Becoming Bella

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Becoming Bella Page 29

by Sarah Hegger


  Matt stared at him, frowning. “This is new.”

  “Not really.” Matt was one of the few people he would bother explaining himself to. “I think some part of me always did. I’ve been running shit scared from that part for most of my life. At least since first grade.”

  Matt gave a rueful laugh. “Now you see it.”

  “I was never the brain in the family.”

  “That’s bullshit, Nate.” Matt stood and clapped a hand on his shoulder. “Almost as big a pile of crap as that chip you carry on your shoulder. You weren’t the black sheep either.”

  “Ah, come on.” Matt must be suffering from early onset senility. “How many nights did you have to drag my sorry ass out of trouble?”

  “I remember.” Matt’s grip tightened on his shoulder. “But you know what I saw?”

  “Hit me.” May as well air all the family dirty laundry.

  “I saw a kid who was hurting. The same thing old Sheriff Wheeler saw. A good kid with so much pent-up hurt he didn’t know where to go with it.”

  He couldn’t quite buy that. “We all lost Dad. I was the only one who played up.”

  “Really?” Matt snorted. “You have a selective memory. Were you the one who locked himself in the house for the first six months?”

  Nope, that had been Mom.

  “Or the one who tried to drop out of college and then, when I wouldn’t let him, failed a semester just to prove a point.”

  “Eric did that?”

  “Yeah, Eric did that.” Matt laughed. “Jo dropped out of life altogether and Isaac is still MIA. So next time you cast yourself in the role of family screwup, you might want to consider the competition. And then there’s me.”

  “You?” Matt, who had turned down a full-ride scholarship to take care of the family after their father died and their mother turned mourning into a profession?

  “Yeah, me.” Matt punched his shoulder. The old guy still had some power going there. “I more or less hid out behind Dad’s company until it was almost too late. If Pippa hadn’t come into town and forced me out of hibernation, I might still be in there.”

  Nate had never really considered things from that angle.

  Matt shoved his hands in his pockets. “I’m proud of you, Nate. If anyone knows how to pick yourself up and start over, it’s you.”

  Goddamn. If Matt kept this up, they might both start bawling. “Shut up.”

  “Good idea.”

  “Bella will be okay.” Nate cleared the lump that seemed to have lodged in his throat. “She’ll be okay because I’m never giving up on her.”

  * * *

  Bella stuffed the invitation under a pile of paperwork sitting on her desk. It didn’t diminish the effect.

  When Phi issued an invitation, she did it the old-fashioned way, through the mail and on her own stationery. A royal summons to Bella’s own store from the Ghost Falls royalty.

  Matt had finished in the store three days ago, and still she hadn’t managed to go around and see the final outcome. People thought she avoided the store because of frightening memories, and Bella wished she could say they had it right. The real reason was much more embarrassing. She was hiding out from her life. She’d even deleted all her Dr. Childers downloads because she didn’t want to hear all that take-charge crap.

  Her last visit to the store had almost broken through the gray nothing and she couldn’t risk that. Each day it got harder to stay numb.

  Liz had eventually placed the orders for stock on her behalf and unloaded them into the storerooms. Bella didn’t even know if the right garments had arrived.

  She wandered through to the kitchen and put some coffee on. Not that she wanted any coffee, but she needed something to do while she worked on her excuse for Phi. Unlike other people, Phi didn’t take no lightly. If you tried an excuse Phi didn’t think held water, the diva straight-up told you and then insisted you came anyway.

  Phi clearly thought the time had come to open the store again because the invitation was to the grand opening of Bella’s.

  Bella slammed her cupboard door closed. It kind of pissed her off that Phi had taken the initiative and decided to open her store for her. She detected the sly hand of Pippa in this. Why couldn’t Pippa mind her own business?

  The smell of coffee reminded her how much she really didn’t want a cup.

  Of course, if she got all irritated with Pippa, she’d have to start taking on a whole bunch of other people. Ghost Falls seemed to have decided as a town that Bella needed to buck up.

  Outside, Noel shoveled Liz’s walk. When he was done, he would come over and do hers. Not because Bella had asked but because Noel had taken it on all by himself.

  People didn’t get it. They all thought she should get on with her life and cheer the hell up. Cheer up! Bella made a retching noise.

  She checked the time on the kitchen clock. Nate would be around soon to make sure she ate. Who knew all you had to do was get kidnapped by a psycho to get a man to pay attention to you? No matter what she said, what she tried to text him, Nate showed up at her door.

  Like right now. His cruiser drew up outside her house and Nate climbed out. He took a moment to chat with Noel.

  So ridiculously hot with the shadow of the day’s growth darkening the clean-cut lines of his face. Wind ruffled his dark hair with loving fingers. If she didn’t have this dead place in the middle of her, she might be getting all giddy with excitement around about now.

  Nate spotted her at the window and waved.

  A little something twanged through her chest. Could be indigestion for all she knew.

  She opened the door for him and Nate trotted up the walkway.

  “Hey, babe.” He bent and kissed her cheek. His frozen cheek pressed against hers as if they were a couple. “Have a good day?”

  “Yup.” Because if she said anything else, he’d want to hear all about it. “And you?”

  He pulled a face, shrugging out of his coat. “Spent most of it driving around the backcountry. Damn roads haven’t been plowed yet. Had to make sure some of the senior citizens made it through for their hospital appointments.”

  She got him a beer and poured herself a glass of wine.

  Nate cooked while she sat at the kitchen table. The conversation drifted from one subject to another. Small talk about his day, her day, things going on in town. This she could handle, even admit it was kind of nice. Not that she had much of a choice; any attempt to put Nate off failed dismally. He’d arrive anyway and barge his way into her house.

  “I got an invitation today.” Bella watched his face to see if there was any reaction.

  “Phi, I’m guessing.” He grinned and took a sip of his beer.

  It was like a damn conspiracy. “Did you put her up to this?”

  “I might have had a part in it.” He turned back to his cooking onions.

  “Why?” She had a bunch of other questions, but she’d start with that one.

  “Babe.” Nate glanced at her. “The store is done. It’s time.”

  She wanted to throw her wine at him, but it was wine, and she wanted to drink it more. “Because you decided it’s time.”

  “Maybe.” His tone got wary. “You have to open the store, Bella.”

  “I don’t have to do anything.” She knew she was being childish, but this assumption that she could just pick up her life where Adam had ripped it up really got under her skin.

  Nate flipped off the burner. “Bella . . .” He crossed his arms and gave her the sheriff face. “That renovation cost you money, and every day the store stands there is costing you money.”

  “So this is about saving me money?” Hell, if he wanted to go there, she would so go there.

  “No.” Now he gave her that tone that said he was exercising all his patience. “This is about a lot of things. One of those things is money.”

  “Does it occur to you that I don’t need your help?”

  “No.” He snagged the bottle and refilled her wine. Then we
nt right back to cooking. “And I think we’ve been through this before.”

  Bella scowled at his back. They had been through this before and she’d lost every single one of those times too.

  “Isn’t it against the law to force yourself into someone’s house?”

  Nate stirred something that smelled great. “Not if you’re cooking them dinner.”

  His glibness made her want to smack him. Like everyone else, Nate thought she could pick up her life where Adam had torn it apart, sew together the tattered ends, and be back to the way she was before. None of them understood. “Why do you care?”

  Nate turned and looked at her. Really looked at her, and she dropped her head to dodge the way he saw so much. “You know why.” The toes of his boots moved into her line of vision. “But just in case you’ve forgotten, I’ll tell you again.” Nate crouched at her feet. His lion gaze held her captive. “I. Love. You.”

  Like arrows, the words pierced the comfortable gray, and Bella came back swinging. “No, you don’t. You just think you do.” She had to get away. His eyes, his face, the sincerity demanded stuff from her. Made her feel. Bella stood. Why did they all insist she start feeling again?

  Nate pressed her back into her chair. “I love you.” He caught her hands and held them firmly. “When I saw Adam standing over you with the scalpel, it all crystalized for me, but I loved you before then.”

  “No.” She needed to hold on to being numb. Everything hurt less that way. But light forced its way into the gray and a sob caught in the back of her throat.

  “Yes.” Nate kissed first one palm and then the other. “I might even have loved you when I used to stomp on the things you made in the elementary-school sandbox.”

  “They were sand cakes.”

  He slid his hands to her hips and held her still. “I might even have loved you when I nearly asked you to prom.”

  “You did?” He must be making this up.

  “I did.” Nate winced. “I changed my mind at the last minute because I was scared of your nana, and she was there the day I came around to ask.” He wiped a tear from her cheek.

  When had the tears started? All she knew was that the cold inside her was retreating, tickling, prickling, and hurting, like when you walked into the warm after the cold. “You can’t have.”

  “Maybe it was better this way, because I wasn’t any good for you then. I wasn’t even any good for you when you dropped your dress in my hands and strutted your hot ass away from me. Only I quit fighting it then.”

  “I didn’t strut.”

  “Babe!” He chuckled. “You worked it. And it slayed me. All this time I’ve been pushing you away, telling both of us I’m not the right man for you, when all along it turns out I was only being a coward.”

  She so wanted to believe him, but she held back. Doubting. Not trusting herself to know what was good for her. Bella shook her head. He needed to stop saying this stuff to her.

  Nate cupped her cheeks in his rough palms and she had no choice but to look at him. “Yes, Bella. I was scared and uncertain and running away from you. I hurt you in the process and I’ll spend the rest of my life making it up to you for that. But when I saw you in that room, it all became clear. I didn’t realize I loved you at that moment; I just realized I’d been dicking around for so long, it had almost cost me you.”

  “I can’t.” Couldn’t so many things.

  Nate nodded slowly, his beautiful eyes sad. “I understand. I pushed you away for so long, and then Adam. You’re not ready.”

  “I may never be ready.”

  “I’ll take that chance.” He kissed her, softly and undemandingly. “Because if there’s even a possibility you’ll change your mind and trust me with you, it’s worth it.”

  * * *

  “Darling!” Bella held the phone away from her ear as Phi bellowed down the line.

  “Hey, Phi.” All day she’d been hiding in her house, but that hadn’t prevented Nate’s words from last night following her from room to room. Try as she might, the detachment kept evading her. She felt sad and mad and scared and hopeless—and then hopeful, and then it started all over again. She’d even caught herself with a smile on her face as she read a text from Nate.

  “Now listen, darling,” Phi yelled. “Pippa and I are engaged in a brouhaha.”

  “Oh yes.” Bella braced for where Phi went next. The word brouhaha brought that smile creeping back.

  “Pippa is being stubborn,” Phi said. “Not there, Mathieu. How will I get the fur rug underneath that? Sorry, Bella.” Phi took a deep breath. “Mathieu has no sense of style.”

  “Where are you?”

  “At your wonderful little shop, of course, darling.” Phi chuckled. “Tomorrow night is your grand opening after all, and we have so much to do.”

  Excitement tried to wriggle through, but she stamped on it. “Listen, Phi, about that—”

  “That’s why I’m calling,” Phi said. “Pippa keeps trying to interfere with my decorating scheme. I need you to tell her that the purple will be divine.”

  Bella went a bit light-headed. “Purple?”

  “Yes, purple with gold accents because one color is so blah. Darling, it’s sublime.” Phi sighed. “The shop is so dreary with all this cream. The purple is just the thing to make it pop.”

  Facing the annihilation of her elegant, understated décor she’d chosen to showcase the clothing, Bella had to sit down. Surely Pippa wouldn’t let Phi do it. “Why must it pop?”

  “Because, darling, we need some more drama in here. Just a moment,” Phi yelled on her end. “Drape the gold lamé in great swaths, Mathieu. Swaths! I’m back,” Phi said. “I know you’re going to love it. Anyway, see you tomorrow, darling. Make sure you wear something purple to match the decorations.”

  Bella stared at the dead phone in her hand. She should leave them to do what they wanted. She hadn’t sent any invitations, set the date, nothing. They could just carry on.

  Purple? Purple!

  Dear God.

  Bella snatched up her keys. Damn it, she didn’t want to do this. But, even more, she didn’t want Phi turning her store into a purple hell.

  Annoyed at herself, she drove too fast to the store. Part of her hoped Nate would pull her over for speeding and she could vent some of her ire on him.

  Foiled when she arrived uncontested, she marched into the store with her pissed-off flag flying high.

  “Oh, hello, darling.” Phi waggled her nails at her. “Nice . . . um . . . sweatpants.”

  Okay, she could have changed the sweatpants and food-stained T-shirt, especially with everyone staring at her. But, holy crap, the store looked amazing and there wasn’t a trace of purple anywhere. Wood floors, crystal chandeliers, taupe silk curtains for the fitting rooms, walls painted a warm off-white. Garments in jewel-bright splendor framed by the discreet elegance all around them.

  “Well?” Pippa strolled over to her and flung an arm about her shoulder. “What do you think?”

  “It looks amazing.”

  “I know.” Pippa jostled her. “My honey did good by you.”

  Her store. Bella ran her fingertips over the smooth finish of the wooden service desk. “He sure did.”

  This was her store. Not the candy-pink nightmare she’d babied along for years now. Her dream had come to life. Something trickled through her that felt a lot like anticipation, with a touch of pride. She’d done this. Along with a lot of help.

  Matt stood beside Pippa, his gaze keen on her.

  “It’s perfect,” she said. She didn’t have any other words, only a hard knot of emotion stuck in her throat. While she’d been recovering, her friends had completed her vision for her. “It’s exactly as I imagined it.”

  “So . . .” Nana stomped into the store. “Are you happy now?”

  Happy? Seemed like an odd concept, but standing in her store with her friends all beaming at her, she came perilously close, so she nodded.

  “How much did this cost us?” Nana
fingered the silk drapery.

  “Me,” Bella said. “It’s costing me. Not us.”

  “Huh!” Nana drifted over to a rack of dresses and flipped through them. “These aren’t bad.”

  “Not bad?” Pippa snorted. “You’re looking at dress magic right there.”

  “Did I get it right?” Liz appeared in the doorway to the storeroom. She indicated her sprayed-on skinny jeans and bedazzled sweater. “Because I’m not exactly the best person to be ordering for you.”

  Bella flipped through the hangers. Liz had done great. More than great. “You nailed it.”

  Liz grinned and fanned her face. “Whew! Because it scared the shit out of me to do those orders. Mainly, I ordered stuff I thought would make me look old.”

  Noel arrived clutching two champagne bottles. He looked at Liz first. “Did she like it?”

  “She liked it.” Liz winked at Bella.

  “Good.” Noel gave his shy smile. “Then let’s all have a drink to celebrate.”

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Putting on makeup and wearing heels again felt alien. For her store opening, Bella wore a discreet pencil skirt and a blouse. After so many weeks in sweats, it was like putting on another person.

  Her therapist had come as close to cheering as a therapist did when Bella had called and told her she was attending the store opening. “I know this is frightening,” she’d said in her no-nonsense voice, which beat the crap out of all Dr. Childers’s crooning. “But you’re doing this because you’re ready.”

  “Hey.” Nate’s reflection appeared beside hers in the bathroom mirror. “You look beautiful.”

  “You were supposed to wait outside until I was dressed.”

  “You are dressed.” He held her shoulders. “And I got tired of waiting.”

  Through her thin blouse, Nate’s body heat tempted her to lean back. For a split second, she almost gave in to the temptation. “You know you don’t have to come with me.”

  “Of course I do.” He frowned and kissed her temple. “There’s nowhere else I’d rather be.”

  “What if I don’t want you here?” She had no idea why she said it, but the more he pushed at the walls around her, the more she knee-jerked and fought back. In truth, she didn’t think she could do this without him.

 

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