Читать книгу Wed on His Terms: Million-Dollar Marriage Merger - Charlene Sands - Страница 8
Two
ОглавлениеRena looked in her closet as tears streamed down her face. It had been three weeks since the funeral, and Davidâs clothesâhis shirts and pants, his jackets and sweatshirtsâstill hung just beside hers. She reached out to touch his favorite blue plaid shirt. Her fingers lingered a bit and an image appeared of sitting by a cozy fire cuddling up next to David and laying her head on the soft flannel, his arm wrapped around her shoulder. She smiled at the memory, even through her tears. âWhat now, David?â she asked in the solitude of her bedroom.
She was a thirty-one-year-old widow. She never would have believed it. Not when just weeks ago sheâd planned on telling David her joyous news ⦠that they were to become parents. Sheâd had it all planned. Sheâd silk-screened T-shirts that said, âIâm the Daddyâ and another that said, âIâm the Mommyâ and the third tiny T-shirt said, âAnd Iâm the Boss.â Sheâd planned on giving David the set of them over his favorite dinner.
She hadnât gone to the doctor yet, relying solely on the pregnancy test sheâd taken. Sheâd wanted David by her side when they heard the news officially. Now sheâd be going to all of her appointments alone, facing an unknown future.
The only bright spot in all this sadness was the child she carried. She loved her baby with all of her heart and vowed to protect it, doing whatever it took to make a good life for him or her.
Rena closed the closet door unable to remove and discard Davidâs clothes as sheâd planned. âIâm not ready to let go,â she whispered. She needed Davidâs things around her, to feel his presence and warmth surround her. It gave her a sense of peace, odd as that might seem.
âDo you want me to help you with Davidâs things, Rena?â Solena Melendezâs voice broke into her thoughts. Rena turned to find her friend at the bedroom threshold, a concerned look on her face.
Rena smiled sadly. Since Davidâs death, Solena made a point to check up on Rena every morning.
âSolena, no. But thank you.â Solena and Raymond Melendez worked at Purple FieldsâSolena in the wine-tasting room, Raymond overseeing the vineyards. Theyâd been loyal employees since Rena and David took over the winery after her parentsâ deaths.
âIt will take time, Rena.â
Rena understood that. Sheâd lost both of her parents. She knew the process of grieving. âI know.â
âAnd when itâs time, I will help you.â
She smiled and wiped away her tears. âI appreciate that.â She reached for Solena, and they embraced. Their relationship had grown over the years, and now Rena thought of Solena and Raymond as more than employeesâthey were dear friends. Friends whose salaries she may not be able to pay if she didnât get this bank loan.
âWe have orders today,â Solena said, breaking their embrace. âIâll make sure they go out on time.â
âOrders are good,â Rena acknowledged with a nod of her head. Thankfully, Solena reminded her daily that she had a winery to run. Purple Fields was small but well-respected, and theyâd been holding their own until a slowing economy and bigger wineries started shoving them out. Smaller vintners werenât able to compete and sustain the same degree of losses as the more established ones.
âI have an appointment at the bank today.â Though Rena held out little hope, she had to try. She needed a loan to make her payroll this month and next. She was due a small amount from Davidâs life insurance policy, and that money would pay for her doctor bills and whatever was left over would go in trust for her childâs future. No one knew about the child she carried as yet, and sheâd planned to keep it that way for the time being. Sheâd not told a soul. Not even Solena.
âI will pray for good news,â Solena said.
âSo will I,â Rena said.
Rena lingered a bit after Solena left her room, putting a little makeup on a face that had seen too many tears. With dark circles beneath her eyes, no amount of makeup could hide her despair. Her grief would be evident, yet she had enough pride to want to appear in control of her emotions when she met Mr. Zelinski at the bank. Bankers were wary of desperation. Rena understood that and prepared herself with facts and figures she hoped would prove that Purple Fields was holding its own and worth the risk of a loan.
Rena walked down the stone hallway and made it to the living room when a knock sounded at her door. âWho could that be?â she muttered, taking up her purse and the file folder for her bank appointment and tucking it under her arm.
She opened the door to Tony Carlino. More than surprised, Rena blinked. âTony? What are you doing here?â
He cast her a grim smile. âYou wouldnât return my phone calls.â
âThereâs a reason for that. I donât care to talk to you.â
âMaybe not,â Tony said. âBut I have to talk to you.â
Rena took in a steady breath and calmed her nerves. Just the sight of Tony brought bad memories. Sheâd gotten over him once and had moved on with her life. She certainly didnât want anything to do with him now. âWhat could you possibly have to say to me?â
Tony glanced inside her home. Heâd been here before many years ago, but she certainly didnât want to invite him in. Sheâd never minded that sheâd come from humble beginnings and that her family home was cozy and rustic, where the Carlino mansion had four wings of stately elegance, two dozen rooms, Italian marble and ancestral artwork that went back a few generations.
âWhat I have to say canât be said on your doorstep, Rena.â
Rena glanced at her watch. âIâm on my way out. I donât have time to talk to you.â
âThen have dinner with me tonight.â
âDinner?â Rena had to focus hard not to wrinkle her face. âNo, I wonât have dinner with you.â
Tony let go an exasperated sigh. âI donât remember you being so difficult.â
She hadnât been when sheâd first met Tony at the age of sixteen. Sheâd taken one look at him and had fallen in love. Theyâd been friends first, Rena keeping her secret that sheâd fallen hard for a Carlino. Tony had a smile that lit up her heart, and when they laughed together, Rena thought sheâd died and gone to heaven. It had been painful holding in her feelings, not letting on that she loved him. It didnât help matters that Santo Carlino was trying to run her parents out of business.
âYou donât know me anymore, Tony.â Rena lifted her chin. âIf this is about easing your conscience about David, youâre wasting your time.â
Tonyâs face tightened. His dark eyes grew cold. He stared at her for a moment, then as if gathering all his patience, he took a deep breath. âI havenât got a guilty conscience, Rena. But what I have to say is about David.â
Rena glanced at her watch again. It wouldnât do to be late for her appointment, yet heâd caught her curiosity. âWhat about David?â
âHave dinner with me and Iâll tell you.â
Pressed for time and jittery about her bank appointment, Rena relented. âFine, Iâll have dinner with you.â
âIâll pick you up at eight.â
âOkay, now at the risk of being rude, I really have to leave.â
With a quick nod of agreement, Tony left and Rena breathed a sigh of relief. She wouldnât think about seeing him later and breaking bread with him. Sheâd seen the determined look on his face and knew he wouldnât take no for an answer. Frankly, she didnât have time to argue. The bank appointment was all she could focus on. âOne hurdle at a time.â She mumbled Davidâs favorite words of encouragement every time theyâd faced a challenge.
She had more important things to worry about than having dinner with Tony Carlino.
Tony drove out of the Purple Fields gates and turned right driving along the roads that would lead him to the Carlino estate. Vineyards on both sides of the highway spread across the valley rising up hills and down slopes, covering the land in a blanket of green.
Heâd only been home about three months, and he still felt disoriented, unsure of his place here in Napa. Heâd come home because his father had been ill. And now, as the oldest son, he had to assume responsibility for the business working alongside his two brothers. His father had expected as much from him.
The timing had been right for his return. Heâd made his mark on NASCAR and had enjoyed every minute of his career until a crash and injury took him off the racing circuit. Perhaps it had been an omen to quit, but it wasnât until his fatherâs passing that Tony realized heâd had no choice but to leave the racing world behind.
Somewhat.
He still had endorsement deals with various companies, and that could be an advantage to Carlino Wines. The Carlino name meant success, and people identified with that. Yet Tonyâs life had changed so drastically in such a short span of time, and now he planned on taking on a new responsibility with a wife and child.
Was he ready for that?
He questioned that reality now. His vow to David never far from his mind, Tony admitted, if only to himself, that Rena had been right about one thing. If he hadnât come home and rekindled their friendship, David would still be alive today.
Tony approached the Carlino estate and pressed the remote that opened the wide iron gates. He parked the car in front of the garage house and exited. He met up with Joe in the driveway, his brother ever the optimist wearing a smile and horn-rimmed glasses, slapped him on the back. âYou look like youâve seen a ghost.â
He had, in a way. Visions of Davidâs tragic death played in his head ever since heâd driven away from Purple Fields.
It had been a glorious afternoon in Napa, the temperatures in the low seventies with fresh sunshine warm in the airâa day that made you glad to be alive. Tony remembered thinking that, right before he witnessed Davidâs crash.
Before he knew it, he was riding beside David in the ambulance.
âI think sheâs pregnant,â David whispered, struggling to get the words out.
âShh. Hang on, David. Please. Save your strength.â
Tonyâs plea didnât register with David. He continued, his voice so low that Tony had to bend over to hear him.
âShe wonât drink,â heâd confessed, and Tony immediately understood. Vintners drank wine like others drank water.
Davidâs coherent pleas gave Tony hope, though he appeared so weak. So fragile.
âTony,â heâd implored.
âIâm here.â He knew whatever David had to say must be important.
âDonât leave her alone. She deserves a good life. Promise me youâll take care of her. And our baby.â
âI promise, David. Iâll take care of Rena,â Tony whispered, looking deep into Davidâs fading eyes.
âMarry her,â David said, grasping Tonyâs hand. âPromise me that, too.â
And Tony hadnât hesitated. He squeezed Davidâs hand. âIâll marry her.â
David gave the slightest tip of a nod and closed his eyes. âTell her I love her.â
âHang on, David. Sheâs coming. You can tell her yourself.â
Frantic, Rena rushed up to David the minute theyâd reached the hospital. Theyâd had time together, spoke their last words and Tony hung back giving them privacy. When David let go, Rena cried out. Her deafening sobs for David shook Tony and reached deep into his soul. Heâd never seen a woman fall apart like that.
Tony shifted back to the present and looked at his brother with a shake of his head. âI saw Rena today.â
Joe wrinkled his nose and gave an understanding nod. âWhich explains the haunted look in your eyes. Thinking of David, too?â he asked with genuine concern.
âYeah, heâs never far from my mind. Iâm the race car driver. Iâm the one taking risks, yet he was the one to die in a crash.â
âPeople die every day in car accidents.â Then Joe caught himself. He didnât have a cruel bone in his body. âSorry, I didnât mean to sound callous, but you didnât encourage him to get behind the wheel. And it was an accident.â
âI wish Rena felt that way. It would make what I have to do a whole lot easier.â
âSo, it didnât go well today?â
Tony shrugged. âShe blew me off, but not before I made a dinner date with her.â
âThatâs a start. It should get easier now.â
Tony scratched his chin, the stubble grating his fingers. âDoubtful. Rena is as proud as she is stubborn.â
âI hear you, Tony. Iâve learned my lesson with the opposite sex. No more relationships for me.â
Tony looked his brother in the eye. âSheila really did a number on you, didnât she?â
Joe lifted his shoulders in a nonchalant shrug. âIâm over it.â
Tony believed him, noting the firm set of his jaw and his cool air of confidence, despite his casual shrug. Joeâs gorgeous New York assistant had played him, using her charms to snare him into an engagement. But the minute a wealthier man had shown interest in her, sheâd dumped Joe for greener pastures and married a man who was twice her age. Joe had been burned, and he wasnât going near the fire any time soon.
âIâm on my way to the downtown office,â he said, changing the subject. âGood luck with Rena tonight.â
âThanks. And Joe, keep this quiet.â It wouldnât do for news to get out that Tony was dating his friendâs new widow.
âIâve got your back, bro.â
Rena parked her car outside her home, her hands frozen on the steering wheel as she looked with numbing silence at the house in desperate need of paint and a roof that had seen better days. Her garden had been neglected lately, the grounds and outer buildings werenât what they once were. But the vineyards beyond, whose budding grapes were the mainstay of her legacy, had the best terroir in the vicinity. Their merlot and cabernet wines won awards from the combination of good weather, soil and minerals. The vineyards had never let her down. âAll I have left are those vines,â she mumbled, her voice shaky. âWhat am I going to do?â
The news from Mr. Zelinski wasnât good. She hadnât known the lengths David had gone to in order to keep them in business until sheâd pressed the banker to be brutally honest. She saw regret in his eyes and sympathy cross his features and knew of his reluctance to tell her the ultimate truth. Both the Fairfield and Montgomery families were part of the tightly knit Napa community and had been personal friends of the banker. She assumed it was out of respect for her mourning that he hadnât been knocking at her door demanding his money.
The grim news she received shook what little hope she had left. Not only couldnât she qualify for a loan but David had taken out a home equity line of credit to keep them going these past few months. Until that loan was repaid and her credit restored, she couldnât even think about asking for additional help from the bank.
She owed more money than she originally thought.
Tears welled in her eyes as the hopelessness of her situation enveloped her. From across the driveway, out among the vines she spotted Raymond checking the leaves, making sure the grapes were healthy.
A sob escaped. She knew what she had to do, and it hurt to even think it. She couldnât pay Solena and Raymond. Sheâd barely scraped up enough money to give them their last monthâs salary. Sheâd let her other employees go, but hoped she could keep her friends on. Now, it was clear she had to let them go as well.
Her heart breaking, Rena bounded out of the car and ran up the steps to her house, tears spilling down her cheeks. She couldnât face losing them, not after losing David so abruptly. Everything around her was changing too fast.
Yet she couldnât expect Solena and Raymond to stay. She knew theyâd have no trouble finding employment at another vineyard. Both were efficient, dedicated and knew as much about winemaking as she did. Selfishly, she wanted to keep them close, to have them work the land and be here when she needed them. Rena had sad facts to face, and she didnât know if she was up to the challenge.
Slamming the door shut, she strode to her bedroom, wiping at tears that continued to fall. She tossed her files and purse aside, kicking off her shoes as she flopped down on her bed. She lay looking up at the ceiling, searching her mind for a way to keep her business afloat. What avenues had she missed? Who could she turn to for help? Finally, after a half hour of torturous thought, she came up with the only solution that made sense. She had no other option.
She had to sell Purple Fields.