The Cliffside Inn

Home > Other > The Cliffside Inn > Page 26
The Cliffside Inn Page 26

by Jessie Newton


  He took a few minutes to answer, during which AJ told how she didn’t think she’d get an on-air spot, and she was actually coming to terms with it. She said, “And you guys, I want to get together at Christmas.” She looked around at everyone. “The five of us. Right here.” She met Eloise’s eyes. “Will the inn be open?”

  “I don’t know,” Eloise said. “We’ve made a lot of progress, but there’s still miles to go.”

  “If it is, we could all stay here,” AJ said. “And celebrate together. Husbands and kids welcome.” She beamed around at everyone. “What do you think?”

  “I think I’ll book it,” Eloise said. “It sounds wonderful.”

  “I’ll talk to Duke,” Robin said.

  “I’ll see if Frank wants the kids for the holidays,” Alice said.

  “I’ll tell Julian what we’re doing.”

  Eloise noted how Kelli hadn’t put any wiggle room in her statement. She’d be there, plain and simple.

  Her phone buzzed, and she said, “Oh, Aaron says the seventeenth is the 5K and ferry fundraiser.”

  “Oh, that’s right.” Robin sighed as she scrubbed out the words she’d already written in. “The tenth it is.”

  Eloise texted Aaron that date, and when she looked up, everyone was watching her. “I missed something. Sorry, I was texting Aaron.”

  “We just want the engagement story now,” Alice said, smiling. She reached out and pinched off another tiny piece of a fritter.

  A smile filled Eloise from top to bottom, inside and out, from here to the stars above. She held up her wrist, where Grace’s bracelet dangled. “It was so sweet,” she started. “The girls were there, and they said the cutest things about how much Aaron loved me, and how much they loved me.”

  She told the story, adding in some drama when Aaron had dropped to both knees. About that time in the story, her phone buzzed again, and he’d said, The tenth is great.

  She showed her phone to Robin, who gave her a wide smile.

  By the time she finished, Eloise felt like she was glowing. Silence descended on them, and she looked around at the women she loved so much.

  “Thank you for not giving up on me,” she said, her voice quiet. No, Garrett would not be at the wedding. Eloise wouldn’t invite him. He’d know anyway, and she hoped he’d just stay away. She’d done what he’d wanted her to do, and surely he knew he wasn’t welcome in her life anymore.

  Alice put her hand in the middle of the table, and Eloise quickly put hers on top of it. Then Robin, and then Kelli, and finally AJ. They looked at their fingers, all in an array of different colors, and then they looked up and around at one another.

  Eloise wasn’t sure who started laughing first, but it didn’t matter. In the end, they all joined in, and she experienced one of the happiest moments of her life—and none of that could happen without these four women at her side.

  “Okay,” she said, shushing them. “Here’s the most important question. Really, two questions.” She held up one finger. “First, will you all be my bridesmaids?”

  Robin perked right up, as being a bridesmaid was probably one of her life dreams.

  “And two,” Eloise added once they’d all said yes to question one. “What color should the dresses be?”

  * * *

  Read on for the first couple chapters of Christmas at the Cove the next book in the Five Island Cove women’s fiction series, for more secrets, more romance, and more great friendship and sisterhood fiction that brings women together and celebrates the female relationship.

  * * *

  I hope you’ve enjoyed getting to know Robin, Alice, Eloise, Kelli, and AJ! And of course, Kristen, and even a new woman who could become integral in Five Island Cove, Laurel. If so, please leave a review for The Cliffside Inn

  * * *

  Join Jessie’s newsletter to stay up-to-date with new releases, sales, and other book news. All subscribers will get MEMORIES AT FRIENDSHIP INN, a novel exploring more of the friendship between Robin, Alice, Eloise, Kelli, and AJ from 30 years ago… It’s the perfect set-up for the whole series.

  Sneak Peek! Christmas At The Cove Chapter One

  AJ Proctor took off the red and white striped sweater with a muttered, “This makes you look like a chubby candy cane.” She’d put on a few pounds since she’d quit her job at the sports network a couple of weeks ago.

  Perhaps she’d quit a month ago, but she really had only gained about five pounds. She was happier than she’d been in a long time, and she knew it was because of a trifecta of things all combining together to increase her overall mood.

  One, she was now seriously dating Matt Hymas. Yes, he still lived in Five Island Cove, and she still lived in New York, but he came to see her every chance he got, and she’d been back to the cove several times in the past few months since they’d reconnected.

  Two, AJ had started seeing a therapist. She wasn’t sure why she’d been so resistant to meeting with a mental health professional, only that she’d once believed that admitting she needed help was the worst form of weakness she could exhibit.

  She now knew her father was wrong. All of the coaches she’d had over the years were wrong. She herself had been wrong. There was nothing wrong with getting the help she needed to be the best, most whole, and healthiest version of her herself that she could be.

  It was Dr. Genosie that had kept AJ in New York, actually. If not for the progress AJ had been making with her therapist, she strongly suspected she’d have already made the move back to the cove.

  At the same time, AJ did not really want to move back to Five Island Cove. That was the topic of today’s therapy session, and AJ pulled off her sweater and tossed it on her bed. She needed to make the right decisions for her about Five Island Cove, not because Matt lived there and she’d already fallen for him all over again.

  He was precisely the kind of man she’d always wanted to look her way. Had she known he would respect her, show up on time, and hold her when she was uncertain, only providing suggestions if she asked for them, she’d have answered his telephone calls in the months following her departure from the cove.

  He’d gone to college too—right here in New York City—and he’d tried calling her in Miami a few times. She’d had her roommate screen those calls, because she’d been running from the first eighteen years of her life.

  Sometimes she still felt like she was.

  AJ peered into her closet, which in the apartment she rented, was about the size of a kitchen cabinet and couldn’t be called a closet at all, trying to find something else to wear. She reached for the same black, floral blouse she’d been wearing everywhere lately and tugged it over her head.

  It at least lay so it wasn’t obvious that she’d gained a few pounds. She needed to stop eating so much pasta, but she lived above The Noodle Factory, and it was so easy to stop there on her way back from the gym in the morning, and even easier at night when she finished writing her columns in the shared workspace she rented on the next block over.

  That was the third reason she was so blissfully happy—her new career as a freelance sports columnist. She could finally get credit for all the contacts she had, all the stories she dug up, and all the knowledge of sports she’d acquired over the years. She’d had no problem selling her columns; as it was, she was booked out for the next three months, as the basketball regular season had just begun, and all football fans everywhere were gearing up for bowl games on the collegiate level, and then the Super Bowl in just six weeks.

  Everyone wanted to know everything about their favorite athlete’s training schedule, and what they did to stay mentally strong through playoffs and stressful games, and what they did to rejuvenate in their personal downtime.

  AJ hadn’t had to call in any personal favors yet, and she was making twice as much as she had writing the stories for the on-air talent at her network.

  It’s also a job you can do from the cove, she thought as she quickly stepped into her boots and reached for her coat. She wa
sn’t sure why the thought was there; she had never wanted to return to the cove permanently. Just eight months ago, she’d only gone for Joel’s funeral out of sheer obligation.

  So much had changed since April, and AJ wasn’t sorry about any of it. Down on the street, her stomach lurched as she lifted her arm to get a cab. She’d forgotten to eat again, but she reassured herself that Wendy, the woman who sat next to AJ in the shared workspace, would have snacks on her desk. She never minded sharing, and she even brought in the dried apricot and mango that AJ had sampled once and really enjoyed.

  She’d head to the creative commons after her session, and she’d be able to eat then. She watched the city go by, seeing images of her life on the windows and walls of the tall buildings. College, which had been one big disappointment, though she’d graduated.

  Her failure to make the Olympic track team. Her decline into more men for a year, until she cleaned herself up and got a job in sports.

  Her return to college, this time with an emphasis on broadcasting and journalism. Her graduation. Her long relationships that led to dead-ends.

  Robin. Alice, Eloise. Kelli. The women who never truly left her, and who’d always accepted her for exactly who she was.

  A smile touched her face, and AJ blinked. The images disappeared, and the city became just the city again.

  “Lexington building,” the cab driver said, and AJ quickly tapped her watch to pay for the ride. Outside, she zipped her coat to her chin and started down the cleared sidewalk. Mother Nature had not been kind this first week of December, and she often felt like an insect bustling through paths with high walls of snow on either side.

  Heat greeted her upon opening the door, bursting into her face with the scent of flames and vanilla. The receptionist at the front desk always burned candles, and AJ had started to purchase some of the brand for herself. They were all hand-created, with creative names and scents, from a female-owned business out of California.

  “What’s this variety?” she asked Raymond as she signed into the building.

  “Take a chill,” he said. “Vanilla bean ice cream, long naps, and marshmallow dreams.” He grinned at her as he turned the jar toward her.

  AJ read the same description, a smile crossing her face too. “I got the Boyfriend’s Sweater one. I love it.”

  “Darby loves that one too,” Ray said, taking the check-in clipboard and pressing the button to let her into the building.

  AJ didn’t immediately move toward the door, though if she didn’t pass through it in the next sixty seconds, Ray would have to open it for her again. “She does, huh? And you two are…? Engaged yet?”

  “I’m working on it,” Ray said, not meeting AJ’s eye.

  “Are you?” AJ had loved getting to know Ray, and he made it very easy to do that, as he could talk the ear off a deaf man. “What’s the hold-up?” She was at least a decade older than Ray and his girlfriend, but she’d heard a lot about the two of them in the past three months since she’d been coming to the Lexington Building and meeting with Dr. Genosie.

  “The hold-up is Darby said she’s not sure she wants to get married.” Ray looked up then, and AJ’s heart tore for him.

  “Oh, no,” she said. “Get on out here and hug me.”

  Ray shook his head, a small smile on his face as he did what AJ said. He was a sharp dresser, his hair always combed just-so. She’d thought him a good catch for someone lucky enough to find him, and she couldn’t fathom why his girlfriend didn’t want to marry him.

  She wasn’t going to be like Robin, though, and ask. A question did bounce through her mind, but she kept it silent. She’d been on the wrong end of it before, and she would not put another person through the emotional turmoil of wondering if Darby didn’t want to get married in general, or if she simply didn’t want to marry Raymond.

  Nathan hadn’t wanted to marry AJ, and that had been a painful, painful realization that she’d already worked through with her therapist.

  “Thanks, AJ,” Ray said, his voice muted and so unlike his own. He stepped back and kept his face turned away from hers as he returned to his desk. “Go on, so I don’t have to open the door again.”

  “Okay,” AJ said, stepping toward the door. She didn’t move very fast, adding, “Ray, call me if you need to, okay?”

  “Yep,” he said, already back in his seat. AJ went through the door to the bank of elevators that led up to at least a dozen medical offices, knowing Ray wouldn’t call her. They were friends, and they had exchanged numbers, but she saw him once a week. She didn’t really know him.

  AJ thought about the people who she did know, and who knew her. If she needed help, she didn’t need to call Ray or Wendy. She’d call Kelli first, who’d probably alert Eloise or Robin, and the entire Seafaring Girls group would know within minutes.

  She swiped on her phone as the elevator took her to the sixteenth floor and checked the group text string the five of them had started months ago. Nothing new, and Eloise’s message about how the inn would be ready for them to spend Christmas together was the last one.

  AJ had read it an hour ago, when it had come in, and she hadn’t wanted to be the first to respond. Since no one else had either, she assumed she wasn’t the only one who didn’t want to be the first to confirm they’d be in the cove for the holidays.

  She had no hesitation about going; her plane ticket was already booked, and she’d already made several plans with Matt.

  Last time the five of them had gotten together over the summer, they’d assigned meals and planned activities together. Someone would need to spearhead all of that, and it shouldn’t have to be Eloise just because they were all staying at the inn.

  AJ could see herself doing it, because her articles for the college bowl games were already outlined. All she had to do was wait to see who won, get a couple of quotes, make some minor adjustments, and they’d be done.

  As the elevator dinged her arrival, she quickly sent, Thank you, El. I’ll put together a meal schedule, okay? Unless anyone has any objections, I can do activities too, since Matt and I already looked into everything happening around the cove during the holidays.

  She’d barely given her name and sat down to wait before a flurry of texts arrived. Thanks, AJ, Alice had said. With the move, I’m so scattered.

  No objections, Kelli had said. We’ll be a day early to the inn, Eloise, if that’s okay.

  Take it away, AJ! Robin had said, ever the cheerleader of the group.

  AJ smiled at all of them, wondering why no one wanted to text first. She couldn’t quite pinpoint why she hadn’t wanted to either, and she looked up, trying to examine her feelings and make sense of them.

  “AJ,” Dr. Genosie said, and she looked toward the door where the woman stood. “I’m ready for you.”

  AJ smiled back at her, ready to do this too. She needed to determine whether or not she could return to the cove the way her other friends had, and if that was in her best interest and not because she felt left out.

  A week later, AJ disembarked from the plane and hustled through the wind to get inside the airport on Diamond Island. At least it’s not raining, she thought, because she’d been in the slanted, sideways rain that plagued Five Island Cove in the winter, and it wasn’t pleasant. It could be as sharp as needles and as cold as ice, and a booming clap of thunder filled the sky as she stepped inside the airport.

  Cries rose up, and AJ suspected the people in the waiting areas had been there for a while—and would be staying a while longer. Planes didn’t take off in the driving rainstorms, and it was cold enough today to produce snow.

  Sure enough, when she arrived at baggage claim, an announcement sounded through the whole airport. “All planes had been grounded for the next ninety minutes,” a male voice said. He continued to talk over the groans of those who wanted to leave the cove, and the relieved conversations of those who’d made it in.

  AJ wasn’t sure how to feel. She’d come to the cove two weeks early, and not for a reason
she wanted anyone to know about. She’d seen Dr. Genosie yesterday, but she’d already changed her plane ticket and packed her bag at that point. Meeting with the therapist had only confirmed what AJ knew to be right.

  She hadn’t told a single person she was coming today, not even the man she’d come to see. Her pulse fluttered in her throat, not strong enough to choke her. She’d been through that debilitating feeling of losing everything already, and it was time to do something about it.

  After lifting her own bags from the belt, she went toward the RideShare line, hoping that wouldn’t be too delayed, though she knew it would be.

  Her mind raced, as it had been doing for the past three days, since she’d learned of her condition. She’d been working through so much since then. Flight changes. Laundry. Submitting a couple of articles early and pulling others. Packing. Flying.

  “Ma’am,” the attendant said, and she clued in. The man already stood at the back door of a sedan, waiting for her to take the RideShare.

  “Thanks,” she said.

  He helped her with the bags, and gratitude filled AJ. She didn’t want to lift them into the trunk, and she hoped the driver could help her once she arrived at her destination.

  A woman sat behind the wheel, and AJ’s hopes withered slightly. “Where to?” the driver asked, a pretty smile on her face. She eased away from the curb before AJ could comprehend the question.

  “Oh, uh, Seventy-four Blue Lake Drive,” she said, her stomach and chest rioting against what she was doing.

  But it had to be done.

  The drive didn’t take long—or maybe AJ had zoned out again. She didn’t need to take her luggage to the door, but she didn’t have anywhere else to store it. She probably should’ve gone to the hotel first, but she hadn’t allowed herself to even think of it. If she didn’t just tell him, she was worried she’d chicken out.

  The driver did help her with the bags, and then AJ faced the simple yet stylish house that sat only two blocks from the beach. The rain had definitely driven Matt indoors, and he’d told her once that he didn’t stay at the clubhouse if he didn’t have to.

 

‹ Prev