: Chapter 14
When in Rome
Just as predicted, I walk through the door of The Pie Shop and the little bell ringing over my head alerts Noah to my presence. The sudden force of his gaze threatens to level me when he looks up from the counter where heâs writing in a little notepad. A classic little notepad for the classic man. His eyes lock with mine and BOOM, grumpy face. Itâs good he doesnât smile. I wouldnât be able to stay standing if he did. But thisâ¦
I can make do with.
I approach the counter slowly. Heâs a lion Iâve just encountered in the wild. âHiiii,â I say, stepping closer, one little scooting step at a time. He doesnât say anything, just lifts a brow. I try not to tremble.
When I get close enough, I lay both bouquets on the counter like an offering right next to where his muscular forearms are resting. My eyes get tangled up with the light dusting of masculine hair on them. The hairs are so blond, fine, and unobtrusive you have to be close enough to see them. My mind reminds me unhelpfully that I am close enough to see them, along with the shadow his baseball cap casts over his eyes, nose, and cheekbones. The scruff of his jaw is a little more prominent than it was yesterday, telling me he might not have gone home after sitting by my bedside all night. I donât want to acknowledge why the thought of Noah worrying about me through the night sends a shiver through my body.
His eyes drop to the bouquets and then back up to my face. âFlowers?â
âFor you,â I say, scooting the bouquet I made for him closer before clasping my hands behind my back and rocking lightly on my heels. âAn apology-slash-thank-you for taking care of me last night.â I tip my shoulder. âAnd I know you like flowers. Annie told me you buy a bouquet from her several times a week.â
He doesnât shift even an inch. âJust to be clear, I do it to help her. Not because Iâm obsessed with flowers or anything.â
I widen my eyes at that incredible word. â
â I say, letting it dissolve pleasantly on my tongue. âSure youâre not,â I say, nodding and squinting my eyes.
His eyes narrow. âAre you taunting me?â
âIâm just not sure why youâre ashamed to admit youâre obsessed with flowers.â I press my lips together against a smile.
âIâm notââ He starts to say in an impassioned tone, rising up to his full height and taking the bait before realizing Iâm just goading him. He grunts and crosses his arms.
âI like them. Iâm not obsessed.â
I mirror his stance, and itâs too much fun. âItâs okay to admit your deep infatuation. I wonât force you to give up your man card.â
The hint of a smirk touches his mouth now. Heâs on to me. âI own a pie shop. You think I give a shit about man cards?â He looks over his right shoulder, â
â and then back to me.
âIf thatâs trueâ¦then why so hesitant to fess up to your flower obsession? Annie claims you think sheâs at risk of bankruptcy, but do you want to know what I think?â
âPretty sure youâre going to tell me no matter what.â
âI â I begin in a fervent courtroom tone, âyou very well know just how many people love and support her shop, and that her flower business is doing just fine. I think, good sir, that you use your brotherly care as a disguise for yourâ¦â I let the word hang as we stare at each other. âObsession.â
He leans his palms on the counter, angling himself closer. Something sweet and warm crackles in the air between us. âI thinkâ¦my obsessions are none of your business.â
âAha!â I hold up a finger toward his face. âSo you admit it?! Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, you heard it from his own mouth!â
To my complete shock, Noah hooks his finger around mine, lowering them both slowly down onto the counter. Too many sensations mingle in that small touch, and when he doesnât immediately remove his finger from mine after theyâre finally resting on the counter, my heart gives out. I flatline. Someone get the stretcher.
A grin hovers on the side of his mouthâa lovely addition to the dark shadow his hat casts over his eyes. âI like the way they make my house smell.â
I canât say anything. Iâm frozen in this moment with Noah softly gazing at me, the skin of his hand against mine, and memories of his hungry kiss swimming in my mind. I never want it to end. âAnd your mom loved flowers, right?â
Nothing, and I do mean nothing, could have been worse to say in this moment. A silence so menacing drops between us that it practically takes on a physical form. It would be a man gnarled with scars and slapping a baseball bat against his enormous calloused hand. I should run screaming in the opposite direction. Instead, I watch, holding my breath as Noahâs brows pinch together and he rises to his full height again, removing his hand from mine. He doesnât acknowledge what I said, and maybe thatâs for the best since I didnât mean for it to come out. He turns away and disappears into the kitchen without another word.
I mentally punch myself for acting like I was close enough to him to bring up his painful past like that. Like I had any right to call attention to it, let alone that his mom loved flowers and isnât around anymore. How vulnerable he must feel now.
I should leave. In fact, I will.
But after picking up the bouquet of flowers Annie gave me, I decide that now I have two things to apologize for and set the flowers back down next to the other bouquet. After I cross the shop and open the front door, Noah calls out to me while reemerging from the back. âYouâre leaving?â
I freeze and look back at him. Heâs holding two plates with a slice of pie on each one. âI thoughtâ¦I thought you were mad and it was better if I left.â
He rolls his eyes with a little hint of a smile before gesturing toward the slices of pie. âI was just getting you a slice of pie. If youâre interested, that is?â He moves around the counter and out into the main portion of the shop, setting the plates down on the two-seater table near the window. One plate is uncovered and the other has plastic wrap over it.
âSomething you need to know about me,â he begins in a softer tone than Iâve heard him use yet. âIâm not talkative.â I give a mock gasp of surprise, which makes him grin. âAnd I donât like talking about personal stuff when Iâm not prepared for it. Sometimes I need a minute to process when Iâm caught off guard. But if Iâm actually mad, Iâll tell you. I donât believe in the silent treatment when it comes to stuff like that.â
Iâm still standing halfway out the door because I canât move. Iâm overloaded with how incredible and heartfelt that speech was. I donât think Iâve ever had a man articulate his emotions so well to me before. I didnât even realize that was something I should expect or hope for. Itâs clear that thereâs so much more to Noah than his Surly Pose and burnt orange truck. Heâs obsessed with flowers. Is protective. Feels deeply, but prefers to keep it to himself.
And damn if I donât find all that sexy as hell.
He lifts his eyebrows when I donât respond. âSo. You in or out, pop star? If youâre in, turn that Open sign around and lock the door on your way back in. Itâs my lunch break.â
I laugh and step away from the door, letting it fall shut behind me before flipping the sign and the lock. âWith your accent, it sort of makes it sound like you just called me a Pop-Tart.â
âNo, definitely not.â He takes his seat and then flashes me a grin. âI actually like Pop-Tarts.â
I laugh and throw a pepper packet from the table at his head. It bounces off his cheek and hits the floor. Noah s while leaning over to retrieve it. âBringing up my family history littering in my pie shop. And to think this is how Iâm rewarded for keeping your ass safe last night.â
âI already bought you flowers for that. My debt is paid in full.â I sit down opposite him, realizing belatedly that this tiny table makes it so our legs are pressing up against each other. I would move mine, but heâs not moving his. So there they stay.
I clear my throat. âSo is this my farewell pie?â Looking up, I see his confused expression. âI assumed you asked me to come here today because Iâve been a pain in your ass and you want me out of your house tonight instead of Monday morning.â It physically hurts to think of leaving this town the day after tomorrow. Itâs too soon.
Noah chuckles. Actually chuckles. Itâs so deep and rumbly I imagine pressing my palm to his chest and feeling the laugh while hearing it. The complete experience. âYouâre definitely a pain in my ass. But Iâm not kicking you out. In fact, just the opposite.â Noah nervously licks his lips. âDo you remember anything you said last night?â
I didnât until he asked. But at his questioning, my memories hit me in bursts.
â
Ohhhhhh I hate all those words. Theyâre so raw and vulnerable they make my skin itch. And thatâs why I lie right through my pearly white teeth. âNo. I donât remember.â
He studies me closely, and I must have a better poker face than I realize because he seems to believe me. âWell, youââ Before he can finish, thereâs a knock on the door. Noah looks out the window at the same time I do, finding two middle-aged men peering through the door. Noah ignores them so I do, too. Especially because I have got to know what he was going to say. The way he left it lingering has me terrified that Iâm not remembering everything there is to remember from last night, and maybe I pulled my pants down and mooned him or something. Or worseâ¦did I hit on him?!
âYouâre killing me. What did I say last night?â I ask as blunt as the knife edge piercing my gut. Dramatic? No. Not when thereâs a potential memory of mooning hanging in the balance.
He scratches his neck, the exact appendage I want to strangle at this moment until he tells me what I said and did.
âYou told me you wereâ¦â He looks up, seeing my horrified expression, and then smiles softly. âTired.â
Noah has a poker face, too. We might as well be wearing neon visors and clutching cards to our chests. We stare at each other, wondering who will fold first. If I admit to knowing I never once said the word to him last night, then heâll know I remember my blubbering vomit of emotions and weâll have to discuss it. Iâd rather not. And I think heâd rather not as well.
âAhâtired, yes,â I say, pushing my poker chips into the middle of the table.
He grins. âSo I was thinkingâ¦in light of you being soâ¦
ââ
Our conversation is interrupted again by more knocks on the door and I want to groan. A small crowd of townspeople are starting to gather out there. âShould we let them in?â
âNo,â he says with a shake of his head and then frowns at the window where at least ten people have gathered, gesturing for Noah to open the door. âNo!â he says sternly. âIâm closed for lunch. Go away!â He swats at the air but they donât flee.
Itâs hard to focus but Iâm determined to hear where this conversation is going. Noah has the same thought so he adjusts his chair, positioning himself so his back is to the window. I do the same. Now weâre nearly shoulder to shoulder. This is excruciating.
âAnywayâ¦I, uhâ¦I thought about it, and Iâm okay with you staying with me until your car is fixed.â
âYou are?â I ask, turning my face to look at him. Weâre so close I can see the tips of his eyelashes.
He nodsâpoker face still in place. âThe guest room is yours if you want it. Andâ¦â He gives his throat a big uncomfortable clearing. âIfâ¦you want a tour guide, I moved some things around and have some free time now.â
Now Iâm blinking as if someone has just flashed a camera in front of my eyes. âAll because Iâmâ¦
?â
My mind autocorrects that word to and I think itâs doing that in Noahâs head, too, but heâs too kindhearted to say it out loud. Heâs playing along in a way that makes me feel safe and I just want to know why. Anyone might have heard my sloppy speech last night and chosen to look the other way. What I said to him is messy and complicated. Instead, heâs choosing to extend a hand to me in the water.
Still, past experience has me wary to believe his good intentions. âAre you planning to sell the story of my visit to a tabloid? Did someone offer you an exclusive?â
He looks deeply offended. Maybe even angry.
âThe pill I meant to take last night was a migraine medication. Iâve been getting them from all the stress and my doctor says I should take more breaks and get more rest, but I chose medication instead. Thatâs a pretty juicy story, are you sure you donât want to sell it?â
âWhy would I do that?â His voice is stern again. Irritated that I wonât believe his kindness.
I laugh sharply. âBecause anyone else in the world would. My own mom has sold personal stories about me to tabloids on multiple occasions.â I didnât mean to say that last part, and I wince lightly at my slip. My poker face falters a hair and I think he can see my cards.
Noahâs eyes are soft when I look at him. He shakes his head the tiniest amount. âNot me. I would never do that to you.â
Oh no. Those are good words. Too good. I feel my heart trying to suck them all up at a frantic pace. Itâs dangerous to let myself believe him, and yet, IÂ do.
Iâm not sure what he sees in my face, but it causes his expression to soften. He lays his cards faceup and he has a winning hand. âYou can trust me, Amelia. I wonât exploit your â
And now, Iâm beginning to think heâs not wrong about that choice of word. I am tired. Tired of loneliness. Tired of distrust. Tired of being taken advantage of. And tired of hiding myself from everyone all the time.
âOkay,â I say, while looking down at my pie and scooping a bite onto my fork. If I say more than that, Iâll cry. And Iâve had enough vulnerability for the last twenty-four hours without needing to add tears to it as well.
âOkay? So youâre staying.â
âIâm staying.â My stomach does a little flip.
Noah lets out a breath almost like heâs relieved. And then pulls that classic little notebook he was writing in from his back pocket and sets it on the table between us. âYou should write down a few things you want to do while youâre here. So we have a plan.â Itâs adorable how awkward he is right now. He wonât make eye contact with me and itâs painfully obvious that talking with me this much has him wanting to crawl out of his skin. I should let him off the hook and tell him he doesnât have to spend time with me. But Iâll die before I do that, because even though itâs the worst idea in the world, I want to spend as much time with him as I can while Iâm here.
âBecause youâre my tour guide,â I say, taking the notebook.
He fights a smile. âBecause Iâm your tour guide.â
Iâm already busy trying to think of everything I want to do while Iâm here. Do I want to be restful or adventurous? Do I want to hide or see more of the town? I think some combination of all of it.
âOh, but just one thing.â
Annnnnd here it is. The catch. The hammer. The thing he wants in return. I knew it was too good to be true.
Noah leans slightly toward me and lowers his voice like maybe all the Peeping Toms outside the window will hear us or read his lips. âThe other night. When I told you I wasnât on the market.â My cheeks flush a little at the memory. âI meant that. And I think itâs best if right out of the gate we get things straight. This isnât going to turn into anything romantic between us. Itâs justâ¦friendship.â
I should be disappointed that my summer camp crush isnât interested in me. But Iâm not. Because little does he know, friendship is exactly what I want. What I âPerfect,â I tell him, feeling lighter than Iâve felt in years.
And then thereâs a firm knock on the window, making us both jump and look over our shoulders. Mabel has her nose pressed into the glass, and her brows pulled together sternly. âNoah Daniel Walker,â she says, sounding slightly muffled from the glass. âYou better open up. You know I get low blood sugar.â
He sighs at her nose print on the glass. âBatshit crazy town.â He smiles, and itâs clear that he means that as nothing but affectionate.
Thatâs when I notice the slice of pie sitting in front of him covered in plastic wrap. âWere you planning to eat that?â
âNo,â he says, standing from the table. âItâs for someone else Iâm meeting just as soon as I take care of these loons.â
âYou know? I canât help but feel itâs completely unfair that youâre allowed to have so many secrets when I continue to spill mine.â
âSounds like a you problem,â he says with zero smile but amusement running through his voice, straight into the pit of my fluttery stomach.
Noah lets me borrow his truck to drive back to his place, and with the windows down and a smile on my face, the strangest thing happens to me. I catch myself singing along to the radio. Something I havenât felt like doing in a while.