: Chapter 33
When in Rome
Noah approaches me until weâre an armâs length apart. He stops and crosses his arms, shoulders stretching the fabric of his T-shirt and looking as stern as a rock.
Truth is, I donât intend to quit and he knows it. I canât cancel the tour even if I wanted to. Contracts have me bound at the ankles. But I am Feeling so much and so strongly about everything that I canât quite handle it. I love being here with Noah. I love walking through this town and feeling the heartbeat of its personality. I canât believe I have to leave it. And because I canât fall into tears right now, and thereâs nothing I can do about my quickly approaching real life, I have to fight with Noah. Because I know heâll let me, and itâll help.
His eyes narrow lightly as he scans my soul. âSay it again,â he says in a steely tone that has shivers running over my skin. âI need to watch your face as you say it.â
I take a moment to summon my best lying skills so I can pass this test. I need him to think Iâm serious.
I tilt my chin up. âI said, Iâm quitting music.â Unfortunately, I think the last word ratted me out. My voice shook. Also, it probably doesnât help that this morning as I lay in bed with Noah, I sang to him the few verses Iâve been working on the last few days and told him how excited I was about them.
Something sparks in Noahâs green eyes. He knows Iâm a little liar now because heâs come to recognize my tells.
âYou canât quit. I wonât allow it,â he says sharplyâargumentativelyâand heâs onto my game but is putting a fresh spin on it. A hot spin, judging by the way the corner of his moody mouth twitches ever so slightly.
says his grumpy-handsome face.
âI can if I want.â Iâm defiant as I take a step toward him. With anyone else Iâm grace and poiseâIâm Audrey.
But with Noah, I speak my mind. Iâm not afraid to look silly. To fight and argue and get messy. I cast an explorative glance around The Pie Shop. âIn fact, I think Iâll just work hereâ¦with you.â
âIâm not hiring.â He pauses. âBesides, Iâve seen your baking skills.â
âThatâs only because you refuse to teach me. I can learn, though.â
Noah steps forward, the gap between us slowly disappearing and searing heat crackling between us. âNo. I wonât let you work here.â
âHa!â I raise my chin. âIâm Rae Rose. Iâve built a musical empire and a cult following that would risk their lives if I asked them to. Iâd like to see you try to stop me from doing anything.â I wish I was actually this confident.
âIf you quit, I wonât talk to you again.â
This makes me smile. âReally?â
âYes.â
âYou think you can hold out?â
He grunts an affirmative response, but his actions are telling a different story. His hands are somehow on my waist and heâs been slowly backing me up until Iâm close enough for him to lift me up onto the counter. Memories of last night dash through my mind and my pulse sledgehammers against my ribs.
âEasy.â Heâs cocky with that hat casting a dark shadow over his eyes. Brooding and commanding. I rip it offâsplashing his face in light and then running my hand through his messy hair. Itâs tossed and perfect. On the brink of needing a haircut, but not quite there yet.
âSo letâs just say I quit and Iâm living here. Iâm at your sistersâ house making pancakes while youâre over there. You see me reach for the salt instead of the sugar and raise it over the mixing bowl. You still donât say anything to me?â
His mouth tilts sardonically.
his eyes say. âI donât eat your pancakes anyways so it doesnât affect me.â First of all, rude. Second, I never want to stop playing with Noah.
âFine. Iâll up the stakes then.â My hands glide up his chest and clasp at his neck, pulling him between my legs, lightly toy with the hair at the nape of his neck. His fingertips press firmly into my hips. âIâm crossing the street, and I donât see an oncoming car. You still donât say anything?â
His eyes hover down at my lips. âNot fair.â
âIâm not trying to play fair.â
âAnd Iâm trying not to be the reason you give up your dreams.â
Truth falls between us and ruins the game.
Thereâs a moment of silence, where only the tension in our bodies is speaking, where our fingertips say words that our mouths never will. My hold around his neck tightens. He slides his hands all the way around to hug my hips up close to his.
And then because he knows I need for him to lighten this moment, he grins lightly and tacks on, âForfeiting so soon, Pop-Tart?â
I quickly press my mouth against his. Itâs so forceful he rocks backward slightly and I nearly fall. But he stabilizes us quickly and kisses me back, just as forcefully. Weâre still fighting, but itâs on new terrain. Itâs bumpy and jarring and our mouths will be bruised. I nip at his lip and his hands grip my back. None of this is helpingâitâs making it worse. I whimper from a fresh stab of emotions and Noah pulls away quickly.
He cradles my face and studies my eyes. âDid I hurt you?â
I shake my head and try for a smile. Itâs weak and pitiful. âNoah. I wonât ask you to come with me when I leave, but I need you to know that if you ever change your mind youâre always welcome wherever I am. Always.â
He stares at me, a crease etched between his brows, and takes a deep breath. He tilts forward and kisses me again. Softly this time. Our lips donât part. We donât explore. We soothe and settle.
The bell chimes above the door, and then a womanâs scratchy voice echoes through the shop. âUnlock those puckers, kids!â Itâs Mabel.
And sheâs not alone.
âOh, sweet bread and butter on Christmas morning.â
âNow, Harriet, you just tuck those delicate sensibilities away for another day. This ainât the time.â
Noah and I peel ourselves from each other and I look over my shoulder to find Mabel and Harriet catching their breath. I quickly fix my skewed shirt and would most definitely feel embarrassed by the scene they just found us in if there were enough time. But these two ladies are pink cheeked and panting from shuffling their way in here like they were trying to win a fast-walking competition. All thatâs missing are hot pink windbreakers.
âDonât try to boss me around, Mabel, Iâm older than you.â
âAnd stodgier, too. Havenât you ever seen a couple in love doing a little bit of kissing before?â
Harriet lifts her nose. âThey should wait to show that sort of affection until marriage.â
Mabel rolls her eyes. âOh, like you and Tom did?â She says this with a sassy slur making Harriet gasp. â
donât act so surprised, Your Supreme Holiness. Canât tell me your little last-minute wedding back then was because of love. It was because youâd been and a baby! You had yourself a good olâ fashioned shotgun wedding.â Mabel grunts again. â
â
âLadies,â Noah says, somehow managing not to laugh at these two bickering grannies I hope to grow up and become exactly like one day. âWas there something urgent you came in here for?â
â
Yes!â says Mabel.
Harriet jumps in before Mabel can finish, also taking a delicate but poignant step in front of her. âYou need to hide!â she says, aiming her hawk eyes on me.
Mabel nearly pushes Harriet out of the way to step in front of her this time. And now itâs clear they werenât here on a joint missionâthey were each racing to get to us first. âThat fellow whoâs been snooping around all week with his camera is in town again right now.â
âThe paparazzo?â Noah asks.
âNo, the pizza man has a new photography hobby! Yes, Noah, the paparazzo! But even worse, thereâs more of them!â Poor Noah. He takes it like a champ, but Mabel is downright lethal today. Actually, I think Noah secretly adores it because the corner of his perfect mouth is doing that slight twitch again.
âPhil and Todd saw him coming and waylaid him with facts about hammers. But I donât know how long theyâll hold him, and the others are all scattered around.â Harriet says this while lifting the folding countertop and trying to push her way through it. I say because Mabel is also trying to push through and the two are only getting themselves wedged in that little space together.
âMabel! Would you justââ
âI would, Harriet, if you would justâ¦â
Now, Noah has stepped away from me to help pull these ladies through the counter. âNow look at what you two have done,â he says gently. âMabel, suck in and twist.â
âHow many of them are out there, Mabel?â I ask, feeling sick.
Noah tugs her arm lightly and they both pop through to our side of the counter. âOh honey, thereâs gotta be at least twenty of them. A whole crowd. You need to get out of here quickly.â
I look to Noah and our eyes both convey the same message: Game over. Our time together is up.