: Chapter 26
When in Rome
Iâve been in the flower shop with Annie for a few hours when the door flies open and Noah steps inside. The door bangs back against one of the displays, nearly knocking it over. Annie and I jump, and Mabelâwho is gathering bouquets for her B and Bâsqueals.
Noah winces. âSorry about that.â A rare color of red sweeps over his cheekbones. âI didnât mean to make such a dramatic entrance.â
Mabel shoves a finger in his direction. âAre you trying to give me a heart attack? Donât bother trying to make me kick the bucket early, because I love you but Iâm not leaving you the inn in my will. Itâs going to my niece.â
Noah gingerly closes the door behind him. âI donât want your inn, Mabel.â
She scoffs. âWell, you would if you knew whatâs good for you! Honey, thereâs all kinds of money sitting in that inn. And I donât mean tied up in the equity, I mean hidden in the floors!â
Noah frowns. âThatâs not good. You shouldnât store money in the floorboards, Mabel. What happens if thereâs a fire?â
I donât particularly love the way he looks at me when he says that. It was a tiny fire, okay? Minuscule, really. I had already put it out when the fire department arrived. They just helped me get all the smoke out of the house. But anyway, lesson learned. Donât leave a pancake in the pan while youâre mixing up another batch.
Mabel puts her hands on her ample hips. âAnd whoâs gonna do that? Are you planning to start a fire, Noah? If you need money, just tell me. I can work out some window-washing days with you so you donât have to go doing nefarious acts for attention.â
Noah looks dumbfounded. And then distraught. And then back to dumbfounded. âNoâ¦Mabelâ¦I donât need money. And how would starting a fire evenâ¦â He shakes his head and lifts his hands up. âYou know what? Never mind.â
Noah sends Annie a look, and in a split second, she is rushing over to the meddling old woman. âMabel, letâs get those bouquets finished up for you. Iâll help.â The two continue picking flowers around the store and Noah finally walks over to where Iâm standing behind the counter, looking like a real workingwoman.
âHi,â he says, in his quiet, rumbly way. His voice isnât necessarily deep, but it has a grit to it that just good to hear. I need to plug my ears. Iâm trying to distance myself from him, and not imagine him whispering in my ear while Iâm soaking in a bubble bath with his fingers tracing a quiet line over my skinâeven softer than the caress of his voice.
now Iâm picturing that. And it doesnât help that he has his hat off today, giving me the full effect of his startling woodsy eyes. Iâm drowning in a lush evergreen forest.
âHello,â I reply, pulling my mind out of that fantasy bubble bath. âAre you here to buy flowers?â
He darts his eyes away, heavy lashes blinking. âNope.â
I watch as he delicately runs his finger over a velvety petal from a long-stem flower beside the counter, and it makes me shiver given my last fantasy of him. âDid you need to talk to Annie?â
Again, Iâm met with a no.
âGoing to the market then?â
He shifts on his feet and shakes his head. âIâm good on groceries.â
Goodness, Noah is always cryptic, but this is too much. And awkward. Heâs standing there practically vibrating with nervous energy and in return itâs making nervous. Iâm starting to sweat. Iâm one more anxious minute away from getting pit stains on my shirt.
Why is he just standing here? Why wonât he say more?
Iâm not the only one who notices. Mabel sighs deeply from across the room and practically yells, â
child! Heâs here for you! Now go ahead and ask the lady out, Noah, so we can all be finished with this barrel of awkwardness.â
My face flames. Iâm sure it looks like Iâve just dipped it into a vat of tomato juice. Noah smirks lightly, eyes crinkling in the corners. âIâm taking off early and going fishing. It was on your list so I thought Iâd come by and see if you want to come with me?â
Spend the afternoon with Noah? I donât know. I was trying to spend the day away from him so this thing weâve had humming between us would hopefully die down. Itâs why Iâm planning to spend the day with James tomorrow, too. I thought Noah and I were on the same pageâthat he would want me to stay away from him given he spent the night at Jamesâs house last night. But looking into Noahâs eyes, I go weak. I may be confused, but I couldnât say no to him even if I tried.
But of course I have to annoy him first.
I bend slightly to rest my elbows on the counter, propping my chin on the backs of my knuckles. âWhy? You miss me?â
He rolls his eyes, the corner of his mouth twitching. âAbsolutely not. Just trying to live up to the title of Mr. Hospitality.â
âYou did miss me. You were just sulking around the shop because you donât know what to do without me being all up in your life anymore.â
âAre you coming or not?â
I move around the counter to stand by him, blinking up at him like a coy Disney princess. âWas it so lonely without me?â
He starts pushing me by my lower back toward the door. Looks like Iâm going with him then. âIt was a hell of a lot more peaceful than it is now.â
âJust admit you missed me!â Iâm giving a half-hearted attempt to put on the brakes, but he keeps pushing me right along with him, touching my back like heâs done this a thousand times. Like the warmth of his hand seeping through my shirt doesnât send a current across my skin. Like I wouldnât willingly go with him anywhere he wanted.
âAnnie, Iâm taking this spoiled pop star off your hands for the rest of the day.â
âAnnabell! Make him admit he missed me!â I say, over my shoulder. My quick glance shows me a smiling Annie and smirking Mabel before Noah closes the door behind us.
âQuiet, you,â says Noah, pausing to look down at me when we make it out to the curb. Iâm bubbling with laughter that I canât contain even if I wanted to. Itâs the kind of happy laughter that slows you down, makes you want to anchor your hands on your thighs just so you donât fall to the ground.
Noahâs eyes drop to my mouth. They linger there for a full in and out breath, before his lashes rise back up to my eyes. âI missed you.â
My laughter stops.
My heart skips.
My lips part.
But before I can respond, he adds, âBut youâre still a pain in my ass.â
How does he manage to say that in a way that makes me feel like Iâm back in that fantasy bubble bath?
When I was younger, there was an oak tree in my front yard. It was enormous. In the summer, my favorite thing to do was sit at its base, lean my back against it, and listen to music. Sometimes Iâd take my guitar out and play, writing songs and soaking in every last drop of sunshine. Nothing bad could touch me under that oak tree with the sun brushing my skin. No place in this world has ever been able to recapture that feeling of absolute soul-cuddling peace.
My arm is hanging out the window of Noahâs truck, and my old friend Sunshine is rekindling our past love and kissing my exposed skin. The wind is twirling my hair all around my face, and at my side is Noahâhand draped casually over the steering wheel. A soft grin on his perfect chiseled face. And when I say perfect, I donât mean classically perfect. Noah isnât a pretty boy by any means. His face is tan and scruffy. Freckles down the bridge of his nose from too much sun and not enough sunscreen. He has a random little scar above his eyebrow and another above his lip. I imagine he got them in a fight as a boy. Someone called his best friend a mean name and he stepped in. But the unique concoction of rugged scars and long thick eyelashes framing bright green eyesâit should be illegal. Right up there with crystal meth.
Except for the wind, weâve been driving in silence, me quickly sneaking peeks of Noah over my shoulder when Iâm sure heâs not looking. Normally I like the quiet between us. But right now, I feel fidgetyâwhich seems like it would be at war with the peace Iâve been feeling, but itâs not. They go hand in hand. Itâs the very feeling of calm and serenity that lets me know something is unmistakably Noah has struck a chord inside me and itâs quivering. I need to bounce my knee. Gather my hair up in a ponytail. Check my phone, see that it still has zero bars of service, and turn it off again.
Noah notices, but his only reaction is a slight raise of his eyebrow. He knows that if I want to talk about it, I will. Heâs not a man who needs constant reassuringâwhat I used to think was grumpy is really just him being earnest.
And thatâs exactly why Iâm dying in here with my body alone with his body. And my body wants to make him pull over so I can climb onto his body. Did I not just remind myself last night to stop pursuing my attraction to Noah? To not explore why I hang on his every intentionally spoken word. I decided to stay away from him. Far, far away. Put up a damn fortress between us. But now here I am, eyes tracing the lines of his face like a map Iâm memorizing.
We need some music to fill this silence.
Reaching forward, I push the dial on his radio. Itâs staticâmaking me wonder if he even listens to musicâso I turn it to the nearest station. Itâs country. An old George Strait song fills the air and rides the breeze perfectly. Iâm not really a fan of country music, but I have to admit that something about it pairs perfectly with golden sunshine and a warm day. I shut my eyes and let my head sink back against the headrest, enjoying the moment of stillness.
Over these last few days, I feel parts of me coming alive again. Like when youâve been sitting on your foot too long and then finally walk around. Itâs tingly and uncomfortable at first, but then you shake it back to life and can move normally again.
Our comfy moment suddenly slices in half when a different song comes on and changes the whole vibe of this drive. Itâs a song by Faith Hill and Tim McGraw. One so sexy I want to die. â
I snap my eyes open and look at Noah. His hand is tightened on the steering wheel but otherwise not betraying that he feels as prickly as I do all of a sudden. I wonder if heâll make a move to change the station, but he doesnât. Whether itâs because he doesnât want to tip me off to discomfort, or because he wants to see if Iâm affected by these lyrics or not, I have no idea. Or maybe he finds it hilarious.
Either way, I lurch forward and change the station. âWhew!â I say loudly, trying to cover the awkward moment and that I nearly just broke his radio dial from the force I used to turn it. âYou donât mind if I surf the radio a bit, right? Iâm not really in the mood to listen to country today.â
The corner of his mouth hitches up. âShame. Thatâs one of my favorites.â
I give him a side-eye look and keep scrolling, making him chuckle. âSo sorry to disappoint you.â
I finally settle on a commercial about a menâs hair loss remedy. Perfect. Zero sexual tension here. And at each new point the radio announcer makes, I give mock encouraging eyes to Noah. âWell, see there, Noah!â I swat his bicep playfully, desperate to recover the levity from a few moments ago. âThereâs hope for your bald spot after all.â He contains his amusement so I push harder. âI bet you didnât even know you had one. But you do. Itâs back there. A gaping shiny bald spot. And you know what? Iâm a good friend, so if you want, Iâll buy this cream and apply it for you. I wonât even expect anything in return other than pancakes made for me daily with whipped cream and chocolate chips on top.â
âIâll gladly make you pancakes every day if youâll quit trying to burn my house down.â
Iâm just about to respond with something sassy and delightful, when my own voice stops me in my tracks. Itâs my latest chart-topping single. When it plays through the speakers, I freeze. My joy dims, and a boulder settles back over my chest. Itâs a reminder of the real world that I donât want or need.
âYouâre about to tour for this album, right?â
I nod and swallow the lump in my throat.
Noah nods, too. After another pause, he asks, âHow long will youâ¦how long does the tour last?â His voice sounds suspiciously light. Like heâs working extrahard to convince me that he could care less and is just making small talk. But I know.
I fidget with the hem of my shorts. âNine months. Iâll have a break between the U.S. leg and the international leg, but itâll be short.â
Again Noah nods slowly. And this time, heâs the one to abruptly end the song. âOkay, enough with the radio. Besides, I hear that singer is a real diva. And wants everyone to like yogurt for some reason,â he says with a smile before clicking the CD button.
âYou would have a CD in there. Who still listens to CDs?â
He gives me a look. âJust be glad itâs not a cassette.â
I settle into the bench again, looking out the window, excited to learn what is in Noahâs personal music library. I donât know what Iâm expecting to hear, but I can promise you I never in a million years would have guessed Frank Sinatra. âLove Me Tender,â Frankâs version of Elvisâs classic song, croons through the cab of his old truck and itâs so lovely that even the sun swoons. Of course he would have this. Of course because heâs the classic man.
classic man, my mind wants to tack on, but I swat that thought away like a pesky gnat.
I turn sharply to look at Noah. âThis is your CD?â
âWhy?â
âBecause youâre a thirty-year-old man living in Rome, Kentucky.â
âThirty-two.â
âFine. Thirty-two. You should be listening toâ¦I donât know, some weird rock music from your youth. Or since you like classic things, maybe Hank Williams. Johnny Cash! I donât knowâ¦anything but !â
He glances at me and then back to the road. âDo you not like Frank?â
Frank. He would be so familiar with him that he feels inclined to be on a first-name basis with the man. Like I am with Audrey. It physically hurts now how smitten I am with Noah. I canât take much more.
âI Frank Sinatra.â I say this in a tone similar to a person trying to speak while their insides are being squeezed. âAs well as the other greats of that time like Ella Fitzgerald, Bing Crosby, andââ
âTheyâre on here, too,â Noah states casually like this doesnât completely floor me. At my silence he looks at me with an amused smile. âItâs a compilation CD. My grandma bought it for me a long time ago.â He chuckles and turns his eyes back to the road. âShe bought it for me because I was listening to too much of that weird rock you talked about. Said I needed to know the classics if I had any hopes of growing into a good man.â
I want to whisper loud enough for him to hear, but instead I stay quiet, and together we let the song wrap around us. An already perfect moment feels like a dream now. When the song ends, I look at Noah. âI love your grandma. I wish I could have met her.â
A real genuine smile splits across his face like the sun popping over the horizon at dawn, but he doesnât say anything.
Noah pulls into a small parking lot that overlooks a dock, stretching out to a small scenic lake. There are trees lining the bank, making it feel secluded and intimate. We both get out of the truck, and he pulls two fishing poles and a tackle box from the back of his truck. Together we walk down the long dock until we end at the small platform. I remove my white canvas sneakers and sit down, dangling my legs over the side. Itâs high enough up that my feet hover about a foot above the water. Noah sits beside me and our shoulders touch. My face flushes with an innocent pleasure I havenât experienced in years.
The tips of Noahâs ears turn lightly pinkâsomething that happens to him when heâs embarrassed, Iâve learnedâand he scoots away. If there were a window between us, I think we both would have rolled it up slowly and dramatically. Weâre acting as if weâve never touched anyone of the opposite sex before. Itâs absolutely ridiculous. And wonderful. And confusing. And incredible.
âWhat was she like?â Iâm desperate for any glimpse of a picture heâll paint for me, and also to break the tension between us.
âMy grandma?â he asks as he pops open the tackle box and begins baiting his hook. I nod. âShe wasâ¦tender and fiery at the same time. That woman loved to love on people. I swear no one made it out of her pie shop without a hug. Even strangers. Itâs just the way she was.â
âWhat was her name?â
âSilvie Walker. Believe it or not, she and Mabel were best friends since their teenage years. Those two got into all kinds of trouble together. And since my grandad had already passed away by the time my grandma needed to take guardianship over me and my sisters, Mabel acted like our second parent in a lot of ways. I rarely went a day without seeing her.â
âAhâthatâs why Mabel loves you so much.â
âThatâs why she me so much.â He smirks, but I hear the tenderness in his voice. âI may have lost my parents, but Iâve been really lucky to be loved by so many people who feel like family to me and my sisters. Itâs why I didnât hesitate to come back when they needed me here.â
I open my mouth to ask why they needed him back here, but he continues talking before I can. âSpeaking of namesâ¦â Once he gets his hook baited with a nasty-looking rubber worm, he sets his fishing pole down and turns his face to me. âIâve been wondering how you chose your stage name.â
âRae is my middle name.â I shrug lightly. âMy mom used to call me Rae-Rae when I was little sometimes, and so it felt like a sweet choice for a stage name. And I thought having people refer to me as Rae instead of Amelia would help me have some separation between my private and professional life.â
âDid it?â he asks, and this is something about Noah that is so different from other people. Most people would hmm, nod, and then move on. But he wants to know the answer.
âNo. In fact, Rae Rose just absorbed me. I feel like I havenât been Amelia in so long. Except for you and your sisters, everyone just calls me Rae now. Even my mom. Itâsâ¦â I falter for polite words to describe what it feels like, so I settle with a basic childish idea instead. âI it. I feel so jumbled and unsure of who I am.â
âThat must be hard,â Noah says without accusation or shock. He doesnât even offer advice or throw a pile of s on me. Doesnât even seem to expect me to come to any conclusion right now. I just get to say what I feel, and if thatâs not freedom, I donât know what is.
âMainly itâs the loneliness that makes it so hard. The second I became famous, everyone stopped seeing the real me. All they see is Rae Rose now and what she can do for them or give them. You know my mom used to be my best friend? Even she just sees me as a twenty-four-hour ATM now. It sucks. And the thing thatâs so weird is Iâm rarely ever alone, and yet I can be standing in a room full of hundreds of people that supposedly love me and feel completely isolated.â
âDo you feel lonely right now?â
Noahâs question punches me in the heart. âNo.â
Everything would be so much easier if my answer were yes. Part of me wishes I could have come to this damn town and found my joy of music again without also finding something âGood. Iâm glad.â He sounds genuine. He genuine. âAnd maybe after this time away, youâll find your love for your career again.â
âThatâs exactly what Mabel said.â
âAnd sheâs never wrong. Or at least, thatâs what sheâll lead you to believe.â He grins and turns his eyes to the tackle box. He pulls out a nasty, squirmy, wet worm that is 100 percent a bucket of cold water to the intimate mood.
We need it. âSo do you want to bait your own hook?â
âAm I a wimp if I say no?â
âDefinitely.â
I make a thinking face before answering. âIâm realizing Iâm okay with that.â
âSuit yourself, but youâre missing out on all the fun.â
I laugh and bump his shoulder. âThat be your idea of fun.â
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â he asks, but itâs clear by his tone that heâs playing along.
âYou just donât seem like the type of guy to pursue So something sedate and peaceful like this would be considered fun to you.â
âIâm very fun,â he says deadpan. âForget Mr. Hospitable. Everyone else calls me Mr. Fun. You just havenât been around long enough to hear it.â
âMm-hmm. Sure.â
He raises an eyebrow, his full lips turning up at the corners. âWant me to prove it?â
âYes,â I say with a firm nod and then have to blow my bangs out of my eyes. âI would pay good money to see it, in fact.â
âWell, youâre in luck. Itâs free of charge today.â Noah sets down the fishing poles and quickly hops to his feet. I frown up at him as he extends his hand to help me stand. I slide my palm into his and my heart flutters wildly. He tugs me up to my feet until weâre nearly chest to chest. I stare up at him expectantly. âOkay, Mr. Fun. Whatâs it gonna be?â
I watch in awe as his face opens into a full smile, eyes crinkling at the corners. He then puts his hand softly to my abdomen, and I gaspâwhich is perfect since the next thing I know, heâs pushing me off the dock right into the water.