Free Read Novels Online Home

Smoke and Mirrors (City Limits Book 3) by M. Mabie (3)

Chapter Three

AARON

When I handed cash over the plastic takeout bags, her damn fingers touched mine, and I was certain the sensation wouldn’t leave for hours. A small almost-smile bent her lips, and although her eyes wouldn’t meet mine as she counted my change, I knew what color they were. Blue-green sea glass.

I said, “Thank you.”

What I meant was I fucking miss you.

“You’re welcome, Aaron,” she replied. I suspected that was what she meant.

It’s surprising what little human contact a man can survive on. For four years, I’d had less than none. Actually, none would have been better; I had a deficit.

In the Air Force, on 72s and 96s, there’d been times after I’d heard she’d moved on when I was lonely enough to find someone, but rarely anyone caught my eye. If a random woman would, I’d always compare her to Faith. Her laugh. Her wit. Her attitude. Her hands. Her eyes. The smell of the air around her.

And even though I didn’t know how Faith tasted or sounded or moved during sex, I was confident she’d have been better. However, Faith wasn’t there.

So while I was gone, I looked for the her in other women, but I couldn’t do that in Wynne. I hadn’t been with anyone since I’d come home because she was the her here, and she wasn’t mine.

Four. Long. Years.

Then an even longer four more when I got home.

The station was too quiet that Saturday night. After I swept and mopped the bays, and checked and cleaned equipment, I sat on a lawn chair in front of engine number one and waited for her to drive home from the bar when it closed.

The list of things I did with regard to Faith—private as most of them were—danced around a line that bordered nuts and crazy. I was aware of it.

I couldn’t explain why I had to do stuff for her. Like how I’d cleaned her gutters after I finished what I could in my kitchen that morning while she and Di were at the restaurant. I’d been on the ladder at Darrell’s the day before and seen how badly they needed attention.

What was I supposed to do?

My two options were: tell her and add more to her damn plate or just fucking clean them myself when no one was looking.

I’d chosen to clean them. It took me all of fifteen minutes.

It was a way I could help her, take care of her.

When she’d gotten a rose bush last May, I’m guessing for Mother’s Day because it had been that week, she couldn’t keep the damn thing alive to save her own. I ended up replacing it five times when no one was watching.

Finally, I just started taking care of the last one. It survived. Damn it, if that bush made her happy, then I could protect that.

Also, I could leave large tips, down the bar away from where I’d sit or at other peoples’ tables, so she didn’t know it was from me. That stuff gave me peace of mind. Those things, those dumb-ass, borderline stalker moves I pulled sometimes made her smile.

I couldn’t make her happy, but the secret shit I did could. I benefited as well because the shit made me kind of happy, too.

If that made me a criminal, then I was a criminal. Still, I hadn’t been caught in four years, and I’d gotten away with a wealth of fucking relief, knowing she had someone looking out for her.

That someone just happened to be me.

Her car passed the station, right on time. She needed new tires so damn bad, which she’d surely notice if I put on. Then again, she hadn’t noticed the tail light bulb I’d replaced a few months back. So maybe not.

When she got inside her small house and turned the porch light off, I went in and tried to sleep.

#

“SON, DO YOU EVER SLOW down?” Darrell asked me over the Renfros’ picnic table I’d built for them as a wedding gift.

I finished chewing and swallowing the last bite on my paper plate, wiped my mouth, and answered, “I slow down plenty.”

He scooped up another fork of potato salad and stopped before it reached his lips. “Bullshit.”

“Leave him alone, Dad,” Hannah argued. She was slipping Sawyer’s pudgy legs into the seat that Vaughn mounted to the end of the table. When the toddler was comfortable, Hannah’s voice softened as she spoke to her daughter, “Tell Pawpaw to be nice.”

Vaughn sat across from his wife, on the other side of Sawyer. “That’s right. We can’t have Pawpaw being mean to your little brother or sister.”

Di’s hand covered her chest immediately and she gasped.

Darrell laughed. “You’re kidding me? Baby number two?” He dropped his fork and threw his arm around his daughter. The Renfros shared a smile.

Everyone congratulated them, and Sawyer clapped her chubby hands.

“Hannah, how far along are you, sweetie? Are you feeling all right?” Di asked, leaning forward to talk to her.

“Just about twelve weeks and feeling pretty good. This one is much easier than she was.”

“Thank goodness. I had awful morning sickness, and Faith did with Delaney, too.”

The thought of Faith being sick turned my stomach, and I was thankful I’d already finished eating or I would have lost my appetite. I’m sure her mother had been there for her, but I seriously doubted Chad had been.

Call me old fashioned or whatever, but if a man can make a baby, he can damn sure provide for the baby and the mom. I hadn’t been there much when they were together, coming home at the end of her pregnancy, but I knew—for a fact—he left the very day Delaney was born.

Over the years, I’d thought about how different things might have been if I’d stayed and waited for her to graduate or not left at all.

Maybe we would’ve gotten together, and things would be different if Faith was mine. If Delaney was mine.

The first one done with my plate as usual, I wadded my napkin and cleaned my mess while everyone else ate and chatted.

Hannah winked at her husband as she cut a hot dog up into bite-sized pieces on the plate beside hers. “Yeah, I’m not feeling that bad at all this time. You should have brought Faith and Delaney.”

“That’s sweet, honey. Maybe I will next time,” Di replied.

“I thought Country Gold Barbie and the farmer would have the next kid,” Darrell added. “Where are Sunny and Rhett?”

They’d only been married about a year, but I think we’d all expected them to be next. They certainly couldn’t keep their hands off each other—no matter who was around, or talking to them, or helping them frame up a house.

Newlyweds. 

“They’re in St. Louis for a race,” Hannah answered. “They should be back later tonight. Sunny said Rhett got third in his bracket, but she wouldn’t tell me how she finished.”

Darrell scoured the table for something else to eat. “I bet Farmer Boy has to tie a stick to her back and dangle beer in front of her to get her to move.”

Dad.” Hannah shot him a dirty look but failed to hide her grin. We all knew he meant no harm.

“What?” He stabbed at a piece of cantaloupe on Di’s plate. “I’m just saying, I’ve known that girl her whole life and I’ve never seen her run. Well, maybe her mouth.”

Dean stood and climbed off the bench between Vaughn and me. “People can change,” he claimed.

Darrell fired back, “You don’t.” He licked his fork clean and then stuck the plastic handle in the front pocket of his denim overalls. He patted the disposable silverware and said to me, “I’ll need this for dessert.”

He was an original; I’d give him that.

Then from across the table, he said, “My gutters look damn good. Di’s too. I climbed up there this morning to get a look at my new handy-dandy leaf guards and noticed Di’s looked just as clean. What do I owe ya for hers? I don’t expect ya to do it for free.”

Busted.

“Don’t worry about it. I just saw they needed it too, and while I had my ladder ... you know?” I tried to play it cool. I’d only been neighborly.

He looked at me dead in the eye and stacked Di’s plate on top of his, cleaning up her mess. “Yeah, I know.”

I met his gaze, not wanting to look guilty or like I was backing down. I wasn’t ashamed; I’d done it. I simply didn’t need a pat on the back for it.

Besides, it wasn’t much.

“Did you clean my gutters?” Di asked, throwing her hand over mine on top of the wooden table. “I don’t think about those things sometimes. Thank you, sweetie. Next time you buy dinner for the station it’s on me.”

My eyes bounced between her and Darrell, but his didn’t leave my face.

“Thanks, Di. The guys will appreciate it.”

She gave my fingers a squeeze before she let go. “You like peanut butter pie, don’t you? You get that one sometimes.”

“I do. My mom makes that for me at Thanksgiving.” I loved the stuff.

“Well, I’ll have one for you to take home—for yourself.”

“How are your mom and dad?” Hannah asked. “Mrs. Goodman was my favorite teacher.”

Welcoming the change in subject, I opened beer number two and answered, “They’re good. Dad’s working for a bigger contractor, doing project management stuff. I think he likes not being the boss. Mom did some substitute teaching this spring since Ian was in pre-school.”

“Are you still selling the house?” Vaughn asked. I’d told him that was the plan a few summers back, but I never seemed to get it done.

“I don’t know. I get one project finished then find another to do. Between work and projects I have going for other people—”

Darrell interrupted under his breath, “Pro bono gutter work.”

I continued without letting the remark knock me off track. “The house only gets whatever extra time I have.”

“That reminds me. Hannah and I were talking, and we want to do some updates to our upstairs bath before the baby gets here. When I bought the place, it needed the least amount of work, but now I think we just want it done. I can do a lot of it, but you’re quicker. Got the time in the next few months?”

Hannah’s hands slapped together like she was praying. “Say yes. Have pity on me. I’m going to be pregnant and chasing a two-year-old.”

I laughed. “Sure. I’m putting a new deck on the back of Randy’s place and hanging a few windows for Mrs. Williamson up on the hill, but after that I’m open.”

“Thank God,” Hannah said, relieved. Her face softened when Vaughn huffed. “You do a great job, but we need help.”

By the time Vaughn walked me through everything they were thinking for their old master bathroom, he looked relieved for the help.

It wasn’t going to be a small project, basically a full gut and reno.

I had a busy couple of months ahead.

#

I DIDN’T HAVE ANOTHER shift until Tuesday night. So that Monday morning, I headed to the lumberyard to check on the windows I’d ordered and picked up the lumber and hardware I needed for my fire chief’s deck.

I remembered my mom and dad fighting before they put in the pool the summer I was in seventh grade. My dad had said, “Carrie, have you ever built a deck?”

She’d said, “No.”

“In the long run, one will cost more than what we’ll spend on concrete. I can have that thing framed and poured in two days.”

He’d been right.

By that evening, after tearing off Randy’s rotten old ten-by-ten deck, all the while knowing the one I was replacing it with was twice the size, I understood why my dad had fought so hard for an in-ground pool and a concrete patio.

Deck work sucked balls, but at least it was good money.

I tossed the last piece of scrap wood into the roll-off dumpster Randy rented. It didn’t feel like I got much done for a full day’s work, especially since there hadn’t been a fire or emergency to distract me. The yard was bare though, so at least I’d have a clean slate to work with the next day. I could probably get the posts dug and in before my shift the next afternoon.

It was getting dark, and if I wanted to eat, I had to swing by the store. Both my counter-less cabinets and refrigerator were empty.

I pulled my truck out of the yard and out through the alley, and then saw Faith’s car down the road, coming my way. We both slowed in front of Willard’s Grocery Store. I had the right of way for the perfect spot, but I went past it, contemplating whether or not I should just go home and eat cereal, but I didn’t even have milk.

Nevertheless, I parked on the end, and before I got out, I grabbed my two-way radio and turned the volume down so it wouldn’t be obnoxious if it went off inside.

Leisurely, I strode up the sidewalk, thirty or so feet behind Faith. I was used to being around her, but not with her. Had things been different, and we were there together, I would have teased her about the cloth grocery bag tucked under her arm.

Seriously, what did she use to line her bathroom trash, if not a plastic grocery bag? Didn’t everyone do that?

The problem with running into her at the store—which I’d done before, but not on purpose, I wasn’t that psycho—was how all stores were laid out for everyone to follow the same path.

When I came through the doors, she was still wrangling a cart and it busted loose as I walked up.

“Hey, Aaron.” She tossed the cloth sack into the basket, and I pulled a buggy from the row over.

“How’s it going? Night off?” Obviously, I wasn’t great with small talk with her.

“Yep. Delaney’s at the diner with Mom. So I’m using the time to get a few things done.” She laughed. “Okay. One thing done. I’m out of coffee.”

“Out of coffee? You can’t have that.” I pushed forward into the small produce section and grabbed a bag of apples.

She rolled past me to the veggies and chose a bag of baby carrots. “Tell me about it.” 

It was a good time to stall so I wasn’t following her down every aisle, but Willard’s was only open for another thirty or forty minutes. Hopefully, that was plenty of time to give her space and still get what I needed.

Hemming and hawing around the potatoes, I acted like I was choosy. In reality, I needed one or two to throw in the microwave when I grilled that week, and I wasn’t picky in the least. I’d eat them skin and all.

There was only so long I could dick around beside the onions, so I stepped around her and reached for a bag of salad, deciding maybe it was best if I just moved on ahead. Tossing the bag in the cart, I took a breath and said, “Have a good one.”

Bread aisle, here I come.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, Bella Forrest, C.M. Steele, Jenika Snow, Madison Faye, Dale Mayer, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Piper Davenport, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Eve Langlais,

Random Novels

Taken by the Dragon (Dragonspark Brothers Book 3) by Tully Belle

Crazy Good by Rachel Robinson

Dusk (Hero Society Book 3) by Jessica Florence

My Something Wonderful (Book One, the Sisters of Scotland) by Jill Barnett

A Bicycle Made For Two: Badly behaved, bawdy romance in the Yorkshire Dales (Love in the Dales Book 1) by Mary Jayne Baker

Sure Thing by Jana Aston

A Royal Entrapment: The Young Royals Book 3 by Emma Lea

Forbidden Feast: A Blakely After Dark Novella (The Forbidden Series Book 2) by Kira Blakely

Deep as the Dead (The Mindhunters Book 9) by Kylie Brant

You've Got Aliens (Alienn, Arkansas Book 1) by Fiona Roarke

Wolf's Hunger (Alpha's Hunger Book 1) by Carina Wilder

The Inheritance: a reverse harem novel by Lane, Mika

by Erin West, Nicole Kelley

Zach (Hell's Handlers MC Book 1) by Lilly Atlas

Hunted by Evangeline Anderson

Winterberry Fire: A Silver Foxes of Westminster Novella (Winterberry Park Book 2) by Merry Farmer

Blood Kiss by Evangeline Anderson

You Forever (Cameron Farms Book 3) by Melanie Jayne

Finding Life (Colorado Veterans Book 4) by Tiffani Lynn

Dax by Shannyn Leah