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      Darn Sabrina. Couldn’t she be more tunnel-visioned like their other coworker, Olivia?

      “I didn’t sleep well last night,” she said, going with honesty. “Actually, I think I’m kind of an ogre today. Would you mind handling the customers? I’ll do any and all grunt work.”

      Sabrina smiled. “That’s fine.”

      She was too nice. It made Clara feel like a jerk.

      “Thank you.” She retrieved a towel and stood up.

      “Is anything going on... Or...”

      Clara sighed. “It’s complicated. And I’m sure you have things to do.”

      It wasn’t really complicated. And she didn’t have a reason not to tell Sabrina about the situation with Alex.

      “Everybody seems settled right now. Tell me about complicated.”

      “It’s not interesting.”

      “Is it a guy?”

      “Well, yes.” If Sabrina were an antennaed creature, said antennae would’ve been pointing straight upward. “Not in that way,” Clara added, her cheeks starting to feel hot.

      “In what way?”

      “I’ve been avoiding dealing with Jason’s lawyer,” she said, keeping her voice quiet.

      “I understand that,” Sabrina said. “I get it. Legal stuff is terrible and my only experience with it is as an observer. Lindy and Damien’s divorce was just...so toxic. And the fight over the winery and whether or not the prenup meant Lindy got it... My parents were horrible to her. Damien was horrible. I never want to talk to a lawyer again. Anyway... This isn’t about our drama. It’s just to say I understand why that must be completely overwhelming on top of everything else.”

      “Except it turned out the lawyer was calling me for good reason. My brother didn’t leave the ranch to me.”

      Sabrina’s eyes widened. “What?”

      “Apparently, he left it to Alex Donnelly. Well, I mean, not for...forever. But he’s in control of it for a year, before it passes to me.”

      She had entertained the idea of contesting it...for about a minute. She could hardly manage to open her mail. And anyway, it was only for a year. A year of Alex. But there was an end point. She could handle anything for a year.

      Sabrina’s entire demeanor changed. Her usually cheerful mouth went flat, her blue eyes turning cool. “Alex Donnelly?”

      “Yes,” she said. “Is that...significant in some way?”

      For some reason, she imagined Sabrina and Alex together. Together, together. It made her throat feel tight.

      “I’m not a fan of the Donnelly brothers,” Sabrina said, her tone stiff. “I don’t know Alex that well. I just can’t imagine him being less of an asshole than Liam.”

      Her lips looked pale all of a sudden, her expression strained.

      “Well. I’m kind of stuck with this one. Unfortunately.”

      Clara had a feeling there was a lot more to the story about Liam Donnelly. And she also had a feeling it absolutely was in that way. Clara didn’t have any heartbreak like that in her past. She’d experienced too much heartache in the form of death, loss and grief. Putting herself out there romantically hadn’t seemed worth the effort.

      Until Asher. He was...well, it was difficult to explain, even to herself. But he was just so fascinating. So unlike her. So unlike everything in her life. He felt like hope. Like the possibility of something new.

      She didn’t like to think that Asher could end up replicating in her the strange heartbreak-induced facial expression that things with Liam had clearly provoked in Sabrina.

      Clara had been through enough.

      She needed something good. She deserved something good.

      “Alex isn’t going to come up here, is he?” Sabrina asked. “I mean, the Donnellys aren’t going to start hanging out here?”

      “He’s not my guardian,” she said. “It’s not like we’re close or anything. Or like he’s taking care of me. Although, I think that is maybe what Jason was thinking.”

      Her stomach clenched tight. It was so easy to feel mad at Jason, but the anger made her feel guilty too. And she knew that regardless of how she felt about him going back into the military after their father died, no matter how much she wanted to second-guess all of it, she couldn’t demand answers of a dead man. But why couldn’t he simply have stayed with her? Why had he felt compelled to test fate like that? If he didn’t care about himself, the least he could have done was care enough about her.

      Then again, she supposed whatever this was with Alex...it was Jason caring in his way. Through somebody else. By not being here. By sending a check. In this case, he was sending a friend.

      She gritted her teeth. She wasn’t being fair. She knew that. She was just in the anger stage of grieving, wrapped somewhere around denial. Angry denial.

      “I mean, of course if they come up here it’s fine,” Sabrina said, forcing a smile. The color returned to her cheeks, to her lips, and she seemed to be grappling now with feeling embarrassed. “I’m sorry. It’s really stupid. The whole thing about me not liking the Donnellys. It was a long time ago. A lot has changed.”

      “Is there a meeting I don’t know about?”

      Olivia Logan had walked across the dining room, and was now standing behind Sabrina looking, well, smooth and implacable and impossible to read.

      It was difficult to say whether Olivia liked them or not. She wasn’t unkind at all, she was just extremely focused. On work, on her boyfriend. And there was a kind of natural aloofness to her demeanor. But then, her ancestors were quite literally the founders of Logan County, the namesakes. It was entirely possible she perceived Olivia as being slightly uppity for that reason alone.

      “No,” Sabrina said. “We were just talking about family stuff.”

      Olivia’s mouth tightened into a firm line. “Oh.”

      “Do you need help?” Sabrina asked.

      “Oh, with all the guests? Actually, no. Everything is handled.” Olivia was a funny, efficient creature. She was nice enough, but sometimes seemed like she didn’t quite understand how to make light conversation. She was intense and goal-oriented, which made her good at every job she set out to do. But made her not so great with small talk.

      Not that Clara was an expert in it.

      “Do you guys want to hang out tonight?” Sabrina looked so hopeful. And it made Clara feel slightly guilty.

      Olivia looked surprised. “Me?”

      “Yes. All three of us.”

      “I can’t,” Clara said, feeling like a jerk. Because she actually could. And she maybe even should. “I mean, Alex is at the ranch. He has been all day. And I need to see what he’s thinking about doing. But once I get settled... Once everything is a little bit more settled I think maybe I can go out sometime.”

      Sabrina turned her focus to Olivia, slightly less hopeful-looking now, but clearly still eager.

      “I’m closing tonight,” Olivia said. “It will be really late by the time I get out of here. So I shouldn’t.”

      Grassroots Winery was nestled in the trees, between the communities of Copper Ridge and Gold Valley, where Olivia lived.

      “I understand,” Sabrina said, sounding slightly deflated.

      “Well, Bennett dropped me off this morning and he’s getting me tonight too. I don’t want to put him out,” Olivia added.

      Bennett was Olivia’s

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