Hemingway looks up at me and whines under his breath. I feed him another treat and ruffle his fur.
“That's okay, buddy,” I say. “We don't need her. We don't need that mean old lady.”
I take his leash in my hand and lead him down the path that will take us home. The conversation with Paige still ringing in my ears and fueling the angry heat that's burning inside of me.
Chapter Eight
Paige
“I mean, who in the hell does he think he is to talk to me like that?” I fume. “To tell me my thought process is a problem – I mean, he implied that I'm stupid. What an asshole, right?”
Skyler is sitting on the stool behind the front counter, having stopped by to bring me some lunch. I'm pacing in front of the counter, still pissed off about my encounter with Mr. Liam Anderson – even hours after the fact. Poor Skyler has had to listen to me rail on about him for the last twenty minutes.
“I mean, right?” I say and look at Skyler, who's been strangely silent to this point in my diatribe.
“Well, yeah,” she replies. “I mean, if you're looking for blind support and a show of solidarity, hell yeah. Girl power, baby. Down with the oppressive, condescending, prick of a man. Solidarity, sister!”
I stop mid-pace and look at Skyler, arching an eyebrow at her. She's never been one to hold back or be afraid to tell me the truth of things. Even if that truth is something I may not want to hear. I know I can always count on her for her blunt honesty and sharp opinions. If I'm being unreasonable, I expect her to tell me. And she does. Oh, does she.
But, this is different. I can't explain it – it just is. It somehow feels more personal to me.
“What?” I ask.
“What?” she replies, a saccharine-sweet smile on her face.
“I get the feeling that this is one of those times you're going to say something I'm not going to like.”
She shrugs. “I don't know what you're talking about,” she says. “I'm standing in solidarity with you.”
“Smartass,” I say. “I know you have something to say, so out with it.”
“Well, if you insist,” she says.
“I don't really,” I reply. “But, I know that at some point, you're going to say it anyway. Might as well be now.”
“Well, just imagine this guy's surprise,” she says. “He's just out walking his dog –”
“I doubt it,” I reply. “He was sitting on a log up by Rodham's Field. You know that place that overlooks the whole town?”
“Yeah, I'm very familiar with Rodham's Field,” she says and giggles. “I've spent plenty of hot nights under the stars there.”
“Of course, you have,” I say.
As she sits there preening, I can't stop the grin that crosses my face. Skyler is a woman who enjoys her conquests but enjoys bragging about them too. She might enjoy bragging about them even more than the actual conquests themselves.
“Anyway,” I continue, “the way he was sitting there looking at the town – I could imagine how he was carving it up in his head. Putting together a list of locations to buy so he could demolish them and put up another damn Starbucks or something.”
“I hate to say it, but I think you're making a lot of assumptions, hon,” she says. “You came at him pretty strong and maybe, given that you don't actually know his intentions, you read him the riot act for no reason.”
“Yeah, that's exactly what he said,” I reply. “But, what else was he going to say when I caught him in the act?”
“The act of what exactly?” Skyler asks. “Sitting up at Rodham's Field, enjoying the fresh air and the view?”
“I doubt that's what he was doing,” I say. “Those damn vultures don't enjoy views. They figure out the best way to put up big, tall buildings that will obstruct the view.”
Skyler is looking at me, a small, sly grin forming at the corners of her mouth. “This man has really gotten under your skin.”
“Hardly,” I say. “And not in the way you're meaning.”
“No?”
“No,” I say. “I just don't like his kind.”
“And what kind is that, Paige?”
“Opportunistic profiteers,” I say.
She shrugs. “Sadly, that's business,” she says. “All businesses. Everybody's doing what they do to make money. Otherwise, why do it to begin with? Am I a horrible person for wanting to make money down at the Grill?”
“That's different,” I say. “You're not forcing people out of their homes and businesses.”
“To be perfectly fair, and to play Devil's Advocate, of course,” she says, “from what I understand, nobody is being forced to do anything. The developers are coming in and are making more than fair offers for people's houses and businesses. Everyone is choosing to take the money and run.”
I stare at her, my eyes wide and my jaw agape for a long moment, not believing what I'm hearing.
“I can't believe you're taking his side in this,” I say.
“Honey, I'm not taking anybody's side,” I say. “I'm just explaining how the business works.”
“Were you made an offer for the Grill?”
“You bet your sweet ass I got an offer,” she said. “A really fat one too.”
“So, why didn't you take it?”
She shrugs. “Because I'm betting on myself,” she says. “Port Safira is changing, hon, and there's nothing we can do to stop it. They're bound and determined to turn it from a blue-collar town to a more affluent place. And I believe they're going to get there. We're already seeing it.”
“I know,” I say and let out a long breath.
“By turning down their offer,” she says. “I'm gambling that I'm going to make more money from the hipsters and the yuppies moving here than I would have gotten from the developers buying my place out. I'm betting on me because I think my place will make a lot of cash and let me retire early – while I'm still young enough to get my tight ass down to the Caribbean and find myself some hot island man to enjoy.”
I laugh and shake my head. That's my Skyler, always thinking with her lady bits. I understand what she's saying, and I know it makes sense. I know we can't stop the wheels of “progress” now that they have started turning. And on some level, I know I'm probably too attached to a town that just a few short years ago, I wasn't sure I even wanted to live in.
But, Port Safira is my home. It always will be. To see everything that I love about the place being ground under the wheels of “progress” just feels like a kick in the gut. It hits me really hard in ways I can't even begin to understand. Seeing my hometown changing so radically, becoming something I don't recognize, is affecting me on a deep level. And, to be honest – I'm not entirely sure why.
“You know you're the first person to actually ever see Gatsby, right?” Skyler asks.
I laugh softly. “His name is Liam Anderson.”
“Details, details. Gatsby is a little flashier,” she says. “Adds an air of mystery about the guy.”
“If you say so.”
“I do,” she says. “So, what's he like?”
I arch my eyebrow at her. “You really want me to go into that whole diatribe again?”
She chuckles. “Not really,” she says. “But that’s also not what I meant. What does he look like?”
“Google his name.”
“Just tell me.”
I let out a long breath. “I don't know, he's a little over six feet tall,” I say. “Dirty blond hair, really light blue eyes. He's big. Fit. Looks like he played football or something. He's got dimples when he smiles and has that stylish scruff on his chin –”
Skyler is smiling wide and I don't know why, but I stop talking because I get the feeling that I just walked into some sort of a trap. A moment of awkward silence hangs between us while Skyler looks like she’s trying to hold in a laugh so badly she’s about to burst.
“What?” I finally ask.
“And you say Gatsby didn't get under your skin,” she giggles. “Sounds to me like you've got a bit of a crush.”
“Oh, shut it,” I say. “I do not. You're off your rocker.”