: Chapter 9
When in Rome
Beady eyes follow me everywhere I walk. Like annoying little gremlins that wonât leave me alone.
Amelia has been at my house for almost three full days now, but other than Mabel, no one has been able to confirm her existence because she hasnât ventured out from under my roof, and Iâve kept a firm stance. I donât know what in the hell sheâs been doing there over the last two days because Iâve avoided her like I avoid Harriet at theâ¦well, everywhere. But clearly speculation about Ameliaâor Rae as they know herâhas spread rapidly through the locals because my pie shop has had more foot traffic over the last two days than itâs had all month.
No one around here really listens to mainstream music, because they prefer songs with a country twang and lyrics about a man and his beloved dog driving over dusty roads. So no oneâs been fanatic about seeing her or anything. No, theyâre only in it for the juicy taste of gossip on their tongues. They hope to stir their coffee in Sunday school while coyly distributing details of the famous star like theyâre graciously handing out hundred-dollar bills to the poor and needy.
Plus, they remember how it all went down with Merritt, and they want front-row seats to the potential sequel of my terrible love life. Iâve got news for them, theyâre going to be sorely disappointed because Iâm not going anywhere near Amelia.
Those are the only reasons theyâre lurking around here. Everyone knows what pies I offer. They each have a favorite and I can name every town citizenâs usual order while flat-out drunk. And yet, they have all lingered and stared at the pie case like these little round pastries are a fresh invention.
âAnd this blackberry pie is filled withâ¦?â
âBlackberries,â I say, crossing my arms.
âWell, I know that, but it doesnât have any secondary berries in it?â asks Gemma, who owns the quilting shop across the way.
âNope. Same ingredients itâs had for the last fifty years.â Gemma is around fifty years old herself, and also a town native, so she knows this as well as anyone.
She wrinkles her nose, admitting her stalling techniques have come to an end. I stare at her without a smile, willing her to just pick a damn pie and leave.
Phil and Todd are sitting at the high-top table, nursing the coffees they ordered an hour ago and eating bites the size of crumbs. Iâve seen mice tackle a larger mouthful. Thank goodness I can close up in about thirty minutes, andâ¦wait, no, I canât go home.
be at home. What am I even supposed to say to her? How will I avoid her with so many hours left until I can justify going to sleep? Iâve been going to Jamesâs house every day after work until Iâm ready to go to bed just so I donât have to spend any time with Amelia. But he told meânot very politelyâto quit being a coward and that I wasnât welcome this evening at his house.
Iâve been kicking myself for agreeing to let her stay the weekend. Should have turned her away immediately. Itâs not like sheâs homeless or penniless. And when I stop and ask myself why I did let her stay, Iâm not comfortable enough to answer. Because Iâm pretty sure it would have something to do with the way I lingered in the bathroom over her bottle of body lotion like a freak. I told myself to leave it alone. Just leave it ALONE. But it was sitting there next to her hairbrush and makeup bag and it was too tempting not to pop the top to sniff it like the pathetic piece of shit that I am. Even worse, I felt disappointed when I smelled it because I knewâfrom standing too close to her on too many occasionsâthat the scent was all wrong. It changes when itâs on her skin. Turns deeper, softer, and warmer.
Iâm annoyed.
Iâm angry.
Iâm frustrated.
And I lean into those emotions like old friends because those are the ones that keep me from making a careless mistake like growing attached to a beautiful, talented woman with a great personality and a life far away from Rome, Kentucky.
Gemma finally leaves the shop with her apple bourbon vanilla pie (the same one she always gets, by the way), and most everyone else, except Phil and Todd, clears out. Iâm wiping down the counter when I spot a woman rolling up in front of the shop window on a bicycleâ¦
No. What is she doing here? And why is she wearing my hat?
The door chimes as Amelia steps in, sunlight spilling all around her form like sheâs a damn angel sent to earth to prove that heaven really exists. I wish I could say my eyes donât track the length of her tan, toned legs in her white shortsâthe same ones she was wearing the night I met herâbut they do. Her long dark hair is now braided over her shoulder and drapes all the way down to the middle of her abdomen. Itâs tied at the end with a navy silk ribbon that matches the blue in the striped tank top sheâs wearing. White canvas sneakers cover her feet, but I know thereâs red toenails hiding underneath. Needless to say, this classic and sophisticated style of hers is a complete contradiction to my old, faded Atlanta Braves baseball cap. Does she think itâs helping her hide? She sticks out like a beautiful, radiant thumb.
She ducks her head a little and then approaches the counter hesitantly. âI know I said I wouldnât bug you, but your fridge was sort of empty, so I thought Iâd come into town and get a few things to make dinner tonight. Earn my keep and all. But then I saw the name of this shop and remembered you saying you owned a pie shop, and .â She sizes up the frown on my face and starts backing away. âIâll just go. Sorry. This was a bad idea andââ She cuts herself off and turns around, heading for the door, braid whipping her back like itâs spurring her to move faster.
Phil and Todd duck their heads together, whispering and casting me disappointed looks. Like James, they donât think Iâm treating Amelia well enough. This town is too damn polite for its own good, and I wish I wasnât raised to think the same way. I wish I could successfully push her away like Iâve been trying to do instead of immediately tugging her back.
âAmelâRae.â Her shoulders bunch when I call her name, and she freezes, lightly spinning on the balls of her feet to face me again. I hitch my head toward the pie case. âHave a look around.â
Maybe if I let her see everything now, sheâll get her fill of the ânormal lifeâ and hit the road sooner. Because Iâm sure thatâs all this is for her. The rich and famous star is stooping down from her stage to and over our quaint little lives and then sheâll take some stories of our Mayberry-type town on the road with her to tell her friends. This town is just a layover for her type. Believe me.
I donât know if Amelia is smiling or frowning as she looks over every nook and cranny of my pie shop because I go into the back kitchen and clean up for the day. When I hear the front door chime, I audibly sigh with relief knowing that the bell means sheâs gone.
âShouldnât have let her stay,â I grumble under my breath as I scrub a mixing bowl in the sink. âNot worth it.â Scrub, scrub, scrub. âSuch an idiot.â
âYou talk to your dishes more than people.â
I jump a mile out of my skin at the sound of Ameliaâs voice behind me. I startle so much that I accidentally fling a big glob of soap bubbles right into my eye. âShit. Dammit!â Now my eyes are burning like they were just doused with bear spray. Iâm trying to use my elbow to wipe them out, but itâs not working and my hands are still too soapy to use them.
âIâm so sorry! Let me help.â Amelia tugs my shoulder turning me toward her, and through my burning, squinting eyes, I can see that she has wet a dish towel. If she thinks Iâm going to let her doctor me up, sheâs got another thing coming. I donât want her anywhere near me.
âIâm fine.â I wipe my eyes with my forearm again, but itâs getting worse. Involuntary tears are starting to stream from my eyes. Iâm not crying! Let the record show my eyes are doing this on their own!
I shove my soap-covered hands under the stream of water and frantically try to rinse them so I can wipe what I now think might be straight-up battery acid out of my eyes. Amelia tries to tug my shoulder again, but I donât budge.
âOh, for pityâs sake,â she says like sheâs lived in this town for more than two days. She then slides herself up under my arm, right between me and the sink. My arms are wrapped around her now and our chests are touching. Hot electricity surges through my veins and Iâm left stunned. Itâs been too long since Iâve had a woman in my arms and thatâs the only reason my body is reacting so intensely right now.
âJust let me get the bubbles out and then you can go back to ignoring me,â she says, lifting up on her tiptoes to push the dish towel into each of my eyes, wiping the suds out. It helps. Or maybe I just donât feel the pain anymore because my brain is zeroing in on all the places our bodies are touching. It takes me all of two seconds to note that her eyes have flecks of green. That when her vanilla lotion mixes with her skin it smells like brown sugar. A light dusting of freckles sits on the bridge of her nose. Other than that subtle black line that extends over her lid and flicks out beside her thick eyelashes, I donât think she wears much makeup. If I had to wager, Iâd say those raspberry-pink lips are all natural.
I swallow when her hand lowers and my eyes are no longer burning. She doesnât move. I donât move. Thereâs this magnetic sort of pull between us that Iâm not happy to realize exists. More than anything Iâd love to be repulsed by herâbut Iâm not. And I sure as hell donât hate staring at those full lips, wondering if they taste just as tart and sweet as they look.
I should step back. Drop my arms. Take a deep breath and cool off. But I canâtâmy feet wonât move and my eyes wonât budge from her mouth.
And then, I donât know who moves first, but our lips collide. My hand shoots up to cradle the back of her neck, and her arms wind around my waist, pulling my body flush with hers.
.
Her delicious mouth chases away my logical thoughts until all thatâs left is desire. I step forward, pressing her back against the sink. We should stop. This goes against everything Iâve told herâbut she makes a soft sound of encouragement that spikes a sharper need in me than I can contain.
Usually, I kiss like I have all day. A gentle build of sensuality thatâs meant for savoring. Amelia unlocks something in me, though.
Her tongue glides over mine and sheâs so damn sweet I feel like Iâm burning alive.
I glide my hands to her waist and wrap my fingers around her hips, one second away from hoisting her up on the counter when the shop door chimes. The sound douses us in reality and all my rational thoughts return.
I drop my hands and step wayyy back, feeling strongly that whatever that wasâit was a mistake. Amelia shuffles to the farthest corner of the counter. Weâre not making eye contact anymore, and the atmosphere turns awkward.
âAmelia, Iâm sorry. That wasââ
âNot supposed to happen,â she finishes my statement in a rush. âI know. And Iâm sorry, too. Letâs just move on and agree not to do it again.â
Weâre prevented from talking anymore about thisâwhich is probably for the bestâwhen a familiar voice calls out to me from the front of the shop.
âNoah?â
Oh no. Not now. Not yet. I thought theyâd get back in town tomorrow!
âHe must be in the back.â
âHiding probably.â
I look at Amelia and grimace. âI apologize in advance.â
Amelia only has a second to look confused before all three of my younger sisters barge through the kitchen door, eyes frantic and on the hunt.
âThere you are!â says Emily, the oldest of my sisters, who I can best describe as a bottle of hot sauce. âYou have so much explaining to do!â She just turned twenty-nine last year and has my momâs green eyes. The same ones I have.
Next comes Madison, second to youngest, pushing through the swinging door and peering over Emilyâs shoulder. âWe just got back into town and had to hear from Harriet that you had a random woman stay over at your house last night!â Madison looks the most like my dad. She has dark hair and dark eyes. She pretends to be as assertive and unflappable as Emily, but she doesnât fool meâshe feels deeply.
And then next comes Annabell (aka Annie), the baby of the family at age twenty-six, the soft, quiet, wholesome one, and also the only one with naturally bright, nearly white, blond hair. We used to joke that she got it from the mailman since neither my mom or dad had blond hair. Even Emily and I have more of a golden, sandy color than true blond. âBut then, we heard from Phil, who heard it from Gemma, who heard it from Mabel that itâs not a random woman but Rae Rose! As in Rae Rose!â
Madison comes up and pokes me in the chest. âWhat were you thinking, keeping something like this from us? Do you not love us?â
I grin lightly. âHow was the flower show?â
âDonât try to distract us! Go ahead, Noah, tell us you hate us!â says Emily.
Annie puts her hands on her hips. âItâs the only reason we can imagine you wouldnât call us immediately and tell us that pop royalty is staying in your house.â She pauses a moment and her face turns slightly abashed. âAnd the flower show was nice. Thank you for asking.â
Like I said, energy of the sun. These ladies talk at a clip that only the most seasoned of listeners can keep up with. I happen to be one of them.
I clear my throat and then glance over each of their heads toward the poor woman with wide eyes in the back corner of the room, looking like a trapped bunny. This is good, actually. Maybe itâll scare her out of town. I should have sicced my sisters on her sooner.
My sisters follow my gaze until their heads are swiveled toward Amelia.
âLadies, this is Rae Rose.â
my mind corrects. âHer car unfortunately broke down in my front yard a few nights ago and sheâs stranded in town until Tommy can fix itâ¦orâ¦â I let that hang.
My sistersâ mouths are wide open, catching flies, and they are speechless for probably the first time in their lives. Amelia smiles, and Iâm unable to stop myself from noticing how itâs completely different from the one she gives me. With what can only be described as grace, Amelia raises a hand in their direction and waves good-naturedly. âHi. So nice to meet you guys.â
Thereâs about two seconds of complete silence before my sistersâ shock wears off and they pounce. Itâs a swirl of peppy southern voices bombarding Amelia with question after question. Fortunately for Amelia, thereâs only three people in this town who are genuine fans of hers. Unfortunately for Amelia, theyâre all currently in the kitchen with her.
The conversation goes like this but pretty much all at once.
Youâre stuck at Noahâs house? He doesnât even have Wi-Fi, you know?
Noah is boring. Come out with us tonight!
Weâre going to Hankâs if you want to come?
Hankâs is a local bar where we all go and drink on Friday nights.
We can pick you up!
Weâll make sure no one annoys you while youâre there.
Youâll love it, I promise.
I fully expect Amelia to shove them out of the way and take off running for the hills. Thereâs no way she even comprehended all those words pelted at her at once. But of course, Iâm wrong again and Amelia is apparently the one woman in the entire world who can speak Excited Walker Women.
Her bright smile stretches across her mouth, and honestly, Iâve never seen someone look happier.
my mind adds again because itâs a little jackass. âUmmâHankâs, Iâd love to go with you guys. That is ifâ¦â Her eyes slip to me and her smile falters a fraction. âIf Noahâs okay with it.â
Iâm not given a chance to respond before Emily steps between us and says, âWhy the hell do you need his permission? Last I checked he doesnât own the place. Well, he does own place, but he doesnât own Hankâs. So will you come with us?â
How has this woman infiltrated my life so quickly? I think tornadoes have blown through this town slower. And probably with less damage than sheâs likely to inflict.