: Chapter 23
My Darling Bride
Since the basement incident, Grahamâs taken care of dealing with the plumber, swept the rotunda, and helped an elderly couple onto the elevator. Both he and Jasper wear ball caps, and only a couple of people have recognized them.
Graham looks relaxedâthat is, until Londyn squirms in Andrewâs arms and points at Graham. Andrew hands her to Graham, who holds her from his body with outstretched arms until Andrew tells him to put Londyn on his hip. He bounces her around when she starts to whimper, and pretty soon heâs walking around the store with her, pointing out different things for her to look at. Sheâs sleepy and rests her forehead on his shoulder.
I take a bite of the grilled cheese Jane made me earlier. Itâs the first time Iâve sat down all day.
âQuite the view, right?â Brody says as he plops down next to me at the table. He arrived about an hour ago, after Graham texted him. Cas stayed behind for work but said heâd come by later.
I take a sip of my tea. âWhat view?â
âGraham with a baby. Giving you ideas?â He waggles his brows. âIâd adore a little niece or nephew. Cas and I have thought about adoption, but we need to get the business going first.â
âAre you looking at places for your gym again?â
He nods. âI think weâve found a great place in Brooklyn. Itâs in a fun part of town and has plenty of space for everything we want to do.â
âThe cookies are going off in the oven,â Jane calls out to him.
Brody smirks and rises to his feet. âSorry. Iâm on cookie duty. Want me to bring you a hot one? Itâs chocolate chip in this batch.â
I tell him no, that I donât eat chocolate because of caffeine, then check my phone as a text comes in. Itâs from the art girl who made the shark. I sent her a text this morning, hoping she might have some ideas for us on how to repair the shark.
Sorry I canât help you fix Mr. Shark. I got hired at Bloomingdales full-time.
I congratulate her on the job, then toss the phone down and want to cry in frustration.
Great. Now what?
âTomorrow is the big reveal for our window,â I tell the staff and everyone else whoâs gathered in the rotunda. Itâs nearly closing time, and a few customers come and go, but Jane is handling them.
âThe Times will be here to take a look at it. Weâd planned a shark window, but that isnât going to happen because the shark is ruined, and the artist isnât available to help. I need quick and easy ideas, and whoever is available tonight to stay and help put it together. I know weâve all been working hard, but this window is our biggest coup of the summer. We need something fantastic.â I pause. âAlso, in case you havenât heard the good news yet, our buyer of the store is keeping it open. Heâs also here today helping us. Staff, meet Graham Harlan.â Apparently Graham met with Terry in Atlanta, and they officially signed the papers.
Babs claps excitedly.
The staff waves a hello at him. Some of them cheer.
âGraham, would you like to add anything?â I ask.
He clears his throat. âGood work, everyone. Iâm glad to be here.â
Andrew munches on a cookie as he flirts with one of the newly hired girls. âHe bought it because he loves my sister. Theyâre married.â
Babs rolls her eyes. âWe all know theyâre married, Andrew.â
Grahamâs eyes find mine and glint with something. âWho couldnât love her?â
Brody smiles widely as he gives me a thumbs-up and claps. âBravo, brother! The bookstore is your great new adventure.â
Jasper elbows Brody. âBeing the best tight end in the country is his adventure.â
âWith that settled, shoot me with your ideas for a summer display,â I say. âAnything. Just something. Please.â
Jasperâs hand shoots up in the air, and I smirk. âYou donât have to raise your hand, Jasper.â
âOh, well, youâre in charge, so . . . How about a bunch of sand, giant beach balls, then toss some books in there about summerââ
Jane interrupts him as she arrives with Londyn in her arms. âNot exciting.â
âItâs a great idea,â he retorts to her as she sits at their table.
Babs clears her throat. âJust rolling with the beach theme . . . we could put a chair in there, an inflatable palm tree, put the male mannequin in a Speedo, and let him read a book with a summery title. Oh! We could toss in a surfboard.â
I jot down her thoughts on a clipboard.
âWe could ask our owner or one of his friends to sit in the beach chair a few hours a day, you know, just to make it exciting,â Jane says with relish as she sweeps her gaze over Graham and Jasper. âGives them something to do besides banging against each other on the football field.â
Jasper glowers at her. âWe have busy lives.â
âIt must be so hard to put on a uniform and run around. Give the man a cookie,â Jane says sweetly.
Jasper glares at her. âIâm going to get a cookie, then Iâm going to shelve more books.â He stalks away, and I sigh as I give Jane a Can you settle down for a hot minute? look.
She shrugs and mouths Iâm sorry.
Brody raises his hand, and I groan. âYou donât have to raise your hand.â
âIs the shark completely ruined?â he asks.
âIt has half a head. A few teeth left. The rest of the body is unsalvageable,â Graham says.
Brody taps his chin. âMaybe have the mannequinâin his Speedo, of courseâfighting off a shark, only you canât see most of the shark, just the mangled head. Blood is everywhere. His leg is gone. Maybe an arm. The girl mannequinâmaybe a lifeguardâis trying to pull him out of the water. You could feature books about sharks and travel guides to sea destinations.â
I nod. âI appreciate your idea, but the blood and loss of a leg might be a bit much for some customers. We try to keep our displays PG.â
âYeah, they donât want to scare people away, Brody,â Graham adds.
Brody pouts. âI love gore. If I had a bookstore, it would be a horror one.â
One of the staffs suggests summer hobbies like gardening. Another suggests a camping scene with a tent and a fake fire. None of them seem to take hold.
My shoulders slump. âWe need to nail this down. Any other ideas?â
âI noticed you had a box of old vinyl records in the basement,â Graham says. âAnything good?â
I shake my head. âJust some items Terry bought when we talked about selling records. What are you thinking?â
âWell, most windows will be doing beachy themes, right? We want to stand out.â
I nod.
âI was flipping through the records, and most of them are from the seventies. You could do a âDisco Summer of the Seventiesâ or a âFifty-Year Anniversary of Booksâ kind of thing. You could get a disco ball; well, actually I have one at myâourâapartment.â
Brody nods enthusiastically. âDude, yes! Hang the ball, dress the mannequins in seventies outfitsâhalter tops and bell-bottoms, head scarves, chokers, feather jewelry. I can get in touch with our drama teacher at the school. Theyâll have a roomful of costumes.â
We have a few costumes we keep in storage for our mannequins, but not anything from the seventies. âThanks, Brody. Could you get them today?â
He taps his phone. âAlready on it. Might as well consider it done.â
Jasper comes back over. âGraham, you mentioned the records. Maybe we could play music in the window, let it trickle out into the store. We passed an antique store on the way here. They might have one of those old record players to add to the ambiance.â
I smile at him. âThatâs a lovely idea. Okay. Letâs come up with a list of books. What books do we associate with the seventies?â
Everyone pops out their phones, and Graham is the first to say, âJudy Blumeâs Are You There God? Itâs Me, Margaret.â
âA favorite,â I say as he holds my eyes intently until tingles dance over my skin.
âThe Joy of Sex,â Jasper calls out triumphantly. âThatâs what Iâm talking about, folks! Twelve million copies sold. Boom.â
Jane smirks. âTypical that youâd go to the book about sex. Do you need a little self-help?â
Jasper narrows his gaze. âI donât, Joanie.â
âItâs Jane.â
âWho cares,â he replies coolly.
âI donât,â she says.
Jasper narrows his gaze. âThe book is about experiencing intimacy and having fun with sex. Maybe you need it.â
âYou know nothing about me,â she mutters.
âOkay, enough of you both. Keep going,â I say, rolling my hands.
âFear and Loathing in Las Vegas, All the Presidentâs Men, Roots, The Shining,â Babs says as she balances her phone and Londyn in her lap.
âThe Shining!â Brody exclaims. âA creepy caretaker at a hotel in Colorado, ghostly twins, dead guests, and an axe! Oh, I want a window just with that.â
âWe have an axe,â Jane murmurs.
âEnough with the axe,â I tell her pointedly.
âItâs a good list of classics. Great idea, Graham,â I say. âYouâll make a great bookstore owner.â
Heâs bent over his phone, taking notes, and glances up at me. A long moment passes, or maybe itâs just my imagination, but it feels as if weâre sharing more than just ideas. Nope. Weâre just professional. A professional marriage.
âYouâre welcome, darling,â he murmurs.
I shake myself out of my reverie and gaze around. âSo . . . whoâs going to help us get this done tonight?â