A Treasure Worth Seeking Read online




  A Treasure Worth Seeking

  Sandra Brown

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  Chapter One

  In spite of the calm assurance she projected, Erin O’Shea was quaking with nervousness as she pressed the doorbell. She heard the chimes tolling within the interior of the house. It was an attractive house, situated in one of San Francisco’s middle-class neighborhoods.

  Glancing over her shoulder at the other houses lining the street, Erin reflected on the well-maintained neighborhood. The lawns were well kept; the houses, if not ostentatious, were immaculate and tasteful. The house she stood before was painted dove gray and accented with white trim. Like all the other houses on the street, it typified San Francisco’s architecture, having the garage level with the street and the house elevated. Steep concrete steps led up to the front door, which boasted an old-fashioned etched glass window.

  She tried to peer through the opaque glass and glimpse some sign of movement as she listened for approaching footsteps, but could see nothing and heard no sounds from within the house.

  What if no one were at home? Erin hadn’t thought of that possibility. Indeed, she had thought of nothing since she had deplaned from the flight from Houston except finding this house. Her thoughts while navigating the picturesque streets of San Francisco had been single-minded and purposeful. Today was the culmination of a three-year search. She had prevailed over musty record books, endless long-distance telephone calls, slammed doors, and disappointing false leads to be standing here at this moment.

  Today she would see her brother for the first time in her life. Today she would be face-to-face with her only blood relative.

  Her heart lurched when she heard footsteps coming toward the door. His wife? A maid? Her brother? She swallowed hard.

  The door was opened slowly. He stood in front of her. “Mr. Kenneth Lyman?” she asked.

  He didn’t answer her. Instead his eyes raked her from the top of her head to her toes. His rapid inspection couldn’t have taken more than a fraction of a second, but she felt that he had missed nothing.

  “Mr. Kenneth Lyman?” she repeated.

  He nodded curtly.

  All her nervousness fled and was replaced by immeasurable joy when the man confirmed that he was her brother. He was so handsome! She was surprised to find nothing in his features that resembled her. He was as fair as she was dark. Whenever she had tried to visualize him, she had conjured up a face that was a masculine version of her own, but this man was nothing like she expected.

  His hair was sandy brown, but when only a glimmer of the weak February sunlight struck it, it shone golden. Perched atop the mussed strands was a pair of eyeglasses with narrow tortoiseshell frames. The eyebrows that bridged his wide forehead were thick and as golden as his hair. Blue eyes, which were scrutinizing her closely, were fringed by thick short lashes that were dark at the base and gilded at the ends.

  His nose was straight and narrow. The mouth underneath it was firm, wide, almost stern. There was a beguiling vertical cleft in his strong chin that suggested a stubbornness of will.

  “Forgive me for staring,” she apologized even as she continued to look at him intently. Would she ever tire of seeing this face she had searched for for so long?

  He still didn’t say anything. His eyes darted behind her as if he expected to see someone accompanying her. They took in the white Mercedes she had rented at the airport, the house across the street, the entire surroundings in one sweeping glance before they came back to her. It was disconcerting that he hadn’t said anything. But then, he didn’t know who she was.

  “I’ve come a long way to see you,” she said for a start. “May I come in and talk to you for a moment?”

  “What do we have to talk about?”

  Her heart was pierced by a sweet pain at the first sound of his deep, low-timbred voice. But the pleasure changed to shyness in deference to his harsh tone. He probably thought she was selling something. “I… well, it’s rather personal.” She didn’t want to introduce herself to him while standing on the doorstep.

  “Okay. You’d better come in.” He moved aside and she took a tentative step through the front door. He glanced around the yard once more before closing the door and turning to face her.

  Standing this close to him, she was made aware for the first time how tall he was. She was considered tall for a woman, and yet he seemed to tower over her. Or maybe it was his overbearing attitude. Her brother seemed to exude power and a commanding control. He wasn’t muscle-bound, but radiated a strength that was intimidating.

  Erin looked past the loosened knot of his necktie to the strong cords of his neck. The sleeves of his shirt had been rolled to his elbows to reveal tanned, sinewy forearms. The white cotton was stretched across a broad chest that tapered into a flat stomach, and his long legs were hard and lean beneath gray flannel slacks. Perhaps he played basketball. Tennis? Surely he was athletically inclined to have maintained this wiry physique. She knew him to be thirty-three.

  He perpetuated the unnerving silence and stared at her with as much temerity as she was looking at him. When she shifted her handbag from her shoulder to under her arm, every muscle in his body tensed though he hadn’t actually moved. He was like a cat about to pounce.

  He isn’t making this easy for me, Erin thought. Maybe he didn’t want to know what had happened to the younger sister from whom he had been separated thirty years ago. Maybe he wasn’t even aware he had a sister.

  “My name is Erin O’Shea,” she said by way of introduction.

  “Miss O’Shea,” he spoke her name in that same stirring voice. His blue eyes hadn’t left her face. She moistened her drying lips with the tip of her tongue.

  “May I sit down somewhere?” she asked.

  With an outstretched hand he indicated a room to the left of the entrance hall and she walked toward it. She assessed the comfortable furnishings of the house. It was tastefully, though not expensively, decorated. Somehow the interior of the house didn’t coincide with her first impressions of her brother. She thought he would have leaned toward a more austere decor to match his taciturn personality.

  What was she doing? She hadn’t been with him for more than a few minutes, and she was already analyzing his psyche! Still, the house, this room where she was taking a seat on a splashy sofa, didn’t seem to fit the man. Most likely his wife had decorated the house.

  “Is Melanie at home?” she asked politely.

  His answer was slow and careful. “No. She had to go out.”

  Erin smiled and relaxed somewhat. She was glad that they would have some time alone. Having an audience when she identified herself might make them both uncomfortable. “Now that I think about it, I’m surprised to find you at home in the middle of a weekday. I would have thought you’d be at the bank.” She knew her brother was a banker.

  The eyes he had narrowed on her now shifted to her brown suede purse, which she had placed beside her on the sofa. He had a way of making one feel that he hadn’t missed a movement. “I came home early today,” was his only reply.

  “Kenneth—may I call you Kenneth?” At his nod, she continued. The time had come. “Kenne
th, what I’m going to tell you will surprise you.” She laughed nervously. “Maybe shock is a better word.” She looked at her hands clasped tightly together in her lap, then lifted her head and met his eyes directly.

  “You knew that you were adopted?”

  Again the blue eyes narrowed as they studied her. There was an almost imperceptible lowering of his clefted chin to indicate an affirmative answer.

  She drew a deep breath. “I’ve been looking for you for years, Kenneth. I’m your sister.”

  His face registered no expression. She sat tensely, waiting for some reaction. Erin had expected him to rush across the rug and embrace her, laugh, cry, curse, show dismay, anything but sit there and stare at her with his masklike face fixed in rigid lines.

  Finally, he reached for the eyeglasses on top of his head and took them off, twirling the stem in his hand as he said, “My sister?”

  “Yes!” She nodded her head enthusiastically, making her short dark curls bounce. “I know it’s incredible, but it’s true! May I tell you what I know?”

  “Please.” He still wasn’t excited about her revelation, but at least he was responding. More than anything she wanted to dispel his wariness of her.

  “We were adopted from a small Catholic orphanage in Los Angeles. Did you know that?”

  “I think so,” he answered noncommittally.

  “You are three years older than I. Our mother gave us up for adoption when I was only several months old. I was adopted by a couple named O’Shea. Soon after they got me, they moved to Houston, Texas, where I grew up. It wasn’t until I was in high school that I began to be bothered about who I was and where I came from. I guess that’s true of all adolescents, but having been adopted, it was even more important for me to find my roots, so to speak. I’m sure you can relate to that feeling.”

  “Yes,” he said. He was slouching in the overstuffed chair with his arms folded across his chest. It was a relaxed position, but Erin sensed that his insouciance was deceptive. Her brother seemed never to be totally relaxed.

  “It was years later that I was finally able, financially and every other way, to begin an earnest search for my true identity. There are organizations now that help adopted children locate their natural parents or lost siblings. Believe me, by now I know them all. I left no stone unturned. Almost four years ago—”

  She broke off when the red telephone on the desk rang. With the alacrity of a striking snake, he uncoiled himself from the chair and shot across the room. He jerked up the instrument in the middle of its second ring and answered with a curt “Yes.” He listened for a moment, never diverting his eyes from Erin’s astonished face. “Yeah. No, everything’s cool. I’ll be in touch.” He replaced the telephone receiver and then returned to his chair. “Go on,” he said calmly.

  Erin was nonplussed by his abrupt, economical movements. Didn’t one usually say “Excuse me” when they answered the telephone while engaged in conversation with someone else? And why had he attacked the telephone instead of answering it casually? Was he expecting an important call?

  “Well, I…” she stammered. What had she been saying? He seemed suspicious of her losing her train of thought.

  “You were saying, ‘Almost four years ago…’ ”

  “Oh, yes,” she said nervously. “Almost four years ago, I began an extensive search for our natural parents. My adoptive mother understood this compulsion I had to find them and supplied me with the name of the orphanage in Los Angeles. I was heartsick to discover that sometime subsequent to our being adopted, it had burned and all the records with it. That set me back for months. Finally, I was able to locate a nun who had been at the orphanage at the time we were brought in. That was when I first learned about you.” To her chagrin, her voice began to quiver and she could feel tears filling her dark, liquid eyes.

  “Can you understand my happiness that day? I had a brother! Someone I shared a heritage with. I began to examine faces in a crowd. Each man of your age, I studied, wondering if he might be you. I won’t bore you with all the tedious details now, but I traced your adoptive parents. That was relatively simple since they had stayed in Los Angeles. I’m sorry about their demise. They were killed several years ago, I believe?”

  “Yes.”

  “I lost Dad, Mr. O’Shea, when I was in college. I hope you were as lucky as I with the family who adopted you. The O’Sheas loved me as if I were their own flesh and blood. And I love them.”

  “Yes, my parents, or rather, the Lymans, were terrific.”

  “Oh, I’m so glad,” she enthused. “One of the agencies I was telling you about helped me trace you here. I know all about you, but not nearly as much as I want to know. I want to know everything about you, your life.”

  The glasses were precariously clinging to the tip of his nose, and he stared at her over their frames. Now he took them off and placed them on the table at his elbow. “That’s quite a story,” he said. “We don’t look much like each other. Who would believe that we’re brother and sister?”

  She laughed, glad now that they seemed to be sharing a normal conversation. The hard lines around his mouth had softened. She must be patient with him. After all, she had dumped quite a load on him today. “I thought the same thing when you answered the door. There’s no resemblance at all.”

  His eyes were taking in each feature of her face and she sat still while he perused her, allowing him the same privilege she had afforded herself when she first saw him.

  He scanned the tumbled sable curls that surrounded her head and fanned away from her face. Dark, smooth brows arched winglike over her eyes—Natalie Wood eyes, one of her high school sweethearts had dubbed them. They were round and large and as dark as ebony. When she lived in New York, she had consulted a makeup expert who taught her how to accent them with just the right touch of pencils and shadows. The result was heart-stopping to someone meeting her for the first time. Her eyes expressed more of what Erin felt and thought than words ever could.

  It made her nervous for her brother to examine her with such keen interest. His eyes dwelt an inordinate amount of time on her lips which were soft and moist and accustomed to smiling.

  As his eyes traveled from her chin down her throat, he seemed to take note that her smooth complexion, delicately fair in contrast to her dark hair and eyes, extended to her neck and beyond.

  Erin smoothed imaginary wrinkles from the skirt of her white wool suit as he continued to appraise her. The emerald green silk blouse she wore under her jacket suddenly seemed stifling, especially when his eyes lingered on the single strand of coral beads that rested on her breasts. She uncrossed her legs self-consciously when his eyes raked them from her knees to the toes of her brown suede pumps.

  His eyes returned to her face and he stood up, crossing the room to stand in front of her. “Not every man is fortunate enough to have a sister,” he said quietly as he looked down at her. “Learning of her existence in midlife is a phenomenon. Having her be as lovely as you is a rare pleasure indeed.”

  She blushed happily. “Thank you, Kenneth.” He was proud of her! Perhaps in time she and this stranger could come to know and like each other—maybe even grow to love each other.

  “Would you like something to drink?” He held out his hand and she accepted it unhesitantly as he helped her off the cushions of the couch. His hand was warm as he clasped her fingers fleetingly.

  “Yes, thank you. The flight was crowded and I was too excited and in too big a hurry to stop for anything before coming here. I hope you don’t think it was rude of me to just drop in like this. I thought it best to meet you in person and not try to introduce myself over the telephone.”

  “You were right. I’m glad you came straight here.”

  He was propelling her through the house—down the main hallway, through a dining room—into a sunny kitchen. She looked at the view out the window. Kenneth’s house was situated on a hill, but unfortunately it didn’t provide a view of the bay, or the Golden Gate Bridge, or any
other distinctive landmark of this fabulous city. Instead, the view was dotted with the rooftops of houses on the lower slopes of the hillside.

  Kenneth offered her a chair at the small round table that stood in the center of the kitchen. “What will you have? Coke? Beer? Wine?”

  “Coke, please,” she said. “I’m anxious to meet your wife. Does she know that you were adopted?”

  He ignored her question as he opened a can of the soft drink and reached for two glasses in the cabinet over the counter top. As he chunked ice cubes into the glasses he said, “Melanie should be back shortly. She went out to run a few errands.”

  “How long have you been married?”

  He paused as he handed her the glass of Coke. “Several years now,” he answered lightly. He smiled charmingly, and for the first time Erin saw two rows of perfectly matched, startling white teeth. He really was quite handsome when he wasn’t wearing that surly, suspicious expression. “You’re married, I see,” he commented nonchalantly as he took the chair across the table from hers.

  She followed the direction of his eyes to the large diamond ring on her left ring finger. “No,” she muttered. “Just engaged.” For some reason, she didn’t want to tell him about Bart right now. Bart had a way of dominating a conversation, and she didn’t want even a mention of him to intrude on the special, rare intimacy of this first meeting with her brother. “Tell me about your work,” she blurted out in order to change the subject.

  “What about it?” he asked evenly. Erin was alarmed to see that he was staring at her again with that narrow-eyed stare that made her feel like a laboratory animal under a glass.

  “What exactly do you do? I know you work at a bank.”

  “Yeah,” he shrugged. “I guess I do a little of everything.”

  “I see,” she said, though she didn’t.

  “You?” he asked. “What do you do?”

  “I have my own business in Houston.”

  The thick golden eyebrows raised in silent query. “What kind of business?” He leaned his elbows on the table and propped his chin on his fists. The backs of his hands and his knuckles were sprinkled with crinkly blond hairs. His fingers were long and tapering, not thick and stubby like Bart’s. His nails were well cared for, she noted objectively.