“Other plans? Like being with another man?”
Phoebe gave a careless shrug. “Never mind. It’ll do him good to wonder where I am.”
“I really do appreciate the help,” Emma said earnestly as they both walked out to the parking lot with loaded boxes.
“I know. You’d do the same for me,” Phoebe said again. “When’s the next fruitcake interview?” she asked, although Emma wasn’t sure why she’d changed the subject.
“Next week—Tuesday, I think.”
Emma didn’t welcome the reminder that Oliver was scheduled to fly her into Friday Harbor. She didn’t want to think about him—or the fact that she’d soon be in the air again.
“Are you ready to take these over to the new place?” Emma asked in an effort to derail her thoughts. She was eager to show off her apartment. An apartment she wouldn’t have if it wasn’t for Oliver, her conscience pointed out.
“Sure,” Phoebe said. “Let’s go.” But her enthusiasm seemed forced.
Emma hesitated. “Do you want to talk some more?” This disagreement with Walt had really depressed her friend.
“Not especially,” Phoebe murmured, revealing a little more life. “Let’s go,” she said again.
It was nearly seven and completely dark out. The first thing Emma noticed when she pulled up in front of the complex on Cherry Street was that Oliver’s apartment lights were off; only his Christmas lights flashed a festive message. He was probably out on some hot date, she thought glumly. Despite her best efforts, her spirits sank. It shouldn’t matter where he was or with whom—and yet, it did.
She stood by her car, fumbling for the door key, as Phoebe’s SUV drove up behind her. Carrying a couple of plants she’d transported on the front seat, she joined Emma. “What’s wrong, Em?”
Emma looked at her blankly.
“You just growled.”
“I did? I was thinking what a bother moving is,” she said, inventing an explanation that was also the truth.
“I’ll work as long as you want tonight.”
Emma nodded her thanks. She wanted out of the old place as quickly as possible. Because she didn’t own much, it hadn’t taken long to pack. Books, bedding and towels, clothes, kitchen stuff. Her TV and CD player. Odds and ends. Only a few pieces of furniture remained.
They made two trips, with both her car and Phoebe’s loaded, rooftop and all. Back at the old apartment, they surveyed the things that still had to be moved.
“We should take the bed over tonight,” Phoebe suggested, hands on her hips as she stood in the almost-empty bedroom. “That way you’ll be able to sleep at the new place.”
The idea appealed to Emma. “Are you sure you’re up to this?”
Phoebe nodded.
Oliver’s lights were on when they arrived with the bed and nightstand. So he was home. Not that she cared.
The mattress was the most difficult to handle. With Phoebe on one end and Emma on the other, they wrestled it out of the SUV.
“I’m starved,” Emma said as she paused to take a breath. She hadn’t eaten lunch; her only sustenance had come from a vending-machine pack of peanuts. “When we finish, I’m treating you to dinner. What time is it, anyway?”
Phoebe didn’t answer. When Emma looked around the protruding mattress, she saw why.
Oliver’s apartment door was open, and Walt Berwald and Oliver stood just outside the doorway, watching them struggle.
Phoebe dropped her end of the mattress. “Walt,” she said in a choked voice.
“Oh, could you use some help?” Oliver asked coolly as he stepped forward.
“Phoebe?” Walt sounded nervous.
Even in the dark, Emma swore her friend’s cheeks blossomed brighter than the cherry trees across the street ever would. She looked directly at Walt and then—reluctantly—at Oliver. She realized she owed him an apology. Her ungracious and ungrateful behavior toward him had worried her all day, and she needed to make it right.
“I’ll take that,” he said, hurrying toward her end of the mattress.
“Thank you,” she whispered, and moved aside so he could grab the mattress. “For everything.”
Oliver nearly stumbled. He dropped his corner of the mattress. “What did you just say?”
“I, ah, was attempting to apologize.”
“That’s what I thought,” he said. “It felt good to hear that. Would you mind saying it again?”
Emma considered refusing, since he just wanted to rub it in. Oh, well, she supposed he deserved to hear her apology twice. Not that she intended to use the word sorry even once. She cleared her throat. “I wanted to thank you for all your help,” she said more loudly.
He seemed gratified. Nodding his head, he said, “You’re welcome.” He lifted his end of the mattress again and grappled with it for a moment until he noticed that Walt hadn’t taken hold of the other side. He propped the mattress against the back of the vehicle.
Emma saw that Walt and Phoebe were staring at each other. He’d come to stand beside her, ignoring the mattress, Emma, everything.
“When you said you had ‘other plans,’ you let me think they were with someone else,” Walt murmured, frowning.
“It was what you deserved to think.”
“What’s going on with those two?” Oliver whispered, moving closer to Emma.