He rose from his chair, catching the linen napkin in his lap before it fell.
Was he glad to see her? Jana couldn’t tell.
“Good morning,” Brandon said, watching her carefully, cautiously almost.
A moment passed and finally Jana said, “I thought I’d join you for breakfast.”
“Well…” Brandon glanced at the two newspapers on the table. “You know I always eat breakfast alone, but well, if you’d like to it’s fine…this time.”
He rounded the table and pulled out a chair for her at the opposite end. For a few seconds she thought he was staring at her backside as she lowered herself into the seat, then dismissed the idea. Her imagination, surely.
A maid entered the room, greeted her and poured coffee as Brandon resumed his chair and his reading.
Another long moment passed in silence after the maid disappeared. The clock in the hallway ticked.
“I see you’re reading two newspapers?” Jana ventured.
Brandon looked up. “The Times and the Messenger,” he said and turned back to his reading.
Jana fiddled with her spoon. “I thought it would be nice if we hosted an informal supper.”
Brandon looked up again, a frown on his face. “A supper?”
“Yes, so that I can get reaquainted with—”
“You know I like the house quiet.”
Jana shifted in her chair. “Yes, but since I’ve been away, I thought a small supper would be a good way—”
Brandon pushed out of his chair, then folded and tucked both newspapers under his arm. “When I come home in the evenings after a busy, sometimes difficult day, I want things quiet. I don’t like suppers and that sort of thing, and you know it. I don’t know why you’d even suggest it.”
“But—”
“I’m going to the office.” Brandon stopped in the doorway. “I notified that decorator, the one who was here before, what’s-his-name, that you’re ready to resume work on the house.”
Jana’s eyes widened. “Mr. McDowell?”
“Whatever.” Brandon dismissed the name with a wave of his hand. “He’ll be here today.”
“But—”
Brandon walked away without another word, without listening, leaving Jana with a familiar knot of dismay coiling in her stomach.
After a moment, she went up to her room, fetched her hat and handbag, and left the house. At the corner of West Adams Boulevard and St. James Place, she boarded the trolley, paid her nickel fare and spent the day with her aunt.
She was at the house again that evening, well before the designated six o’clock hour. Not that it mattered. Jana passed the time in the one and only decent sitting room until shortly after seven when she ate supper alone, her only company an occasional servant and the ticking of the hallway clock. When Brandon arrived home just after eight, Jana was on her way upstairs.
She turned on the bottom step, watching as he gave Charles his bowler and satchel. After what must have been a long, trying day for him, Brandon still looked fresh…handsome.
Jana silently reprimanded herself for having the thought.
“I received a telephone call from Mr. McDowell today,” Brandon said to her.
“And good evening to you, too,” she countered.
He didn’t notice. “McDowell told me he came by the house but you weren’t here.”
“That’s correct.”
“I told you he was coming by.”
“I’m aware of that,” Jana said. “But, Brandon, I don’t like—”
“I expect things to get back to normal.”
“Back to the way they were?”
“Certainly,” Brandon told her.
Jana stood on the step a moment longer, gazing at him, fighting off a dozen storming emotions.
“You really have no idea at all why I left, do you,” she said. It was a statement, not a question, because she knew without a doubt that he was completely ignorant on the subject.
Brandon just stood there, staring, looking confused, as if trying to understand where her comment had come from, why she’d said it.
When he came up with no response, Jana knew she’d gotten her answer after all.
She turned her back on him and climbed the stairs.
Chapter Five
B randon slapped the papers down on his office desk. “Unacceptable.”
In the chair across from him, Noah Carmichael raised an eyebrow. “Frankly, Brandon, I thought you’d be in a little better mood, now that your wife is back.”
Brandon’s already grumpy disposition grew more foul. He glared at Noah and sat back in his chair. Outside the open window, noise from the traffic on Third and Broadway drifted in, a low hum that was at times soothing, other times irritating.
Today it was irritating. Like everything else in Brandon’s life.
“I take it your reunion isn’t going exactly as you’d planned,” Noah ventured.
“That’s for damn sure,” he grumbled. He sat up straighter in the chair. “Last night she accused me of having no idea why she left.”
“And do you?”
“Of course,” Brandon declared.
“You know because you asked her?”