these seals as a kid, maybe she could use that and try to change his mind about her access. She wasnât above begging, or conniving.
Whatever it took to snatch back a bit of control.
Not only did she have three funding grants riding on this, but her professional reputation as well. She didnât want years of work to be wasted because somebody had a chip on their shoulder about conservation programs. She had her university, the Fisheries Department and the Castleridge Town Shire to remind her of that. They were expecting results in return for their contribution and it was her job to get them, come hell or high water.
Or hot, surly city lawyers.
Â
âSo, what was the good news?â Grant drained the last of his coffee and stared meaningfully at Castleridgeâs mayor.
Alan Sefton chuckled. âTwelve weeks is pretty short for probate settlement, as you know. You should be thanking me.â
Three months before he could legally boot Kate Dickson and her team off his land.
âThank you for agreeing to be Dadâs executor,â he allowed.
The older man smiled sadly. âI was aware that he wouldnât⦠That you and heâ¦â Grant lifted one hand and Alan gratefully picked up the cue to move on. âDid you know heâd left you the farm?â
âI had no idea.â
âYou were still his son. His only heir. Time couldnât change that, nor distance.â
âIt wouldnât have surprised me if heâd left the farm to those greenies just to spite me.â
Alan frowned. âSpite is not a trait I connected with Leo. Belligerence, absolutely. Selective hearing, sometimes. But he was not a man who wasted time on petty grudges.â
Grant let that sink in. âPerhaps he mellowed in the twenty years we were apart.â
âOr perhaps you did.â
Silence fell. With no other customers this early in the Castleridge café, the tinny radio coming from the kitchen was the only other noise.
Alan cleared his throat. âHow are you doing, son?â
Son. It had been a long time since anyone had called him thatâsince his mother had died early in his life. His father had called him exclusively by his given name growing up, his school teachers by his surname, and his staff tended towards âsirâ. Just hearing the phrase âsonâ brought a certain familiarity to the discussion. If anyone else had asked him how he was getting on, he would have moved the conversation quickly on.
But discovering a body together had a way of forging a bondbetween strangers. The genuine question deserved a genuine answer.
âIâmâ¦getting by.â
âHow are you finding being in his house?â
âItâs fine.â And, surprisingly, it was, despite everything. âItâs been so long since I lived there with him; itâs not like the walls are infused with his spirit, you know?â
Alan nodded.
âUnlike his tobacco,â Grant said. âTwenty years didnât change that habit.â The memories of his distinctive brand made it too hard to sleep. âI had to repaint the whole place to get rid of the smell.â
A dark shadow crossed the mayorâs face before he masked it.
Grant moved the conversation on. âWhat else did you want to tell me?â
Alan caught the eye of the teenage waitress and interrupted her nail-varnishing session at a far table to indicate it was time for the bill. âNot tell , so much as ask,â Alan hedged.
Grant waited but nothing further came. âShoot.â
âI know you donât have a lot of connection to Castleridge these days.â
Not a lot, no. But heâd been floored by the number of people who had attended Leoâs funeral, and the amount of prepared dinners that had graced Leoâs freezer when he died. The locals were still looking after their own. âI grew up here, remember? Thereâs still a lot of familiar