Signed, Sealed, Delivered: Chapter 16
Signed, Sealed, Delivered: A brother’s best friend / anonymous penpal romance (Wells Family)
Age 21:
To: shinyobjects@gmail.com
From: lilypad10@gmail.com
*Attached picture of puppies in a shelter*
Iâm volunteering at a shelter this week for extra credit, and I need you to see the cuteness surrounding me. There is no way I can make it a whole week without taking one of these little guys home. Look at the one with the different colored eyes! Heâs practically begging me to adopt him.
Anyway, I need help with picking out a name, so give me all your best suggestions. Iâm thinking Deeogee (get it? Like D.O.G.). I know, Iâm hilarious.
Anyway, happy Monday, my friend!
Hugs and puppies,
Lil
***
Pulling a chair up to the table, I squished up next to Marigold and waved at Nathan to sit beside me. He looked uncertain, glancing around the table to where Luke sat. Finally, he pulled a chair up beside me and settled in it.
Dropping my elbows to the table, I leaned forward. Iâd never been great at dining etiquette. âHave you guys had fun?â
Luke took a sip of his drinkâthe new Nathan-ator, if I had to guess. I had been hearing a lot about it. âYeah. Iâm really loving the shirts.â All the guys, except Adam, of course, were wearing matching Skywalker shirts.
Luke tipped closer to Layla and gave her a look full of gentleness and compassion. âHave you had a good time?â he asked her in a voice so soft I could barely hear it over the music.
Layla nodded like a bobblehead. âCalla showed me the romance section of every bookstore, and there was a bottomless mimosa spot outside one of our stops. Actually, I donât know if it was bottomless. All I know is that I never found the bottom of it.â
Luke laughed and patted her hand. âI donât think you did either.â
Soon enough, Crew and Liam left the group of women sitting at the bar and joined us, each grabbing a spare seat from the surrounding tables and forcing Nathan to scoot his chair closer to me.
Nathan turned to Crew, who had a bright red lipstick stain on his cheek. âHow did that go?â
My brother snorted. âAll I had to do was show a few pictures of me with my adorable nephews at the park and they were tossing numbers at us like confetti.â He turned to Liam. âAnd you said it wouldnât work.â
Liam lowered his brows. âI said your Hawaiian shirt wouldnât pull.â
Crew looked down. Heâd layered the Hawaiian shirt over the Skywalker shirt, leaving it unbuttoned. âThey liked me, Hawaiian shirt and all, so suck on that.â
Marigold laughed to my right, a little louder than necessary. âI hope those poor girls know how badly you snore, Liam. I wouldnât want them awake all night, listening to the water buffalo snoozing next to them.â
Liam smirked, his eyes flashing as he canted forward in his seat. I knew that look all too well. Liam loved to find someone to mess with, to argue with, and Marigold was the easiest one to set off.
âAhh, I wouldnât be too worried about them getting any sleep, Goldie.â
Dang. If Marigold had the supernatural power to set a man on fire with a single look, Liam wouldâve been a flaming ball of cockiness right now.
Unfortunately, she did not possess such skills. So as retaliation, she just glared at him. âWere you sure to tell them you have to stretch before bed on account of your old man back?â
Liam scoffed, his smirk growing further. âAt least I donât watch Bluey for hours after my kids go to bed.â
Marigold gasped and slapped her palm to her chest. âBluey is for adults. I wouldnât expect your pea-brain to understand that.â
Liam practically growled at her as he leaned back, shooting daggers and looking like he was about to punch a wall. The tension between them descended on the table like a thick fog.
Layla faked a gasp. âI love this song.â She turned to Luke. âLetâs dance!â
Luke cocked his head to the side, oblivious. âDo you even know this song?â
Layla narrowed her eyes and elbowed him. âItâs only my favorite song ever. Remember?â
Lukeâs eyes widened, then traveled from Liam to Marigold. âOh yes, yes.â He nodded. âThis is a great song.â
The rest of us followed suit, all spouting some form of âYeah, letâs danceâ and âSure, why not?â in order to avoid the crossfire happening between the divorced couple at the table.
Rachel, Laylaâs best friend, moseyed up to where Adam, my mom, and my dad had settled at the jukebox, surely about to take over song selection.
Luke and Layla headed straight to the dance floor, wrapped in each otherâs arms, swaying back and forth to the beat of the slower song. Crew also hit the dance floor. But with no partner, he simply shrugged and raised both arms, a beer in one hand andâ¦was that a soft pretzel in the other? Either way, he swayed to the music by himself.
I leaned against the far wall, where I had the perfect view of my siblings and our friends. I couldnât help but laugh at Marigold and Liam. They were practically nose to nose, leaning over the table, making snarky comments.
Everyone I cared for most was here. Sure, I had friends here and there, but none of them even came close to the people here tonight. Except Shiny. But Iâd email him later tonight, and all would be right in the world.
Luke and Layla were still dancing. He was sliding his hand down to the top of her waist and whispering in her ear, and she was throwing her head back in laughter.
I rolled my eyes and scoffed. How it took them three years to figure out what was right in front of them, Iâd never know.
Behind me, a throat cleared, and I turned toward the sound. Nathan had his arms crossed, and he was smirking at Luke and Layla.
I smiled at him and turned back. âYou would think theyâd be sick of each other by now.â
Nathan chuckled. âI guess theyâve been dancing around each other for so long they want to make up for lost time.â
At that exact moment, Luke lowered his hand farther and squeezed Laylaâs butt, making her laugh even harder.
âUgh, gross.â I groaned. There were some things better left unseen.
I turned my back to them, facing Nathan.
He laughed and took a sip from his water bottle. âI think itâs sweet.â
âOh yeah?â I smirked. âYou a big romance guy? You can borrow a couple of my new books if you want.â
âNot necessarily romance, you dork. But having one special person in my life? Finding my other half? Yeah, I want that one day.â He watched Luke and Layla with a mix of envy and desperation. It was honestly precious.
I could picture Nathan settling down with a nice girl; sheâd be all put together. Her hair would be perfectly straightened every morning, and sheâd never eat cereal while sprawled out on her kitchen floor in her pjs. Sheâd make gourmet dinners using quinoa and never once miss a credit card payment.
Was it possible to want to slap a figment of oneâs imagination? Because if so, homegirl is wrecked. There wasnât a woman in existence who was worthy of such a caring and funny man. The day he brought home a girl and I had to show her my lipstick knife would be an awkward one.
My stomach growled, pulling me out of my musings about Nathan and his future wife.
âHey.â I tugged the bottom of his shirt. âDo you want to go to Libertyâs?â
He sighed. âCan you really eat Philly cheese steaks at any hour?â
I nodded with a smile. âSome would say itâs my most impressive skill.â
âSome would say itâs an obsession.â
Nathan and I pulled an Irish goodbye and slipped out of Romfuzzled without stopping to wish the future bride and groom goodnight. Judging by their dancing, they wouldnât miss us a bit.
Twenty minutes later, we were sitting side by side in Bessie with messy handfuls of Philly cheesesteak sub.
With a sigh, I slumped back in my seat. âI swear they put crack in their sandwiches.â I took an oversized bite, stuffing my cheeks full.
Nathan scanned the sketchy, mostly empty, very dark parking lot. âUh, yeah. I wouldnât be surprised at that.â
I snorted and elbowed him. âDonât act like you didnât eat here for lunch yesterday. I saw the receipt in the trash can.â
âYou went through my trash?â
âI didnât go through it,â I said in my best mocking Nathan tone, throwing in an eye roll. âIt was sitting on top when I threw away my own trash, practically begging for me to read it.â
He took another bite of his sandwich and avoided my gaze, basically admitting I was right without coming out and saying it.
âSo, any job interviews yet?â
I had been searching my email like a madwoman, as though my spam account would hold a magic job opportunity. Instead, all Iâd been met with were Bath and Body Works three-wick candle sales and notifications from real estate websites that a new apartment, which was far beyond my price point, was now available.
âNone yet. Iâm still hoping to get into a position where I run social media accounts and maybe work with the players. My resume is tinyââabysmal, reallyââbut I have tons of photography experience. And maybe my work with Luke and your lessons will help keep me from looking like such a fraud.â
A fraud was exactly what I felt like as I applied for job after job I was nowhere near qualified for. An unskilled impostor. I was trapped in a vicious cycle. I couldnât get a job without experience, but I couldnât get the experience necessary without a job.
Nathan set his sandwich on its paper in his lap and wiped the corner of his mouth with his napkin. He turned to me, and in a tone more serious than Iâd ever heard from him, he said, âYou donât actually believe that, right? That youâre an impostor?â
Silence was my only answer. Sure, I knew Iâd be good at a job like that, but I wasnât sure I had what it took to get hired. All I had was a degree and a brother who, thankfully, saw an inkling of potential in me.
I picked at my sandwich, pulling at a pepper so I could hide my disappointment.
âCalla.â Nathan reached over the console and placed two long fingers under my chin, forcing me to turn his way. His deep brown eyes locked on mine, and a wave of comfort and familiarity rushed through me, followed by a contrasting spike of adrenaline and a yearning that got my blood pumping. Like a sugar rush after eating Momâs coconut cake. A bite of nostalgia and cheer now; a rush of exhilaration later.
âYou are not an impostor. Youâve done things in one day that I couldnât do in a year. Youâve tripled the number of followers for Romfuzzled in only a couple of weeks.â
He was right. Iâd seen the barâs socials grow, but it hadnât really sunken in. Like my brain wouldnât let my heart get involved.
I shrugged. âI canât put that kind of stuff on paper, and they wonât see how amazing I am if I canât even nail an interview.â
My reply was casual, but Nathan wasnât letting up.
âCalla, seriously, you have talent. And once the right employer sees that, theyâll snatch you up so fast.â
He sounded so certain. As if he had this vision of success and possessed a confidence that I would reach the potential heâd somehow planted in his mind. And maybe he was right. Maybe Iâd luck out and get called for an interview. I had no problem making a good first impression. And I was very good at small talk: weather, school districts, paint colors. You know, the works. If I could just get my foot in the doorâ¦
âHow do you do that?â I whispered.
âDo what?â
âMake me feel like I can actually do this.â
He snorted. âYou can actually do it. I donât put my faith in things I donât believe in. But you, Calla, are something worthy of all my confidence.â
Maybe it was the butt-warming seat heaters or the peppers finally kicking in, but my cheeks warmed at how undoubtedly sure of me he was.
Nathan shrugged and took another bite of his sandwich, his attention focused on the building across the parking lot. âAnd if it takes a while to find a job, that means I get to keep you as a roommate for a while longer, and I have to say, I donât mind that at all.â
It hit me then. Spending my night in a dimly lit parking lot with Nathan Huxley, laughing so hard my cheeks hurt and stuffing my face full of Philly cheesesteaks, had become one of my favorite pastimes. Watching his chest rise and fall when he chuckled or how he would tilt his head like a puppy when I was telling a story. And the way his eyes filled with such intent and curiosity made my heart race like Iâd run up a flight of stairs.
Maybe I needed a few minutes to myself to figure out what that meant.