They Called Her Porch Repair an Eyesore Until She Opened the Battered Suitcase

Chapter 1: The Suitcase Stopped at the Clubhouse Door

Nicholas Harris put his palm out before Barbara Hall could cross the marble threshold.

Not high, not rough enough to look like a shove, but close enough that the heel of his hand brushed the front of her rain-dark coat and made her stop. Behind him, the clubhouse glowed with chandeliers, white tablecloths, polished silver coffee urns, and the soft clatter of people pretending not to stare.

Barbara’s fingers tightened around the handle of the brown suitcase.

It was too old for that room. Its corners were scuffed pale. One brass clasp sat crooked from years of being forced shut around more papers than it was meant to hold. The leather handle had been wrapped twice with black tape where it had split. She had carried it from her front hall, down the back steps, across the driveway, into a hired car she did not tell anyone she had ordered, and now into the lobby of the Cedar Glen clubhouse, where the annual reception was already underway.

Nicholas looked at the suitcase first, then at her.

“Mrs. Hall,” he said, keeping his voice low because the room behind him had gone quiet enough to hear anyway. “You can’t bring that inside.”

Barbara breathed through the small burn in her hip. She had taken the back door again before leaving home, and the extra steps had made her leg stiff by the time the car reached the clubhouse. She shifted the suitcase half an inch so it rested against her shin.

“I’m on the agenda,” she said.

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