Safe in the Fireman's Arms

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Safe in the Fireman's Arms Page 7

by Tina Radcliffe


  “There’s a job opening? How did you find out about it?”

  “Beck told me. It’s a temporary teaching position at the high school. I emailed my résumé over yesterday.” The excitement that bubbled over was contagious.

  “And the college professor from Denver would consider teaching at a high school in Paradise?”

  “Of course.”

  Of course.

  “That’s great. Congratulations, Maggie.”

  “I don’t have the job yet.”

  “Oh, I’ll be praying.”

  “Will you?” she asked, her head tilted so her ponytail hung askew.

  “Sure will.”

  Maggie staying in Paradise? He wrapped his mind around the idea, liking it more and more. Oh, yeah. He’d be praying.

  He met her gaze and smiled, then looked away, forcing himself to concentrate on the pie instead of the woman across the table from him, because in a stunning instant he realized that he’d been right all along. Maggie Jones held the power to do some serious damage to his heart and that fact rocked him.

  Chapter Six

  Bells chimed as Maggie pushed open the door to the Hair Emporium on Main Street. Immediately the buzz of conversations came to a sudden halt and whiplash moved through the shop like the wave at a football game.

  Women popped their heads out from beneath the dryer hoods and craned their necks. At a far sink, a technician shampooing someone’s hair peeked around a large woman with pink sponge rollers in an effort to assess Maggie. A manicurist seated against the wall swiped fuchsia enamel across a patron’s nail and looked up and over her bifocals. All eyes were focused on the door.

  The pungent and unmistakable scent of a perm in progress wrapped itself around Maggie’s throat and tightened. She swallowed before taking a tentative step into the room. Where was Susan?

  From across the busy shop, a petite woman in a white lab coat moved through the activity toward Maggie.

  Self-confidence.

  And this woman owned it. Her heels clicked on the linoleum as she approached. The name Sally-Anne was stitched in black on the pocket of her pristine jacket. Her glossy black hair framed her face in a short, banged bob that swung back and then forth as she propelled her lithe frame forward.

  Sally-Anne’s age seemed impossible to determine—somewhere between forty and...forty? The woman was flawless, from her perfect makeup to her impeccable French manicured fingertips.

  “Maggie Jones.” She gave a short nod. “Sally-Anne.”

  “How did you know who I am?”

  Sally-Anne smiled and pointed to the newspaper on the counter. “You’ve made the front page. Again. Twice in less than seven days.”

  “I didn’t realize anyone was counting.”

  “Welcome to Paradise.” She gestured with a wave of her arm, toward the window of the shop. “And you’ve met Chief MacLaughlin.”

  “Yes, but...” Panic hit Maggie. Surely the woman didn’t think... “Those fires were accidents,” she finally said.

  “I’m sure they were.” The other woman offered an indulgent smile as she moved behind the counter and scanned her computer screen. “What can we do for you today? I don’t see any notes next to your appointment,” Sally-Anne said.

  Maggie gripped the small clutch purse in her hands tightly and searched out the window, hoping to spot Susan or her little red car. “My cousin is supposed to meet me here. Maybe I should reschedule.”

  “Nonsense. We’re booked solid due to the Founder’s Day events on Saturday.”

  “Okay, then, I guess a trim would be good.” She pushed a loose lock of hair behind her ears.

  “A trim?” Sally-Anne stepped from behind the counter and circled Maggie.

  Maggie heard the acute disappointment in the woman’s tone.

  She reached out a hand to inspect a strand of Maggie’s hair. Then she fingered another strand and rubbed it between her fingers. Raising red-framed glasses from the chain around her neck onto her nose, Sally-Anne examined the ends of Maggie’s hair, all the while uttering dispiriting noises of assessment under her breath.

  Behind them the door burst open, setting the bells into a frenzy of noise. Susan. The cavalry had arrived.

  “Style and cut and low lights. I brought a picture.” Susan handed Sally-Anne a page torn from a magazine, then glanced at herself in the mirror behind the front counter and adjusted the Peter Pan collar on her white silk blouse.

  “Hmm.” Narrowing her eyes, Sally-Anne analyzed the photo for a moment before holding the paper next to Maggie’s face. Then she turned to Susan. “Deep conditioning is critical. The follicles have been seriously neglected.”

  Neglected follicles. The accusation stabbed at Maggie’s already dismal self-esteem.

  “That will be fine,” Susan said. “We want her to dazzle. She’s going to the supper with Jake, you know.”

  Maggie’s eyes widened when Sally-Anne perked up, and her jaw sagged in surprise.

  “You have a date with our Jake?”

  A buzz started through the shop. Someone under the dryer whispered loudly to the woman seated next to her. “Late with Jake?”

  “No. A date with Jake,” her dryer partner corrected.

  Maggie cringed. “Not exactly a date,” she said. “I won him.”

  “Oh, it was you. I heard a Margaret won. I thought it was a woman at the retirement home.”

  “Maggie. Margaret. I’m named after my grandmother.”

  “Two hundred tickets, was it?”

  Maggie swallowed. “One hundred and forty-seven. Actually Susan bought the tickets.”

  “I thought we were playing fair,” Sally-Anne said.

  “Oh, come on now,” Susan responded. “You, of all people, realize that rules are out the window when it comes to firemen.

  “Humph.” Sally-Anne dusted off the first throne and ushered Maggie to sit on the black leather upholstery. She snapped black latex gloves onto her hands. Then she carefully mixed tubes of color into a black bowl and began to paint sections of Maggie’s hair with a brush, before carefully folding each section in foil.

  “Would you like something to drink while your hair processes?” Sally-Anne asked as she rolled the gloves off her hands.

  “No. I’m fine, thanks.” Maggie sat quietly watching the other women in the shop and the procedures going on with interest. Across the room, Susan sat in a reclining chair enjoying a pedicure and a cappuccino.

  Sally-Anne came over to Maggie’s chair at intervals and peeked inside the foil on her head, then nodded her approval and left again. When a buzzer signaled the color was done, Maggie was turned over to a technician at the shampoo sinks.

  “The works,” Sally-Anne commanded. “Give her the deep conditioning treatment, as well.”

  Once shampoo and deep conditioning were complete, a towel-headed Maggie was moved to yet another chair.

  “Very nice,” Sally-Anne observed, combing out Maggie’s hair. “Wear a hat outside from now on. The Colorado sun is ruthless, especially at this elevation.”

  Maggie nodded at the instructions.

  “When was your last salon visit?”

  “Oh, this is my first time at a salon.”

  Sally-Anne choked. “Well, I hope it won’t be your last.”

  “No,” Maggie murmured. She kept her eyes fixed on the laces of her sneakers as they peeked out from beneath the cape.

  “You’re staying with the Joneses?”

  “I’m staying at Susan’s cottage.”

  “And you’ll be teaching at the high school in the fall?”

  Maggie’s head jerked back. “How did you know about the job? I haven’t even interviewed yet.”

  With a fingertip, Sally-Anne tilted Maggie’s head to the left. “Try not to move or you’ll end up with a très chic pixie cut.”

  “But—”

  “This is Paradise. The grapevine is faster than a text message.”

  “Terrific.”

  “How long have you known J
ake?” she inquired as her thin, tapered, silver scissors snipped, snipped, snipped.

  “Seven days.”

  She stopped cutting. “Seven days?” Sally-Anne gave Maggie an intense scrutiny in the mirror. “And you won a date with two hundred tickets?”

  “One hundred and forty-seven, and it was Susan.”

  The scissors began again. Sally-Anne moved around Maggie, her eyes narrowed and her brows knit in thought as she worked.

  A few minutes later the snipping stopped once more.

  “He’s widowed, you know.”

  The shoulders of the black plastic cape rustled as Maggie straightened in the chair. She met Sally’s eyes in the mirror.

  “Our chief is a tortured soul.”

  “I didn’t know,” Maggie murmured.

  The blow dryer began, its white noise blocking out everything else.

  Jake was widowed? Maggie sat stunned at the information. The pain she’d read in his eyes was real. He had loved and suffered the worst imaginable loss. Didn’t she feel like a horrible human being for how she’d jumped to so very many thoughtless conclusions about the man?

  Oh, Lord, please forgive me and my big mouth. I’ll be nicer to Jake from now on.

  If only he wouldn’t goad her. He seemed to know how to push all her buttons and he enjoyed doing it, too.

  Sally-Anne circled the chair, repositioning Maggie’s head with a touch of her hand.

  “What do you think?” Sally-Anne asked.

  Maggie looked up in time to see Susan’s grinning face reflected in the mirror.

  “You look amazing, Mags.”

  With a small hand mirror, Maggie examined herself from several angles. Sally Anne was a gifted stylist. The cut flattered. Strands of caramel and golden brown hair danced on her shoulders, with wispy layers and bangs framing her face. Oh, yes. She had to admit the change was amazing.

  “Do you think I can get it to do this by myself?”

  “Of course. Let me recommend a line of shampoo, conditioner and style extender. Also a nice ceramic brush.” Sally-Anne reached for the supplies and placed them on the counter.

  The register sang joyfully, as it tallied up the purchases. Maggie gulped as her budget flat-lined. Except when she looked at the receipt she’d only been charged for the brush, and hair products.

  “This is incorrect. You undercharged me,” she said.

  Sally-Anne waved a hand in dismissal. “Professional courtesy. Your cousin is a member of the Paradise Small Business Association with me. Besides, your hair is the best word-of-mouth advertisement I could ever hope for.”

  “Thank you, so much,” Maggie said.

  “Thank you. Remember a good haircut is like a good marriage. You do your part, and I do mine.”

  “I’m not sure I can live up to my end of this...marriage. I haven’t looked this good in my entire life.” Maggie stared at herself in the mirror behind the counter. She swung her head and the layers moved and then settled in attractive disarray.

  “Don’t be so hard on yourself. You had the basic resources to start with.”

  “No. It’s all you, Sally-Anne. You’re an artist.”

  Sally-Anne purred. “Now I know why Jake likes you. You’re nice, even if you are breaking the heart of every woman in Paradise who is in love with Jake MacLaughlin.”

  “No. No. Jake and I... He doesn’t.”

  “No worries. I didn’t say this would stop the rest of us from trying.”

  Maggie couldn’t resist a laugh.

  “See you at the supper,” Sally-Anne said, as she handed a hot pink shopping bag to Maggie. “Oh, and here’s a coupon for fifty percent off a manicure.”

  Instinctively Maggie curled her nails into her palms. They were a mess from yard work. “Thank you.”

  “Are we still on for lunch?” Susan asked as she linked her arm through Maggie’s. “My treat.”

  “Sure.”

  “Patti Jo’s?”

  “Sounds good.”

  Maggie and Susan strolled down Main Street to the corner, where the red doors of Patti Jo’s Café and Bakery welcomed them. When Susan opened the door, Aunt Betty stood on the other side.

  “Mother,” Susan said. “Are you getting off work?”

  “Lunch break. I saw you two coming down the street through the window. May I join you?”

  “Of course,” Susan said.

  “Maggie.” Aunt Betty’s eyes popped wide. “Your hair. I don’t think I’ve ever seen you without a ponytail. You’ve worn a ponytail since you were a little girl. You look so different.”

  “Is that good?”

  Aunt Betty cocked her head and stared at her. “I think it’s good, but Maggie, you’re a beautiful woman. Are you ready for that?”

  “What do you mean, Aunt B?”

  “You might not be prepared for the attention you’ll be getting.”

  “Mom is telling you to get used to it, Mags. Life as you know it is about to change.”

  “That’s a stretch.” Maggie fingered her bangs. “But, I guess I never realized how bad I looked before.”

  “You never looked bad. Simply a case of hidden potential,” Susan said.

  They’d only barely slid into a high-backed booth when Susan’s phone trilled. She dug in her leather satchel and pulled out her cell. “Excuse me. I’m going to slip outside and take this.”

  Maggie’s gaze wandered around the room, taking in the black-and-white tiled floor, the cute retro-style cherry-red and aluminum tables and booths. “How long have you worked here, Aunt B?”

  “I only work in the spring and summer. It’s very busy when the tourists hit town and I like having a little extra cash of my own to put away for the holidays.”

  Susan appeared back at the table. “I’m so sorry. A shipment just arrived and I’ve got to deal with the vendor. With the Founder’s Day supper I’ve got all sorts of merchandise I have to get on display.” She looked at Maggie. “Mom will take good care of you, Maggie.

  Aunt Betty patted Maggie’s hand. “It’s okay, Susan. We’ll be fine.”

  “I’ll stop by Saturday morning to help you dress for the parade.”

  “I can dress myself, you know,” Maggie said.

  “I’ll see you Saturday morning.” Susan waved and headed for the door.

  “Susan...”

  The waitress appeared at their table, cutting off Maggie’s opportunity to protest.

  “What do you recommend, Aunt Betty?”

  “The chicken Caesar wraps. Best in town.”

  Maggie smiled at the young redheaded waitress. “Two wraps then.”

  “And to drink?”

  “Iced tea, please,” Maggie said.

  Her aunt handed the menus to the teenage server. “I’ll have the same. Oh, and Julia, have you met my niece, Maggie?”

  The girl smiled. “No, but I heard about you.”

  “It wasn’t my fault!”

  “Excuse me? Oh, I meant Beck. He told me that he works for you. He actually talks about you a lot.”

  “You’re a friend of Beck’s?”

  The teen blushed. “Yes. He’s really brilliant, isn’t he?”

  “Yes. All that and something else,” Maggie agreed. “Nice to meet you, Julia.”

  “You, too.”

  “Wow,” Maggie said as Julia walked away, a dreamy smile on her face. “Can you say ‘crush’?”

  “You think so?”

  “For sure, Aunt B.”

  “Young love.”

  “Beck has tunnel vision. He probably has no clue.”

  “Speaking of romance, Maggie, how are you doing?”

  “Me? Romance?” Maggie looked up from the dessert menu. “What do you mean?”

  “This Saturday is the date you would have been getting married.”

  “I know. My bank account reminded me this morning.”

  “Apparently you aren’t bemoaning the loss.”

  “Only the dent on my savings after I sent a check to my parents for all
the deposits they lost.”

  “Oh, Maggie, you reimbursed your parents?”

  “I was the one who ran.”

  “Hmm.” Aunt Betty shot a stern frown at Maggie. “I was under the impression that the engagement and arrangements were your parents’ idea.”

  “I’m thirty-two years old. I should have put my foot down before everything got out of control. And it was way out of control, believe me.” She took a small drink of water. “Anyhow. That’s behind me now.”

  “Is it? Have you talked to your parents since you left?”

  “No. I’m avoiding another conversation, as is my ‘head in the sand’ way.”

  “Maggie, you need to check in with them.”

  “I will. Sunday is Father’s Day. I’d planned to call then.”

  Maggie folded and unfolded her napkin. “Aunt B, why is it I’m so different from my parents? Do you think maybe I was switched at birth?”

  Aunt Betty chuckled. “I have often had similar thoughts about your Uncle Bob.”

  “Uncle Bob? Why?”

  “He and your father are so different.”

  Maggie considered her words. “I never thought about it before, but you’re absolutely right.”

  “Have you ever wondered how we live comfortably in Paradise on the income from a fix-it shop in a town of less than two thousand?”

  “Well, come to think of it...”

  “Your Uncle Bob is as smart as your father. Not book smart yet smart nonetheless. He simply expresses it differently. Actually, you’re a lot like him. Years ago Bob sold one of his fix-it shop projects to a big company in Denver.” Betty leaned closer and whispered. “He made a small fortune, Maggie, enough to allow him to fiddle happily with his projects for the rest of his life and not worry about the bills.”

  Maggie’s eyes widened.

  “So the fix-it shop is a front?”

  Aunt Betty laughed again. “I guess you could say that. He loves that shop dearly.”

  “I don’t blame him.”

  “You’re like Bob. Smart, but in a different way than most people. You both see the world differently. Don’t despise what God has given you, dear. You’re different. Period. He made you that way for a reason. There’s no condemnation in Him. Be proud. After all, there’s only one Maggie Jones, and I think she’s pretty wonderful.”

 

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