hanging out after school, doing homework together and sharing secrets.
Derek and Gabby, Gabby and Derek. Heâd been her other half from eighth grade through senior year. She knew about the curse. Everyone in town knew.
Derek feared the power of the curse, and though Gabrielle had never believed in such things, given his family history, sheâd respected the threat it held over the Corwin men. Derek had never used the â L â word, not even the day after the prom when heâd ended things and broken her heart. She knew heâd loved her too much to take their relationship further, thereby setting the curse in motion, so heâd said goodbye. He hadnât even given her a choice in the matter.
But she had a choice now. And she chose to believe that she and Derek were in such close proximity after all this time for a reason. For Gabrielle, the reason came down to second chances. She needed to know if the flame between them still burned.
The memories she had of him were strong. Sheâd idealized him and their relationship to the point where no other man could live up to the standard heâd set. No man since had understood her or given enough of himself. No man had been Derek.
So after years of moving from relationship to relationship, always being the one to break up, always looking for more than whatever the man of the moment had to offer, Gabrielle saw this as her chance to revisit the pastâand find out, once and for all, whether her future could include Derek. If it didnât, at least sheâd know. Then she could move on.
It helped that her best friend was also the librarian of the Perkins-Stewart Public Library. By asking Gabrielle to speak, Sharon had given her a reason to come to town. Gabrielle was ready for her talk at the library, but she didnât expect to see Derek there tonight. She considered herself a pretty good judge of character, and given what she knew of Derek, heâd avoid her lecture on curses at all costs.
That was fine with her. Gabrielle preferred to set her own agenda where Derek was concerned.
Her first stop this morning was the Rhodes Inn, which consisted of a trio of rooms in an old boarding house. Though Boston was only an hour away, Gabrielle wanted to visit for a few days so sheâd taken a room at the inn run by Adele Rhodes, Gabrielleâs fifth-grade teacher, a nice woman whoâd indulged Gabrielleâs love of school and writing. When Gabrielle had called to rent a room, Mrs. Rhodes had been thrilled to hear from her now-famous student.
Gabrielle checked in and shared a warm reunion with her former teacher. She unpacked her suitcase and personal items, climbed back into her convertible and drove to Sharonâs house on the outskirts of town.
Sharon and her fiancé, Richard Stern, had bought their own home in Perkins. But until they married after the election in the fall, Sharon still lived with her parents. Richard was running for mayor of Perkins against the previously uncontested Mary Perkins. He couldnât afford the scandal living in sin would cause. Once upon a time, Sharon would have had no problem flouting convention, but a painful episode in her past had changed that. These days, Sharon was happy but more subdued.
Gabrielle parked out front and rang the doorbell of the old Cape-style home. Sharon opened the door and greeted Gabrielle with a huge hug.
âIâm so glad youâre back,â Sharon said, releasing her.
Although theyâd kept in touch by phone and e-mail and Sharon had visited Gabrielle in Florida, this reunion was different. Gabrielle hadnât been back in town for almost fourteen years. Sheâd avoided this placeâand the memories of Derekâfor way too long. But now that she was living within driving distance, she was finished staying away.
Gabrielle smiled. âIâm happy to be back, too. You look great,â she said, taking in her friendâs long blond hair and