hips, never her waist or her boobs. If sheâd been born a century earlier sheâd have been right in style, complete with a built-in bustle.
Unfortunately, long, lean and selectively silicon-enhanced was todayâs style. As she was none of the above, she was forced to make the best of what she had.
Which she did withâshe hopedâstyle, taste and panache.
By the time she had breakfasted on a doughnutâjust one, as she was dietingâand a homemade latte and gotten dressed, the temperature had climbed into the low seventies. As there wasnât a single cloud in the sky, she put down the top on the convertible that had been her thirty-fifth birthday gift to herself. Her foundation was a high SPF, but even so she tied on a wide-brimmed hat, letting the scarf-ends trail out behind her.
Hadnât some famous actress died that way when her scarf got tangled around a wheel? She might not have a college degree, but she prided herself on having a wealth of trivia at her fingertips.
Just past the bridge over the Currituck Sound, she stopped at her favorite coffee shop and ordered a hammerhead to go. In case her headache threatened againâand even if it didnâtâshe could do with the double shot of caffeine.
Several minutes later she pulled into the paved parking area beside the Jamison cottage. A single glance told her that the parking area next door was empty. She refused to admit to being disappointed. Judging from what she knew about menâand she could have written a book on the speciesâthe studly security man was probably still in bed.
A morning person herself, Sasha had practically been forced to pry all four of her ex-husbands out of bed. Frank had been born lazy. Barry had worked nights, which gave him a legitimate reason, she admitted reluctantly. But Rusty had simply preferred to sleep late and play late, gambling and partying till all hours, usually without her.
As for Larry, her first husband, met and married in a mad, mad weekend the month before sheâd turned nineteen, she couldnât even remember what his excuse had been, unless it was because he knew it drove her crazy. Even as a child sheâd been up with the sun, bursting with energy.
The truth was that not a single man sheâd made the mistake of marrying had possessed anything resembling a work ethic. Even her father, redheaded, stern-faced Addler Parrish, had sold his tobacco farm and taken up preaching.
Not that he was very good at that, either. Everyone said old Ad was mean as a snake, and she could personally vouch for that. But at least the hours suited him better, giving him plenty of time to lay down the law to his family and punish anyone who broke his rules. Which Sasha had consistently done.
Sheâd been plain Sally June Parrish back then. Her overworked mother had lacked the strength to defend either herself or her children from her husbandâs vicious tongue, much less from his belt and his fists. As soon as Sally June could escape sheâd left home and found a job stocking and clerking in a furniture dealerâs showroom. Within a few years, she began taking night classes at the community college and attending the International Furniture Market in High Point with her employer.
By that time sheâd been married to Larry Combs, a Jude Law lookalike who couldnât manage to hang on to a job for more than a few months. Heâd claimed to be overqualified. What heâd been was under-motivated. Larry had been the first. Her second husband had been even better-looking, and witty, besides.
Unfortunately, heâd also been a crook.
With two brief marriages behind her, she had left the Greensboro area and started her eastward migration, eventually leaving behind two more ex-husbands. None of her marriages had provided her with what she so desperately neededâa close and loving family. And none had lasted much longer than a year. By the time sheâd moved to