Home > Feels like Rain (Lake Fisher, #3)

Feels like Rain (Lake Fisher, #3)
Author: Tammy Falkner


Introduction

 

 

Lake Fisher is a place where miracles happen, and if anyone ever needed a miracle, it’s Ethan Roberts.

 

One of the hardest things that Ethan has ever had to do is walk back into that small town, the place where he’d once made his biggest mistake. But walk back in he does, because he has a son who needs him. What he never expected was to walk back in and find her there too.

 

Abigail Marshall was Ethan’s best friend when they were children spending summers at Lake Fisher. Abigail doesn’t see a broken man with a shady past. She sees the happy boy she once knew.

 

But Ethan is not that boy anymore. Now he’s a man hated by the townspeople, and for good reason. But he hates himself even more.

 

Despite the rumors and innuendo surrounding his past, she leaves the door open for him to step right back into her life and it feels like they never spent a day apart. Twenty years changes a person, but when Ethan and Abigail are together, the past just disappears.

 

But how long can he keep it away? Because the one thing he’d never be able to endure is Abigail hating him too.

 

 

1

 

 

Abigail

 

 

“It feels like rain,” my grandmother says as she sits on the glider on the porch, staring up at the star-speckled sky. The sky is clear, and a gentle wind lifts my hair. Gran hugs her arms around her skinny body and shivers, like someone just walked over her grave. The temperature is eighty degrees outside. A storm isn’t in the forecast. It seems like a gentle fall night.

“I don’t think so,” I say. “The weatherman said to expect clear skies today and tomorrow.”

Gran makes a rude noise in her throat, the kind she would slap me for if I did it. Then she gets up and goes inside the house. I stand up and follow her, the screen door clanging loudly behind me as it slams shut.

“Take an umbrella when you leave,” Gran says, and then she kisses me on the forehead and goes to sit on the couch. She turns on the TV and finds “her stories” that had been recorded during the day.

“I thought I might spend the night tonight,” I call to her as I clean the kitchen.

She makes another absurd noise. It’s a cross between a grunt and a snort. “I don’t need a babysitter,” she says. “Take yourself home to that husband of yours.” She nearly spits the words that husband at me. She doesn’t like Charles. She hates him, in fact. Some days I do too. The rest, I just don’t care.

“I told Charles I was staying over.” I wash the last of the dishes and go to sit with her.

“And what did Charles have to say to that?” she asks. She doesn’t look away from the TV.

He looked relieved, honestly. “Nothing.”

Gran grunts. “A wife’s place is at home,” she says. She clicks the TV off, pulls an afghan from the back of the couch, and covers herself with it. “Go home, Abigail. I’ll be fine.”

“I don’t like leaving you,” I say. Gran is getting older and it shows. And I enjoy spending time with her.

“Go home, Abigail,” she says more firmly. Then she rolls over and pulls the afghan close under her chin.

“You should go to bed,” I tell her.

“I’ll go to bed when I’m ready,” she says quietly. “Go on home, now.” She snuggles deeper into her cocoon. “Take the umbrella by the back door,” she murmurs.

“I’ll see you tomorrow.” I lay my hand on her arm and give it a squeeze. She smiles softly and I get up to leave.

I look up at the clear night sky as I walk out the back door. The gentle wind still blows, but I don’t need the umbrella. It’s not going to rain.

I drive across town to the house I share with my husband and I let myself in the back door. The scent of Italian food meets my nose and I inhale deeply. Then I see the take-out bags on the kitchen counter. Charles has gotten us take-out when he knew I wasn’t coming home? Maybe he forgot. I toss my keys onto the counter and stop when I see the candles flickering in the dark dining room, the room we never use. There are two places set at the table, and Charles has used our best china. The plates are empty. The food rests in the bags on the kitchen counter, if the smell emanating from them is any indication.

My heart lurches. Have I forgotten an important date? Our anniversary isn’t until January. I run through our history in my mind. I can’t think of anything we would have been celebrating.

I hear a noise from the bedroom. “Charles,” I call out. “Are you here?” I walk in that direction.

The bedroom door slams shut in my face, the whoosh of air halting my stride, and I brace myself in the doorframe to keep from walking straight into the door.

“Charles,” I call out. I listen at the crack in the door and jiggle the knob. It’s locked.

“I thought you said you were staying at your grandmother’s tonight,” Charles calls back, his voice overly loud.

“Gran said she didn’t need me.” I press my ear to the door again. “Charles,” I say, “what’s going on?”

“Um… Nothing, Abby, just hang on.”

I jiggle the doorknob a little harder. “Charles,” I say again, and trepidation floods me.

“Oh, God, Abby,” Charles calls back, his voice frantic. “You weren’t supposed to be here tonight.”

“I know, but Gran…” I suddenly stop. “Is someone in there with you?”

“Abby.” He heaves out a sigh. “It’s not what it looks like.”

“It looks like you have me locked out of our bedroom.” I jiggle the knob again. “Open the door.”

Charles opens the door and stands in the threshold, blocking my view. “It’s not what it looks like,” he says again.

I look beyond him and find my friend and coworker Sandra standing there, as she bends over to pull on her high heels. She looks up, but her eyes won’t meet mine.

“Sandra?” I say. Then it hits me, like one of those waves at the beach that knocks you off your feet, and then it spins you around and you get sand in the butt of your swimsuit and grit in your eyes. “Oh, God.” I take a step back.

“I should go,” Sandra says, her voice small. She walks toward us, still not able to look me in the eye. We’ve been friends for two years. She got me the job I have at the hospital where I work.

“Sandra,” I say, and I follow her to the front door. She stops and presses herself against the door, hugging it tightly as she clutches the knob.

“Why did you have to come home tonight?” she says, I suspect more to herself than to me.

Because I live here. “Did you…sleep with…my husband?” I jerk my thumb toward the bedroom.

“I didn’t—” she starts. But then she stops and shakes her head. “Charles should tell you. Not me.” She opens the door and steps out into the night, closing it softly behind her.

I turn around to find Charles standing in a pair of running shorts and nothing else. He drags a hand through his hair, which is standing on end. “I didn’t want you to find out like this,” he says on a heavy breath.

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