Total pages in book: 57
Estimated words: 53629 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 268(@200wpm)___ 215(@250wpm)___ 179(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 53629 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 268(@200wpm)___ 215(@250wpm)___ 179(@300wpm)
My father ripped people off for a living. Every member of a board of directors, every family with any kind of financial influence, all lost money by investing with a crook. Said criminal being one Albert Williamson. My father, more than likely, stole from Mandy and her husband too.
It was just as devastating as it was embarrassing. Even worse, it was damning in this small town.
Everyone knew exactly who I was and my situation when I came home early from college to pick up the pieces of what was left. They all knew I’d never had a job and that I was his daughter. Who the hell was I to ask anyone to hire me? Let alone for my dream job.
My worst fear was that they thought I didn’t fall far from the tree. Why would anyone employ the daughter of a liar and a thief?
The news broke about my father, and he died the next day. Two weeks later, I learned there was no money. There was a single bank account with a few thousand in it but the cheat disguised as a bimbo that my father had been sleeping with ran off with it all.
So I had nothing but a tainted last name and bills to pay. I had no experience, and no lifelines left. Mandy wasn’t my first option simply because of the shame. Renee convinced me to go for the one job I really wanted in this town. She said all the whispers and dirty looks were mistakes and the people around here would remember who I was and what I was made of. Fake it till you make it and all that. It’s her motto and she pushed me to do it. I’m so grateful she did. Robert gave me a place to stay so I could sell my family home and work on paying off debt after debt.
Four years later, this is the only job I’ve ever had, and with the new website and increased sales, it’s paying pretty darn well to boot.
I suck down the rest of my coffee before clicking on an email about the exhibition coming up. We’re hosting the event and I needed lodging information from Chandler. He runs the inn a few blocks down.
The rates and blocked-out dates were the last pieces of information I needed to send out a mass email to all invited guests. By the time I’m done thanking Chandler and whipping up a draft of the email, which I forwarded Mandy to check before I send, a new email comes through. It’s from Mandy. She can’t make it in today. Darn, I really wanted to brag about—I mean, celebrate the sales. On the other hand, literally the other hand, is her coffee, which I shall gladly drink.
I finish mine and scoot hers closer to my laptop. It doesn’t escape me that it’s a bit vexing to not allow any drinks in the gallery, even though I drink coffee right here every day.
But I’m a single mother of a three-year-old. I need the coffee if I’m expected to function and unlike patrons, I can’t exactly leave just to get a drink when I’m supposed to be working.
Just as I’m replying to Mandy, updating her on several things she should know ASAP, including the details about the exhibit, the door chimes a subtle ring and I hear a familiar voice.
“Why is it always dead in here?” Renee asks in a comical tone that makes me smile. She wanders over to one of the new pieces we just got in from New York. It’s abstract circles painted with watercolors on a four-by-seven canvas. The edges have a hint of silver and, in the right light, they look like the phases of the moon.
“She’s brilliant, isn’t she?” I ask Renee in return, ignoring the question about it being dead in here.
After squinting at the name on the info card next to the canvas, she tells me, “Yeah, Samantha has serious talent.” She whispers when I make my way to her, sans coffee, “This would look even more brilliant in my bedroom.”
The laugh is genuine, leaving me with a grin. “You wish,” I say. With my arms crossed, I admire the painting again.
“I’m doing the video for it today, want to sit in?”
Renee walks to the bench at the front, leaning against it she makes a face that forces my grin to grow wider. “I’d really rather not.”
Renee isn’t exactly into art. I don’t hold it against her because most people like to look at it, but are bored by the details. I get it; I know it’s my nerd side. She doesn’t hold that against me, which is why we work so well together.
“I was on my lunch break and thought you may be lonely in here. Since, you know, there’s never anyone in here.”