Chapter 7

Chapter Seven

Tori

The following evening, I hustled from one table to the other.

With it being spring, the pace of tourists was beginning to flow faster into town.

I spun through the night. I was pretty much on autopilot—reeling off the specials, serving the drinks, getting the food, all the while laughing and joking and collecting plenty of tips.

In a rush, I moved from a big family table to a small table facing the windows. I didn’t look up until I was standing by the table.

My eyes collided with Shelly’s gaze. The woman who smiled through family barbecues with us for years. The woman who used to swear my mom’s potato salad was the best. And, who, apparently, for a decade of those years, carried on an affair with my father. Here she was now. Maybe not happy—but here.

For a few extra seconds, I contemplated turning away and asking to have my section reassigned, but that meant making somewhat of a scene. Even though I knew it would be okay, that my boss would let it slide, I didn’t feel like going through with it.

So, with my face feeling like it was about to crack and shatter into pieces at the effort, I smiled. I swallowed through the cold tightness in my throat and chest. I was holding it together. Just barely.

“What can I get you?” I asked politely.

Shelly’s eyes met mine. Once upon a time, I’d known her so well.

It wasn’t just family barbecues. She had come over many a time in a pinch when my mom was busy at work.

She was the one who brought me pads because my mom was at work once.

She had cleaned up my knees when I scraped them.

She had been the closest thing to a second mom that I ever had.

I despised what she had done to our family.

“Tori,” she began.

I breathed through that cold tightness. “Shelly, I can’t do this. I’m working. Let me just take your order.”

“Look, just listen to me for a minute, and I’ll order. But, please just listen.” Seeing as I either walked away or listened, I stayed silent. “I really want a chance to talk to your mom, and she won’t talk to me. It’s like a wall.”

My mouth actually fell open. “Shelly, are you serious? You were fucking my dad for a decade. My mom thought you were her friend. That’s not what friends do.

I’m sorry you’re sad about blowing up your friendship, but you did it.

It’s all on you. All of it. Don’t start with the whole ‘well, there were some problems in their marriage’ bullshit.

Maybe there were. I have no idea. Really, it’s hard to know when everything turns out to be a lie.

It doesn’t matter. That is a violation by an alleged friend that can’t be papered over.

So good luck with that. My mom’s probably more forgiving than me.

” I took a slow breath, willing the anger burning through me to cool. “What can I get you?”

Blessedly, Shelly ordered nothing more than a drink. I retreated to the bar. My hands were shaking, and I could barely breathe.

I served her that drink, left her check at the table, and said nothing else.

I didn’t cry. I was really proud. I just kept working.

Blessedly, it was late. I kept it all together until I made it out to the back patio toward the end of my shift—a staff-only section where they had recently put up decorative string lights in preparation for some events. They were glittering in the darkness.

I leaned against the railing, trying to breathe through the emotion bottled inside.

With it being early spring, the air was still cool with a bite to it.

Goosebumps rose on my arms. That coolness was better than the heat of anger that blasted through the cold numbness I felt whenever I even thought about Shelly and my dad.

I didn’t even hear the footsteps. I didn’t hear anything. Until I heard Kincaid’s voice.

“Are you okay?” he asked quietly.

I spun around, curling my hands onto the railing at my sides. My nervous system was a jumble, all my nerves rattled from my encounter with Shelly.

I didn’t want to talk, but Kincaid was here, his presence steady and solid. I didn’t sense pressure from him. He just waited, like he’d stand there in this chilly evening for hours if that’s what I needed.

Finally, my voice barely audible, I managed to say, “Shelly. Again.” I shook my head.

“I wondered,” he offered. “I saw her leaving.”

Kincaid’s expression didn’t change much, but his eyes darkened, and I saw his jaw tighten just slightly. He stepped a little closer, close enough for me to feel his warmth emanating, his strength almost surrounding me.

I didn’t expect him to say anything.

“Tori,” he finally said. “You don’t have to hold it together.”

His words unraveled me. It was as if he had tugged lightly on the tiny threads barely holding me together.

My eyes stung, just for a second. I blinked rapidly, and my breath caught in my throat.

He reached out slowly, slow enough I could stop him if I wanted to.

When his hand lifted to tuck a strand of hair behind my ear, I felt the brush of his fingertips on that sensitive skin along the shell of my ear.

It was quiet out here, the air around us crowded with unspoken emotions. I could hear my own breath. The distant call of an owl, followed by a raven in the darkness. The sound of wings beating through the air passed by.

I finally looked up at him, really looked. The sense of emotion in me was so heightened, so fraught. I wanted anything to distract me from it. Here was Kincaid. A firefighter with all kinds of rescue-y vibes.

The space between us shifted, the air thickening. It felt charged—a humming pause, as if the air itself was holding its breath just as I was.

Kincaid leaned in, the motion incremental. Close enough that his warmth felt like tendrils of smoke curling around me. He didn’t move again. He just waited.

I exhaled a small, shaky laugh. “How do you do this?”

“Do what?”

“Make me feel safe. Every time. I mean, it all started when you saved my life, so maybe that’s it.”

The rustle of the low chuckle in his throat sent goosebumps prickling over my skin. He smiled, his lips kicking up slightly.

“How do you make me feel like my life isn’t on fire… when it is?” I whispered.

He tipped his head. “Well, you make me feel like it is on fire, but I’m not sure that’s what you mean.”

Heat pooled low in my belly, and I felt the strongest pull. My hand fell to his chest, where I could feel the rapid thump of his heart. I wasn’t thinking, at all, when I leaned up and brought my lips to his. I wasn’t sure what would happen, but he met me right there. His hand, palming my cheek.

I felt rare in this moment, fragile. Our lips brushed together once, and then again, his lingering on mine for a beat before he drew away. Just close enough for me to still feel his breath.

“You’re human,” he said. “You’re allowed to fall apart sometimes.”

I started to shake my head to argue the point, but I was tired. And, honestly, so off-kilter. “Okay,” I whispered.

When his arms slid around my waist, and he held me for a few beats of my heart, all I could think was that no matter how unsettled I was, I truly did feel safe when I was with him.

The sound of the door opening onto the deck snapped through the moment. We stepped apart. My head whipped toward the noise, wondering who had come out. Someone shook a dustpan into the trash can tucked just outside the door on the porch.

“Are you still working?” Kincaid asked.

I took a shaky breath, gathering myself. “Yeah.”

“I’ll walk you back in.”

A few minutes later, I was back in the rhythm. Although time and again, I found my gaze darting over to where Kincaid was at the bar with a few other firefighters.

Shelly was gone, and she’d left me a ridiculous tip. “You can’t bribe me, Shelly,” I whispered to the cash as I tucked it into my apron.

I knew I needed to talk to my mom about seeing her. I wasn’t ready, though. I told myself I could deal with that on another day.

The heat from that brief kiss with Kincaid still felt like embers burning inside.

I fell asleep hours later at home, thoughts of him spinning through my mind.

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