Yvette would bring little Benjamin by, her eyes searching for Anderson the entire time. Davie, too—though he would just walk right up to Anderson and say hello. Their conversations didn’t last long, and both Yvette and Davie would leave with perplexed faces, sometimes whispering to each other.
Tucker dropped by once to ask if I wanted any of the deer jerky he and his brother had made after their last hunting trip. We had talked in the kitchen for a while, but I felt Anderson’s gaze hot on my neck every second he was there, that is until he redirected his laser beams at the back of Tucker’s head as he walked down the drive and back out onto the road.
The rest of the town seemed to make a point to walk by my cabin, their stares lingering as they passed. Sarah was one of them. One day she stopped, crossing her arms over her chest as she watched Anderson cut fresh firewood behind the garage. I’d caught her staring from where I was sketching on the porch and waved, but she just narrowed her eyes and flicked her ponytail off her shoulder, stalking away.
“We’ve become the talk of the town, you know,” I said to Anderson casually one night as he packed up his tools.
It’d been just over two weeks, and every day we became more of a sideshow. He looked up at me, and I nodded my chin toward the end of the drive where two residents I’d yet to meet were walking slowly by, eyes glued on my cabin.
Anderson glanced over his shoulder and frowned, dismissing them just as easily and shutting the lid on his box. “Not much else to do out here other than talk, I guess.”
I chuckled, watching as the last of the sun’s beams spread over my front yard through the trees. “You should come back for dinner tonight.”
I hadn’t really planned on saying the words, but they’d tumbled out anyway, so I didn’t feel the desire to take them back once they had. It’d been nice having him around, and though we’d talked a little, I was still curious about him. I wanted to know more. I wanted to spend time with him without his toolbox involved.
“I’m kind of tired,” he tried, but I rolled my eyes, grabbing his notebook off the counter and handing it to him.
“Too tired to eat?”
He opened his mouth, but closed it tight again, lips flat.
“Exactly. Go drop your stuff off and shower and let me attempt to cook for you,” I said. “I hope you like pancakes.”
This time, his brows folded. “It’s dinnertime.”
“And?” I pressed. “Don’t tell me you don’t like breakfast for dinner. That’s just un-American.”
Anderson chuffed, tucking his notebook under his arm. He looked out the window toward the mountains. “I don’t know.”
“Please,” I begged, dragging the word out. He looked at me again and I poked out my bottom lip.
“Fine,” he conceded, the edges of his lips fighting back a smile. “But I really am tired tonight. How about tomorrow?”
When I looked a little closer, I saw the slight bags under red eyes, and his lids were heavy. I smiled and nodded, happy with the compromise. “Tomorrow, then.”
He nodded, excusing himself without another word.
The moment he left the cabin, I realized what I’d asked, what I’d implied. He was coming over for dinner tomorrow night. I was going to have dinner with a man. A man who wasn’t my ex-husband.
My stomach dropped at the realization, nerves flittering to life.
I watched him walk down the front steps and kept my eyes on him until he’d cleared the drive, assuring myself everything would be fine. It was just dinner. Dinner with a friend. Dinner with a friend who’d been helping me out. It would be fun, and I needed a little bit of that in my life.
Something told me Anderson did, too.
AMELIORATE
ame·lio·rate
Verb
To make better or more tolerable
I looked stupid.
Huffing, I pulled at the cuff on my long-sleeved button up, rolling it up until it cuffed at my elbow before working on the other arm. My hair was combed, for the first time since I was eight probably, and I’d trimmed the short beard on my face, shaping it the best I could. There was a button missing on the bottom of my shirt, but it was the nicest thing I owned, so I tucked it into my jeans and fidgeted with it until I didn’t look like old man Ron. I stood straight, angling my head in the mirror before blowing out one long breath.
Stupid.
But that was as good as it was going to get. So I jogged downstairs and swiped my house keys off the counter. My hand froze on the front door knob. I felt Dani’s eyes looking up at me from the photo, and the weight of tomorrow swept in fast. Involuntarily, I winced, gripping the gold metal keys tighter.
But tomorrow could wait its turn.
Closing my eyes, I forced a shaky breath and opened the door, willing myself not to look at her picture as I slipped out and locked up behind me.
I took my time on the walk down to Wren’s, hands shoved deep in my pockets. It was chilly, even though we were well into June. That was how summer in Gold Bar was—pleasant days, cool nights. Tomorrow would be the first real “hot” day of the summer.
It always seemed to line up that way, as if the weather wanted to remind me of my mistakes as much as my memory.
The anniversary of Dani’s death had snuck up on me, especially after the distraction of spending my days at Wren’s cabin. It was easy to lose time with her. Most of the time we didn’t even talk—I’d work, and she’d do whatever it was that she felt like doing that day, but just being near her was enough to make the days fly.
I’d been working hard to look passably focused and determined while I fixed things around her place. The truth was my eyes skirted far too often to where she stretched out her long legs on the porch while she sketched in her book, especially when she decided to do so in a swimsuit to catch a few rays in the process. She asked me questions when we ate lunch and I pretended like I didn’t want to rip open my rib cage and show her everything inside me.
Sometimes I gave in, answering her questions or asking some of my own. I’d learned a little about her boutique, about her family, about her best friend in the city. I’d yet to ask what I wanted to most—who was she running from? I wondered if she’d answer, or if I was even ready to hear it if she did. A part of me knew I was playing with fire, but I told myself I could handle the burn. The truth of that statement was yet to be discovered.
It was kind of funny, how every day was the same again.
And yet everything was different.
Music spilled from Wren’s cabin, her front door wide open and letting in the evening breeze. I jogged up the first few stairs but slowed when I saw her, quieting my steps.
Her long, slender back was exposed in a dark green dress that clung wide on her shoulders, the fabric hugging her ribs and meeting again at the small of her back. It flowed from there, cut above her knees, the skirt of it swaying as she moved in time with No Diggity. I stopped at the door and crossed my arms, watching as she stirred the pancake batter with the wooden spoon she’d serenaded me with the first day I’d worked at her cabin. She knew every single word, and I chuckled.