Eight Hundred Grapes
Page 18
“I believe that was so someone could get married on the property,” he said. “Isn’t that next weekend?”
“Don’t insult me.”
“I’m not insulting you. I’m just letting you know that all the contingencies have been met. Your dad requested that we not transfer ownership until after your wedding. Until they’re able to close up the house.”
“I intend to contest this sale, Mr. McCarthy.”
He shot me a look.
“No one’s called me Mr. McCarthy. Like ever.” He paused. “I don’t like it.”
Which was when my phone buzzed. Suzannah appeared on the screen with a text message.
Ben called me and told me what was going on!!
Where are you? Call me already, so I can tell you what to do. After I yell at you for sticking me with this case. (Still at work and furious btw.)
Jacob was staring at the phone. “Who is Ben? The jilted groom?”
I put my phone away. “I’m just here to talk about the sale,” I said.
He laughed. “Then there’s nothing to talk about,” he said. “That isn’t your business.”
“My father’s well-being is my business.”
He nodded. “So you should know that the contract has been signed and notarized. His business is now . . . my business.”
Then he smiled—a smug, assured-of-itself smile, his going-out-on-a-limb-for-no-one smile. Which was when I decided it. How much I couldn’t stand him.
“Good of you to come by. Though I think we should probably end this conversation,” he said.
“I couldn’t agree more,” I said as I headed out the door.
A Guy Named Mark and a Guy Named Jesse
When I got back to the house, the sun was setting over the vineyard. The magic hour, as my father would call it. So much of what my father did at the vineyard, he did after the sun was down. The magic hour, the time before he went to work, involved respecting where the vineyard had gotten to in the daylight. After dark, when the grapes were on the vines, he’d help pick. If they were off, he’d help care for the soil, or care for the wine.
My father also thought it was the magic hour for another reason. The sky turned an odd shade of yellow, which he swore it never had before he started working the land. He said it was reflected that way because of the land—how lush and vibrant the land had become.
I was too exhausted to get into it with anyone. But Finn was sitting at the kitchen counter, wearing his backward baseball cap and running shorts, looking like the little-boy version of himself, back from pitching practice. He was eating an enormous piece of my mother’s famous lasagna, straight from the baking pan.
This was the big joke of the lasagna. We all loved it. Never once did it actually make it to the kitchen table for dinner. No matter how pissed we were at each other—all of us would sit at the counter and eat it as soon as my mother took it from the oven to cool. Burning our tongues on it.
She made the lasagna with olives and tomatoes from the vineyard, spinach, five cheeses, and something else she wouldn’t ever confess to. Finn swore he’d walked in once and seen her adding chocolate chips to the bottom layer of noodles. We had spent years, cumulatively, searching for a sign of them.
Finn looked up as I walked into the kitchen. “I was bribed,” he said.
“I can see that.”
He took a large bite as I climbed on the stool across from him and put the contract down on my lap. It was a reminder—as if I needed one—that if I didn’t figure out what to do, this could be the last time I’d be sitting in this house with Finn, eating our mother’s lasagna, staring out at a vineyard that we would soon have to say our family used to own.
Finn puffed his cheeks out and tried to cool the lasagna already in his mouth. Then he shoveled more inside. “Mom didn’t want to be alone with you,” he said. “She called in reinforcements.”
“So she told you about her and Dad?”
He nodded. “She told me.”
Finn handed over a fork. I dug into the middle of the large pan. Finn’s look of sympathy turned to annoyance, always annoyance when I took lasagna from the middle of the pan, even though he liked the edges.