CHAPTER TWO #2
“I mean, this place can’t offer you a vacant room or much of anything else besides this bowl that’s probably had ten different hands in it so far tonight, but I can offer you my great personality and my indiscernible ear.” She smiles cheesily.
“And you just ate a piece of the germ mix,” I point out.
“And then I drank some wine so the alcohol killed off those germs. Simple as that.” She takes a gulp of wine to emphasize her point. “An added bonus is this roof seems sturdy and we’re currently dry.”
“Currently being the operative word.”
She taps her glass against mine. “So, cheers.” When all I do is simply stare at her, she continues, “What? I’m a glass-half-full kind of girl.”
“Clearly.”
She reaches her hand out. “Elle. Ellery, really. Nice to meet you.”
“Ellery? That’s unique.”
She chuckles. “Ha. That’s the way to say it’s an interesting, weird, fill-in-the-blank name.” She shrugs as if she’s heard it all before. “It’s a family name. Celery Ellery,” she singsongs like a kid teasing and then laughs. “God, how I hated it when I was younger, but I don’t mind it so much now.”
“Ford. Fordham, actually.” I shake her hand. “And I’m named after a university—or a car company—so I have no room to talk, Celery Ellery.”
“Then I guess we’re even in the name department.”
“We are,” I murmur.
We both glance down and realize we’re still holding hands and quickly pull them apart before looking toward the window to break the sudden awkwardness settling between us.
Awkwardness laced with attraction.
Shit. I didn’t expect that.
I scrub a hand through my hair and slide a glance her way. She smiles softly as she watches the show Mother Nature is putting on outside—snapshots of destruction highlighted by flashes of light—and for the first time, I notice the slightest dimple.
Of course, she has to have one. Funny. Forward. Gorgeous. And has a dimple. I’m such a sucker for dimples.
“So where were you headed when Fred deterred you?” she asks me when the lightning lulls.
“Fred?” I ask, averting my gaze from her.
“The tropical depression we’re currently sidelined by.”
“Yes. Sorry. That Fred.” I glance around.
Some people have dozed off. Others are occupied with their cell phones.
Very few are talking with the strangers beside them.
But when I bring my eyes back to her, apparently, it’s her turn to study me.
My hands. My forearms where the sleeves of my dress shirt are folded up.
My chest and the top two undone buttons on my shirt.
She jolts when her eyes meet mine and knows she’s been caught.
Now we’re even.
“Thanks for nothing, Fred.”
“Amen to that,” she murmurs, suddenly busying her hands by using a cocktail napkin to wipe away the condensation our glasses have left.
I make her nervous. That’s interesting. Or is it the fact I caught her checking me out while she has a ring on her finger that has her unsettled?
“So . . . where were you headed, Ford-named-after-a-university? Does it have anything to do with the pity party we’re throwing?”
“Sag Harbor,” I say gruffly.
“Nice.” She raises her eyebrows but then narrows them when she notices I’m not sharing the same enthusiasm.
“Not nice then?” When I don’t respond, she continues, “You have to pick one or the other. Indifference isn’t an option when you’re throwing a pity party.
But Sag Harbor. Huh. You’re close but oh-so-far from it with this weather. ”
“I am.” I nod but don’t say anything else as Ellery sips her wine and makes small talk with the bartender.
I observe their interaction. She’s definitely sexy. Indisputably gorgeous. And that easy smile of hers that lights up her face when she offers it.
She’s taken, Ford.
And by the size of the rock on her finger, her man wants everyone to know that she is. Understandably so.
It’s late. The whiskey is starting to hit me. And I’m no closer to figuring out why tonight and everything that happened earlier hit me so hard. I take another sip of my drink before closing my eyes for a beat.
I could buy her a bigger diamond.
Jesus. Where the hell did that thought come from?
I shake my head and chuckle. It’s the alcohol talking. Hands down.
But when I look over at Ellery, those blue eyes sparkle with curiosity and her brow furrows as if to ask me what I laughed about.
“I was contemplating whether I should switch to beer,” I say as if that will explain my random laugh.
“Beer?”
“Yes. It’s going to be a long night, and I’m thinking I should pace myself.”
“It all depends on what you’re pacing yourself for.
” Her laugh is rich as she shrugs, while my mind ventures to a few places and all of them have to do with her.
She crosses her arms over her chest. “So lay it on me. The story. The culprit of the pity party. Tell me who I’m supposed to hate on because they upset you. ”
I walked in here not wanting to talk to anyone and now, for some reason, she’s made it so I don’t mind so much. My initial hesitancy is gone.
“It’s stupid really—”
“Clearly it upset you, so I wouldn’t say it’s stupid.”
“I had a fight with my brothers,” I finally say.
“Okay. So family stuff. That’s always a tough one. What was the fight about?”
“It’s a long story.”
She looks around the room and takes in the scene before shrugging as she meets my eyes. “It’s not like we don’t have time for one since we’re basically stranded for the time being. Does it have anything to do with that?”
“With what?” I ask, looking down to where she’s pointing.
“To the bow tie hanging around your neck. I mean, I’m very curious what idiot would follow through with a black-tie event in weather this dreadful.” She mock shivers but her smile is playful.
I snort. “Me. My brothers. We’re the idiots.”
“Oh. Whoops. I guess now would be a good time to insert my foot in my mouth.”
“Being called an idiot is definitely the nicest of all the insults I’ve been called today . . . so I’ll take it.”
“That bad, huh?”
I nod. “Something like that.”
Someone laughs loudly across the room as she takes another handful of the germ mix. I eye her as she proceeds to pick all the pretzels out and place them on the counter beside the bowl. Bizarre.
She meets my gaze and winks. “I’m living dangerously.”
I laugh. “A tropical depression and germs all in one night.”
“You forgot to mention engaging a mysterious and grumpy man too.”
“Yes. That too.” For some reason, the tension in my shoulders eases with each comment exchanged between us.
“Black tie . . .” She twists her lips as she contemplates. “Too early for a Christmas party.”
“Considering it’s April, that would be a safe bet.”
“So my guess is either an awards banquet for the higher-ups—which if you and your brothers put it on, that would mean you—or a fundraiser for something or other. Oh. I know. It was a movie premiere.” She cocks her head to the side.
“Don’t tell me you’re a famous actor who’s hiding out here in this sleepy seaside town and is buying this inn to breathe new life into it?
You plan on making it a destination—an elite bed and breakfast, if you will—because you and all your friends are sick of not being able to go on vacation and have privacy. ”
“Anyone tell you that you have an overactive imagination?”
Her grin widens. “Another one of my many party tricks.”
“Clearly.”
“Is your lack of an answer confirmation that you are in fact Chris Hemsworth in disguise?”
“Shh. Don’t blow my cover.”
“Your secret’s safe with me,” she whispers. “Your American accent is perfect. So . . .”
“A charity fundraiser.”
“Yes,” she says and pumps her fist.
“It’s an annual black-tie event we host,” I say, thinking of the Alzheimer’s charity gala we throw in our late father’s honor. “And yes, we went on with it despite the impending storm because it’s tradition and . . . who the fuck knows why.”
“Because you’re men and no one, not even Mother Nature, tells you what to do.”
“Now, when you put it like that, it sounds rather ridiculous. But, yes. Something like that.”
She nods and eyes me above the rim of her glass.
“And so, your fight was about what? They didn’t have the right canapes at the event, or one of your brothers hit on your girlfriend and it pissed you off?
Or . . .” She shakes her head as if to ask the question.
“Something even more scandalous than that? Give me all the juicy details.”
“Nothing juicy or scandalous. Sorry to disappoint you.” I smile. Imagining my brothers taking their eyes off their wives long enough to look at anyone else is comical. If there were ever a visual of what falling hook, line, and sinker looked like, it would be them.
Besides, we may be triplets, but our taste in women is completely different. I’m . . . Just Ford.
I bristle at the thought and my anger fires anew.
How do I tell her that what I’m upset about has more to do with feeling invisible without sounding like a pussy? That my last name defines who I am, and how people perceive me—it always has—but I didn’t realize how it also obscured me too?
“We just . . . we had a difference of opinion. Something unexpected came up, and I had a different perception of it than they did. Words were exchanged, and I was less than thrilled with what was said.”
“That means you guys are close.”
“Aren’t all siblings?”
She snorts and there’s definite derision to it that piques my curiosity. “Of course,” she says but doesn’t sound convincing.
“So yes, we are close.” And isn’t that partially why it bugged me so much? That they didn’t see where I was coming from? That most days we can finish each other’s sentences, thoughts even, but this time they didn’t understand why I was hurt not by what was said, but by what wasn’t said?
She nods as if she understands. “Okay, so your brothers are who we don’t like right now then? Who we’re so pissed at that we’re going to order another round over?”
I nod. “Sounds good to me.”
“How many brothers do you have? What are their names?” she asks. “I mean, it’s hard to stick pins in homemade voodoo dolls if we don’t have specifics.”
She’s made me so comfortable that I almost answer her without hesitation.
But I’m a Sharpe, and I’ve learned over the years that people knowing that I am one isn’t always a positive.
Especially with the publicity that’s about to hit my family with the release of the biography.
The last thing I need is to give her my brothers’ names so she can put two and two together at some point and cash in with a story about the bereaved brother sulking at a roadside inn.
“There are two of them,” I say with a wave of my hand, neglecting to tell her we’re more than just brothers, but that we’re identical triplets. “Their names are irrelevant. It’s just . . . have you ever realized how other people look at you or perceive you, and it knocks you back some?”
She picks more pretzels out of the germ mix and sets them on the table with the pile of others. “In a way, yes. It’s unnerving. Sometimes it’s sobering. And more often than not, it’s not exactly flattering.”
Especially when it’s your father’s observation.
I clear my throat from the sudden emotion clogging it. “You hit that nail on the head.”
“I’m sorry.”
The purity in her simple response gives me pause. A sincerity I seldom hear these days—especially when coming from an absolute stranger.
The look in her eyes is just as genuine.
And it must be a mixture of the late hour, the third glass of whiskey, and the fucking events of the night, but Jesus . . . I hate the sudden pressure in my chest and need to move about.
I rise abruptly from my stool and Ellery’s eyes widen in surprise at my sudden movement. “What’s wro—”
“Excuse me, everyone,” a woman near the entrance of the bar shouts. The opening is a cased doorway that leads to a foyer. People shuffle but fall silent as they turn to face the woman’s kind smile and guarded eyes.
“Listen up,” our bartender bellows to get the attention of the last remaining patrons too preoccupied to pay attention.
“Hi. My name is Amy. As some of you know,” she says when the room falls silent, “the authorities have just informed us that they’ve closed the road for the night in both directions.
For those who didn’t know that yet, oops, sorry to be the bearer of bad news.
So yes, that means you’re stuck here for the night if you haven’t already secured a room at one of the other hotels down the way.
As for us, we’re also completely booked.
” A collective groan rumbles through the room.
“The good news,” Amy continues, “is that you’re welcome to stay and make yourself comfortable in here.
It’s not the Ritz, but it’s dry, has comfortable chairs, and the light show outside is spectacular.
” She smiles as she motions to the windows.
“The other bad news? By state law, we were required to stop serving alcohol about forty minutes ago. So we’re going to have to close down the bar—”
“Seriously?” a man slurs from the far side of the room with numerous empties on the table beside him. The bartender slides a glance over to Amy as if to say, he’ll handle him if need be.
“Seriously,” she repeats with an understanding smile.
She holds her finger up. “But that doesn’t mean we can’t sell you a bottle of your favorite poison now .
. . or what’s left of a bottle so you can drink at your own leisure throughout the night.
” A few whoops sound off across the room.
“I thought that might make some of you happy.”
Clapping breaks out in a show of our sad state of desperation, and Amy curtsies.
Ellery leans over, that sunshine scent present again mixed with her shampoo, and murmurs, “I guess it’s time to make a decision, Ford.”
“About?”
“Whiskey or beer?”