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Just One Kiss: A Harbor Pointe Novel

Page 32

by Courtney Walsh


  Though, sadly, this time, he wasn’t even sure where he was on his way to.

  Chapter 2

  “Well, that was . . . exciting.” Quinn Collins picked up an overturned chair and put it back on its feet.

  Betsy Tanner, the owner of Hazel’s Kitchen, let out a substantial sigh. “What am I gonna do?”

  “You’re going to make that guy pay for the mess he caused,” someone said from the other side of the restaurant.

  Nate Kelley appeared in the doorway, and Betsy’s whole demeanor changed. “Nate.”

  “What happened?” He walked toward her. “Got a text saying a fight broke out?”

  “It’ll be okay,” Betsy said. “Maybe Lane can help me redecorate. Maybe it was time for a face-lift.” Never mind that the current decor wasn’t all that old. Quinn knew Betsy was trying to make herself feel better.

  Quinn picked up a few more castoffs from the fight as the crowd continued to recount what they’d just seen—two grown men acting like imbeciles and ruining poor Betsy’s business.

  Quinn had admired Betsy for a long time. She’d taken Hazel’s and turned it into something even better than it had been before. Her pies put the place on the map, and she’d even been profiled in national magazines. Someone said they were going to get that spiky-haired blond guy to come out and feature her on the Food Network. After all, this place was a local favorite and definitely deserved the recognition.

  What Betsy had done with Hazel’s was exactly what Quinn had been longing to do with the Forget-Me-Not Flower Shop for years. Her hand slid to her back pocket, where she felt the keys, still safe where she put them after her closing just an hour before.

  She was officially a business owner.

  Somehow seeing Betsy in this state of disarray did nothing to squelch her excitement. This was what Quinn had been praying for, dreaming of. Even knowing there would be difficult times like the one Betsy was going through at that moment didn’t dissuade her.

  She was ready.

  Finally, her life could begin.

  She walked out of Hazel’s Kitchen and into the cold evening air. Harbor Pointe was smack in the middle of winter, and the evenings were brisk and cold. She pulled her jacket a little tighter around her.

  Lane Kelley. Lane had moved back here not too long ago to start her own interior design business. Quinn hadn’t thought of calling in a professional, but if she could fit it in her budget, it might be worth it. After all, she wanted to completely overhaul the flower shop. Mimi Hudson had wonderful taste twenty years ago, but nothing much had changed since. Quinn knew because she’d tried, more than once, to update the displays, to paint the walls, to bring Forget-Me-Not into this century. But Mimi was a creature of habit.

  And she was cheap.

  Quinn walked a few doors down to Forget-Me-Not, and a swell of memories rushed through her. How many times had she come here after school, setting up her own little station for creating adorable bouquets from the cuttings her mother couldn’t use?

  It still amazed her how easily her mind transported her back. She’d done her best to box up all the feelings (and there was a mix of them) and stuff them away, but sometimes, when she wasn’t careful, one would sneak through, like light underneath a door in a dark room.

  She was seconds from inserting her key when a glow at the back of the shop caught her eye. What in the world . . . ?

  When she tugged the door, it opened, and the big bell Mimi had installed overhead jangled. Loudly.

  Shoot. What if it was a thief?

  Well, that was a ridiculous thought. What kind of thief would rob a flower shop?

  No sense pretending she wasn’t standing here now. “Hello?”

  After a few long seconds, she heard a noise in the back room. A moment later, Mimi’s face, wearing a sheepish expression, appeared in the doorway.

  “Mimi, you scared me to death,” Quinn said.

  “I’m sorry, hon,” Mimi said. “I was just coming to say good-bye.” She was smiling, but there was sadness in her eyes.

  Quinn shifted her purse from one shoulder to the other. “Don’t tell me you’re regretting your decision to travel the world with Barry.”

  “Of course not,” Mimi said. “I’m thrilled we get to go on these adventures while we’re still young and limber enough to enjoy them.” She stilled. “But this place was my whole world for so many years.”

  Quinn nodded. Hers too. For as long as she could remember, the Forget-Me-Not Flower Shop had been a part of her life. And she’d been waiting for the day she could officially call it hers.

  Not that she didn’t love Mimi. After all, the older woman had done so much for her—treated her, in many ways, like a daughter when Quinn so desperately needed a mother. Mimi had made her the most beautiful corsage for her senior prom and explained to her how important it was to protect her purity even though boys were often very persistent. Mimi had hugged her through several low, low days, the kind of days Quinn hoped were behind her now.

  But in the back of her mind, Quinn had never viewed the flower shop as Mimi’s. It was as if Mimi were just taking care of it until Quinn was ready.

  As caretakers went, Mimi was certainly a good one. The best. But Forget-Me-Not was a Collins legacy, and Quinn was ready to take the lead.

  “You’re going to do a fantastic job, Quinn,” Mimi said.

  Quinn smiled. “I hope so. I want to make you proud.”

  I want to make my mother proud.

  Mimi stepped out of the back room and into the shop. She stood behind the counter, where Quinn was accustomed to seeing her. “You’ve already made me proud, hon.” She smiled and slung her large purse over her shoulder. “Now, one little piece of advice from an old bird who learned the hard way?”

  “Of course.” Quinn took a few steps closer, the faint light from the back room and the streetlamps outside filling the shop just enough that Quinn could make out the older woman’s familiar features. Mimi’s red hair framed her face and offset her bright-green eyes. She’d looked that way as long as Quinn could remember—further proof the older woman resisted change.

  Still, Quinn knew there was much to learn from her. Mimi was whip-smart and kind to boot. It made for good business in their small town, especially once tourist season was over. This business depended on the locals, not the passersby.

  Mimi reached across the counter for Quinn’s hands. “Do your work. Be good at it. But don’t let it consume you.”

  “I won’t,” Quinn said.

  “No, really.” Mimi squeezed her hands. “It’s so easy when you run your own business, especially one that means so much to you, to get lost in it all. To forget that there’s more to life than just this place. I worry about you, Quinn. You work here. You live upstairs. You never go anywhere else.”

  Quinn pressed her lips together. What was she supposed to say? It was true—by design. Didn’t Mimi understand why she couldn’t leave Harbor Pointe?

  “I’ll do better, Mimi,” Quinn said. “I promise.”

  “Book a vacation,” Mimi said. “Do it tonight. Come visit Barry and me in Italy this summer.”

  Quinn laughed. “I think I might need to start a little smaller than Italy.”

  Mimi waved her off. “Go big or go home, sweetheart.”

  “I’ll think about it,” Quinn said, knowing it was a lie.

  Mimi knew it too, but she didn’t say so. She just studied Quinn for a long moment, then finally let go of her hands and joined her in front of the counter. “I don’t want to see you get your hopes up, Quinn.”

  She frowned. “What do you mean?”

  “Just that it’s been twenty years. I want you to move on. Make this a fresh start—maybe accept the fact that she’s not coming back.”

  Quinn knew it was true; why did the words still sting after all these years?

  Mimi pulled her into a tight hug, patted her twice on the back, then let her go. “I’m going to be praying for you every single day. You know that, don’t you?”


  “I know, Mimi.”

  “Ask him to take that pain away, honey.” Mimi’s smile was warm. Maternal. “He’s the only one who can.”

  Quinn shook her head. “I’m fine. You don’t need to worry about me. I promise.”

  “Well, that’s no comfort. I’m going to be worrying about you till the day I die.” She stepped away. “That’s what I do.”

  “And I’m grateful for it,” Quinn said. “How about instead of worrying, you just send me postcards from all the places you see on your crazy European adventure.”

  Mimi giggled. “I will. I can’t believe I’m doing this. I don’t know what we’re going to see over there—Stella Jones told me they have topless beaches. I sure hope we don’t stumble onto one of those.”

  Quinn laughed. “I hope not either. I’d hate to see Barry topless.”

  Mimi swatted her arm. “I sure am going to miss you.”

  “Me too.” Quinn reached out for one more hug, blinked back fresh tears, and watched as Mimi turned around and walked out the door.

  Maybe for the last time.

  Standing there, in the middle of the flower shop, surrounded by the old displays, she was suddenly overwhelmed with emotion.

  This was it. She was on her own. No more Mimi to take care of her or make sure she was okay. Sure, she still had her dad and his friends, but business-wise, Forget-Me-Not was her responsibility.

  And she was determined not to mess that up.

  She pulled her notebook from her purse and sat down on the floor in the center of the space. The flower shop was old and run-down, so she’d been collecting ideas on how to improve it for years. She scooted the elastic band holding the book together off to the side and opened the pages. Even in the near dark, she knew what the sketches and scraps of magazine clippings were. She remembered every idea, every plan as if she’d just saved them yesterday.

  She was excited, but she knew that as much fun as she’d had collecting ideas, it was going to take a lot of work and money to whip this place into shape. That thought overwhelmed her.

  The floors needed to be refinished and the walls needed to be painted. There was a whole shelving system in the back room that still had to be put together. The signs outside hadn’t been replaced since the year Mimi bought the shop, and the window displays needed to be rebuilt. She wanted to add some small gift items to their inventory, but she had to get the display shelves put in place, and then, of course, there was the office where Quinn would meet with brides, plan festival displays, place orders, and work on the designs she’d enter into the Michigan Floral Expo, just a few short months away.

  Florists from all over the state could enter the Michigan Floral Expo with displays they created for any event—festivals, carnivals, weddings. For Quinn, the Harbor Pointe Winter Carnival would be the locale for her entry. And that carnival was coming up quickly.

  She pulled out her phone and swiped over to the Expo website. The entry form nagged at her. She had displays she’d designed throughout the year that would be perfectly fine to enter, but none of them were perfect.

  None of them would win.

  And this year—after finally becoming the official owner of the Forget-Me-Not Flower Shop, winning was the only possible outcome.

  And the only way to get her mother’s attention after living twenty invisible years.

 

 

 


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