by Marie Force
“How the hell do I know? She loves the theater, and I could possibly cross paths with her billionaire father. Dinner out. I don’t know.” Suddenly the absurdity—and the futility—of what he was trying to do hit him like a ton of bricks. He stumbled backward and sat on Hunter’s bed, dropping his head into his hands as despair overtook him.
“What the hell am I doing? I’ve got no business chasing after her in the city. I’ve never even been there or had any desire to go. I’m going to stick out like a sore thumb and embarrass the hell out of her no matter how well you dress me.”
Hunter surprised him when he sat next to him. “Stop talking shit.”
His brother’s tone had Will looking over at him.
“You’re not going to embarrass her. If she cares about you at all—and judging from the moony, lovesick way she looks at you, I’d say she does—she’s not going to care if you stick out like a sore thumb. She’ll care that you made the effort to fit into her world.”
“You think so? Really?”
Hunter rolled his eyes. “This is worse than I thought. Are you in love with her?”
Will gave a brief nod.
“Dude, you just can’t do simple, can you? Always got to be wanting something outside the comfort zone.”
“My pattern of self-inflicted torture is not intentional, trust me on that.”
Hunter got up and went to the closet. He emerged holding a dark suit with a dress shirt and tie. “This for the theater. If it’s formal, find a tux shop. There has to be a million of them in the city.” He produced several other dress shirts, a couple more ties and two pairs of dress pants—one black and the other gray. “How long are you planning to be there?”
“Maybe a week?”
Hunter went back to the closet and came back with two more shirts, a belt and a pair of black shoes that had square toes.
“Those look like pilgrim shoes.”
“You’ll see them everywhere in the city,” Hunter assured him.
“Why do you have all this stuff living in this town?”
“I like nice clothes. So what?”
Will hid his smirk because he wouldn’t put it past Hunter to take it all back if he thought his brother was making fun of him.
“Were you planning to tell anyone you’re taking the week off?”
“I’m not taking it off. I’ll have my laptop with me, and I’ll be working.” Another thought occurred to him. “Crap. The spring craft fair in Montpelier is on Sunday. I usually go to check out what’s new and see if there’s anything we might want to offer in the store.”
The realization was a major bummer as the fair was a big part of his annual routine.
“Oh, for crap’s sake,” Hunter said, exasperated. “I’ll go.”
Will looked up at him. “You will? You hate that stuff.”
“Yeah, but I don’t hate you. Yet. Keep up this whole hangdog routine, and I might start to actively hate you.”
Will got up and hugged Hunter. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d had cause to hug Hunter, but his brother’s help and support certainly warranted it.
Hunter patted him awkwardly on the back. “Make this work, will ya? I don’t want to deal with you if it doesn’t.”
“I’ll do my best.” He started to leave the room, but thought of something else he wanted to ask Hunter. “Do you have a thing for Megan?”
The question and the flash of shock that crossed Hunter’s face all but confirmed it.
“Cameron told you, huh?”
“I saw her talking to you, and she told me she suspected you might be interested. That’s all. Are you?”
“Maybe.” He shrugged. “What’s the point? You’re the one she wants.”
“We were never going to happen, and she’s known that for a long time. Don’t let that stop you.”
“I don’t want to talk about her. You have enough of your own problems without taking on mine, little brother.”
Hunter never let Will forget he was sixteen entire months older than him. “If you get the chance to find out if there’s something there, take it. You never know where it might lead you.” Will left him with that pearl of wisdom and went down the stairs, eager to heed his own advice.
CHAPTER 17
Time to pee on the fire and call in the dogs.
—The gospel according to Elmer Stillman
Cameron drove slowly and cautiously through town to Will’s house. She’d made the drive so many times with him by now that she knew exactly where she was going, but after just getting her car out of the shop, she was on the lookout for wayward moose and other hazards.
Nolan and Skeeter had done a beautiful job on the car, which looked as good as it had the day she picked it up from the dealer. Was that only sixteen days ago? One moose, one sexy rescuer and fifteen life-changing days later, she’d be going home a different person.
Driving past the spot where their first fateful encounter had occurred, Cameron’s eyes filled once again. She’d been an absolute disaster as her last day in the office passed faster than any day before it ever had.
Will had offered to take her to a hotel in Burlington for her last night in Vermont, but she’d told him she preferred his cozy cabin to a hotel. She wanted to spend their last night—for now—in the place where so many of their best moments had taken place.
She was clinging to those two little words for now with everything she had. With the website project ongoing, she’d be back to Vermont several times in the next few months as they worked through the various stages of the design and implementation. Her first return trip would occur in about a month.
Surely she could get through one month without him. She’d gotten through more than twenty-nine years without him, so she could survive thirty days. Or so she told herself. The thought of one day without Will’s handsome face on the pillow next to hers was almost too much to bear, let alone thirty such days.
She took the right-hand turn onto his long driveway and negotiated the ruts like a seasoned pro, pulling up to the house to find he wasn’t there yet. They’d had many a conversation about the fact that he never locked his house. The city girl in her couldn’t conceive of a universe in which people didn’t lock their doors. But the city girl in her also couldn’t have conceived of a place like Butler, Vermont, until she had experienced it for herself.
According to Will, unless you knew his house was there, you’d never have any reason to come down the road that led to it, so why bother to lock the place?
She opened the door to an enthusiastic greeting from Tanner and Trevor. Cameron would miss them almost as much as she’d miss Will. “Hey, boys.” She stepped aside to let them out to romp in the snow after the long afternoon cooped up in the house. Then she went over to stoke the fire like she’d seen Will do a hundred times.
It occurred to her how very much at home she’d come to feel in the secluded cabin in the woods, more so—if she was being honest—than she’d ever felt in the apartment she called home in the city. She liked the apartment and its lower Manhattan location, close to her office and many of her favorite haunts. But it was nowhere near as warm or as cozy as Will’s bare-bones cabin.
She checked on the dogs and then curled up on the sofa, pulling the down comforter over her as she watched the fire dancing in the stone fireplace. As she finally let herself relax, she made a vow to enjoy this evening with Will and not ruin it with maudlin displays of emotion.
The door flew open a short time later in a flurry of dog paws and gruff orders from Will. Tanner and Trevor were so happy to see him that they didn’t do a single thing he told them to do, which made Cameron laugh from the sofa.
“Don’t encourage them,” he said gruffly. “Hey, nice fire.”
“Thanks. I’m rather proud of it.”
“I’m turning you into a regular country girl,” he said as he carried brown grocery bags to the kitchen.
Reminded of all the ways she’d changed made Cameron wonder how her new self would fe
el about city life once she returned.
“Your car looks awesome. Nolan and Skeeter to the rescue.”
“They did a great job. She’s as pretty as she was before she met Fred.”
“I think I saw some cat gut in the grill,” he said with a teasing smile and a wink.
“That’s so gross. I still don’t believe he froze his dead cat.”
“My mom would swear on a stack of Bibles that it’s true. She went to school with him, and he’s always been odd.”
“That goes beyond odd. I can’t even think about it or I’ll never eat frozen food again.”
“Speaking of food, I’m making linguine with clam sauce.”
“You know how to make clam sauce?”
He finished stashing the groceries and came over to join her on the sofa, leaning in for a kiss. “Prepare to be dazzled.”
“I’m already dazzled,” she said, wrapping her hand around his neck to prolong the kiss.
“I have two presents for you. Which one do you want first? Big one or small one?”
“More presents? This really has to stop.”
“No, it doesn’t.”
She looked around him. “Where are they?”
“Behind the sofa.”
“You’re very sneaky.”
“I prefer stealthy to sneaky. What’s it going to be?”
Cameron pretended to give it some significant thought. “Small one first.”
He reached behind the sofa and plopped a small brown bag on her lap. “I couldn’t let you leave Vermont without one of these.”
Inside the bag, Cameron found an army green T-shirt that she held up to see what was printed on the front. The giant moose crossing sign made her want to laugh and cry at the same time.
“Fred and I hope you’ll think of us every time you wear that.”
“I’ll think of you both every minute of every day.”
“Maybe you could give me a tiny bit more time than Fred gets?”
Cameron appreciated his attempt to keep things lighthearted for as long as they could. “Nope. Sorry. He brought us together, so he’ll always own a piece of my heart.”
Smiling, he said, “Ready for the other gift?”
“I didn’t get you anything.”
“Don’t say that. You’ve given me so much. I haven’t had this much fun in a really long time. If ever.” He punctuated his sweet words with an even sweeter kiss, breaking away only to reach for the other package.
Cameron eyed the giant paper bag with trepidation.
“Go ahead.”
She put the bag on the floor so she could look inside. “Oh! Oh my God! Are those my boots?” She withdrew the gorgeous suede boots that were now a shade darker but were every bit as soft and gorgeous as they’d been before they encountered Vermont mud season.
“Mrs. Jefferson said she tried to retain the original color, but when she couldn’t do that she thought you’d rather have them a tad bit darker than not at all.”
Cameron couldn’t quit touching the soft suede or thinking about the night she’d ended up ankle deep in mud and he’d come to her rescue. Then the tears she’d managed to stave off all day were slipping down her cheeks. How was she supposed to handle her looming departure stoically if he insisted on being so sweet and thoughtful?
“Thank you for this,” she said. “It means so much to me that you went to the trouble to have them cleaned.”
“It was no trouble.”
She put down the boots and turned to him. “You’re the nicest guy I’ve ever known.”
“You know . . . You could just stay here forever.” The moment the words were out of his mouth, his eyes widened with dismay, as if he’d said something he hadn’t meant to. And then he looked directly at her, seeming to summon the courage to speak his mind. “I’d love that.”
“If I stayed forever?”
He nodded solemnly, and he’d never been more adorable.
“You’d probably get tired of me in no time.”
“No, I wouldn’t. You really could stay. If you want to. Like you said, someone has to oversee the website when it’s done. Why couldn’t it be you?”
He’d obviously given the matter some thought. “I don’t know what to say.”
“I didn’t mean to lay it on you like that, but I didn’t want you to leave without knowing what I’m thinking—or what I want.” As he spoke, his fingers spooled through her hair.
“What do you want?” she asked, even though she suspected she already knew.
“I want you. I want us. I want this. For a lot longer than fifteen days.”
“It’s all happened so quickly.”
“But it has happened, so now we’ve got to figure out what to do about it.”
“I need some time, Will. There’s so much to consider.”
“How much time?”
“I don’t know, but I can’t decide anything tonight or tomorrow or the next day.”
“Will you keep talking to me about what you’re thinking?”
“I’m going to want to talk to you all the time.”
“Good,” he said, sounding relieved.
She ran her fingers over the pulsating muscle in his cheek. “If it’s any consolation, I’m every bit as undone over this as you are.”
“It’s a huge consolation.”
He put his arms around her and held her for a long time.
Cameron had never felt more at home anywhere than she did with him, and for someone who’d had a somewhat lonely life, letting go of that feeling wouldn’t be easy.
Her ringing cell interrupted their quiet interlude. “Do you mind if I get that? I haven’t had a signal all day, and it might be Lucy about work.”
“Sure, go ahead.”
She bent to retrieve her phone from her purse on the floor, saw Troy’s name on the caller ID and took the call because she hadn’t talked to him in more than a week.
He started talking the minute she said hello. “What the heck did you say to Lucy? She’s melting down about you leaving the business and moving to Vermont.”
“Wait, what? I never told her I was moving to Vermont. Where did that come from?”
Cameron glanced at Will, who scratched Tanner’s ears as he stared into the fire. She wished the house were bigger so she could talk to Troy without him hearing her.
“You told her you dig the guy you met there.”
“I do, but I never said I was moving.”
“So you’re not?”
The thought of Lucy panicking about the business cut Cameron to the core. They’d built that business from nothing and had worked so hard for so long. Something in her died as she took a deep breath, and said, “No, I’m not.”
“Oh, good. I gotta say, I was kinda melting down, too! What would we do without you? When will you be home?
“Tomorrow. Tell Lucy to stop panicking. Everything is fine.”
“Call me when you’re back.”
“I will.”
“I’ve missed you, kiddo. Nothing is the same without you here.”
“I’ve missed you, too. See you soon.”
“Everything all right?” Will asked when she returned to the sofa and curled up next to him.
“Yeah.” Troy’s call had started a storm of turmoil inside her as she tried to process Lucy’s reaction to their recent conversation. She’d said what she thought Cameron wanted to hear, but had apparently panicked at the possibility of her partner making some serious life changes.
Could she honestly deny that she’d entertained the secret fantasy of relocating to Vermont and working with Will and his wonderful family and continuing their relationship in the place where it had begun?
No, she couldn’t deny that the possibility had hovered at the edge of her subconscious, even more so as her departure drew closer. It pained her to realize that she’d been so caught up in her romance with Will that she’d given much less thought than she should have to how her decisions would affect the friends she loved like famil
y—especially Lucy.
She felt sick when she thought about how she would’ve felt if Lucy had decided to leave their business to move somewhere else. Losing Lucy in her daily life would’ve been devastating, both personally and professionally. How could she think it would be any less so for Lucy if she were the one who left?
Will reached for her hand. “What’re you thinking about over there?”
With his warm hand curled around hers, Cameron was reminded of what she stood to lose if she couldn’t find a way to keep him in her life. “Work. And stuff.”
“What stuff?”
“You. Me. New York. Vermont. My company. Your company. Your family. My friends. That kind of stuff.”
“It’s a lot to consider.”
“Yeah.”
“What you said to your friend just now . . .”
Cameron winced, hating herself in hindsight for taking the call. But how could she have known what Troy would say about Lucy?
“If things between us were to continue, you wouldn’t consider moving here? Ever?”
“I don’t know,” Cameron said, filled with despair as she realized they could no longer postpone this conversation. “I love it here, and I love being with you. This has been such an amazing couple of weeks in so many ways.”
“But?”
“My whole life is there. My friends are so important to me, and I’m important to them. We’re a bunch of misfits who found something in each other that we’d never had before. It would be hard for me to leave them. And then there’s my dad . . . He is what he is, but he’s still my dad.”
“It’s okay. It would be really hard for me to pick up my whole life and move there, so I get it.”
“Where does this leave us?”
“I guess we’ll have to wait and see what happens.”
“I knew this would be tough, but I didn’t expect to feel like my heart was being ripped out of my chest.”
Like he had so many times before, Will framed her face with his hands, looking at her as if she were the most precious thing in his world. “I didn’t expect any of this.” He bent his head to kiss her. “What do you say we pretend for a little while longer that you aren’t leaving tomorrow?”