The Girl I Used to Be: A gripping and emotional page-turner Heidi Hostetter (best ereader under 100 .txt) š
- Author: Heidi Hostetter
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Jill sagged against the back of the chair. āI wish Iād known.ā
āWe all wish that,ā Mrs. Ivey said. āFor a long time, Dianne blamed herself, and it was heartbreaking to see. Even after the divorce, she was afraid to visit, and sheād lived here for most of her life. Marc took that from her.ā
āWhat about her father?ā
āHe lives near her, up in Rhode Island,ā Mrs. Ivey answered. āBut heās not the same man he was.ā
Outside, dusk had turned to darkness. A patter of fall rain tapped on the windowpanes. Chase reached for a blanket and laid it across Mrs. Iveyās lap. She didnāt seem to notice that sheād shivered.
āThat man told us heād come to help, but he didnāt.ā Mrs. Iveyās voice shook with emotion. āHe came to plunder.ā
The thought from earlier tugged at her. She needed to ask again, but she chose her words carefully this time. āDuring our divorce arbitration, Marc said his company hadnāt earned a profit in all the time we were married, but I donāt believe thatās true. To prove it, he submitted a financial packet. Inside was a document from the state. I saw the seal.ā At the time, Jill had disagreed with what Marc had said but she hadnāt looked closely at the financials. A mistake she regretted. āThen earlier today Nancy Pellish said āafter what he did in Mantoloking.ā Do you know what she meant?ā
āI donāt,ā Chase said. āBut Mantolokingās not far from here.ā
āMarc told the judge a property he owned had been declared a total loss. But the only properties I know of are the development in Summit, which he just completed, and the land in the Berkshires, which he just bought. Could the property he mentioned be the same one Nancy Pellish was talking about?ā
āItās possible,ā Chase said slowly. āThere are parts of Mantoloking that are still underwater, even today. The hurricane carved an inlet through a residential neighborhood over by the bridge. I think that town was hit the hardest.ā
Marc had testified that his business hadnāt turned a profit in years, yet theyād both spent money freely. His watch alone had cost almost fifty thousand dollars, her shopping trips had been frequent and pricey. In addition, there had been country club dues, gym memberships, personal trainers, dinner parties, vacationsāthe list was endless. And that was only personal spending.
Chase interrupted her thoughts. āYou said you came for answers. What did you want to ask?ā
āI know that Marc arranged for you, specifically, to be at the party in August. Do you know why? Do you know what he wanted to talk to you about?ā
āI assumed it was about investing.ā Chase shrugged. āMarc always asked me about investing.ā
But Chaseās reply only stirred up more questions.
If Marcās company was losing money, he had nothing to invest. Why bother Chase? But Jill wouldnāt press. Reliving the hurricane had clearly cost them something and Jill couldnāt bring herself to ask for more. It was time to leave. She reached into her bag for her camera and removed the memory card.
āWould you mind giving this to Ryan? He needs it for the website.ā Then she rose from the chair. āThank you for your time.ā
Pausing at the front door, she added, āIām sorry for what Marc did. You can see now that I didnāt have any part in it.ā
āIām not sure that matters,ā Chase answered. āThe fact remains: if youāre selling that house, then youāre part of it.ā
Twenty-Two
Jill hurried back to the beach house.
After leaving the Bennett home, Jill cut down a side street to avoid the festival activity in town, though she didnāt want to. In the few days sheād been here, sheād come to like Dewberry Beachāthe people, the town, the shore. Avoiding them now felt wrong, like she was accepting blame for a scheme sheād had no part in. It bothered her that Chase believed that selling the house made complicit. This was Marcās doing, not hers. Why couldnāt Chase see that? She kicked a stone in her path and it skittered across the street, smacking the opposite curb with a satisfying crack. Marcās lies had affected her as well; she was a victim too. But the worst part was that Marc was free to live his life while those heād deceived struggled to find theirs.
Back at her own house and utterly exhausted, Jill let herself inside, locking the door and drawing the shades, hiding from the neighbors. But she already knew they were watching. She kicked off her shoes and settled into an alcove away from the windows, thinking that she should follow up with the real-estate agent, but she didnāt have the energy.
After all sheād heard, several things still nagged at her: one of them was the idea that Marc had built a single house instead of a development. He never did that, ever. How many times had she overheard him tell his associates, at parties or dinners, that profit came from developments, not singles. āSingle builds lose moneyāāshe could hear his voice as clearly as if he were standing in this room.
And the other was that Marcās whole business was losing money. That wasnāt true either.
Sheād been ordered to leave the Summit house because it had soldāthe last house in a successful development. And if the development wasnāt successful, how could Marc afford to move ahead with the Berkshire development? The money from the mortgage that Cush had stolen was significant, but not nearly enough to pay for the land Marc needed. So where did he get the rest?
It didnāt make sense. None of this made sense.
Maybe she should start with the financial packet Marc had submitted to the judge.
Jill closed her eyes and
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