Текст книги "Love Unrehearsed"
Автор книги: Tina Reber
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Текущая страница: 14 (всего у книги 27 страниц)
Marie grabbed my arm as I tried to rush past her. “What the hell is going on?”
“He just told me Melanie died this morning.”
Marie’s angered face fell and she gasped, releasing the grip she had on my forearm. “Oh God, no.”
Wasting no time, I hurried after Thomas, snagging his leather jacket, redirecting him into the empty kitchen. I needed him to tell me what happened.
Before I knew it, Thomas pulled me into his arms, wrapping them around me tightly in a hold of desperate need. His fingers knotted into my shirt. I knew it was killing him to show this much weakness, breaking that impenetrable façade he wore for all the world to see. Sometimes I think that this was the true reason he broke up with me so many times. I was the only girl who could break past that façade and it scared him to death.
As much as it repulsed me to allow my first love this close to me after how deeply he had devastated me, the need to comfort him wiped my hatred away.
I breathed in his familiar scent of leather and spice and skin, causing thousands of memories to surge into my consciousness. There were times I would have killed to have his love, to have him show me the tenderness and raw emotion that I knew he was capable of. But he always held back—always kept me at a safe distance. But now, at this moment, all of his guards were down and he was sobbing uncontrollably in my arms.
“It’ll be okay,” I said, even though my silly words were nothing more than a reflexive attempt to console him. Things would never be okay for him, his family, or for any of us who loved Melanie. Death is final.
“I thought she was getting better,” he whispered in a higher-pitched tone of pain. “Oh, Mel . . .” His fingers clawed into my shirt.
I let him release his pain for a few minutes before whispering, “Tell me what happened.”
Thomas rested his forehead on my collarbone and sniffed. One of his arms released me so he could wipe his eyes, but the other remained firmly locked around my waist. I tried to put some space between us, but as quickly as I tried, he pulled me back to his chest.
“She gasped for fucking air for twelve hours. I’ll never get that sound out of my head. Oh God. Why?”
His entire body trembled. “I’m so sorry I hurt you, Taryn. God, I’m so sorry.”
“It’s okay.”
His lips were awfully close to my neck. I could feel his breath on my skin. “No. It’s not okay. And now it’s too late. It’s all too late. I should have never done what I did to you.”
In that moment, I found forgiveness. Life is too short to hold such a monumental grudge.
“What the hell?” Tammy exclaimed when she came through the kitchen door, giving me the evil eye over the top of her sunglasses as she assessed our embrace. “Am I interrupting something?”
I quickly put some space between Thomas and me, not wanting her to get the wrong idea.
“Tammy, you remember Thomas,” I started.
“Uh huh,” she said with a reproachful tone.
“Woman, where did you put the Aspinall catering slip?” Pete stopped short, not believing what he was seeing. “Are you kidding me? Are you fucking kidding me?” he growled, stepping up to us.
I put my hand on Pete’s chest to stop him and Thomas from squaring off. Pete had size but Thomas had years of practice; besides, Thomas was emotional. I knew Thomas would much rather pound the shit out of something than cry about it.
“Easy, Pete. Stop.”
“What is he doing here, Taryn? You finally have a good thing with Ryan and you need to fuck it up? For this piece of shit?”
“Fuck you, Herman,” Thomas bristled and growled, wiping the remains of his tears away. “Don’t start shit you can’t back up.”
“No. Fuck you, Sager. You’ve got some fucking brass balls coming here. Don’t you think you’ve caused enough damage?”
“Stop it! Both of you.” I turned to Pete. “He came here to tell us that Mel . . .” Her name caught with a hitch in my throat. “Melanie passed away this morning, all right?”
Pete’s angered death glare at Thomas instantly fell as he took in my words. “Mel?”
I nodded, trying to hold it together. It’d been a long time since I’d seen her but the tragic news of her passing cut fresh and deep. Marie slipped in and put an arm around me, noticeably pulling me away from Thomas. I’d thank her later for that.
Thomas covered his eyes with both hands and let out a sigh.
“Oh God.” Pete hunched over as if he’d been punched in the gut. His unrequited feelings for Mel had messed him up for years. Tammy tried to touch him but he flinched. “What happened?”
“Cancer ate her, asshole.”
I let that one slide. We were all sporting fresh pain.
Pete glared right at him. “Dude, for what it’s worth. Sorry for your loss.”
Thomas nodded. “Taryn, can I talk to you?”
Marie tugged me by the shoulders, walking me toward the kitchen doors. “I think we could all use a drink.”
Thomas followed me out into the pub and grabbed his stuff off the bar, finding an empty booth.
I tapped two small glasses of beer and joined him. Last thing his mother needed was to lose her only other child to a drunken motorcycle accident.
“Thanks for the short,” Thomas said as he spied the small glass with disdain, taking a sip anyway.
I wanted him to get this over with. Seeing him again was tearing me up inside. “You’re planning on riding that death trap you call a bike. Just looking out for your well-being.”
The edge of his lip turned up slightly. “I recall you used to beg me to be on the back of my bike.”
“Yeah, well. I didn’t know any better.”
“Ouch.”
“Look, your mom doesn’t need another tragedy today.”
I saw him wince. “Mom’s not taking this well. They actually had to give her something to calm her down.”
I felt bad for his mom. Mrs. Sager always treated me well, siding with me most of the time.
“If she can’t pull it together, would you consider going with me to the funeral home? I’m going to lose it if I have to pick out her fucking casket by myself.”
Why me? My caretaker gene immediately wanted to say yes but I stamped it out—quickly. “That’s something her family should do, Thomas. I know your aunt Betty would help out.”
He gave me that innocent, tilted-head look that used to melt my resolve. “So is that a no?”
“As much as I want to help, I can’t. Sorry. That’s a no.”
He nodded at the tabletop. “I really fucked up with you, didn’t I?”
I crossed my arms. “Yes, you did.”
He sort of shrugged and the gesture instantly angered me. “I hear you’ve been in the news. Dating some famous actor now?” He motioned toward my ring. “Rich, too, can afford that kind of ice. Good for you. You deserve to be happy.”
I nodded at him.
“Not gonna lie,” he said. “Right now, I’m wishing you were with me.”
I felt that like a physical blow. It was at that moment when I realized I was glad it wasn’t. Everything shifted one degree, significantly enough to make me realize that the broken man sitting before me was not worthy of my heart. Still, it angered me.
“You say that now? Don’t say that stuff to me. Not now. I gave you my heart time after time. I said yes to you when you asked me. You were all I ever wanted. But you’re the one who fucked some girl in our bed. It doesn’t get any worse than that.”
“I was mad at you that morning,” he admitted.
I tilted the small glass in my hand, toying with the idea of tossing its contents in his face. “You cheated on me with Cheryl Regan because you were mad at me?”
He nodded. “Sounds stupid now, but at the time it felt justified.”
I noticed Thomas’s glare at Pete. “Justified?” The notion that I was ever head over heels in love with this idiot felt so preposterous now. “Because I had to do a favor for Pete you felt justified to bed that stripper whore on my pillow?”
“Every time he called, you ran. How do you think that made me feel?”
“He’s my friend! That’s what you do for the people you care about.”
My cell rang, playing Ryan’s song. Thomas tossed his hands up in angered disbelief when I pulled my attention away from him to answer it.
“Hey babe,” I said somberly, sickened by Thomas’s disclosure.
“Hey, hon, what are you up to?” he asked. His rather nonchalant tone reeked of suspicion. A tingle ran up my spine. I don’t know how he knew but he knew.
I swallowed hard, knowing I had two ways to answer. I glanced at the man I once adored sitting across from me while the man who held my heart and soul as if they were precious jewels was pressed to my ear. I opted for full disclosure.
“I am sitting at a booth in the pub, having a beer with my ex, Thomas. Before you let that upset you, please know that he’s just told me terrible news. His sister passed away this morning. He’s almost finished with his beer and although I am greatly saddened by his loss and I’m very upset that one of my best friends lost her life to cancer, I imagine he’ll be leaving shortly.”
Ryan sighed as if he were holding his breath, sounding relieved. “Thank you for telling me. I love you.”
His breathy declaration seemed slightly off.
“I love you more.”
Thomas rolled his eyes at me.
Ryan snickered once in my ear. “I know. I’m sorry about your friend, sweetheart. Are you okay?”
“Yeah, I’m okay.”
“You sure?”
“Positive.”
“Okay. Good. Now put the asshole on the phone.”
I handed it over. “My fiancé would like to speak to you.”
Thomas pursed his lips, reluctant to take the phone. He finally put my cell to his ear and said, “Yeah?”
Thomas smiled that sinister, toothy smile I’d also seen a thousand times. “Those are awfully big threats from a guy who’s not able to back up his mouth.”
His eyes darted over toward the bar, where an older man with a high and tight military haircut had been sitting since we’d opened. The man tucked his phone in his pocket, got up from his seat, and walked straight over to us.
Thomas leaned onto the table, wearing his cocky smile as he eyed the guy’s full height. “Yes, I’m meeting your goon right now as a matter of fact. It’s Taryn’s bar and she hasn’t kicked me out yet, so I guess I’ll leave when I’m done. Uh huh. Is that so? Yeah, I’d like that. We can swap notes. I see. Well, I’d love to chat some more but your goon is getting antsy. Yeah, fuck you, too.”
Thomas tossed the phone over to me, chugged the rest of his beer, and stood. “You may want to tell him to wait on that restraining order until after the funeral. Just a suggestion as I’m presuming you’d want to be there when my sister gets buried.”
He leaned onto the table, getting awfully close to my face. “I may have done some things that I regret but I never tried to control you like that asshole is. You might want to rethink the whole marrying a control freak thing. Guys who can’t control end up being wife-beaters.”
Whoever the intimidating guy was with the military haircut, it was obvious that he was getting impatient. Thomas didn’t move, only glaring over his shoulder at him. “Touch me and I’ll bust your fucking hand.”
When he returned his attention to me, I looked into his eyes, trying to find any semblance of the guy I once loved. His walls were up again and I was slammed out. This was the base truth about him. No one would ever truly have him for he was unwilling to let anything make him that vulnerable.
Ryan placed his heart in my care every chance he had.
Now that my rose-colored glasses were off, everything was crystal clear. I looked Thomas right in the eye and said, “I’m sorry for your loss.”
His eyes scanned my face one more time, giving me that crooked, sad smile of his. I had no doubt he’d be so drunk later, he’d sleep where he fell.
“Despite what you think,” he said, “I did love you.”
“Fucking a whore in our bed was a funny way of showing it.”
“You’re right. And I live with that mistake. See ya round, Taryn.”
I took a deep breath as I watched him leave, relishing the fact that he no longer held my heart.
As for the new military man in my life standing a few feet away, Ryan had some explaining to do. With slightly shaky hands, I quickly texted him.
“You have something you forgot to tell me?”
My phone rang twenty seconds later.
“Is he gone?”
I finished my drink. “Yeah, he just left. You pissed him off.”
“Good. He better not make a habit of coming around.”
“I love it when you get jealous. Makes me feel wanted.”
“I’m serious, Taryn. He even stops in for a beer I want to know about it.”
“I’m not going to run off with him. You don’t need to worry. So when were you planning on telling me I am under surveillance?”
“You’re not under surveillance, hon. We hired private security to keep an eye on things since we’re not there. But we’re coming home next Friday. I have four days off.”
Hearing that made my day. “You’re coming home?”
“Yep. We’ll be in around two. I really hate that you’re not with me. I can’t sleep without you.”
“I can’t sleep, either. I’m so used to feeling you next to me . . . Thanks for hiring someone.”
“Mike and I are splitting it.”
My head spun. “Why is Mike paying for my security?”
“He’s not. Security is for the both of you. Mike is worried about Gary. Apparently his security background check revealed that Gary owns a lot of guns.”
“He does, but . . .” The thought of Gary attempting to harm Marie was infuriating. “Hang on. I want to go upstairs.” I slipped out of the booth and grabbed Thomas’s empty glass. Marie was behind the bar just a few feet away. I ducked into the kitchen, walking past quizzical looks from Pete and Tammy, and hit the apartment steps to continue my private conversation with Ryan. “I don’t understand. Why does Mike care? Marie’s not even speaking to him.”
“Yeah, Mike said she’s avoiding him but he’s planning on fixing that. Listen, you have to talk to her. I know things looked bad but it’s nothing like it appeared and now that those pictures were published he’s pissed-off and miserable.”
“What do you mean things aren’t what they appeared to be?”
My mouth hung open as he told me the rest of what Mike was really up to.
As soon as we ended our call, I ran down the steps and grabbed Marie.
Chapter 13
Uncovered
“I hate funerals,” Marie said softly as we drove away from the cemetery.
My heart was aching; the sight of seeing a casket tethered above a gaping hole brought back too many bad memories.
Seeing Thomas looking so wiped out was painful.
Just seeing him a few days ago was enough to make me replay every word we’d exchanged, each fond memory I had of him—everything. I hated him for making me reminisce.
Marie stuffed a tissue in her purse. “I can’t believe she’s gone. I didn’t even know she came home.”
“I know. I’m glad they didn’t put her on display. Melanie would not have wanted that.”
“No,” Marie agreed, wiping her nose again. “She would have bitched to high heaven if her family did that to her.” I saw her look over at me. “How are you doing?”
I met her eyes. “I’m okay.”
“Spending some time on Memory Lane?”
Marie knew me so well. “Kind of hard not to.”
“Well, snap out of it. Ryan doesn’t need to see that deep-in-thought pouty look.”
I eyed her speculatively. “You may want to take your own advice there, missy. You still have to deal with Mike.”
She grinned to herself. “I know.”
“So, did you forgive him?”
“Yeah.” Marie nodded. “He told me that she had some personal matters with an ex who was harassing her. He didn’t go into details but I believe him.”
“Good.”
She twisted her hands nervously. “I just don’t know if getting involved with someone is wise right now, you know? I spazzed over a stupid magazine cover.”
I knew exactly how she felt. “Scary stuff when you see your man on those covers, isn’t it?”
She groaned and I could tell just from her expression that she finally could relate.
“I understand,” I said. “Believe me. Thomas’s cheating made me question every man’s motives. That kind of betrayal sticks with you forever. All I can say is follow your heart.”
“Or my vagina,” she said with a laugh.
I smiled at her.
“Speaking of confusion, where are you heading?” she asked.
“I brought all of those keys. Thought since we were over this way we could stop at the bank before the guys land.”
After arriving at the bank, we sat in the lobby, waiting for the next customer service person to help us.
Marie tapped me on the thigh, noticing that the woman approaching us was smiling like a fangirl at me. I let her gush for a minute about how wonderful Ryan Christensen is before getting down to business.
The customer service clerk helped sort through the random baggie of keys, narrowing them down to a handful that might get me into Lockbox 291. Marie and I had found forty random keys when we searched; unfortunately none blatantly screamed “safe deposit box.” “Last key,” I said, trying the last one, small and made of brass. I almost felt giddy when it slipped in and turned.
We pulled the inner black metal case out and she set it on a table, leaving to give me privacy.
Marie raised her eyebrows, waiting in anticipation.
I pulled the top lid back, spying several stacks of letters rubber-banded together. The rubber was so old it crumbled around the envelopes.
I flipped through them, seeing that all of them were addressed to me from Private Joseph Malone. Who the hell is Joseph Malone?
“What is all of that?” Marie asked. “Who are they from?”
“I’m not sure.” I opened up one of the letters, scanning writing I’d never seen before. There was also a twenty-dollar bill inside the envelope.
Dear Taryn,
I hope you had a fun birthday. Five years old now! I can’t believe how much you’ve grown. I promise when I come home I’ll take you to the toy store so you can pick out a new Barbie doll. I remember how much you liked playing with them. I’m at a place called Fort Gordon now. It’s in Georgia. You’ll be happy to know that they painted me green just like you said they would. I’m a real army soldier now. It’s really hot here. I’m learning how to do all sorts of crazy things, like crawl through the mud and climb over tall obstacles. I’m a good climber. I hate crawling in the mud. I think you’d find the mud yucky, too.
I have another six weeks to go and then I might go over the big ocean in a huge airplane. I hope your daddy will use the money I put in the envelope to buy you a new dolly for me until I can see you again. Be a good girl like I know you are.
Love you forever,
Joe
“Who’s Joseph Malone?”
My hands shook. I felt a trickle of sweat slide down my spine, or maybe that was just my nerves. “The only Malone I know is my aunt Joan. That’s her married name.” I dug through the piles, feeling nauseous.
There had to be thirty or forty letters from him addressed to me from all around the globe. Was my father protecting me from a stalker?
At the very bottom of the pile was a thick white envelope with the word Original written in blue ink. I swallowed hard.
As soon as I opened up the folded papers, I felt a warm rush of panic roll throughout my entire body.
“Oh my God. No. No.”
I couldn’t get to the garbage can in the corner fast enough before I threw up the entire contents of my stomach.
“Oh no. Oh, Taryn,” I heard Marie say as I retched into the steel can.
I faintly remember Marie driving us home.
I sat at one of the booths in the pub, reading letters about Joe’s army life, his travels to the Persian Gulf, trying to piece it all together while Marie hovered.
We had an hour before we’d open the pub and a band was scheduled to play, but I couldn’t stop the tears. I wasn’t even sure what I was crying about anymore. My entire world—everything I’d ever known—had been turned inside out, where truth and lies and real and alternate insane realities had reversed.
I didn’t even know who I was anymore. Of all the things to find in a lockbox, this was something I wouldn’t have ever guessed. It was all so overwhelming to process.
I was in a state of shock when Ryan and Mike arrived. I saw Marie run for the kitchen door.
The moment I saw Ryan standing a few feet away, calling to me, I lost it, hurling my body at him and clinging to him like a lost soul in need.
“Oh baby. Everything will be okay. I’ve got you. Shhh . . .” He let me cry for what felt like ages, rubbing my back and soothing me with comforting words.
“Come on. Let’s get out of here. Let’s go get some air.” He put his arm around my shoulders and walked me slowly, patiently, to the beach.
The breeze coming off the ocean tossed our hair and tinged my nose with the familiar salty air. We walked for a while before he sat us down on the hardened sand. He put me between his legs, gently combing my hair back.
“Whatever names are on that paper doesn’t change who you are.”
New tears streamed down my face. I felt empty and twisted inside. “But it does. It changes everything.
Everything I thought was real isn’t.”
Ryan shook his head, cocooning me with his body. “You can’t look at it like that, hon. The people who raised you are your parents. They loved you. Just because someone else gave birth to you doesn’t change who you are.”
Nothing would ever be the same. “My entire life has been a lie.”
“No, it hasn’t.”
I wiped my cheeks with my sleeve. “I don’t know why I’m so surprised. I always knew I didn’t look like either one of them. Eyes, nose . . . I used to stare at my face for hours trying to find a piece of them in me.”
I snuggled into his shoulder, feeling the chill off the ocean mix with the chill ripping though my body.
My face felt sticky from crying. The waves rolled in, misting the air, mimicking the push and pull of my own emotions.
As I watched the gulls fly and land, guilt crashed over me. “I can’t believe this. I’m sure everyone knew except me. Well, I guess this explains why my mother and her sister stopped talking to each other. Now I know that I was the cause of that fallout.”
Ryan rested his chin on my head. “Don’t start blaming yourself. They were adults who made their own paths. You had no influence over that.”
I took the paper out of my pocket, showing Ryan my original birth certificate. I left the official adoption papers back at my apartment with all of the letters. “According to the papers, my birth parents were both sixteen when I was born.” I wiped my face and blew out a cleansing breath, trying to pull myself together. “I remember my mom telling me that the reason I was an only child was that because I was so special, she only needed one. It’s always bothered me why I didn’t look like either of them.”
Ryan sighed and squeezed me with his arms. “Your mom and dad did a fantastic job caring for you.
There are plenty of people out there who are unfit parents. You said it yourself; they were just kids, Tar.
Probably scared shitless.”
“Joe went into the army after he got his GED. I was three or four, I guess. Sent me money in every letter, trying to do right by me. I just feel like I have so many questions now.”
He pulled me in tight. “You do what you have to to resolve this but remember, the people who raised you are your mom and dad.”
“They should have told me.”
His eyes narrowed, almost reprimanding me. “Why? What would you have gained from that knowledge?”
“I never had a chance to get to know the people who brought me into this world. I really think my
cousin Joe wanted to know me. My parents kept that all from me.”
Ryan swiped a thumb across my cheek, wiping away a tear. “Maybe they had their reasons. Look, I know you feel torn up. Anyone would. But your family kept you in the family. They are still all related to you by blood. I’ve seen pictures of you growing up and I can tell you that those two people who raised you adored you.”
As we walked back to the pub, I made the decision to find out what those reasons were.
I knew making this phone call would be difficult. My heart clenched when she answered the phone.
“Hi, Aunt Joan. It’s Taryn.” I was greeted with silence and for a moment I thought I’d need to tell her who I was again.
I heard her breath hitch and then she stuttered. “Taryn?”
“Yeah, it’s me.”
“Oh. Sorry, I’m a bit shocked. I never thought you’d call.”
There was no sense stalling. “I found a copy of my birth certificate, the original one.”
She gasped. “The original? You . . . you know?”
“Not everything. I do know that you’re my grandmother.”
She didn’t try to hide her tears, breaking down audibly in my ear. A few tears of my own dripped. Ryan walked by, pausing to kiss my forehead and drop off a box of tissues before giving me privacy again. I knew he was just around the corner listening. It gave me comfort to know that he was only a breath away.
My voice cracked. “Can I see you sometime?”
“Oh, sweetheart. I would love that.”
“Me, too. Can you tell me where my birth parents are?”
I let her cry for a few minutes. I knew this was hard on everyone. “I wanted to keep you,” she said ruefully. “Joey—he was just a kid—and my husband, Paul, had lost his job. Things were . . . this would not have been a good place for you. I . . . I need you to know that.”
I chewed on my thumbnail, holding my emotions in. “Why did you stop talking to my mom? You were sisters. You, you didn’t even come to her funeral. Was that because of me?”
“Oh, no, dear. Your mother and I . . . Things were strained between us before you were born. Please don’t . . . please don’t think that.”
I wiped my cheek, sensing she was lying. “Where are my birth parents?”
She sighed. “Joe has a family of his own now. He’s in California. Lake Tahoe.”
I found my head bobbing with understanding from her subtle tone, to let it be. “It’s been . . . It’s been a long time. I suppose he doesn’t need his skeletons to rise.”
She hemmed. “He has a lovely wife and two young girls. I’m worried it might be a shock for him. I’m not sure his wife knows he fathered a child at sixteen. It might not be something he wants to divulge.”
I swallowed back the tinge of rejection. “Okay. What about my birth mother? Kelcie Tremont?”
Aunt Joan sniffed. “Taryn, she, um . . . there was a car accident. She and Joey and you . . . It wasn’t his fault. Her parents had kicked her out of the house when she got pregnant and then they blamed him after the accident. You were barely six months old when it happened.”
It felt like a hot knife slid right into my heart. I had four parents who were all dead to me. How cruel is that?
“You look just like her. Just so you know. But you have Joey’s blue eyes.”
My lip trembled as I held back a sob. “Um, well, if . . . if you talk to Joe can you please tell him that I
know and I’d really like to get to know him? He can decide if he . . . if he wants to contact me. All this time I didn’t even get to know him as a cousin.”
Ryan stood behind me, placing comforting hands on my shoulders.
“I’ll tell him but I can’t make any promises. Your father, Dan, was very cruel to him, Taryn, cutting Joe off from all contact with you, even claiming that Joe was mentally unstable when he returned from the Gulf.”
“Was he?”
“Oh no. He had some post-traumatic stress but fortunately he wasn’t injured.”
“If you talk to him, can you please also tell him that I have all of his letters that he sent? I started reading them but it’s . . . it’s a lot right now. But I want him to know that I will read every one.”
“Oh, okay. I will.”
I gave her my cell number. “I’m going to be getting married soon. My fiancé and I haven’t really discussed the details yet but I’m . . . I’m very happy. He treats me like gold.”
Ryan kissed the top of my head.
“So it’s true?” she asked with renewed enthusiasm. “You and that famous young actor are engaged?”
I nodded, looking up into Ryan’s eyes. “Yes. And I’m madly in love with him.”
He kissed my hand and smiled.
“He ran into Mitchell’s Pub one afternoon avoiding an onslaught of fans and now—now he’s mine.”
Somehow just saying those words out loud to someone in my family made everything gel into place.
Those eyes, that devastatingly handsome smile, even with his crazy hair sticking up—he was all mine.
“Hey man! Good to see you!” Cory said exuberantly, shaking Ryan’s hand when we went down to the pub. I had to distract myself from the trauma of the day, and sitting in the apartment going slowly mad was not healthy.
I watched our new bartender/waitress, Kara, comfortably handle the crowd. She seemed like a really good fit. Cory’s roommate, Trevor, was carding people at the door. It was weird having people I barely knew working for me.
Ryan yanked his Mitchell’s Pub ball cap down on his brow and slipped onto a stool next to Mike, who was watching Marie as if someone might try to steal her.
“You still hear from Francesca?” Ryan asked Cory.
He opened a beer for Ryan. “Nah. She’s filming in Australia right now. We tried to hook up a few times but I can’t afford to fly around the globe while she’s doing her thing. She knows where I am if she changes her mind.”
I stepped behind the bar, hoping to feel as if I belonged there. I needed to belong somewhere. I tried to wait on a customer but Cory nudged me out of the way. Then I started to mix a drink but Marie told me she had it.
I stood next to Ryan, slightly dumbfounded. It was hard not to let the sadness of the day creep back in.
Not only was I questioning everything I’d been brought up to believe was true about my life, but now the only place that had marked my identity didn’t need me anymore.
“You okay?” he asked, concerned. He twisted around so I was between his thighs.
I shrugged, trying to spare him the depth of my sadness. I put a smile on my face instead. “I guess they don’t really need me to help.” I watched Marie and Cory taking care of customers, keeping the flow going.
The new waitress, Kara, was mixing drinks and tapping beer as well as hustling around waiting on customers. I truly wasn’t needed behind the bar at Mitchell’s Pub. Is it possible to be kicked out of your own life?
“Taryn, want to sit?” Mike asked, offering up his chair.
“No thanks. You just stay there.” I felt safe with Ryan wrapped around me. Mike was gazing at Marie, completely enraptured. “So I take it you and Marie made up?”
A sly grin appeared on his face and he nodded. “I took Ryan’s advice.”
I raised a brow, glad for the distraction. “And that was?”
Ryan laughed.
“Shut her up quick by kissing her before she has an opportunity to yell at me.”
I laughed. “And did it work?”
Marie glanced over and smiled devilishly.
“I sure as hell hope so,” Mike said with a chuckle.