Chapter 9 #2
I tried not to read too much into her final statement or how much a big contract like Calypso Key Resort could mean to a new firm.
Instead, I concentrated on the exceptional dish in front of me.
Each entrée was a gastronomic marvel, each bite bursting with flavor.
The presentation alone was worth the drive, with vibrant seasonal vegetables and artful drizzles of sauce that made the plates look like they belonged in a food magazine.
As I savored the first mouthful, I knew my instincts were right.
This was the kind of date we needed, and I felt a smug sense of accomplishment at having pulled it off.
Harper gave a contented sigh after her first taste and beamed at me from across the table.
As the candles winked and the night grew darker, we split a dessert, some decadent chocolate thing that made me mentally add a mile to tomorrow’s run.
Harper leaned back with a touch of the whipped cream on her upper lip.
I couldn’t resist the urge to wipe it away, then lick it off my thumb with a wink at her.
She smiled brightly and a soft, slightly flustered laugh escaped her.
She quickly looked down at her water glass, tracing the condensation with a fingertip.
“I have a confession.” Her voice was quieter now, as if testing the waters.
She lifted her gaze, her eyes searching mine.
“When you mentioned noticing me when you were in college…”
I held my breath, suddenly wary. “Yeah?”
“Well,” she continued, drawing the word out, “it wasn’t entirely one-sided.”
My heart gave a distinct thump against my ribs. “It wasn’t?”
She shook her head. “There was this one time, right after you graduated. You, Eli, and I were grabbing beers at Conch Republic after work. I couldn’t have been more than twenty-three. Eli was going on about wanting to rearrange the dive shop—you know how he gets these grand, impractical ideas.”
I snorted. “Vaguely involving duct tape, cardboard, and ignoring basic physics?”
“Exactly. He described his new layout, very detailed for Eli. I thought it wasn’t half-bad.
But you just… scowled.” She laughed at the memory.
“You told him it would create a bottleneck. That there wasn’t enough room for both fins and BCDs on that wall.
So you pulled a pen from your pocket, grabbed a napkin, and just drew.
So fast. Your hands…” Her voice trailed off for a second, her gaze distant.
“They were so strong, moving the pen, but the lines you made were so precise, so delicate. You sketched out the entire optimal flow, the counter placement, storage solutions… basically the exact layout that’s still there today.
All in about ninety seconds on a bar napkin. ”
She looked back at me, her expression earnest now.
“I was completely enthralled. Watching your focus, the way your hands knew exactly what to do, creating something smart and functional out of Eli’s chaos.
I’d always seen you as Eli’s quiet, brainy friend.
But in that moment, I saw something else.
Competence. Confidence. Capability. It was…
” She searched for the words. “Really attractive. I never forgot it.”
I stared at her, momentarily speechless. I recalled arguing with Eli about dive shop layouts over beers countless times, but the specific incident was lost to me. To think she’d not only remembered it but seen me that way back then…
I cleared my throat, aiming for lightness to cover how much her admission affected me. “Wow. All that from a napkin sketch? Guess I should have carried more napkins around back then.”
Her smile remained, but she shook her head to let me know she’d seen through me. “Never sell yourself short, Chase Ashworth. There was always more to you than just being Eli’s quiet friend.”
Her confidence in me, stated so simply, hit hard. It spread deep inside me, a validation I hadn’t known I was seeking. I held her gaze, our shared history, the newly revealed mutual awareness stretching between us like a tangible thing.
“Thank you, Harper.”
She reached out and placed her warm hand on mine. “No, thank you, Chase. I needed this. It’s been a long time since I just felt like Harper. Not Manager Coleridge or Finn’s Mom. Just… me.” Her voice was soft, vulnerable. It was the sound of her walls coming down completely.
“You should always feel like you,” I said, flipping my hand over to lace our fingers together. “You deserve nights like this. And more than once in a blue moon too.”
Her eyes held mine across the flickering candlelight, filled with a deep, quiet seriousness that mirrored the sudden intensity in my own chest.
“Ready to head back?” I asked finally, the question a reluctant surrender to the clock.
She nodded slowly, a soft, luminous smile touching her lips. “Yes. I think so.”
As we stood and pushed back our chairs, the quiet intimacy of the moment lingered.
My hand found her back as we walked through the elegant dining room, a simple gesture of belonging and protection I didn’t pause to analyze.
Dinner might be over, the plates cleared, the wine bottle empty. But for us, the night had barely begun.
Harper’s cottage door clicked shut behind us and the world seemed to exhale.
We left our shoes by the entrance, side by side like they were made for each other.
It was hard to say what changed when we walked inside.
Maybe it was the lamps casting a more intimate light, the lingering scent of cinnamon, or just being here in her space.
It was less dinner and more date, less nightcap and more staying over.
Harper poured us drinks as we settled on the sofa, drinks that felt unnecessary when the air was already thick with possibilities.
This time, I didn’t worry about what to say. I could tell by the way she fit herself against my side that she wasn’t concerned either. Her dress spilled like emerald water across the cushions, catching the soft light. The dress might have been incredible, but she was spectacular.
“So,” she said, her voice teasing, “how long do you think it’ll take before the entire island knows about this?”
“About us?” I asked, pretending to be shocked. “I thought I was just your architect.”
“Is that what you’re calling it these days?”
“I’m a man of many talents.” There was a lightness between us that wasn’t there before, an unspoken acknowledgment that tonight had changed things in ways we hadn’t even started to explore.
She laughed, the sound easy and full of promise. “I noticed. You’re also a very good date planner.”
“I aim to please.”
“In that case”—her lips curved into a smile that made my pulse race—“I’d like to book another one.”
“Consider it done.” I set my drink down, drawn to her in a way that made everything else feel secondary. The resort. The renovation. My entire life on Dove Key.
She shifted closer and her gaze locked on mine. “Look at you, Mr. Confident,” she whispered, her breath warm against my cheek. “Not nervous at all anymore.”
“Wouldn’t go that far. I’ve had plenty of nervous moments the past few months.”
She stroked my arm. “Jumping ship from a steady job to open your own firm can do that to a person.”
“I tried to get through to my folks that I wasn’t happy being a corporate minion, but they weren’t pleased with the switch.”
“I’m sorry they didn’t support your choice.” She shifted sideways to see me better. “You never really talk about them.”
“That’s because they make me look emotionally open,” I said, keeping it light but honest.
“That bad?”
“Yeah.” I paused. “Never what you’d call… passionate. They have a pretty loveless marriage, ruled by inertia.”
She nodded like she understood. “Mom is sort of that way, but for different reasons. I’ve been afraid of ending up the same way. Afraid to want anything beyond the resort and Finn.”
An ache tugged in my chest, hearing her open up like this. It was both a relief and a connection, knowing she had similar doubts and fears. I wanted to say something that would tell her she wasn’t alone. Something that told her how much tonight meant to me, too.
“I’ll say it again,” I said as I brushed my knuckles over her cheek. “You deserve nights like this a lot more than just once in a while.”
She stared at me, and I saw the flicker of hope she was trying to hold onto.
“You really think we can do this?” Her words were almost a whisper, as if speaking too loudly might shatter the fragile possibility between us.
“Yeah,” I said, pulling her closer. “I really do.”
Her lips met mine and the brush of skin felt like everything sliding into place. Like we were the only two people in the world, the kind of kiss that said things words couldn’t.
We were standing before I knew it, our hands tangling and reaching, guiding each other. She led me to the bedroom in a blur, a soft rush of color and taste. And raw desire. I’d never wanted anything more than to make her feel how I did.
Seen. Real.
The room faded as we moved together. It was more than a moment. It was a choice.
I woke first. Soft light filtered through the curtain, painting Harper beside me. Her hair spilled over the pillow like the start of a perfect day. Her breath was slow, her face soft and unguarded.
I’d grown up in a house where emotions were as rare as snowstorms in the Keys.
My parents didn’t fight, didn’t cry, didn’t laugh.
Just a steady monotone of existence. I learned early to keep things under wraps.
How else was I supposed to act? It worked fine when my life was all about jobs and architecture, but Harper was different.
She made me want more than fine, and I wasn’t sure how to accomplish that.
My heart was a contradiction of speed and weight, each beat echoing the undeniable shift between us. I could lose myself in this, in her, and it scared me. It scared me because I wanted it.
Because I already knew how much it would hurt if it slipped away.