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a time for a company there. Of course, when she found out her dad had been sickā€”and that had been thanks to a call from Jakeā€”sheā€™d quit her job in Austin and come home.

Sheā€™d taken the position at Angelā€™s to earn money, and sheā€™d been surprised by just how good the tips were. Eventually, sheā€™d look for another graphic design position, one she could do from home. Or maybe sheā€™d even start her own company. That was a prospect sheā€™d thought about off and on for the last several months.

Leaving the porch, she took this timeā€”with the sun still fairly low in the sky it wasnā€™t too hot yet this second week of Juneā€”and walked around the house. Sheā€™d laid her father to rest the day before, between her mother and her brother. While sheā€™d done her best to be an attentive, caring daughter as sheā€™d helped him these last several months, sheā€™d had to show him an air of confidence and deference that she didnā€™t necessarily feel.

Today was a new day and, as that old clichĆ© went, the first day of the rest of her life. So as she walked around the house proper, her eye became critical as she took in every detail. Her father hadnā€™t seen to the upkeep of much in the last few years since her mother had passed. Hell, he hadnā€™t done much more than the bare minimum since her only sibling, Daniel, had died in Afghanistan ten years before.

The house definitely needed painting, and a couple of windows should be replaced. There was that one step leading to the porch that needed to be fixed, and several on the porch floor needed to be replaced, too. She hated the look of the propane tank. Her grandfather had installed the so-called modern convenience, and she had to admit using the fuel for the furnace was better than using wood stoves for those few cold days. So sheā€™d make a note and check out switching to electric heat.

All in all, it was more house than she would need until that nebulous day in the future when she marriedā€”if she marriedā€”and had a family. The barn probably needed work too, and the fields had been left fallow for a good long while.

Do as I tell you. When Iā€™m gone, sell and get yourself back to the city. Youā€™re only a useless girl. You canā€™t stay here. You wouldnā€™t be able to handle it. Youā€™d only destroy my heritage.

Michaela pushed away the words her father had spoken before heā€™d fallen into that final coma. She didnā€™t doubt heā€™d meant them. Heā€™d had a habit of dismissing her for as far back as she could remember, but especially after Daniel died. But her father was gone now, and she believed that it had been his fearā€”he knew he was dyingā€”that had prompted those hateful words.

Yes, it would take a lot of work, no doubt about it. But this farm had been home for all of her life. It was her heritage, too. She was really hoping it could continue to be so, that this place was where sheā€™d make her mark in life and that it would turn out to be her legacy.

Thinking that particular word drew her attention to the back of the property, where, in the distance but very visible, that beautiful old live oak grew hale and hardy. Her father said his dad had named it the Legacy Tree. Sheā€™d asked him why, but heā€™d had no answer. Not about that, nor about much of anything else, either.

ā€œI donā€™t have any answers about anything. But maybe Jake has some for me.ā€

She turned on her heel and headed back into the house. She needed to shower, dress, and grab a quick breakfast. And then sheā€™d go and see Jake.

Less than an hour later, she arrived at Jakeā€™s office. She hadnā€™t been there before, nor had she seriously spent much time in Lusty, itself. She liked the look of the place. From what she sheā€™d seen so far, neat and tidy and vibrant were the best adjectives she could think of to describe this small town.

Weird I havenā€™t been here much, considering I know so many of the people. Of course, she had been very busy over the last several months. Between working and taking care of her father, she hadnā€™t had much spare time.

But this was the first day of the rest of her life. Michaela made a vow then and there that sheā€™d change that. She could go for breakfast some days to the restaurant, Lusty Appetites, and goodness knew she could use a good spa day now and again.

And then there was that museum sheā€™d heard so much about. Sheā€™d visit that, too, as well as the library.

Jake came out of an inner office the moment she walked in and closed the front door. There was a receptionistā€™s desk there, but it looked as if no one sat there. It was neat as a pin.

ā€œBridget is off today.ā€ He indicated the empty desk. He shook his head. ā€œSheā€™s worked with me a couple of months now, and I swear she gets more done than you could believe, but her desk is always just like that every night. Everything in its place.ā€

Michaela had met Jakeā€™s new assistant shortly after heā€™d hired her. Everything in its place would describe Bridget Carmichaelā€™s appearance, too.

ā€œCome into my office, where things are not nearly as neat, nor as organizedā€”well, not to the untrained eye, anyway.ā€

Michaela had the sense sheā€™d stepped into an old-time lawyerā€™s office. Jakeā€™s desk was big and, sheā€™d bet, an antique. There were bookshelves, and it was the scent of wood polish and leather that loosened the tension that had snuck up on her. She didnā€™t know how or why, but there was something innately comforting in the scent of wood polish and leather.

Jake saw her seated. ā€œIā€™ve tea that Ginny makes for me every day. Would you care for some?ā€

ā€œYes, please.ā€

Jake grinned as he

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