: Chapter 13
When in Rome
Iâm in a different houseâone that is definitely not Noahâs. The last thing I remember, I was at Hankâs Bar. And now Iâm waking up in a strange bed. Panic is hovering on the seams of my consciousness until I realize this room is incredibly feminine. A pretty floral comforter is lying on top of me, the color palette olive, dusty pink, and cream. There are succulents on the windowsill and a giant bouquet of flowers beside the bed. And Iâm still in my clothes.
The sound of whispering female voices (that are doing a very poor job of actually keeping their voices down) floats through the closed door, and now with a sigh of relief, I know where IÂ am.
âShould we wake her up?â
âNo. The doc said to let her sleep.â
It all suddenly comes back to me in broken fragments. Feeling weird and woozy at the bar. Realizing I took a sleeping pill and then drank alcohol. And then lots of memories featuring Noahâs green eyes: beside me at the bar, looking down at me in his truck, in an exam room as a doctor pried my eyelids open and shined a light into them. And then one more view of his startling green eyes staring at me in the darkânot worried, but something elseâ¦
I cringe, shutting my blurry eyes and groaning. I bet I made a real ass out of myself last night. If he didnât hate me already, he really does now. Maybe thatâs why Iâm here instead of at his house. He packed my bags and kicked me out. I wouldnât blame him if he did.
âItâs almost ten oâclock. Shouldnât we at least make sure sheâs still alive in there?â That voice most definitely belongs to Madison.
âFine, but just peek in to see if sheâs still among the living and then we leave her be. Noah will murder us if he finds out we woke her up.â And thatâs Emily.
âI still canât believe he sat beside her bed all night and monitored her. Did you take a picture? Iâm so mad I didnâtâ
â says Madison, with a loud yelp on the end.
âNo, she didnât take a picture. How are you so rude, Maddie?â
âMe? Annieâs the one whoâs always pinching me! Will you quit it?â
âI prefer pinching to arguing,â says Annie in a better whisper than either of the other two sisters.
And, Did they say Noah sat by my bed all night and monitored me? My gaze slides beside the bed to an innocently empty accent chair that is now pulsing with importance. Itâs angled toward the bed. Noah sat in that chair all night and made sure I was taken care of.
I remember him saying.
The bedroom door opens a crack and I donât even bother pretending to be asleep. Three pairs of eyes blink at me, and I raise a hand in a weak wave. âHi. Iâm alive and I heard all that.â
They push the door open all the way and groan. âSorry. We were trying to be quiet,â says Annie. Sheâs wearing a pj set covered in cartoon bananas.
Madison hops onto the bottom of the bed wearing a bright tie-dyed hoodie, turquoise joggers, and glasses with bubblegum-pink frames. She props herself up on her elbow and rests her head against her knuckles. âSoâ¦sleeping pills, huh?â
âMadison! Donât pry into her life, thatâs rude,â Emily reprimands, flashing me an apologetic smile.
âNo, itâs okay. I thought I was taking my other prescription for a headache but I totally forgot that I had also stuffed my sleep aid in my purse earlier this week. I usually only take it when Iâm visiting another country and have horrible jet lag.â I shake my head. âI feel so bad that I caused so much trouble last night. Iâm really sorry, guys.â
Saying I feel like an idiot would be an understatement. My eyes drift to the angled chair again.
Emily perches on the side of the bed, wearing a sophisticated, satiny lounge set in burgundy. She tucks the covers around my feet like Iâm a burrito. âIf it makes you feel better, you were only trouble for Noah and Anna-banana.â
And now the banana pjâs make more sense.
I look up at Annie. âIâm really sorry. And also, I thought your name was Annie?â She shrugs with a soft smile. âAnnie. Anna-banana. Either one. Theyâre both short for Annabell.â I donât think anyoneâs name has ever fit someone as perfectly as her name fits her. Soft. Southern. Kind and welcoming. Itâs not fair that they are being so hospitable and Iâm doing nothing but taking from them.
I decide to give a little of the thing thatâs hardest to giveâmyself. âWell, my name is actually Amelia. Rae is only a stage name.â
All three of them exchange guilty looks. âWe already know,â says Madison. She raises and lowers a shoulder. âWikipedia is such a little snitch. You can find every celebrityâs name and home address on that thing.â
I laugh because here I thought I had this great secret about myselfâand turns out, itâs been public all this time. Thatâs what I get for never googling myself. Suddenly, I wonder what other deeply personal information is available out there. If only Noah had a Wikipediaâ¦
My eyes drift to the chair again. âUmmâ¦soâ¦Noah? Is he mad? I imagine he is since he kicked me out.â
âNoah didnât kick you out,â Annie says in a soothing tone. âHe wanted you to stay here last night because he was afraid you wouldnât feel safe knowing youâd slept all night in his house when you were pretty much unconscious.â
His woodsy eyes flash in my mind again.
The teeny tiny crush Iâve been harboring for Noah flares into something a little terrifying and consuming. Why canât he be like the others? It would be easier to disregard his actions if he had made sure he was here when I woke up so he could gain all the credit. But no. Just like the first morning I woke up in Rome, Kentucky, Noah is nowhere to be found.
The odd thing is, if I had woken up in his house this morning, I wouldnât have felt unsafe. Thereâs just something about Noah that feels honorable. Grumpy as hell, but honorable no less.
âWhere is he now?â I ask, looking around like maybe heâll pop out from behind the door or something.
âOh, he didnât want you to know heâd been here allâOW! Would you quit?!â
I look over just in time to see Annieâs fingers reeling back from the underside of Madisonâs arm. âHe had to go to work,â she says like a soft little springtime butterfly. âBut he said for you to stop by the shop when youâre feeling up to it. Has something he wants to talk to you about. I can drive you in on my way to the flower shop if you want. I donât open until eleven on the weekends.â
My stomach flips inside out. And whether itâs out of excitement or dread, Iâm not sure yet. Thereâs still a good chance Noahâs going to tell me to pack my bags and hit the road two days early.
After scarfing a bowl of cereal, finger-brushing my teeth, and running a brush through my hair, I turn on my cell phone for the first time. Iâm told by Madison that if I stand on her bed and wave my cell phone around the ceiling for a minute, Iâll be able to gain a bar. And sheâs rightâit works. I finally get a bar of service, and along with it, sixty-seven text messages, and thirty-two emails. Most of the texts are from Susan, a few are from my mom.
I hate the hope I feel that maybe her texts will be about something mundane or simple like:
Saw this random flip-flop on the street and it reminded me of the time you got your foot stuck in a public toilet and had to leave the mall without a shoe! Miss you! Call me soon to catch up!
Nope.
Mom, 7:02Â a.m.: Hi sweetie! Are you at your Malibu house this weekend? I was hoping to go stay there for a bit. LA is feeling cramped. Bleh.
Mom, 7:07Â a.m.: Youâre probably busy with friends this weekend. Iâll email Susan instead. Hugs!
I shouldnât, because Iâve learned from history that my mom doesnât care anymoreâbut for some reason, I find myself typing out a response to her.
Amelia: Actually, Iâm in a small town in Kentucky called Rome this weekend. I needed to get away from everything.
I hit send and stare at my phone for her responseâhoping sheâll comment on the fact that Iâm in . Show some spark of a memory that tells me she still thinks of our Audrey movie nights and what we used to have. My heart is begging her to show any sort of concern to my subtle call for help.
Three dots appear for a while followed by her response.
Mom: Okay. Sorry for bugging you while youâre away! Iâll go through Susan for any other questions.
Right. Thatâs my fault for expecting anything different.
I donât even bother reading all of Susanâs messages. I glance through the first twenty, and at first, they are kind and placating. She gently asks me to reconsider and come back. They then quickly jump into reprimanding authority figure:
You would think by the guilt trips she throws at me in these texts that it was a war I didnât show up to rather than an interview.
But one thing is clear as her texts progress: Susan is not comfortable with me being outside of her reach. A little light turns on in the corner of my mind, but I donât have time to explore it right now. I shut off my phone without responding to anything else, making a mental note to call my housekeeping service later. I told Susan I would be in contact Sunday night, and Iâm sticking to it.
The ride into town with Annie feels like a decompression chamber after a loud, exhilarating brunch with her sisters. How those women can all talk at once and still manage to follow each otherâs conversations is sheer talent. I felt like I was witnessing a sitcom and had to physically sit on my hands to keep from clapping when one of them would say something funny.
Now Iâm in Annieâs truck (apparently you have to own one if you live around here) and weâre pulling into town. Most small towns Iâve traveled through are shaped like a square. Rome is shaped like a lowercase âtâ with both roads extending out to farmland and localsâ houses. Most of the shops are made of brick, with colorful awnings above the storefronts. Itâs a tiny minuscule dot on a map, and if you blink while driving, youâll miss it. But somehow they manage to have everything you need right here. Just on Main Street they have an ice cream shop, hardware store, market, coffee shop, diner, flower shop, and of course The Pie Shop. No one parks on the street; instead, Annie drives us over to the communal lot beside Philâs Hardware. Morbidly, I wonder if when someone dies around here, the new store owner changes the shop name, or if they change their given name to fit the store? Maybe thereâs a whole cemetery somewhere full of Phils and Hanks.
Two steps out of the truck and I spot Noahâs burnt orange Chevy. I knew heâd be here. Heâs the whole reason Iâm in town right now, and still, Iâm frozen as my eyes glue themselves to the side of his truck. An inanimate object shouldnât evoke the warm, fluttery feelings sweeping through my body right now, but it does. It really does. I blame it on the manâs overall mystery and the added bonus of a time crunch. It reminds me of summer camp as a teenager. You know youâll only be there for a few days, so immediately you set out to find the hottest person available, zero in on them, and initiate instant-crush. Thatâs all this is. Itâs a crush. Attraction. Forbidden. Temporary. My body likes his body and thatâs all there is to it.
When Annie clears her throat, I realize Iâm staring at Noahâs truck as if Iâd like to make love to it. She graciously doesnât comment and I catch up to where sheâs been standing watching me drool. I feel like a supercool person right now, let me tell you.
Annieâs flower shop is neighbors with The Pie Shop and she asks if I want to come inside with her first. Since Iâm apparently the worldâs biggest coward, I jump at the chance to put off my meeting with Noah. Her shop is the Disney World of flower shops. Itâs bursting with color and natural light and the innate feeling that everything will turn out okay in life. Tubs of flowers line the walls and in the back of the shop is a giant old farmhouse table, painted white.
âWhat made you want to start a flower shop?â I ask her as I pick out a few different single-stemmed flowers and piece them together into a bouquet. A sunflower, a few daisies, a big, pink, puffy, cone-shaped one, and a few stems of greenery. Iâm not sure Iâm cut out for assembling bouquets after I see them all grouped together in my hand.
âMy mom. She loved flowers.â We make eye contact over my shoulder when she says Past tense. Annie doesnât make me ask. âOr so I was so told. She died when I was little so I donât remember a lot about her,â she says, all while taking the small bouquet from my hand, removing the cone-shaped flower and replacing it with a soft pink rose and then adding in a few orange carnations.
She then places it on her worktable where she wraps the bundle in brown paper, fastens a little twine bow around it, and adds a sticker with her logo.
âIâm sorry to hear that. But itâs a lovely idea to run a flower shop in her memory.â
Annieâs smile is like a ray of sunshine. âIt is. And I think sheâd be thrilled to know I named the store after her.â She points to the hand-painted calligraphy sign behind her worktable.
A million questions float through my mind about when she passed away, and how; but none of them are any of my business, so I keep quiet and pull my wallet from my purse to pay for the bouquet.
Annie chuckles, shaking her head. âItâs on me today.â
âNo, really, I want to pay,â I say, immediately feeling guilty. I canât not pay for this. It would look tackyâespecially since Iâm the one sitting on millions of dollars over here, and sheâs running a niche business in a tiny town. Even Noah buys flowers from her often so her business doesnât go under.
But then Annie just hands the bouquet over the table to me with a soft, dimpled smile. âA token of friendship.â Her gesture rams into me. Sheâs not asking anything of me. Doesnât want my money. Just friendship.
Her smile dims into sympathy when she sees my face. âAre youâ¦crying?â
â
Absolutely not.â I sniffle. âThatâsâno. I would beâitâs the flowers. I think Iâmâ¦allergic. Or maybe just the sleeping pill still making its way out of my system.â
She laughs. âMm-hmm. Sure. I think you got hit with the feelings allergy.â
I sigh and clutch the flowers desperately to my chest. âYeahâ¦maybe. Something about this town is really making them act up.â
âImagine living here,â she says with an amused twinkle in her eye.
But no. I absolutely will not imagine that, because I know I would like it far too much. In fact, itâs time for me to go and see the man that I know will wipe away any of these illusions. Heâll be grumpy and stern and make me feel like my company is the last thing on earth he wants, and it will be lovely.
Before I leave the flower shop, I have Annie help me put together a bouquet of Noahâs favorite flowers (which I convince her to let me pay for).
âYou stand there much longer and your feet will grow roots, making those flowers sprout out the top of your head.â
I expel a breath and look over my shoulder. Mabel is walking toward me on the sidewalk, floral print cotton dress swaying in the breeze, leather loafers lightly squeaking under her feet. Her wise eyes slip from me to The Pie Shop Iâm standing just to the side of, and then back to me. She stops beside me, her ample hips nearly brushing against mine. Iâm holding the flower bouquets against my chest like theyâre newborn babies and Iâll protect them with my life.
âIâm too nervous to go in,â I admit openly, because instinctively I know Mabel would accept nothing less. Sheâd see right through any lie of mine.
We stand quietly shoulder to shoulder like two soldiers on the outskirts of battle. She breaks the reverent silence without looking at me. âWhy are you here, young lady?â
âBecause Noah asked me toââ
âNo.â Her raspy voice barks, making me jump a little. A quick reminder that she may be nurturing but sheâs not soft. âIn this town. Why are you here?â
I look down at the cheerful blooms. âI donât really know. Iâm not supposed to be.â
âWhat do you mean?â She will settle for nothing but exact precise answers. Mabel doesnât beat around the bush.
The desire to hightail it away from her in a full sprint is nearly unbearable. I think if I did, though, the powers of her stern mind would capture me by the collar of my shirt and yank me back. âIâm not supposed to be here outside of Noahâs shop. In this town. Away from my life. On vacation.â I say it as many ways as I can so thereâs no way sheâll misinterpret.
âHeavens why, child?â
When was the last time someone thought of me as a child? The endearment is so nice and cozy. Like holding cold hands up to a crackling fire.
âIâm not supposed to take vacations if theyâre not planned a year out and okayed by five different people. My manager has reminded me repeatedly over the last few days that Iâm neglecting my responsibilities and being selfish by leaving suddenly like I did.â
âAnd let me ask you something? When the hell did it become such a crime to be selfish now and again?â Mabel turns to face me, propping her hands on her hips. âI tell you what makes me madder than a hornet. When people tell other people how they should feel. Everyoneâs getting too damn people-ly lately and Iâve had enough of it. Sometimes a woman is just worn out and needs a break, you know?â The lines on her forehead deepen. âThat doesnât prove that youâre weak or neglectful, it proves to all the women standing by and watching you pave the road to success that itâs okay to say no. Itâs okay to shut your door every now and then and put up a sign that says
â
Tears choke my eyes. I look over at the woman who seems ready to do battle on my behalf and my truth spills out before I can stop it. âMabel, I donât love my career anymore. I havenât even loved singing lately. Thatâs why Iâm here.â
She smiles softly. âWell, of course you donât, darlinâ. No one loves anything theyâre miserably chained to.â Her eyes narrow thoughtfully. âBut you own the key to your own lock and donât you forget it. Set yourself free for a while and that love will come back, just you watch.â
I canât help but laugh lightly because with those words, I feel like sheâs rolled a boulder off my shoulders. The feelings Iâve kept strung up and gagged inside me for so long because I no one would understand are free and floating on the wind. Mabel understands.
She steps a little closer and takes my hand like she did that morning in her inn. She grins and her wrinkles multiply. âGo have your break, darlinâ. And even better, have it with a good man whoâll treat you right.â She nods over my shoulder to The Pie Shop.
âMabel, I canât stay. Noah said I have to leave his place on Monday.â
âOh, youâre staying all right.â
I give her a hopeful smile. âDoes this mean youâll let me rent a room at your inn? I can even help out with chores to make it worthwhile for you.â
âNope. Weâre full up, told ya that already.â Iâve never seen a woman enjoy telling a lie more. âBut youâll stay in town. Mark my words.â
âI canât help but feel like your hope is misplaced. Noah doesnât even want me around him.â
She grunts a laugh. âBullshit. Iâve known that boy since he was a baby. I can read him like a book, and Iâd bet my entire living heâs grumpy because he wants you around .â I donât disagree, but I do turn my eyes to the shop window. âAnd I saw him staring at your backside when you werenât looking.â
I whip my head back to Mabel. âHe did not.â
Her smile widens. âNo, he didnât. But now I know by the rosy hue in your cheeks that you wish he did.â She raises and lowers her eyebrows and begins trundling away, passing The Pie Shop entirely. âOh, this is gonna be good,â she says softly to herself. And when I glance down at my flowers and back, sheâs gone, just like a mischievous ghost sent to taunt the town. In all likelihood she just dipped into the market, but I like the ghost theory better.