The Bookshop on Autumn Lane (28 page)

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Authors: Cynthia Tennent

BOOK: The Bookshop on Autumn Lane
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“I did. But you didn't hear me.”
I refused to let him see my embarrassment. I had some dignity after all. I pulled his coat from my back, involuntarily inhaling the scent one more time before offering it to him. He took it and dragged it back on and his biceps were momentarily outlined underneath his shirt.
Blinking and looking away, I gestured to the black spot on the floor. “I wouldn't have dropped the cigarette if you hadn't scared me like that.”
“All you had to do was answer the door.”
I couldn't meet his eyes.
“So while you are looking up the local AA chapter in the directory tomorrow, you might want to check out fire extinguishers too.”
A strange feeling overtook me as my stomach rolled over. I wasn't under arrest and with any luck I would never run into this man again. Sure, in the brightness of the light coming from the bare bulb in the ceiling, he managed to look normal and well . . . almost attractive. But earlier it was easy to mistake him for a beast.
Using the last of my draining energy, I stood up and stumbled on my way to the front door. My nerves were frayed and my confidence was deflating by the moment. Not knowing how one was supposed to handle formalities when asking a cop to leave, I reached for the knob. “Thank you for stopping by. I'd like to say it has been a pleasure . . .”
He broke into a caustic smile that was both cruel and strangely appealing. “Have an enjoyable evening doing whatever it was you were doing.”
I narrowed my gaze.
Then he leaned in. “Your dancing was fine, but I wouldn't quit your day job.”
He said the wrong thing. “M—my dancing may not be any good, but your manners are deplorable.”
He was already through the door. He turned on the front step and his face was lost in the shadows.
“I remember Truhart having a nice sheriff,” I continued. “I can't imagine what anyone was thinking to put you in charge.”
He stepped slowly into the light and a wide smile spread across his face. The hair on the back of my neck stood up and my stomach did somersaults as bile rose in my throat. Why was I having this reaction?
Just then, a breeze blew the stench of the cheap wine and singed carpet my way. I looked at him, wondering if I should warn him.
But it was too late.
The wine and cigarettes were mounting a rebellion all their own. And they were doing it all over Officer Hardy's boots.
Keep reading for an excerpt from Cynthia Tennent's first Truhart romance,
A Wedding in Truhart.
Chapter 1
W
e were late to the dinner party and I was crushed between my great-aunt and my mother in the backseat of a battered taxi stuck in the slow lane.
“Is my bra twisted, Annie? Something feels like it has a hold on my left bosom and it can't be a man!” The setting sun glared off Aunt Addie's purplish gray hair. I never should have let her dye her own hair last week.
“Let me see what's going on.” I shifted my position in the sweltering cab and cringed as I lost a layer of skin on the vinyl seat. Opening the back of my aunt's dress, I took a look at the massive brassiere that was surely more complicated than a seventy-six-year-old woman needed. “You're caught up in the sleeve. Give me a moment to fix this.”
“Take your time, my dear. That air is like heaven on my back. Who in their right mind would live in a city that feels like a furnace?”
Our taxi driver convulsively stepped on the brakes and all three of us lurched forward as we crawled through seven lanes of rush-hour traffic on I-75 in Atlanta. I dodged Aunt Addie's head and Mom's shoulder, attempting to fix the bra, and felt a bead of sweat trickle from my armpit to my elbow. The driver leered at me through the rearview mirror.
“Just remember, this weekend is for Charlotte. We can handle a little August heat. Besides, Atlanta will be a lovely place for a wedding next spring,” Mom said as I finished with the bra.
“With all your brains and talent I always thought you were going to be the one to live in the big city,” said my great-aunt, nudging me with her elbow.
I bit my lip and let Aunt Addie's words roll off me. I'd buried my regrets years ago. The same year we buried Dad.
“I'll remind you about this heat next February when it's ten below and there's three feet of snow on the ground at home,” said Mom as she reached behind her back to fasten the top of her own dress. My mother, Virginia Adler, was attractive and calm, even with a layer of perspiration on her face. I had only seen her fall apart once, and a little heat like this wasn't going to rattle her cool composure.
Was it just this morning that we left our inn before dawn and drove three hours to get to the Flint airport? Unfortunately our luckless journey had only begun. Our flight from Flint was behind schedule and the connecting flight in Detroit was delayed too. I guess that's what we should have expected after buying tickets on a website called ElCheapoFare.com. Now, we were getting dressed in the backseat of a steamy cab as we finished the final leg of our journey.
Sometimes I think my family avoids
luck
as if it is a nasty four-letter word. Well, I guess it actually
is
a four-letter word. But so is
love
, and we have plenty of that. I just wished
love
came with air-conditioning and a restroom to change in.
A dinner tonight, wedding-dress shopping tomorrow, and a wedding shower the following night. The long weekend was going to be a whirlwind. I leaned back against the seat and angled my head to catch a breeze coming through the window, marveling at the fact that my baby sister, Charlotte, called this home. It still was hard to imagine anyone from Truhart, population thirteen hundred and dropping, living in a Southern city like Atlanta.
For the past few years, my focus had been on my family and keeping our inn running smoothly. And now I had another goal. I was going to make sure this wedding was everything my little sister dreamed it would be.
At last we pulled up under a large gilded marquee that marked the entrance to the Ambassador Hotel of Atlanta. A man in a dark suit held open the back door of the cab and all three of us awkwardly slid across the sticky seat. By the time my mother disembarked she had to push Aunt Adelaide and me out of the way; we were momentarily frozen in place as we stared through the open glass doors at an opulent room that was nothing like the rustic lobby of our inn back home.
The man cast his eyes over Aunt Addie and her purplish gray hair piled on top of her head, the way she had worn it since the bicentennial of the nation. Then he cast a glance at the three sorry-looking carry-on bags the driver had tossed onto the sidewalk.
“May I help you, ladies?”
My mother stood up straighter. “Yes, you can. My daughter and her fiancé are hosting a special dinner for family and close friends.”
“Oh, of course, in the Governor's Room. Will you be staying here tonight?”
“Actually, no,” I said. It had been hard enough to scrape together money for the airfare; there was no way we could afford this place.
The man nodded and offered to store our luggage, but Aunt Addie refused to be parted with hers. She insisted that we hold on to them, and my mother and I knew that arguing with her was futile when she had that look in her eye. So we followed suit and shouldered the bags. I cringed to think what Charlotte's guests would think.
Like zombies we shuffled through the main lobby and shivered when the air-conditioning hit us with a cold blast as we walked up a long, winding stairway overlooking the lobby. Standing near a curved bar was a group of elegantly dressed people who stopped talking and stared as we walked past.
I lifted my chin, trying to look as if we weren't totally out of place.
Mom wore a pink cotton dress that she'd worn to our church's fiftieth anniversary last spring. I wore my black go-to skirt with a wilting gauzy white blouse, a silver chain, and hoop earrings.
And then there was Aunt Addie.
Blue cabbage roses shouted out from her floral polyester dress, in stark contrast to the chic black elegance of the room around us. Wearing a dress with an elastic waistband that cinched her large girth, and sensible shoes, she looked like a 1950s throwback. No matter what Aunt Addie did to herself, she resembled a cross between Minnie Pearl and Betty White. Out of habit I double-checked my aunt for handwritten price tags from the church thrift store and safety pins that showed at the hem.
Then I saw Charlotte. She stood in an ornately framed doorway absently listening to an older man as she chewed on her lip and looked at her watch. She looked up and our eyes met.
“Annie!” she squealed, rushing our way.
My worries dissolved as I dropped my bag and closed the space between us. I forgot the imposing room and all the curious faces as we crushed each other in an embrace that brought tears to my eyes.
Almost a full year had passed since Charlotte had left Truhart for Atlanta to become the newest sweetheart correspondent on the nationally televised
Morning Show
. Every time I saw her face on TV, I still wanted to reach out and touch the screen to make sure it was real.
“It's so good to see you,” we said at the same time.
“Jinx,” we said, then laughed.
We pulled apart and Charlotte was immediately captured in a hug from my mother and then Aunt Addie.
“I am so sorry we're late! The plane out of Detroit was delayed and we did the best we could,” Mom explained.
“Oh, that's all right, Mom. I'm just glad you're here.” The smile Charlotte flashed us assured me she was the same blue-eyed angel who used to pour glitter in the sand traps at our inn's golf course, to make pixie dust. But she had changed as well. Dressed in a black sleeveless dress with a chiffon overlay, her blond hair pulled back in a sophisticated chignon, she appeared every inch the celebrity she was becoming.
“You look wonderful, honey,” said Aunt Adelaide, grabbing Charlotte's left hand. “Good Lord, that engagement ring is bigger than a lump of coal in a Christmas stocking. I'll bet that didn't come from the Sears catalogue like mine did.”
“And you should see the new car Henry bought me,” Charlotte exclaimed.
“Just in time! Annie is really excited to drive that SUV back up to Michigan. A new car for you and our old car back to us,” Mom said.
My car had broken down a month ago, and I had been pricing used cars in Gaylord. Now I could reclaim the Ford Escape my dad had bought ten years ago and take it back to Truhart.
“I still can't believe you are getting married,” I said.
“Of course I wish you could have told us before you announced it on
The Morning Show
,” Mom added.
“That Marva O'Shea still brags about the fact that she knew about it before I did,” complained Aunt Addie.
Charlotte frowned. “Oh, Mom, I hope you didn't mind too much!”
We all protested, of course. No point in making Charlotte feel guilty after the fact.
“This must be your family, darling.” The three of us stopped to stare as Charlotte's fiancé joined her.
I was prepared to resent this man who was stealing our Charlotte away from Michigan for good. But something in the way he looked at her before he turned to greet us made me love him on sight. Adoration was written all over his face. It was as transparent as the picture window in the lobby of the Amble Inn after spring cleaning week. His blond hair was cropped short to his thinning hair line, and his broad shoulders made up for the fact that he wasn't overly tall. He wore a sharp black suit with a starched white shirt and blue-and-gray striped tie, the perfect complement to Charlotte's sleek style.
“Henry, this is my mother, Virginia, Aunt Adelaide, and, of course, Annie.”
I held out my hand politely, but Henry surprised us by swallowing each of us up in a big hug. His Southern drawl came with a whole hunk of charm, and Aunt Addie was already half in love.
“I am so sorry you didn't get a chance to rest before this party,” Henry said.
An older woman stepped in front of Henry and held out her hand. I was overwhelmed by a heavy dose of expensive perfume and bling. Her wrists dripped with gold and matched the lamé trim on her formfitting dress. Her blond hair was pulled back and for a moment I wondered if the tight hairstyle was the reason no wrinkles showed around her eyes. But when she spoke and her generous upper lip barely moved, I had my answer.
“Why, it is so nice that you made the trip to our little part of the world. I am June, Henry's mother.” We took turns reaching out for her limp hand and I winced when Aunt Addie shook it too hard and June Lowell flinched. June put her arm around Charlotte's shoulders in a proprietary manner. “We just love Charlotte, our little Northern bride.” It sounded so old-fashioned that I resisted the urge to look around for hoopskirts. “Do y'all want to freshen up or change before the party? I know you probably didn't have time.”
Something about the way she said the word
party
made my breath catch in my chest. I stole a glance at Charlotte. “This is just close friends and family, right?”
“Well, the Lowells have a lot of friends.” I could have sworn that her smile was painted on because it didn't waver. I was conscious of the music and laughter in the room nearby.
Mom placed her hand over her heart. “Would that happen to be the Governor's Room?”
June Lowell's eyes darted to the pin on Aunt Addie's dress, made of lace and shells. She had bought it at last year's church craft show. “Why, yes. Everyone is so excited to meet you. But as I was saying, you are welcome to change in the ladies' lounge.”
“No need to change. We're fine,” said Mom with that hint of ice in her eyes that I recognized as stalwart Adler pride. “That is, unless you feel we should. We are late enough as it is . . .”
“Oh, you look lovely just as you are, Mrs. Adler. I can see where Charlotte gets her beauty. We wouldn't want to miss your presence for another minute,” inserted Henry, giving his mother an annoyed look that lifted him up another notch in my estimation. “Let me get someone to take your bags so you can have a chance to relax.”
Henry signaled to one of the waiters, who put down his tray and held out his hand to take Mom's bag. After I handed over my bag, he turned to Aunt Addie. She clutched hers with both hands and narrowed her eyes suspiciously. The young waiter looked startled when he saw her fierce expression, but Mom and I wrestled the bag from her death grip and looped it around his free arm.
A serious-faced young girl appeared at Henry's elbow. “Virginia, Addie, Anne, I would like you to meet my little sister, Jessica,” Henry said. The girl was in her early teens and it was obvious that she wished she was anywhere else at the moment.
June pushed Jessica forward and I heard her whisper sharply, “Shoulders!” as the miserable girl readjusted her slouch. She was painfully thin and wore a purple dress dotted with sequins. It looked like something her mother might have picked for her. She held out her hand and greeted each one of us without actually looking us in the eye. Then she reached up to fiddle with her hair.
“Jessica, how nice to meet you,” my mother said warmly. “Are you in school in Atlanta?”
“Actually she boards at the Delaworth Academy in Connecticut.”
“Boards?” asked Aunt Addie. “Is that some kind of new sport these kids do?”
“No, she lives at a boarding school,” corrected June. “We flew her here for the weekend so she could come to the party.”
I tried to navigate the conversation away from any comment Aunt Addie might make about boarding school. “It must seem pretty strange to think of your big brother getting married, huh?”
Jessica nodded and looked over at Henry, showing emotion for the first time. Hero worship.
Henry reached over and patted her back. “Actually I keep telling her how great it will be for her to finally have a sister!”
Jessica's glance shifted to Charlotte and I noted how Jessica shut down before Henry led us into the Governor's Room.
As I paused on the threshold of the grand room, some sixth sense made me hesitate and glance to the side. A dark figure caught my eye and the hair on the back of my neck stood up.

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