class.â
âI so wished I could have afforded classes for you, too,â Julia said despondently.
Olivia reached out to her. âItâs not that, Mom. I never felt bad about it. I didnât care about riding. I cared that I was there. I got to touch the horses and talk to them. I took pictures of them on those disposable cameras I bought with my allowance.â
Julia gave Oliviaâs hand a little squeeze. âAnd Sarah, being your number one fan, posted the photo. Iâm sure it was phenomenal.â
âOne of my best,â Olivia admitted. âSarah alone has had over a hundred likes on it. People I donât know are Tweeting it and sharing it. Itâs been a nightmare.â She didnât want her mom to know she was also enjoying the attention.
Julia was quiet for a long moment before she said, âItâll blow over. Things like this always do.â
âIâm not so sure. Rafe wants to race Rowan professionally. He said that he didnât want people who might also be judges or reporters to see photos of Rowan before he was ready to be presented publicly. Rafe and his father had talked about trying to get Rowan into the trials for the Kentucky Derby, at the very least.â
Juliaâs mouth fell open. âYou left that part out.â
âPretty bad, huh?â Olivia asked glumly. âHeâs going to hate me forever.â
âAnd so what if he does? You take some photographs of him at the rehearsal dinner and the wedding andââ Julia brushed her palms against each other ââpffft. You never see him again. Frankly, I donât remember ever seeing him in the deli. As far as youâre concerned, heâs out of your life.â
What Julia said was true. Rafe could be out of her life forever. But if she was honest with herself, that wasnât what Olivia wanted.
Despite the accusations heâd hurled at her the night before, she would never forget the feel of his arms around her when heâd pulled her back from Rowanâs stall. When theyâd spoken in the stable, sheâd never felt quite so alive. The air had seemed electric and yet the conversation had been easy and comfortable. Sheâd felt as if she could talk to him forever about horses, photographyâanything.
Olivia didnât want a couple of photo shoots to be all there was between her and Rafe. She wanted more.
A great deal more.
And that terrified her.
CHAPTER TEN
W HEN M ADDIE CAME into the deli a few days later with an armful of posters for the Indian Lake Horse Race Fundraiser, Olivia agreed to post them in the front window. She was wary about associating the deli with the sport that had almost ruined her and her mother, but the fundraiser was for the hospital. Olivia and Julia had always volunteered their time and talent to the hospitalâs foundation; it was one of Indian Lakeâs largest employers, and the doctors and nurses often treated people in need at no charge.
âI knew I could count on you,â Maddie told Olivia. Maddie served on the fundraising committee. âI figure that between your deli and my café we can get the word out to half the town. Oh! And Nate told me to thank you for your help.â Maddie handed her the Art Decoâstyle posters that Isabelle Hawks had designed.
Olivia studied the watercolor illustration of jockeys on Thoroughbreds crossing a finish line. âItâs not much. These are beautiful.â
âThey are, arenât they?â Maddie agreed. âMakes me want to take up horseback riding.â
A chill snaked down Oliviaâs spine, and her ears filled with her fatherâs curses and screams when his horse lost at the track.
Will this pain never go away?
Olivia struggled through the mire to focus on her friend. âIs there anything else I can do to help?â
Maddie was thoughtful for a moment and then put her hand on Oliviaâs shoulder. âAs a matter of
Jefferson Bass
Sherryl Woods
Amy Ephron
Suzanne Palmieri
Christopher Wright
Shaun Hutson
Christie Rich
Nikki Turner
Michel Houellebecq
Justine Elyot