Camera Shy: Chapter 38
Camera Shy (Lessons in Love Book 1)
About two exits shy of the airport, I remember a conversation I had with Dr. Ruth Donovon. After her big win with consulting for Royalty Airlines, they of course offered her a board advisory position. Dr. Donovon has done very well for herself, but she couldâve owned the entire block she lives on in Key Largo if she wanted to. What stopped her?
When I was debating switching my major from science to business and was scared to lose all the credit hours, she told me to reverse dissect my life. Donât think about my goals and what it takes to get there. She told me to picture my day-to-day life and think about what I wanted to fill my moments with. Dr. Donovon told me to let happiness build my goals. She loved to teachâ¦so thatâs what she continued to do until retirement.
When I think about what makes me happy in my day-to-day, I think about Dex and his scuba diving company. I remember all the random fish facts I knowâeven before this summer and my obsessive deep dive into Cherry Barbsâall because of Dexâs enthusiasm.
I think about Finnâs photography business and how nervous he is to take risks. How he needs me to hold his hand through some of the riskier aspects of small business ownership. Heâs such a manly man, itâs quite endearing to see him nervous about something. He has a gap that I can actually help fill, and it feeds my soul.
I never strived to be rich. Endless travel and luxury resorts are not what Iâm picturing for my life. I want relationshipsâ¦real friendships⦠I want to try new things, to learn new facts, and I want to be as immersed and passionate about my projects as Dex is about scuba diving and as Finn is about boudoir photography.
I no longer need Palmer to talk me out of a sound decision, and I certainly am not going to consult with Mason about anything, so I pull off shy of the exit and pull into a Walmart.
After purchasing a prepaid phone, two blueberry Red Bulls and enough Chex Mix, protein drinks, powdered donuts and waters to fuel a ten-hour drive back to Las Vegas, I make a difficult call to leave a complicated voicemail.
âHello, this is Hunter.â
Shit. âOh, hi!â I shoot up in the driverâs seat and brush the powdered sugar off my shirt like he can see me through the phone. âMr. Mahan, itâs Avery Scott.â
âAvery. Hi. Weâve been trying to call youââ
âIâm so sorry. I lost my phone back at home.â I pauseâ¦home. It just flowed right out of me. Home is Las Vegas. Home is now Finn. âMay I ask why youâre answering an unknown number?â
âGood timing, I guess,â he says through a half-laugh. âIâm actually getting ready to board my flight as well. Iâm assuming Mason told you the meeting got bumped up? Did you get everything squared away with travel? Is there anything you need in the meeting room for tomorrow?â
I let out an exaggerated exhale. âMr. Mahanââ
âHunter, please. Oh shitâ¦youâre not coming, are you?â
âNo. Iâm not.â
âFuck. Sorry, that was unprofessional, butâ¦fuck. Weâre screwed, arenât we? Even you think we should dissolve?â
âNo.â I make sure Iâm as emphatic as possible, then I clear my throat. âHunter, do not dissolve Legacy Resorts or any of its subsidiaries, please. The company is in fantastic shape, and you guys have the potential to blow your competition out of the water.â
âGreat. Fly to Cancun and tell that to the board, please.â
I laugh. âListen, you have a board member, Wallace Frankââ
âYeah, Mr. Frank is our most senior advisor.â
âHeâs a snake in the garden, my friend. I did some digging, and he just invested over sixteen million dollars into Legacyâs biggest competitor. Heâs not rallying the board members to do whatâs best for the companyâ¦heâs bought and paid for, Hunter.â
âYouâre shitting me.â
âNo, Iâm not. This is as close to insider trading as you can get, so you could go to the authorities, or you could invite Mr. Frank to remove himself from the board in exchange for your oversight of the matter. Then you need a few little tweaks to your branding strategy.â
âSuch as?â
âLegacy Resorts should stay luxury. It just also needs to be kid friendly. Parents want to enjoy adult time, knowing their kids are safe. You should take a page from Royalty Airlineâs book. Invest in high-end childcare with actual teachers with security cameras, rotating daily activities, and a little curriculum. Parents love when their kids have fun learning. And get the kids involved in the luxury aspect. Mommy and me spa days, Daddy and son mini-golf. Make sure all the restaurants have kid-friendly menus and have family versus adult dining times. You donât need to exclude anyone from the resorts, just segment out the experiences. The possibilities are endless. Family luxuryâthatâs the only hook you need.â
âAvery, itâs a great idea. We could really use you. And I got your email about Arrow exclusively consulting for Legacy Resorts and bringing Mason on board, and weâre willing to play ball. Whatever the cost to get you to sign with us.â
I am not a saint. I am not perfect. I am a human being and an opportunity has presented itself. Sue me.
âHunter, if Iâm being honest, Mason is subpar at best. He gets his work done, but honestly a chimp might be more productive. The bottom line is he is replaceable and is absolutely not worth a seven-figure salary. I am the backbone of Arrow Consultingâ¦which is no more. Mason and I are splitting the business and parting ways.â
âOh, I spoke to him this morning and he didnât tell me that.â
He doesnât knowâ¦yet. âHe was probably trying to be professional. But the bottom line is, Iâm no longer available. I am so flattered and appreciative of the opportunity, but I think my heart is in small business, so Iâm going to focus my attention there for a while. But I can give you some stellar recommendations, and you have my number. Call anytime and Iâll be happy to bounce around ideas with you.â
âHow about another fifty thousand?â
âHunterââ
âSixty-k and a company car?â
âHunterââ
âSeventy-k, a company car, and I turn a blind eye if you use the company black card every now and then. There is literally no limit on that cardâ¦you could buy Tahiti.â
I snort. âThatâs tempting.â Not really, though.
I donât want Tahiti. I want pajamas, I want thrift shopping girlsâ days with a friend like Lennox. I want a cuddly man who will watch a movie with meâ¦and then bend me over the side of the couch and spank me a little. I just want to laugh, breathe, learn, and relax. I donât want to work sixty hours a week anymore. Itâs not worth the prestige. I just want to enjoy my life and build a family.
âThereâs nothing I can do to convince you?â
âNo, Iâm sorry.â
He grumbles. âAll right, well, expect a few follow-up emails from me that will involve a little more begging.â
I laugh. âFair enough.â
âThanks for the call, Avery, and for the information about Frank. Iâm going to go talk to our CEO and weâre going to take out the trash.â
âGood. I recently did the same. Feels good.â
âTake care. Get home safe.â
Home. âI will.â
I thought my anger and angst would fuel me through the drive, but I couldnât swing it. I had to stop at a hotel and sleep a bit before I drove myself right off the road. Let the record show, Red Bulls are good for nothing except their tastiness.
When I pull into Dexâs driveway the next morning, I see the fish guyâs van parked on the side of the road. Great. I just want to go to sleep. I have a crying hangover. My eyes are puffy, my head hurts, my back aches from this long drive. Iâm not an idiot. I donât care how angry I am at Palmer. I just lost the longest, most significant relationship of my life.
Friendships donât have to end. They arenât exclusive. I was always taught to keep the old and make the new. The dynamics can change. You can go from talking daily to yearly. Sometimes friends can drift apart and then snap back together. They need each other in different ways at different stages of their lives. Love doesnât have to fade due to distance. Friendships can endureâ¦
Unless someone sabotages the relationship.
Palmer couldâve prevented this. She couldâve kept it in her pants. She couldâve talked to me. She couldâve found a way to love me, almost as much as she loved herself. But she didnât. And itâs going to hurt for a very long time.
Iâm going to healâ¦
But first, itâs going to hurt. And thatâs okay.
Leaving my bag in the car and only bringing in my purse, I trudge through the front door. I have no energy to immediately unpack like I normally do. âHey, Fish Guy,â I call out.
âHey, Fish Lady,â he calls back with a chuckle at our little inside joke. All kidding aside, I donât know his real name. Itâs been over two monthsâ¦I canât ask now. Itâs too awkward.
I see my phone sitting on the kitchen counter next to a sealed white box with a note on top:
Not right now. I want to look, but Iâm a little too fragile at the moment. I canât take any more hits right now in case I donât like what my boudoir photographs look like. Itâs not until I grab a bottle of water from the fridge and head to my phone do I see the travesty in the sink.
Cherryâ¦
Out of water, dead in a small dish.
I squeal in shock as I drop my bottle of water.
âWhat the fuck?â I squelch. My reaction causes the fish guy to stop tinkering with the living room tank and head in my direction. He dodges the spilled water with his sock-covered feet and scoops up the water bottle from the ground. âWhen did she die?â
I know sheâs a fishâ¦
But damn.
My head starts to pound as I hold back a fresh wave of tears that hits me. Goddammit. Treachery and tragedy are just fucking exhausting.
âI found her belly up when I got here an hour ago. Iâm sorry. I shouldnât have left her in the sink. I didnât know youâd be here. But I donât flush fish, itâs not good for plumbing or the ecosystem.â
âWhatâre you going to do with her?â Iâm not going to be a child and suggest we have a service and proper burialâ¦but if he offers, I will go put on a black T-shirt right now.
He raises his brows at me. âChum.â
âOh, God.â I pout. âPlease donât tell me that. I really liked this little fish.â
âYouâre a fan of Cherry Barbs, huh?â
âYeah, she used to be super spazzy, but she slowed down. The stripe along her belly, Iâm assuming it was cancer. I just hope she went peacefully.â
Fish Guy bags Cherry and the dish up and sets her by his black supply bag with the blue stripe, which matches his uniform. âItâs not cancer. Some Cherry Barbs have those markings. They can even get translucent.â
âShe didnât have a stripe when I first got here,â I say. âIt developed as she slowed down. Iâm pretty sure she was sick.â
âWhat?â He looks at me like Iâm crazy as he runs his hands through his curly hair. âNo, it died because these are social fish. I keep telling Dex he needs to either get a separate tank or move some of these fish to make room for multiple Cherry Barbs because they like to live in clusters of their own. Iâve gone through three since youâve been here. They are dying because of shock and isolation.â
Thereâs a brief knock at the front door before it opens and in walks the shirtless Adonis of a man that still takes my breath away after almost an entire summer of seeing his naked body.
âHey, Queen, what are you doing home? I thought you were still in Mexico.â He preemptively spins his baseball cap around, because even though heâs sweaty and was clearly just on a run, I know exactly whatâs on his mind. Iâm smashed against his sweaty, hard abs in an instant and his lips find mine briefly. âCan a man get a call, for goodnessâ sake?â He points to my phone on the counter. âI left it here for that reason.â
âI literally just got home.â I press my finger against his lips and lean away to look back at Fish Guy. âIâm sorry, can you finish what you were saying?â
âAbout the Cherry Barbs? They are school fish, so they need toââ
I hold up my hand. âNo, no, the part where you said they are dying? What do you mean by they?â
He squints at me. âFish Lady, Iâve replaced that Cherry Barb three times since youâve been here. You didnât notice? The twitchy one youâre talking about died weeks ago.â
I cover my mouth and gasp into my hand as I wiggle out of Finnâs arms.
He looks shocked at my downpour of tears. âWhoa, baby. Over a fish?â
I canât stop myself. I openly sob. âYes.â I point at Fish Guy. âThat was so fucking sneaky. You canât just replace peopleâs fish without telling them⦠Thatâs a lie. I thought one thingâ¦andâ¦it was all a fucking lie. Itâs going behind someoneâs back and changing their perception of reality and making them doubt their sanity. I thought I knew herâ¦we were so close. I saw her every dayâ¦how did I not know?â
Thereâs an awkward lull as the two men in the room watch me weep over my dead fish friend. Only one of them realizes Iâm not completely insane, and thereâs obviously so much more behind my reaction to this news.
âUmâ¦I brought another Cherry Barb. Do you want me to put it in the tank or⦠I mean, is this legitimately upsetting you? Or is this a lady time of the month thing?â
Finnâs expression fills with annoyance, and he glances at Fish Guy from the corner of his eyes. âCan you give us some privacy? Maybe you forgot something in your van. Go check,â Finn says in a gruff command. âNow, please.â
Finn waits until the front door clicks closed before he wipes my tears away with his thumbs. âWhatâs going on?â he asks softly. âThis canât just be about a fish.â
I sniffle. âI almost gave you up for her. I almost picked her over you.â Finnâs so patient. He just nods as I babble nonsensically. âThatâs why I wasnât going to move. Palmer needed me, so I had to go back to L.A. to be there for her. I promised. I keep my promises.â
âI understand,â Finn says. âThatâs your best friend. Itâs okay, Avery. I told you, weâre going to make it workââ
âSheâs been sleeping with Mason for four years, behind my back. Years, Finn. I am so fucking stupid and clueless. I had no idea. Maybe the signs were there and I didnât want to see it. Iâve just been working and working, completely blind to the fact that everyone was living their life, except me.â
âThe fuck?â he whispers. âPalmer and Mason? Youâre not serious.â
I nod as I continue to ugly cry. âIâve been missing out on so much, worried about everybody else, but now, Iâm worried about me. I said no to the Legacy Resorts job. Iâm done with Arrow Consulting. Thereâs nothing for me in L.A. I donât have anything to go back toâ¦and my fish is dead.â
He pulls me against his chest and I breathe in his salty, musky skin. I feel Finnâs lips on the top of my head. He lets me sob against him, my tears running down his chest and abs. Stroking my back, he shushes me sweetly and tells me itâs okay. When Iâve settled and we can hear ourselves over my open weeping, Finn says, âHow about we donât go back? Either of us. How about we try forward? Together.â
âForward is good, butâ¦â I kiss his pec and then step out of his embrace. Taking a deep, calming breath, I continue, âI have to do this differently this time. So, Finn, I think youâre way out of my leagueââ
âAvery,â he interrupts, rolling his eyes.
âLet me finish. But just because you might be the sexiest man on the planet, doesnât mean you donât have to earn me.â
He grins wide. âOkay. How do I earn you, Queen?â
âI want a date night more than once a year. In fact, Iâd like an official date night once a week, and at least once a month we put on nice clothes and leave the house and flirt, in public.â
âDone.â
âWait, Iâm not finished.â
He smiles again. âNeedy girl.â
âI want you to teach me how to cook.â
âYou can finish your demands in my arms, baby.â He reaches back out and grabs me by the hips. âI will happily teach you how to cook, if we can have a dip buffet for dinner every now and then, too.â
âFair enough.â
âWhat else?â
âI want to walk with you. And I do mean walk, not run. But I want a relationship where we do outside stuff sometimes. I donât want to stay behind a computer screen for twelve hours a day. I want to be healthier all around.â
He squeezes my hips. âOkay, we can do outside stuff together.â
âAnd I donât ever want another woman in bed with us. I donât like it.â
He nods solemnly. âMe neither. Never again.â
âAnd the big oneâ¦â
Finn widens his beautiful baby blue eyes. âGo for it.â
I inhale and hold it for a moment before I exhale. âIâm not waiting four years to get married. We donât have to rush, but Iâm not going to ignore my needs for yours. We can always compromise, but if it is going to take you half a decade to decide whether you want to spend your life with me, I will walk away. I want a family. I want a home.â
âOkay,â Finn says. âI hear you loud and clear, Queen.â
âAnd I donât ever want you to stop calling me Queen.â
âFine with me.â He tries to kiss me again, but I lean back. He raises his brows, his patience running a little thin. I think heâs ready to start our happily ever after. âAnything else?â
âNo, thatâs everything from my end⦠But what about you? What do you need?â
Finn touches his smooth lips against mine. Itâs not a kiss, just a touch. He rubs his nose against the tip of mine. âJust this. I need you to never stop telling me what you need. I want you to cry in front of me, so I know how youâre feeling and I can try and fix it. No more running out on me when youâre upset and making me worry.â
âI can do that.â
âGood.â
âAll right, Finn Harvey. Well, now that thatâs all settled, I think Iâm ready to fall in love with you.â