: Chapter 5
Monster Among the Roses
I didnât see Isobel again for the rest of the morning. She wasnât in the theater, which I found after washing the library windows, and I didnât spot her through the French doors that led into her garden. I meandered my way back to the kitchen just in time for lunch, but neither she nor Mr. Nash showed to eat.
So I sat down with Constance, Mrs. Pan, and Kit, wondering, âWhere do the Nashes eat?â
âMr. Nash has already taken a tray in his office,â the cook replied.
I nodded and waited to hear what the rest of the family did or would do, but no one spoke again.
Just as I began to feel awkward from the brutal silence and bit into a homemade roll to combat the feeling, Constance said, âI noticed you were cleaning the windows in the library earlier.â
I lifted my eyebrows and chewed before wiping my mouth. Mrs. Panâs rolls tasted good, almost as good as one of Momâs creations. Then I answered, âYeah. Was that okay? I didnât steal your job from you, did I?â
âOh, no.â She swung out a hand, absolving me from guilt. âNot at all. I donât often disturb Miss Nashâs spaces, and besidesâ¦â She flushed before admitting, âIâm a bit afraid of heights. The windows in there go way too high for my taste.â
I nodded, relieved I hadnât stepped on anyoneâs toesâ¦except maybe Isobelâs, but that was kind of why I was here, so sheâd have to deal.
âActually, I was wonderingâ¦â Constance started before she discreetly cleared her throat. âSince you seemed okay on a ladder, would you be willing to change a few lightbulbs in the foyerâs chandelier? I usually hunt down Lewis to help, but if youâre willingâ¦â
After Mr. Nashâs reluctance to assign me any specific task, I was surprisedâand gratefulâfor a little direction. âSure,â I said, smiling my appreciation at the housekeeper. âIâd be happy to.â
Constanceâs face bloomed with pleasure. âGreat. Thank you.â
I nodded just as Kit finally broke in, watching me closely. âHowâd you escape the monster in the rose garden?â
âKit!â Mrs. Pan chastised, her face going beet red with embarrassment. âHush. We donât speak of Miss Nash that way.â
I glanced between mother and son, wanting to defend Isobel and yet not wanting to alienate myself from my coworkers on my first day on the job by calling one of their kidâs a rude little shit.
So I smiled tightly at the boy. âTurns out, there was no monster after all. Sheâd transformed into a beautiful princess who pardoned me from death by thorn.â
The two women seemed pleased by my answer, while Kit wanted to hear more about the mysterious princess.
âHow did she turn into a princess? Whatâd she look like? Why didnât she kill you?â
I shrugged, giving the kid a mysterious little grin. âApparently, Iâm thorn resistant. And since, you know, the best way to defeat your enemy is to befriend them, she decided to be nice to me instead.â
Mrs. Pan snorted her amusement into her hand, while Kit scowled at that answer before he demanded, âIs that really true?â
Laughing, I ruffled his hair. âIâm working on it, kid. Iâm working on it.â
While Kit appeared to grow more confused, the two ladies beamed their approval. âBut, whatââ He was cut off by the opening of the back door.
A small, whistling old man with a trimmed gray beard, wearing a straw hat, tan shorts and a dark shirt with a red bandana tied around his throat, entered the kitchen, rubbing his dirt-stained hands together. âBoy howdy, itâs already getting hot out there.â He moved toward the sink as if to wash his hands only to be waylaid by the pot simmering on the stove. âWell, Iâll be, Mrs. Pan. Your food actually smells good enough to eat today.â
âGet your dirty paws away from my stew, Lewis,â Mrs. Pan scolded, making the man jerk his hand back. âAnd what do you mean today? You say my cooking smells good every day.â
âYeah, butâ¦â He turned with a mischievous grin, as if he were about to say something else to make the cook scowl. I got the feeling he drew as much of a kick from pissing her off as I did from irritating Isobel. But then he saw me, and all teasing fled his expression. âWellâ¦â he murmured in curious intrigue. âWho do we have here?â
âThis is Shaw Hollander,â Constance introduced me. âHeâs the new handyman Mr. Nash hired this morning.â
Two shaggy gray eyebrows lifted. âHandyman, you say? Hmm.â His gaze wandered over me before settling on my biceps. âHe looks strong enough,â he decided before addressing me directly. âHow much weight do you think you can carry, kid?â
I blinked. âExcuse me?â
âHey, Iâm not as spry as I used to be,â Lewis defended as if he were being confronted. âThis old body canât carry around forty-pound bags of topsoil the way it used to. And they called you handy, so can you help me with some of the heavy lifting or not?â
âIâ¦â Glancing at the other two employees of Henry Nash, I tried to come up with the appropriate answer. I was supposed to be here to connect with Isobel, but Constance and now Lewis seemed to need my assistance, and Iâd already told the housekeeper Iâd help her, soâfeeling as if I couldnât say no, and not really wanting to turn down the old man anywayâI shrugged. âSure. Whenever you need me.â
Lewis gave a satisfied nod and commenced to wash his hands before spooning up his lunch. Meanwhile, Mrs. Pan tried to coax Kit into eating more of his meal. âYou canât survive on rolls, honey. Take three more bites of the stew and make sure thereâs some carrot and meat in each spoonful.â
As Kit groaned but complied with his motherâs wishes, I glanced at the three employees around me: Constance, the housekeeper; Lewis, the groundskeeper; and Mrs. Pan, the cook.
âAre there any more employees who work here?â I asked, growing more curious about the dynamics of the household by the minute. I also wanted to know when and where the Nashes ate, and where Henryâs wife and son were hiding away. I hadnât spotted either of them all day.
But one thing at a time. So I started with questions about the staff.
âItâs just the three of us,â Mrs. Pan announced cheerfully before adding, âAnd now you, of course.â
She made it sound as if four made up a skeleton crew while I was still trying to wrap my head around the fact that anyone could ever need that many full-time employees to take care of their home.
âOh, and Mrs. Givens shows up every couple of weeks to assess the place,â Constance put in. âSheâs Mr. Nashâs personal assistant, who mostly works from his office in the city, but ever since his wife died, heâs had Mrs. Givens make the main household decisions.â
Iâm not sure why hearing that Mr. Nash was a widower took my breath, but learning Isobel had lost her mother on top of getting scarred knocked me for a loop. I blinked at Constance. âMr. Nashâs wife died?â I thought of the pictures in his office of the blonde woman with two dark-headed children.
âIn the fire,â Kit was quick to supply.
âFire?â I repeated just as his mother shushed him, her face falling gray with sorrow.
But Kit wasnât so easily silenced. His eyes alive with eagerness, he gushed, âThe fire that burned down the first house. But they rebuilt it, even bigger and better. I was only a baby at home with Mom when it happened, but my dad was here. He was the groundskeeper back then, and he tried to save Mrs. Nash.â His gaze slashed to his mother before he finished, âExcept he ended up dying with her.â
Mrs. Pan made a choking sound of grief from the back of her throat and pressed a napkin to her mouth.
âAll right, enough talk about that, now,â Lewis said gently but firmly, setting a hand on the kidâs shoulder. âIt makes your mother sad.â
Blinking cluelessly, Kit said, âBut it was years ago.â
About eight years ago if I had to guess. Mr. Nash had said Isobel had been isolating herself for eight years, and the fire her mother had perished in mustâve been the one to leave her scarred. Besides, Kit didnât look much older than eight, and if heâd been a baby at the time, wellâ¦it all added up to me.
Sympathy speared through me. It would be one thing to recover from a wound of that magnitude, but to lose a parent in the middle of it⦠I shook my head, unable to even imagine what she mustâve gone through, when I remembered the dark-headed boy in the photos with the Nash family. Oh hell, maybe sheâd lost a brother in the fire, too.
âWhat about Mr. Nashâs son?â I asked, worried heâd perished as well. Exactly how much crushing sadness had been laid on Isobelâs shoulders at once?
The three adults blinked at me as if Iâd just asked the strangest question theyâd ever heard. Finally, Constance said, âEzra? What about him?â
âHe didnâtâ¦?â I flushed, realizing this was quite the awkward question to pose. âIn the fire, I mean.â
âOh! No,â Mrs. Pan was quick to reassure me. âNo, Ezra was away at college by then. Heâs still hearty and hale, living a few miles from here in his own house now.â
I nodded, feeling suddenly silly for worrying about him, a complete stranger. But the idea of Isobel losing both a mother and sibling at the same time was more than I could bear.
âMr. Nash was away on a business trip that weekend,â Mrs. Pan added, not mentioning where Isobel had been.
Even though I already knew the answer, I had to confirm it. âAnd thatâs how the daughterâIsobelâgot herâ¦that is, I mean, thatâs how she becameâ¦?â I cleared my throat, trying to think up the most sensitive way to ask when a voice from behind me spoke.
âYes, Mr. Hollander. Thatâs how I became the monster I am today.â
My stomach dropped at the sound of her voice before I twisted in my chair to find Isobel standing in the entrance of the kitchen, her hands fisted at her sides and blue eyes layered with icy disdain.
Earlier, sheâd had her hair up in a ponytail, revealing her entire face, but now it fell down, one half working to cover the mutilated side while the other half lay tucked behind her ear to show off her good side. It filled me with a moment of regret, hoping she hadnât felt the need to hide her scars because of me.
Across from me, Kit gasped and dove under the table to hide, while the other three adults froze guiltily as if they thought theyâd been caught doing something wrong.
Flushing because her narrowed eyes made me think Iâd misspoke, I stuttered, âIâ¦Iâ¦â Gritting my teeth over such nonsense, I scowled at Isobel and moodily muttered, âI was just curious.â Seriously, how could asking a simple question be that wrong? Then, because she was still glaring at me and making me feel crappier for opening my mouth at all, I hissed, âItâs smart to learn about the household youâre supposed to be working for.â
Yeah. That sounded good. If I was supposed to do a decent job here, I needed information.
But Isobelâs glare turned into two thin slits of rage. âRest assured, my personal life will never be any of your business. And if you simply canât control your curiosity, then ask me directly instead of gossiping about me behind my back.â
I hadnât even been gossiping about her, but I felt ashamed as if I had. And the way she so easily drew the shame forward pissed me off. So, I sneered. âFine. I will. Question number one: have you always been this bitter and rude, or did the accident burn your bad attitude into you?â
Iâd just wanted to ask her somethingâanythingâto show her I wasnât afraid to stand up to her, but as soon as the question left my mouth, I knew it was wrong. All wrong.
Dead silence filled the kitchen. Mrs. Pan, Constance, and Lewis gaped back and forth between us before the cook surged to her feet.
âCan I get you a bowl of stew, Miss Nash?â she asked as she rushed toward the stove.
But Isobel waved a hand. âNo, thank you, Mrs. Pan.â Her gaze swerved my way before she added, âIâve lost my appetite.â
As suddenly as sheâd appeared in the kitchen, she was gone.
My shoulders slumped and I ran a hand through my hair. âIâm a complete jackass, arenât I?â
Lewis choked out a sound before admitting, âWell, Iâve never seen anyone react to her the way you did, thatâs for sure.â
âIs she gone?â a small muffled voice asked from under the table.
âYes, dear,â Mrs. Pan said gently. âSheâs left. You can come out now.â
No one scolded him for treating Isobel like a freak by hiding from her. It itched at my craw that they let the kid get away with hurting her feelings. And it made me feel worse about hurting them myself. Mr. Nash would probably fire me if he knew what Iâd just done.
Worried about that, but even more concerned about how my behavior had affected Isobel, I rose from the table and excused myself.
I tried to find her so I could issue a genuine apology. But she wasnât in the library. She wasnât in the theater and I couldnât spot her through any of the glass walls of the conservatory. So I found myself peering in at her flowers through the windows instead, wondering, why roses? Did she just like the peace and serenity that came with gardening? Flowers couldnât knock her ego down by hiding from her under a table or making her feel like less of a person.
Or was it a simpler reason, like maybe they just smelled good?
Or did it stem from something more psychological? Maybe she believed sheâd become so hideous after the fire that she needed to make up for it to the world by creating something beautiful. Balance things out.
I hoped that wasnât the case. I hoped I hadnât made her feel ugly by arguing with her.
I hoped sheâd become a hermit in this huge house because she was just that big of an introvert and didnât like people. I hoped the scars didnât rule any part of her life at all. I hoped I hadnât made everything worse.
When I trudged home that evening, it was nearly seven before I made it to my building. I felt bogged down and exhausted even though I hadnât done much more than climb a ladder to wash windows and change a few lightbulbs in a chandelier. My soul felt weary because I kept worrying about Isobel.
I didnât even know why I was so concerned; sheâd been twenty times nastier to me than Iâd been to her. Why should I care if the barbs Iâd slung her way had actually hit the mark?
Because Iâd meant to infuriate her and cause steam to rise from her collar. Iâd wanted her face to flush with the lively rage I knew I could summon right before she fought back, belittling me in return. Iâd wanted to taste the victory of another sparring match. Instead, nothing but acid had filled my tongue because it felt as if Iâd hurt her. Truly, bone-deep hurt her.
Dragging, I pushed open the front door to my building, only to fall to an uneasy halt when I saw the woman sitting on the bottom step.
When she saw me, she sprang to her feet, her eyes brightening and blonde hair bouncing. âHi, Shaw. Where you been all day? Your mom said you got a new job. Did you get something at the new factory in Dover? Do you like it?â
I let out an exhausted sigh, barely holding in the groan I really wanted to release. âHey, Gloria.â
I itched to brush past her and keep going up to my door, but her expression reminded me of an eager little puppy. I couldnât kick the puppy, even though I knew any kindness on my part would only encourage her into thinking she might finally stand a chance with me. So I made a production of checking my mail slot, delaying the moment Iâd have to face her again.
Gloria was a dilemma I didnât know how to navigate. She was pretty, got along with my mother, adored the ground I walked on, cooked the best pumpkin pie Iâd ever tasted, came from the same background as me and was only a year younger. On paper, we looked perfectly suited for each other, and I should probably thank my lucky stars Iâd found such a gem.
In reality, she was clingy, nosey, annoying and I couldnât summon an iota of chemistry for her. So I usually felt like an ungrateful ass when she threw herself at me, so obviously letting me know I could have her any time I wanted, or whenever my mom tried to nudge me in her direction. But seriously, a clammy sweat broke out over my skin when I even considered getting my mouth close to hers. I couldnât do it. I justâ¦I couldnât. Which made me feel worse, and then caused me to be extra nice and polite to her, which, yeah, in turn fed her hopes and dreams that Iâd eventually develop some affection for her.
I didnât string her along. I swear, I didnât. Iâd explained to herâand to my motherâon numerous occasions that we would never have a relationship. And they both nodded as if they completely understood, only to concoct some new trap to try to snare me into Gloriaâs clutches a week later.
The whole situation was a hot mess, and I would give anything to escape it.
Suddenly deciding I wasnât in the mood to put up with a Gloria encounter after all, I closed the empty mailbox door, gave her a stiff nod, and hedged around her to head upstairs. âWell, have a good night.â
Not that she was deterred. She followed me up the steps. âSo, what kind of stuff did Mr. Nash make you do?â Her voice lowered as she moved closer. âWas it illegal?â
I sighed, wondering why sheâd asked me where Iâd been and if my new job had been at another factory, when sheâd obviously already gotten all the inside dirt from my mother. I really, really wished she and my mom werenât so close, though I felt bad as soon as that thought arose. Mom didnât have a lot of friends. It was sweet of Gloria to visit her, even though I suspected she only did it to get the scoop on me.
âNo, it was nothing illegal,â I answered, knowing sheâd probably glean these very details off Mom sooner or later. âHe just wanted me to be a handyman at his house.â
Her nose wrinkled. âA handyman? Thatâs all?â I guess it wouldâve been more exciting for her if Iâd been breaking kneecaps and handling illegal substances.
I shrugged, inordinately pleased to disappoint her. âThatâs all.â
She nodded. âSo you got to see his house? I bet that was fancy. Whatâs the inside of Henry Nashâs place look like?â
âBig,â I answered, reaching my floor and pausing before darting past her, careful not to physically touch her, and hurrying toward my front door. âWell, Iâm going to check on Mom now. Have a nice day, Gloria.â
âOh, sheâs fine. We had a lovelyââ
I cut her off by slipping inside my apartment and closing the door as quickly as possible. The rest of her words went muffled and I shut my eyes as I rested my back against the door, feeling crappy for probably hurting yet another womanâs feelings today. I was certainly on a roll, wasnât I?
âShaw?â my motherâs weak voice called. âIs that you, dear?â
My eyes flashed open, and I immediately pushed myself forward. âYeah, Mom. Itâs me.â I hurried into the only bedroom in our apartment to find it dark with a blanket hanging over the window to keep as much light out as possible, which meant sheâd had another migraine.
Wincing because I hadnât been here to help her through it, I eased down next to the mattress beside her so I could stroke her thin, graying hair. âI just got home. Are you okay? Do you want me to get you some aspirin? Water?â
âNo, no. Iâm fine. Gloria took care of me.â She made a vague motion with her hand. âI was worried that man would keep you all night.â
I sent her a gentle smile. âNah. He only worked me eight hours. It just took me a while to walk home.â
âHe wasâ¦the work was okay?â She sounded worried so I kissed her forehead and smiled again.
âThe work was fine, Mom. He just wants me to fix odds and ends around his house. Nothing more.â
She sniffed. âNothing more so far. Rich, powerful men like that always have a hidden agenda.â
I thought of Henry Nashâs hidden agenda: Isobel and her angry, sad eyes and wounded soul. âNot this time,â I lied. âI think heâs on the up and up, and ulterior-motive free.â
âHumph. Weâll see about that.â
I stroked the back of her hand and changed the subject. âAre you hungry? Do you want me to fix you something?â
âAww, sweet baby, donât worry about me. I told you, Gloria took good care of me.â With a wistful sigh, she added, âSuch a lovely girl. I still donât understand why you wonât even give her a chance.â
I groaned. âMom, weâve been over this. Gloria and I have nothing in common.â
âI know, I know,â she lamented. âShe doesnât like books the way you do. Or have such fanciful ideas.â
And right on track, the guilt clouded me, for not being able to like Gloria like I should, for being a nonsensical dreamer who wantedâ¦hell, Iâm not even sure. Maybe smart and accomplished were the right words for what I wanted to be. I wished to be something that made me feel meaningful, anyway. Iâd always thought it would be cool to be an archeologist or even work in a museum. I loved history, discovering new cultures and learning about hidden societies. Becoming a real-life Indiana Jones would probably be the biggest high of my life.
Both Gloria and my mom thought that dream was sillyâ¦their words. They didnât care so much about the past, or its cultures. They preferred to live in the present.
âItâs more than that,â I told my mother.
The few times Iâd tried to open up to Gloria and talk about my passions and life goals, sheâd either tried to convince me that wasnât really what I wanted to do, got too bored to listen, or changed the subject. The true problem was she didnât want me to be me. And whatâs more, she didnât seem to have her own dreams either, except to land me. I seriously didnât know what she wanted from life, what goals she had, what she feared or loved. I wasnât even sure if she knew. And thatâs what ultimately made me shy away from her. There was no connection there at all.
âI just want to see you happy and settled down.â This time, Mom was the one who reached out to touch my face. âI want my baby boy to have the best.â
âI do,â I told her, clasping her hand more firmly to my cheek. âI have you.â And I would take care of her until my last breath.
âOh, youâ¦â She smiled and patted my cheek before dropping her limp, exhausted hand. âYouâre the sweetest boy ever. I donât know what Iâd do without you.â
I kissed her forehead one more time, glad sheâd dropped the subject of Gloria, and rose to my feet. âWell, you donât have to find out, because Iâm not going anywhere. Iâll always take care of you. Always.â
And I would. To keep my mother safe and settled, Iâd brave Isobel while resisting that powerful, undeniable draw I felt toward her. And Iâd do it so well Henry Nash would praise the day he met me.
Everything was going to end up just fine.