: Chapter 9
My Darling Bride
âUm, book lady on the floor, hello, are you listening?â a voice says behind me, and I start as I look up and see two teen girls, one brown haired, the other a strawberry blonde. Iâm literally on the floor as I reshelve books left in the reading area downstairs. I assume the girls tried to get my attention before, but my mind has been distracted since meeting with Graham a few days ago.
âYes, how can I help?â I brush the dust off my red dress. Itâs a little retro number with a black velvet collar and buttons down the front. Sadly, thereâs a splash of coffee where my breast is and a hole in my fishnet hose, right on the knee. The coffee happened this morning while serving a customer, and the hole occurred minutes ago. I donât usually reshelve books, but weâre down three employees.
Magic perks his head out from the top shelf above me. His stubby tail swishes.
The strawberry blonde, maybe fifteen and dressed in a preppy school skirt and blazer, knee socks, and saddleback shoes, steps forward. âHi, weâre looking for an autographed copy of William Shakespeareâs Romeo and Juliet.â
I do a little clap. âOh, wow. Please tell me if you find one.â
She scowls. âDonât you have those? Any good bookstore would.â
I exhale, not in frustration, but in glee. I live for these bookstore moments. Girls, itâs time for a trip down memory lane . . .
âWell,â I say with a smile. âYouâre not the first student to come in and ask for this, but Iâve got some bad news for you.â
âAre you out of them?â asks the other girl as she does a little hair flip. âDo we need to go to Lottieâs Bookstore? They do have better coffee.â
How dare she?
âI assure you, we are the best bookstore in Manhattan, but back to your book . . . Shakespeare doesnât have any autographed copies in any bookstore, and if he did, theyâd be worth about, hmm, six to seven million dollars.â My hand rests on my chest dramatically. âWhat Iâd give to come across one.â
They glance at each other, still confused, then almost in unison say, âBut our teacher said to get one.â
âRight. Follow me.â They fall in line behind me as I lead them to the other side of the third floor to the fiction section, my thigh-high heeled boots clicking against the tile. âFYI: there are no original copies of his manuscripts, signed or not. Thereâs not even a couplet written with his name under it. In fact, there are only about six items in the world with Shakespeareâs signature, and none of them relate to his plays. Theyâre on things like wills and deeds. Whatâs really crazy is when we stop and think about the absence of this signature, we have to ask ourselves: What if he wasnât the author of those plays? Shocking, right?â
âSeriously? We didnât come for a lecture,â the strawberry blonde says with a long, aggrieved sigh.
I nod and keep going. âI love a good lecture. What we do know about William Shakespeare is he only went to primary school, his parents were illiterate, and so were his children. I mean, why wouldnât a man whoâd written such moving pieces of literature educate his own children? And, when he died, there was no public mourning, even when people had flocked to see his plays. Itâs just baffling.â
âIâm not baffled. Are we there yet?â one of them says.
I trudge on. âAlmost. If youâre into conspiraciesâI amâsome believe that Christopher Marlowe, a writer of the same time period, was really Shakespeare. Did you ask how? No? Let me explain. Marlowe was despised because of his antireligious works, and nearly everyone in the late sixteenth century was religious. So, the theory is that Marlowe faked his sudden deathâsupposedly stabbed in a barâbecause he was also a spy for the Tudor court, plus there was a warrant out for his arrest. Marlowe was in deep shit. Then, two weeks after his supposed death, voilà , the first work of William Shakespeare goes on sale. Howâs that for intriguing?â
âYou need to take a break from Shakespeare,â one of them mutters.
âRight. To each their own. âTo thine own self be true,ââ I say.
âWhat are you even saying?â one of them says.
I wave her off. Itâs over now. The moment has passed. They didnât get it.
âAnyway, your teacher meant for you to buy one of these. Just a regular copy.â I indicate the correct shelf and grab two paperbacks of Romeo and Juliet off the shelf and put them in their hands. âI hope you learned something today. Enjoy the play. Mercutio is my fav. Oh, and itâs a real tearjerker.â
They smirk. âWe know how it ends, book lady. They die.â
ââParting is such sweet sorrow.ââ And with those words, I mosey away, and Magic meets me at the end of the row. What fresh hell were you spouting? his eyes convey. I give him a pet and head to the staircase as he follows. Heâs fit in well in our apartment, and the expression on Londynâs face when she first saw him was priceless. Pure amazement.
The PA system clicks on, and Babsâs voice blares: âEmmy, we have a cream situation. Emmy to the main floor for the cream.â
Cream? Then it dawns, and I groan. Last month our coffee station got knocked over, and a large plastic container of french vanilla shattered when it hit the marble tile. Sticky, sugary white stuff oozed everywhere, and the floor squeaked for days. It took multiple moppings.
Iâll need the big yellow bucket from the maintenance closet. Magic follows me as I hop on the elevator and take the ride to the basement and grab it. Ugh. The water is murky and hasnât been changed, so I refill it, wrestle the mop back in, get back on the elevator, and push the button for the first floor.
âAttention, Emmy, please hurry! We need you to see the cream,â Babs says over the loudspeakers.
âI heard you the first time,â I mutter as I shove the mop and bucket out of the elevator and onto our main floor.
A man catches me before I get too far. Heâs older, maybe fifty. âDo you have any books on . . . erotica?â he asks as he blushes. âItâs for . . . a friend.â
If Babs were here, sheâd clasp his hand in hers, gush over her favs, and skip with him to the sexy books. I smile. âSure. Second floor, on the right. You canât miss it.â
I turn back to the bucket, and instead of bending over to push it, I shove it with one of my heels. The motion causes the wooden handle of the mop to whip back and bang my nose. Tears burst from my eyes at the pain. The inconvenience of not having a cleaning person ratchets up, and I curse vividly.
Babs dashes over. âYou move like a tortoise. Why are you trying to break your face? You splashed water out on the floor.â
âYou try rolling this thing. Itâs heavy, and one of the wheels is wonky.â I wring out the mop and rub it over the spilled water. âThere.â
âYou shouldnât be doing this.â
âOur maintenance person didnât show. Guess whoâs going to be here all night, cleaning? Me and you.â I push the pail forward, this time by the mop handle. She keeps pace with me as we reach the condiment area. âWhereâs the creamer? You didnât mean the cream soda, did you?â
âThereâs no spilled creamer,â she hisses. âIs that why youâre dragging around this mop bucket like a bedraggled waif?â
Only booklovers use words like âbedraggledâ and âwaif.â
âBabs. Whatâs going on? Why are your eyes darting to the left?â
âMr. Hottie in the cream suit is here. Remember? I told you all about him when you got back from your vacay. Heâs near the window. Donât you dare look, or heâll know weâre talking about him, and itâs bad enough that youâre pushing a mop.â She gives me an exasperated look. âWhat am I going to do with you?â
âThe PA system isnât your personal alert system for good-looking guys.â
âIt is.â
âNo, itâs not.â
âWhatever. Pretty soon it wonât even matter because weâre closing for good. Itâs him. The one who asked for you.â
âJeez, stop hissing,â I say. âI understood you the first time. Heâs the man who came by, and boy was he hot, blah, blah, blah. Where is he?â
Her eyes roll so hard I think for a moment her fake lashes might flop off. âI already told you. Heâs near the display. He asked for you to serve his tea.â
A snort comes from me. I enjoy reading Jane Austen, but I donât pour your tea, my lord. âThe nerve. Iâm not a waitress. At least not here.â
âOkay, well, he didnât really say, âTell her to serve my tea,â maybe I sort of added that part because it sounded exciting, but Emmy! Heâs interested in you. Iâm telling you: thereâs a gleam in his gorgeous gray eyes, andââ
âWait. Gray? Like storm clouds?â
âMore like the polished silver of a spoon. The man is dripping in sex pheromones and money. Not that youâre a gold digger, but, well, you are in a precarious sitch right now,â she says, then winces. âI may have mentioned some things about you to him, so forgive me in advance, but youâre my bestie and I knew your gran, and the truth is sheâd want what I want, which is something wonderful in your life and someoneââ
âStop. What did you tell him?â
Her eyes flare, and her nose twitches like a rabbitâs. She takes a bite of the scone in her hands. âI just told him how sweet you are, which isnât true today. I also told him youâre looking for love.â
âBabs! I am not! I have other things to worry about.â
Her shoulders slump. âI know. Everything is falling apart. The store is closing. Anyway. Heâs waiting for you. Fix yourself and leave the mop bucket in the corner.â
Magic twines between my legs and gives me an Are you okay? look. Yes, sweet cat, something is indeed brewing in the air, and itâs not tea but an arrogant jerk who thinks Iâd marry him because I took his car to the airport, and then it got stolen. And yes, I feel enormous guilt and remorse for taking his Lambo, but marriage? Never.
Holding the pastry in one hand, Babs scoops Magic up with the other and snuggles him. He seems to adore her and Terry and the rest of the staff.
âIâll feed the Prince of Darkness. You go see himâoh, and thereâs a woman with him, which I canât quite figure out, so thereâs that.â
Iâm muttering as I straighten my dress and head to the front area of the bookstore. I glance in a mirror on the wall, and sure enough, my nose looks like Rudolph. Merry Christmas.
There he is, looking like he just stepped out of a magazine, wearing a fitted long-sleeved pale-blue shirt and slim navy slacks. Dark hair is swept off his face, and his inviting lips are currently smiling at his companion. Combined with his broad shoulders and a chest that tapers to a trim waist, heâs gorgeous.
He sits at a table with a petite brunette in a yellow dress with her hair swept up on each side with gold barrettes.
Pretty snazzy for a weekday.
Babs slides in next to me, vibrating with excitement. She must have fed Magic in record time. âAct nonchalant,â she tells me. âDonât run him off with your âromance only works in booksâ spiel.â
I inhale a deep breath, steeling myself. âGuess thatâs his other possible fake wife . . .â
âWhat?â
âNothing.â
âSo you know him? He isnât a stranger?â
âGraham Harlan, football star, mega wealthy, possible mafia or international art thief on the side.â
âWhat?â
âKidding. Thatâs just my imagination.â
Graham must feel the heat of my stare. He glances over at me and quirks one of his eyebrows. Well, it seems to say. Fancy seeing you here. Come meet your competition.
I feel a blush rising up my cheeks. At least I put on makeup today: total skin coverage, plus winged eyeliner and crimson lips. And my dress is hot. A little too short. A little too tight. Just perfect.
Maybe a tiny part of me hoped heâd stop by the bookstore. Pfft. I donât need a love interest, not that that even matters, since heâs only proposing a marriage of convenience.
I approach the table, intent on keeping a smile plastered on my face.
He watches me with lowered lids, as if trying to make sense of my movements, my expressions, my feelings. His eyes brush over my hair, taking in the messy bun, the wisps that linger around my cheeks, and when he ends on my lips, my smile falters.
His gaze is so heavy and intimate that I almost forget to breathe.
His stare needs to be outlawed.
When he sees the coffee stain on my chest, everything inside me itches to grab a napkin off a table and wipe at it, but I hold back the urge, my heart thumping a little too fast for my taste.
Why is the air more alive around him? Crisper?
âThis isnât Marcelleâs,â I say lightly when I reach them. âI donât wait tables here; in fact, no one does. Hello, Graham.â
He merely nods, but the woman lights up with a beautiful smile, eagerness on her face. Her eyes are midnight blue, her teeth like little pearls. Dang, sheâs pretty.
âOf course not,â she says, then sticks out her hand. âHi, Iâm Mina. Babs mentioned how hard you work on the displays. Itâs so . . . cute.â
âCuteâ is a word for kittens. Our windows are freaking divine. âThank you,â I murmur as I release her hand. âWeâll have a new one up for the summer. The Times comes by for the reveal.â I stop, a heaviness sinking in as I realize I forgot for a moment that weâre closing permanently. I shake my head. âSorry. Thatâs incorrect. The store is closing soon. Sometimes I forget.â
âOh, thatâs disappointing,â she says. âItâs my first time here, and G mentioned we should stop by.â
You donât say. How interesting.
He shrugs. âItâs near my apartment at Wickham.â
Ah, Wickham, an exclusive apartment complex that overlooks Central Park. Of course he would live there. How nice for him.
She gives him a secret smile. âWe just came from his place. Itâs horrendous and totally needs to be renovated. He actually has a statue of a giant penis.â She laughs, a dulcet sound. âHave you been, Emmy?â
Well, no, but I have stolen his car. It drives like a dream.
âNo,â I say sweetly, then turn to him and raise an eyebrow. Sheâs perfect, my gaze says.
âThanks,â he replies dryly; then I get flustered because, hello, do we have some kind of mind connection?
âAnd for the record, the statue was in my apartment when I moved in,â Graham says. âAs was the shag carpet and weird sunken living room. Iâm hoping someone can help me redecorate.â He raises an eyebrow at me, which I ignore.
Mina laughs. âItâs lime green and bolted to the groundâthe penis, that is. You really must go see it.â
âHow fun,â I murmur. Iâll never see his apartment, Mina. Because youâre going to marry him, not me.
I put on my customer smile. âSo nice to meet you, Mina. The girl at the counter will be glad to take your order. Please try one of our pastries on the house. Now, if youâll excuse me, I need to get back to workââ
Before I can leave, Graham takes my hand. âWait a moment, Emmy. Please,â he murmurs.
Oh. Shivers dance over me.
Itâs hard to resist a âpleaseâ from him.
Mina rises from her seat with the grace of a swan. âIâll let you two chat while I take you up on a muffin. Iâm going to try the pomegranate tea. Same for you, G?â
âSure,â he replies absently, eyes on me. âThanks, Mina.â
She glides away to go to the counter, and he says, âWill you sit for a moment?â
âOkay.â I loosen my hand from his grasp and take a seat.
âHave you considered my offer?â His gaze lingers on my face.
Itâs all Iâve thought about. Instead of replying, I lean in and cup my chin, giving him my full attention. âWhat are you holding over Mina to get her to marry you?â
âNothing. She adores me. Isnât it obvious?â
âSo youâre going for the romantic angle? Love and devotion?â
He leans back in his chair, a relaxed smirk on his face. âYou remind me of Brody, as if all women hate me. It really isnât true. You stole my dream car, and now youâre breaking my heart, Emmy.â
âYouâre different today,â I say. Heâs softer. Sexier. More relaxed. It must be Mina. âWhatâs going on? Got an ace up your sleeve? Are the cops waiting outside for me?â
His lips twitch. âYour imagination is adorable. Iâm enjoying watching you work. Nice dress.â
My breath quickens as I realize Iâm playing with one of the buttons, and his eyes are following me.
He leans in on the table to match my pose. âAnd who says Minaâs my fiancée? Jealous?â
My teeth click together as Mina arrives with a pomegranate tea for Graham. She places it and a croissant in front of him, then says sheâs going to wander around the store for a bit.
Pain twinges in the center of my skull, one I can no longer ignore, and I rub my temple.
His brows pull down. âHeadache?â
âHmm. I thought it would disappear by now, but it seems to be getting worse. Sorry if Iâm not the best conversationalist right now.â
He takes a napkin from the dispenser and hands it to me. âItâs fine, but your mascara is running, and the bridge of your nose is turning purple. Whatâs going on?â
I dab at my eyes. âI banged my nose on a mop. You might have enjoyed it.â A rueful smile crosses my lips. âIâm shocked it isnât bleeding.â
âCome with me.â He stands and holds out his hand, and I hesitantly put mine in his.
âYou want to look at it? Why?â
âIâm a football player. I know my injuries. The first thing we need to do is put some ice on it and make sure it isnât fractured. I also want to make sure you donât have a concussion.â
âFrom a mop handle?â
âTrust me, anything is possible, plus nose hits sting like a bitch. Iâve taken a few of them just messing around with the guys. Whereâs the kitchen?â
âUm, behind the counter, through the swinging doors.â
He doesnât release my hand as we pass a wide-eyed Babs at the counter, checking out the teen girls from earlier. Eyeballing Graham, they squeal in excitement, then take their purchases and rush over to us. One of them grabs his sleeve, and he disentangles himself and tells her that heâs on his private time.
âDoes that happen a lot?â I ask as we leave them behind.
âHmm, you may not know this, but Iâm famous.â
âDid the player that pulled your face mask get fined or what?â
âTechnically, the defense would have gotten a fifteen-yard penalty, but since I crossed the goal line anyway, it didnât matter,â he says. âWe won. It was a high-pressure game, and people react on instinct. Sometimes the caveman takes over on the field.â
I stop, surprise flickering over me. âWait. You actually have empathy for him? Even after all the problems it must have given you?â
âI believe he didnât mean for what happened to happen. Itâs a risk we all take when we put on the uniform. Iâm angry itâs fucked with me for months, but Iâve been cleared to play. Iâll start this fall.â
I frown. After discovering who he was, I watched the video of his tackle several times. Heâd fallen into a tangle of arms and legs, then lay on the field while everyone else got to their feet. He didnât move. Not an inch. The crowd hushed. The other team prayed. His team formed a wall around him for privacy as the paramedics used a defibrillator to bring him back. Iâve had a similar thing done, to shock my heart back into normal rhythm.
We walk into the kitchen, and our hands drift apart. Tilting my chin up, he searches my face. With surprisingly gentle fingers he touches the top of my nose. Concern etches his features. âI donât feel a break, and it doesnât look misshapen. Your eyes look fine but might bruise later. Do you feel nauseous or dizzy?â
âNo.â
But my heart is suddenly thumping like a snare drum.
Dammit, I like this vulnerable side of him, his care. True, heâs a towering man with muscles, seemingly invincible, but thereâs a gentleness about him that makes my heart tighten.
He smells intoxicating, and with our faces this close, I notice the feathery lines at the corners of his mercurial eyes. I see a small scar on his temple. I take in the strong muscles in his throat, the light dusting of dark hair I see below his neck. I wonder if thereâs a lot of hair on his chest. My mind wanders, and I imagine his abdomen, if he has a six- or an eight-pack; then Iâm tangled up in thoughts about his penisâis there a curve, which direction does it point, is he circumcised, if his height and broad shoulders suggest a girthy cock, and what color the spring of hair would beâ
And nope. I have a cat.
âYeah, I donât think I have a concussion,â I say as I ease away, grab a ziplock bag, and fill it with ice from the machine.
Leaning against the stainless steel counter, I press the bag to my face, focusing on the bridge of my nose and not the man next to me.
âSo, tell me about this fight with the mop. You lost?â
âI banged it while pushing the bucket we use to mop up spills. Some of our employees didnât show, so Iâm doing odd jobs.â
âAh.â
I exhale. The mop incident is just another reminder that the store is going away. My stomach churns all over again. âI guess you saw the sign on the door. Weâre closing for good. Our people are skipping work to look for other jobs. My gran worked here for years. My siblings and I ran around, had meals in the kitchen, played hide-and-seek . . .â My voice trails off. I even got to first base with my crush on the velvet settee upstairs.
Just memories from the past, written on my heart.
I lower the ice pack, thinking. He and I donât know each other, but weâve been through something together. I canât unload on Babs because sheâll try to fix things, like find me a job in Alaska. I canât with my siblings, because Jane is going through her own issues, and Andrew is already on the verge of quitting school. âItâs like, losing the store is just another piece of her gone. Pretty soon I wonât have anything left.â
My chest rises. âThen, thereâs the apartment where I live. My gran took out a second mortgage to help my mom. I know selling is the right thing to do, to get out of debt, and start fresh in a cheaper place, but itâs hard to let go after all the sacrifices Gran made for us, you know? She is, was, my mother.â
âIâm sorry,â he says softly.
I give him a wan smile. âSorry for venting. Bet you wished you hadnât shown up to taunt me with Mina.â
He takes the ice from my numb hands and places it on the counter. His words are whisper soft. âSheâs not my fiancée. That position is only for you.â
My breath catches.
A myriad of expressions flit over his face, ones I canât decipher. âIt must be you.â
I take in the diamond cheekbones, the beautiful lines of his jaw, and the way his eyes peer into mine with that deep, intense look.
âMy answer is no. I donât want to get married. And about the car . . . I think youâre the kind of person who would forgive me.â He has empathy for the guy who tackled him. Maybe he can spare some understanding for me.
Seconds tick by as he stares at me, emotions flitting over his face. Then he turns and walks out of the kitchen, leaving me there.
Shit. I groan. Maybe Iâve misjudged him, and heâs calling the police.
I start when the kitchen door flies open, and he stalks back inside, his chest heaving out an exhale as he stops in front of me. âYouâre infuriating, you know that?â
I dip my face and hide a smile. âWelcome back. So you arenât going to put me behind bars?â
âI never would have, and you know it.â
I touch his arm, and the act sends a buzzing hot zap down my spine. His muscles are taut and hard. I let my hand fall away. âSo let me help you out with Mina. What can I do? She clearly likes you. And she is sweet, even if she did say my windows are âcute.ââ
He rubs his face with both hands, his tone exasperated. âOf course she likes me. Sheâs my cousin. She thinks Iâm interested in youâromantically. She came along to be my wingwoman.â
I canât hide the smile anymore and giggle. âYou dragged her in here to push me into making a decision?â
âYes.â His eyes narrow. âBut with you, I need to be a bit more . . . persuasive.â
I rub my hands together. âLetâs hear it, then.â
âI have a confession.â
My stomach pitches in hope. âWhat? Your car is perfectly fine? That photo you sent is a fake? Please say itâs so.â
âNo, itâs wrecked, completely totaled.â He spears me with his steely gaze, the one that makes my hackles rise. âI bought the bookstore.â
I take a step back and gasp. âYou found out where I worked, then decided to pull the rug out from under me . . . in what . . . revenge? All because of a stupid car?â
âA four-hundred-thousand-dollar car,â he growls as he crosses his arms. âThink about it, Emmy. Of course I was going to find out who you are, especially when I discovered Brody knew you. I came into the store to talk to you, and when you werenât here, I thought Iâd check in with the owner to see what kind of person you wereâseeing as I had so little to base my knowledge on.â
âTerry knows I stole a car?â
âNo.â
Thank God. Heâs like the uncle I never had. And I never want Jane and Andrew to know I made such a dumb mistake. Iâm supposed to be a role model for them.
âBut when I saw his fishing boat, we had a conversation about retirement, and I said I might be interested in buying the store. We exchanged numbers, and I called him the next day.â He stuffs his hands in his pockets. âI do invest in property, Emmy. It happened organically.â
I shake my head. âYou wanted leverage. You knew you wouldnât press charges about the car, so you bought the store. Youâre a diabolical devil.â
âI only found this place because of you. Youâre the common denominator in this.â
âThanks for reminding me this is all my fault.â I turn my back to him and stomp to the door.
âDammit,â he mutters as he catches my arm. âWait, donât walk away. Just listen to me.â
I flip around. âWhat?â
He struggles with what to say, brows lowered, then lifts his hands. âChrist! Fine. I wanted leverage, and if it didnât work, I could have resold it.â
âBut how did you know that I loved it so much?â
He sighs. âTerry mentioned that youâd wanted to buy it someday, so . . .â
Itâs too absurd. âWhy go to such lengths? For me?â
âBecause my mind is set on you,â he murmurs.
âWhy?â I search his face, looking for clues as to what heâs thinking.
He debates internally, then says, âIâm in a rush to get married, and there arenât any other options I like. Brody adores you. Youâre . . . beautiful.â His words soften as he averts his glance and drags a hand through his dark hair. âIâm not terrible to live with. I have training camp soon, and I wonât even be around. Iâll keep the bookstore for you. Brody doesnât want me to buy him anything anyway.â
I inhale sharply as hope flares, burning like a beacon.
Keeping the store would solve so many issues. Iâd still have the memories of Gran here, and I could continue to take care of my family.
But at what cost?
I can feel a tiny thread of something between us. Chemistry, most definitely. Heat, oh yeah. From the moment he got out of his car at the motel, something about him caught my attention.
But . . .
I donât want to get entangled with him. Havenât I been through enough with Kian? I donât want to jump right back into something else, especially something that feels . . . exciting.
Gray eyes search mine, trying to gauge my reaction.
What I want to do is run and break this spell he has on me, but instead, I stay rooted. My mind tumbles his words around, running different scenarios and outcomes.
âWeâll be professional,â he says. âRoommates in my apartment. Perhaps friends.â
âFor how long?â
âA few months, maybe three; Iâm not sure. Until the lawyer approves the inheritance. Then weâll make up a story about why weâre getting divorced.â
I swallow, remembering how my heart jumps whenever heâs nearby. Obviously he doesnât have that issue.
And buying the store? I donât get it. Sure, he could use it as leverage, but that would be entirely overboard. Why not just find someone else? What is it about me that he wants?
âWhat happens to the store after we divorce?â
He studies my face. âI swear Iâll sell to someone whoâll keep it open.â
My throat tightens. Itâs everything I could want.
Unease rises.
I shake my head. âWhat if . . . I mean, it would be easy to . . .â Get attached to him.
Which is the last thing I need.
A moment passes, then: âI see.â
âWhat?â I put my hands on my hips.
âYouâre worried about falling for me.â
I scoff. âJesus. Please. That was the last thing I was thinking. Save me from the egomaniacal asshole.â
âYou wonât, I promise.â
âWhy not? Just curious why youâd say that.â
He shrugs as he leans in, until our faces are close. The scent of ripe cherries and leather wafts in the air. If I moved a few inches, I could kiss him. His lips are perfect for kissing, like pillows.
âThereâs armor wrapped around you so tight it might never come off, and I get it. You still have feelings for Kian. Am I right?â
Of course I have feelings for Kian, but Iâm not clarifying exactly what they are to Graham. I shrug nonchalantly. Let him believe what he wants.
âWhat about you? Is there an ex-girlfriend I should be worried about?â
His jawline tightens as he glances away from me with a faraway look, one that makes me want to ask whatâs wrong. The strong column of muscles in his throat moves. âWeâre alike in that. I love someone I canât be with.â
I inhale, an inexplicable pang of jealousy hitting me. âWhat? Who?â
âDoesnât matter.â He eases away from me, as if he needs distance. âBoth of us have our guard up. Weâve both been hurt. Neither of us hold any illusions about love or each other. Weâre perfect. So . . . deal?â He glances at me.
âIâm in charge of the store?â
He nods. âMake it profitable.â
âIt is already, but I can make it better. Iâll need a raise. After all, you donât want your wife bartending at Marcelleâs part time, do you?â
Amusement glints in his eyes. âDid you ever consider law school?â
âNo.â
âYou might have missed your calling. So. Yes or no?â
The sounds of the bookstore fade, muffled by my heart racing and my shallow breaths.
âHello. You had me at âbookstoreâ five minutes ago.â It means I can stay here for a little longer at least.
We gaze at each other, the seconds ticking by as heaviness lingers in the air around us, a tautness buzzing around the space.
Maybe weâre both feeling the weight of the decision weâve made.
Iâm thinking back to that moment when I ran from Kian by stealing Grahamâs car.
We wouldnât be here if it wasnât for that. I am the common denominator.
âHmm, yeah . . . just . . . guess I should . . .â He reaches inside his pocket and pulls out a velvet box. He opens it and reveals a ring. âThis was my motherâs favorite ring. Itâs an antique, and if itâs not to your taste, then we can get something else.â
I gasp at the square-shaped solitaire surrounded on the sides by smaller diamonds. âItâs . . .â Beautiful. Everything a girl could want.
He takes my left hand and glides it on my finger.
âIt fits your finger.â
My stomach flutters at the sight of the ring on my hand. I trace my fingers over it. âYou have to say the words.â Mostly Iâm kidding, to lighten the mood, but another side of me yearns for it. Weird.
âWhat words . . . oh, I see. Really? Youâre serious. Why?â
âWeâll need a good story. The truer it is, the more real weâll sound.â
âI didnât think you were a romantic,â he says.
âCanât a girl just want something, and thereâs not a label on it?â
âIs that any way to talk to your future husband? Also, your hand is shaking.â
âSo is yours, Mr. Cream.â
He pops that eyebrow. âMr. Cream?â
I wave my hand at him. âYou wore a cream suit. Babs noticed. Thatâs why she was on the PA system earlier, telling me about the âcream situation.ââ
His lips quirk.
âCome on, do it. Take the ring off and start all over.â
He takes the ring off as he growls under his breath, âHardest proposal of my fucking life . . .â
âHow many have you done?â
âJealous?â
âNo.â
He rolls his neck and shoulders. âIâm kinda sore from my workout. Itâs hard to get on the floor. Letâs skip that part.â
âAh, I see, the usual. Youâve never been on your knees in front of a woman.â
âOh, I have, my darling.â
Sexual tension swirls in the air as I imagine him going down on me. My breath hitches as my body quiversâ
Nope. One, I have a cat. Two, this is fake. Three, catch the fuck up, Emmy.
âYour face is flushed, Emmy,â he says, lids lowered.
I check my wrist for a watch Iâm not wearing. âLook at the time. Guess Iâll see you laterââ
He grumbles. âAll right, all right, Iâll stop teasing, and if you really insist, Iâll get down on my knee . . .â
âI do.â
âYouâll be saying those words very soon.â
âI need to close up the store in ten minutes, Mr. Cream.â
He shakes his head. ââMr. Creamâ makes me sound like I sit around and masturbate all day.â
I have to bite my lip to keep from laughing.
With a deep exhale, right there in the kitchen of the bookstore, surrounded by a bag of ice and dirty dishes in the sink, he gets down on one knee, looks up at me with a gaze I canât decipher, and says, âEmmy, will you marry me?â
I cock my head. âYou sound like a robot. Iâm a woman. Weâre in love. You canât wait for us to be together forever. Put some soul into it, some excitement. I want to feel tingles over every inch of my skin. Give me some va-va-voom.â I shimmy my shoulders to make the point.
âMy God. Youâre the diabolical one. Youâre being mean.â
I stifle down a laugh. âI admit, Iâm enjoying messing with you. Itâs not my problem you have thin skin. Youâre the one who wants to get married, Creamy.â
âAll I see is a giant pile of cumâor mayoâwhen you say that.â
I giggle.
âStop giggling.â
âIâm nervous! This is a big deal, okay? You need to stop getting flustered over getting on one knee.â
âJesus. Iâm nervous too.â His top teeth keep chewing on his bottom lip, and he keeps his eyes downcast as if searching for what to say. âEmmy, from the moment I saw you on the balcony of the motel, I knew you were an extraordinary woman. I want to spend the next few months with you. Will. You. Marry. Me.â
The words, which ring with truth, hang in the air, and the moments stretch like a rubber band. The faux tenderness of his expression, the pretend glint of hope in his eyes, the way his fake smile gives me the shivers, I commit it all to memory.
âAll right,â I say, and thatâs when the kitchen door flies open, and Babs rushes in.