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Suddenly Engaged (A Lake Haven Novel Book 3)

Page 9

by Julia London


  She looked at him, then at the armload of damp black T-shirts she was holding. She dropped them in the rolling basket. “These are your clothes?”

  He didn’t speak but leveled a withering look on her.

  Her heart beat even faster, trapped between indignation and shame. “Well, I’m sorry, but the dryer was finished and I needed one.” Her earlier conviction of being completely justified in removing his clothes was now feeling a little weak.

  “You couldn’t wait five minutes?” he asked and grabbed the rolling basket, moving it away from her. “I’m sorry that I caught the light on Main, but it was literally five minutes.”

  “I’m in a hurry,” she said and glanced at the clock.

  “Oh, you’re in a hurry,” he said. “Then please, allow me to remove my damp clothes from the dryer for you, princess.” He kept his dark gaze on her as he reached into the dryer with one arm and grabbed what remained of his clothes. “I’ll just wait over there until you’re through with the dryer so I can finish my drying.”

  “No, go ahead,” she said, gesturing to the dryer. “You finish.”

  “Oh, I wouldn’t dream of it,” he said. “You’re in a hurry.” He turned his back to her, rolling the cart over to the two plastic orange chairs.

  Kyra didn’t have time to debate with The Grouch. She threw her laundry into the dryer, deposited her quarters, and started it.

  Now she had the problem of what to do while she waited. The Grouch was sitting in the orange chair, his legs splayed in front of him and taking up all available space, his arms folded across his chest. He wasn’t exactly glaring at her, but he was not projecting a friendly let’s start over vibe, either. Kyra self-consciously tucked her hair behind her ear, then ducked—okay, fled—outside.

  She stood beside her car; her heart was still racing. She kept checking her watch, waiting for the thirty minutes to pass, and when at last they did, she hurried back inside to claim her clothes.

  The Grouch was standing at her dryer, leaning against it with his shoulder. “You’re a minute late,” he said.

  Kyra rolled her eyes. “Okay, all right. I said I was sorry.”

  “Uh-huh.” He opened the door to the dryer.

  She grabbed her things and threw them into her basket while he waited. They were damp—she could have used another round of drying, but she wasn’t about to ask for more time. When she had fished the last of the things from the dryer, she turned to go.

  “What about this?” he asked.

  She turned around. He was dangling a pair of her panties from his forefinger.

  She snatched it from him. “Are you always so grumpy?”

  “Yep.” He pulled his basket around and began to stuff his clothes into the dryer.

  Kyra made her escape with her damp clothes.

  Vincent, the bartender, was the only person in the bistro when Kyra crashed through the back door, fumbling with her time card and her apron at once. “Sorry I’m late. There’s something blocking the road where it meets Juneberry.”

  “A food festival,” Vincent said. “Didn’t you see the notice by the time clock?”

  “No.”

  “You really have to start checking the board, Kyra. Anyway, it’s gonna be a slow shift. Hope you brought your schoolbooks.”

  He wasn’t kidding. After Kyra and Deenie, her friend and fellow waiter, set up for lunch service, they mostly stood around, each of them with two tables.

  “No one eats indoors on a day like this,” Deenie said as they stood at the bar, watching their diners. “Did you see all the food trucks? I wanna go. Let’s go when our shift ends.”

  “Can’t,” Kyra said. “I’ve got to go pay the babysitter.”

  “Come on, Kyra. You never go out. You never do anything.”

  “That’s because I’ve got a six-year-old daughter at home and only so much money for babysitting.”

  “You haven’t even met my new boyfriend,” Deenie said, playfully nudging her with her shoulder.

  Kyra couldn’t keep up with all of Deenie’s boyfriends—she went through them regularly. Of course she did—she was cute and sparkly. Kyra hadn’t had a boyfriend since Ruby was born. She’d had a couple of dates, both of them bowing out when they learned she had a daughter. Kyra didn’t hold it against them—they were young men, not ready for a family, not ready to babysit. She got that. But that didn’t mean she didn’t feel a little sorry for herself from time to time. She would love a nice dinner out. She would love to go to happy hour for a drink. She would love to have sex. Just sex. No-holds-barred, no-strings-attached sex.

  “Isn’t there anyone you’d like to date?” Deenie asked.

  Kyra laughed. “I don’t know anyone to date. I don’t know any guys in East Beach. Well, except my neighbor, and he, as it turns out, is a grumpy asshole.”

  “Brandon has a friend,” Deenie suggested.

  Kyra looked at her.

  “You could get a babysitter,” Deenie said, suddenly excited about the idea.

  “Babysitters cost money. And Mrs. Miller won’t babysit past six. Believe me, I’ve tried.”

  “At least think about it. Phil is really cute.”

  “Maybe,” Kyra said. “But if business keeps up like this, I won’t be able to feed my kid, much less afford a babysitter,” she said, glancing over her shoulder at their four tables.

  “No kidding,” Deenie said and went out to check on her diners.

  Two hours later, Kyra arrived home with a mere twenty-seven dollars in her pocket. She scrounged around in her backpack and the cup holder for more. She found a dollar in the side pocket of the car door, some loose change in the cup holder she hadn’t used for laundry this morning. The lesson here, she decided, was that sometimes it was a good idea to shove all the laundry into one washing machine.

  She was still fifty cents short, however, and she leaned over to look under the seat for loose change. She stuck her arm under as far as it would go but touched only dirt and crumbs, some paper, a straw, and one of the thousands of cheap plastic toys that showed up in every kid’s meal from a fast-food joint.

  She sat up halfway, then remembered she had thrown some change into the glove box. She stretched across the center console and popped the glove box open, and there found one dollar and forty-four cents. “Yes,” she said under her breath and gathered up the loose change.

  She sat up, shoved her hair back with one hand, then reached for the door handle to open it—and screeched with surprise. Grumpy Gus was standing outside, his arms folded, his weight on one hip, impatiently waiting for her.

  Kyra muttered a few curse words under her breath then opened the door, shoving so hard that the grouch had to take a step backward. “You seriously have to stop sneaking up on me!” she said loudly as she got out of her car.

  “How am I sneaking up on you when I walk across the lawn in clear view?” he asked calmly. “It’s not my fault if you’re oblivious to your surroundings.”

  The screen door slammed, and Mrs. Miller came hurrying down the stairs, her black bag slung over her shoulder, her thermos and lunch bag in one hand. “Oh, by the way,” she said, marching toward Kyra. “This guy says Ruby’s been next door again.”

  “Are you kidding?” Kyra didn’t know if she was madder at Mrs. Miller or Ruby. Either way, she was starting to feel the jaws of defeat squeezing her over this battle of the fence.

  “No one is kidding,” Grump said. “Your daughter brought me the breaking news that she pooped twice today.” His brows went up, as if that was somehow wrong of her.

  “Hi, Mommy!”

  And to complete the picture, here was Ruby with paint smeared on her face. “Okay, all right, I’ll talk to her,” Kyra said.

  “I don’t want to butt into your business—” he started.

  “Then don’t—” she snapped.

  “But it looks like the talking isn’t working.”

  That remark was as maddening as it was true. “Will you just give me a minute?” she dem
anded, flustered now. She would really, seriously, like to come home from work and not run into him. “Ruby, you’re grounded.”

  “What? Why?” she wailed, already crying.

  “You know why,” Kyra said and opened the back door to get the laundry. “I’ve told you more than once you are not to go and bother Mr. . . .” Grump . . .”

  “Bishop,” he muttered.

  “Bishop,” she repeated loudly. “Go inside. We’ll talk about this in a minute.”

  “Mommy!” Ruby wailed.

  “Go,” Kyra said, pointing at the cottage. Ruby turned around and ran, sobbing wildly. Or rather, trying to sob wildly.

  Mrs. Miller watched Ruby go into the house, then turned back to Kyra. “Got my money?”

  “Right,” Kyra said and dropped the laundry basket. She handed Mrs. Miller a ten, a five, thirteen ones, and two dollars in change.

  Mrs. Miller stared at the change Kyra had put in her palm.

  “It was the best I could do today,” Kyra said.

  Mrs. Miller was frowning when she lifted her gaze. “I don’t like change, Carrie.”

  “It’s Kyra,” she said impatiently. “Can you please take it this once?”

  Mrs. Miller pursed her lips and stared down at the change. “This once,” she said curtly, and walked on without so much as good night.

  Kyra and Grumpy Gus watched her get in her truck. As the thing roared to life, he shifted his gaze to Kyra and said, “I didn’t mean for you to yell at the kid.”

  “Oh no?” Kyra asked and stooped down to pick up the laundry. “Then what did you mean? As you said, talking wasn’t working.”

  He looked uncomfortable. He squinted toward her cottage. “It’s just that I work over there, and I’ve got a lot of equipment.”

  “Uh-huh. Is there anything else?”

  He rubbed his nape and looked at the cottage again, where Ruby’s wails could plainly be heard. Which, of course, was exactly what Ruby intended. But The Grouch winced as if those cries pained him. Amateur.

  “No. Nothing else,” he said.

  “Great. If you don’t mind, I’ve got some scolding to do,” Kyra said and walked on.

  She stepped into the cottage, dropped the laundry on the faded couch, and said, “Cut it out, Ruby.”

  Ruby was lying facedown on the floor. “You hurt my feelings!” she shouted, and cried again.

  “I’m going to hurt more than your feelings if you don’t stop that wailing,” Kyra said wearily. “Come on, cut it out. I’ve had a long day.” She walked into the kitchen, noticed cookies cooling on the counter. She sat down on a kitchen chair and rubbed her face a moment. When she looked up, Ruby had crept to the kitchen door, half-hidden behind the wall, and was peeking at Kyra with one eye.

  “Did you and Mrs. Miller make these?” Kyra asked.

  “Mrs. Miller let me do it.”

  “Nice,” Kyra said. “Come pick them up and put them on the plate.” She stood up, opened the fridge, and began to look around for something to make for dinner.

  “I’m sorry, Mommy.” Ruby sniffed as she gathered the cookies.

  “I’m sorry, too, for yelling at you. But sometimes sorry isn’t enough, Ruby. I want to believe you are really sorry. Except that you told me you were sorry before, and that you weren’t going over to our neighbor’s house anymore. And then you did.”

  “I didn’t mean to,” Ruby insisted. “I forgot.”

  “Well, you disobeyed me. What should your punishment be?”

  Ruby looked up, seriously considering Kyra’s question. “No TV?”

  Kyra folded her arms. “Do you think that’s fair?”

  Ruby nodded.

  “Okay. No TV tomorrow.”

  Ruby’s bottom lip began to quiver.

  “Do you think you will remember not to go over there?”

  Ruby nodded again.

  God, it was hard to look at her little crestfallen face. Kyra knelt down and wrapped her arms around her daughter. “Sometimes it’s really hard to be six, isn’t it?”

  “It’s really hard,” Ruby agreed.

  Kyra kissed her cheek, then stood up. She noticed a movement out the window. It was The Grouch, of course, stalking around the back of his cottage, his dog trailing behind him. She watched him pick up some long planks of wood and carry them into the shed. A moment later he appeared again, picked up more wood, and stepped inside the shed again.

  “You know what, Ruby? I have an idea. Let’s go tell Mr. Bishop that we are sorry. Maybe we can take him some of the cookies you made.”

  “Yeah!” Ruby said eagerly.

  Kyra found some plastic wrap, and she and Ruby packaged a half dozen of the cookies. She twisted the wrap around the cookies like a Tootsie Roll, and then together she and Ruby tied red ribbon on either end. Kyra took Ruby’s hand, and with the cookies in the other, they went outside, down the porch, and walked to the fence.

  The Grouch had set up two sawhorses and had braced one of the planks of wood across it and was busy sawing away with a handsaw. Beneath the plank lay the dog, his tail thumping on the ground as he watched Kyra and Ruby walk up to the fence.

  They waited until The Grouch had finished sawing the plank.

  “Excuse me?” Kyra called.

  He glanced up. And frowned. And then straightened, eyeing them with suspicion as his dog stood up, stretched long, and then trotted over to the fence to inspect. Ruby immediately dipped down to pet the dog through the fence railings.

  “We brought you a peace offering,” Kyra said and held up the package of cookies.

  “A what?”

  “A peace offering!” she said louder. The dog stuck his head through the railing to sniff Kyra’s pants, then began to lick them, much to Ruby’s delight.

  Grumpy Grouchy Gus didn’t move, just stood there staring at Kyra. Well, clearly, this had been a mistake. Try to do something nice and look where it gets you. “Look, if you don’t want it, that’s cool,” she said. “But my arm is getting tired.”

  “What is it?” he asked warily.

  “Big cyanide tablets.”

  He looked startled, and Kyra couldn’t help but laugh. “They’re cookies,” she said. “Ruby made them today.”

  “All by myself!” Ruby chirped.

  The Grouch began to move toward the fence in a manner one might use to approach a coiled snake. He peered at the package of cookies she was holding. “What for?”

  “Don’t you know what a peace offering is?” Kyra asked.

  “I know what it is,” Ruby said. “It’s when you say you don’t want to fight anymore.”

  He frowned down at Ruby. “Were we fighting?”

  “No.”

  “What we mean to say is that we are very sorry for being so annoying. Isn’t that right, Ruby?”

  “Yes,” she said, punctuating that with an emphatic nod.

  “And we’re going to try really hard to do better,” Kyra added. “Aren’t we, Ruby?” she asked, looking pointedly at her daughter.

  Ruby nodded emphatically again, her pigtails bouncing, her eyes big and blue and earnest, and Kyra felt a shock of love for Ruby spark through her.

  “Well . . . okay,” Grouchy Grump said. “I accept your apology.” But he looked uncertainly at the cookies.

  Kyra poked him with the package. “Don’t be scared. They’re not poisoned, I promise.”

  He gave her a dubious look, but he gingerly took the cookies from her. “Thanks,” he said shyly. “I appreciate it.”

  “Can Otto come and play?” Ruby asked.

  “No!” Kyra said at the exact same moment The Grump said no. They looked at each other, startled. And then something miraculous happened. The Grumpy Grouchy Goat smiled. It was a faint smile, and lopsided, but above it his storm cloud eyes lit up like a rainbow. Another shock went through her, but this was of a much stronger and fierier variety. “Well,” she said, her gaze on Grump as she groped around for Ruby’s hand. “Enjoy. Come on, pumpkin, it’s time for us to go.”<
br />
  “Is it time for an adult beverage?” Ruby asked.

  Kyra could feel herself color and laughed a little hysterically. “You’re a silly goose! It’s just time to go,” she said, dragging Ruby backward. “Okay, well . . . see you around,” she said.

  Her neighbor didn’t say anything. He watched them go, still looking suspicious. But just as they reached the drive, Kyra heard a low, “Thanks again.”

  She kept walking, her back still to him, but she lifted her hand and waved to acknowledge she’d heard it, then herded her daughter up the steps and into the house.

  “Mommy, what’s funny?” Ruby asked, looking up at her.

  “Funny?” Kyra asked.

  “You’re smiling,” Ruby said, peering at her as if she were viewing a rare woodland creature.

  “Am I? I didn’t know that. Come on, let’s figure out what’s for supper,” Kyra said and kept smiling as she returned to the fridge to resume the search for something fast and easy.

  Chapter Six

  In his kitchen, Dax unwrapped the cookies and tossed one in his mouth—and then immediately spit it out into the sink, coughing. Otto began to wag his tail furiously. “What the hell?” he asked, holding the rest of the cookies up to have a closer look. “That’s the worst crap I’ve ever tasted.” Was it a joke? It was all salt and something else, something truly awful.

  He glared out his kitchen window. He could see her at her kitchen window, working at the sink. Maybe the kid really had made them by herself.

  He bent over, opened the cabinet beneath the sink, and pulled out the trash can. Otto instantly thrust his nose into it. “Get out,” Dax growled. “Even you can’t stomach these.” He tossed the rest of the cookies into the bin, then shoved it back under the sink. When he straightened up again, Kyra had disappeared.

  She had some very pretty eyes, he mused. And some perky breasts. Not that he was looking. Well, he’d glanced. He couldn’t help but glance because there they were, pointed directly at him in that tight shirt she wore. Not that he was complaining about that shirt, not for even a moment.

  But his sudden preoccupation with his neighbor’s body parts did cause him to wonder if perhaps he ought to take Janet up on that arranged date. From time to time, he was aware, sometimes uncomfortably, that he could use a little companionship. Preferably the sort that only used two legs and didn’t stick its nose into trash cans. The truth was that he hadn’t had a date in . . . a very long time.

 

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