to do a background check, of course.â
âAbsolutely. I can give you all the contact information from my agency in Birmingham, as well as references from my last three families. I think youâll be happy with my past performance.â
I pulled out one of my business cards from the holder on my desk and handed it to her. I waited for her to say something about the multiple phone numbers, but instead she responded by sliding her own card across the desk toward me. I picked it up and saw that she had two cell phone numbers. I looked at her and smiled, feeling as if I had finally met a kindred spirit.
âBecause you never know when one phone will stop working or has a dead battery,â she explained.
âExactly.â My smile widened. âItâs so nice to finally meet somebody who thinks ahead. Everybody else seems to only understand how to live in the minute.â
Jayne stood, too. âI know, right? It can be annoying to be the only one prepared for the âjust in caseâ scenario.â She reached her hand across the desk and we shook. âItâs a pleasure meeting you. Iâll get all my information together and bring it over later today so you can get started with my background check. And call me anytime to set up an appointment to meet your children and husband.â
âAnd to go over and look at the Pinckney house. Iâll check with Sophie about her availability and let you know.â
Her smile dimmed. âAll right. I guess the sooner we start, the sooner we can get it sold.â
We said good-bye and I returned to my desk, spotting the pink slips Jolly had given me. Two were from my annoying cousin and Jackâs ex-girlfriend, Rebecca, and one was from the journalist at the
Post and Courier
, Suzy Dorf, who had an abnormal interest in me and my house. Since I would have preferred to stick a knitting needle into my eyeball rather than speak with either of them, I folded each note up into tiny little squares, then placed them in the bottom of my trash can.
It was only when I picked up the phone to call Sophie that I realized the presence was gone, leaving only the fresh scent of rain as evidence that it had ever been there at all.
CHAPTER 3
D espite my battered and bruised feet, I nearly skipped home. It had been a long day, the bright spot being Skyping with Jack while he fed the babies their lunches of strained peas and pureed peaches. Heâd still worn the T-shirt and pajama bottoms heâd slept in, but I refrained from commenting. Iâd come to understand that writers had a few eccentricities I had to learn to live with. Not scheduling certain things like dressing in the morning or vetting oneâs sock and underwear drawer on a monthly basis were just a few of the quirks to which I was making an effort to adjust.
I couldnât wait to get home and kiss my babies and tell Jack that not only did I have a lead on a nanny, but I had three new clientsâin addition to Jayne Smithâand six house showings already scheduled for the rest of the week. Theyâd all seen the ad Iâd placed in the latest edition of
Charleston
Magazine
, for which Nola had suggested including a picture of Jack and me, all three children, and the dogs in front of my Tradd Street house. She said it would make people believe that I knew what people meant when they said they were looking for a family home, and that I understood that historic homes were meant to be lived in.
I wasnât sure I believed all that, but if it helped me sell houses, so beit. During my downtime, in which Iâd dealt with the prospect of losing my home, an angry ghost, a difficult pregnancy that included months of bed rest, and my undefined relationship with Jack, Iâd lost out on two news-making sales in Charlestonâthe Chisholm-Alston Greek Revival purchased by a well-known international fashion designer and the old, dilapidated yet still magnificent Renaissance mansion
George R. R. Martin and Gardner Dozois