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Dreaming of You and Me

Page 19

by Kristy Tate


  “Twilight blue,” Cole said.

  “What’s that?” Nora asked.

  “The sky at this time of day...my favorite time of day.”

  “Mine, too. Not quite night, but the day is done.”

  Cole stepped in front of her. “This will seem absolutely premature, but Nora, do you think there’s a chance that when my day time is done, you’ll be here for me? Will you be the one to sit by my hospital bed?”

  “Maybe you’ll be the one to sit by mine.”

  He laid his hand on her cheek. Her skin felt like silk. He placed his other hand on her waist and pulled her close. Laying his forehead on hers, he said, “I would be so very happy to do that for you.”

  “Even though I lied to you?”

  “Let’s promise that we’ll never lie to each other again,” Cole said.

  “I can do that.”

  “I talked to my mom. She doesn’t hate you.”

  Happiness bubbled up inside of Nora.

  “She said she could never hate you. She said she loves you as a daughter.”

  “She said that?” Nora pulled back so she could look him in the eye.

  “Well, not in so many words, but I know that’s how she feels.”

  “So, you lied?”

  “Darn, this is going to be hard,” he said. “I’m going to need a lot of practice.”

  “Here’s the truth,” Nora said. “You are my mother’s son, but I can’t love you as a brother.”

  He kissed her long and slow.

  She broke away. “Is it too soon to say the L word?”

  “Which one? Lollypops, lions, licorice, lace—”

  “I love all those things,” Nora said.

  “Me, too.” And he wasn’t just talking about lollypops, lions, licorice and lace.

  “WAKE UP, ALICE DEAR!” said her sister.; “‘Why, what a long sleep you’ve had!”’

  “Oh, I’ve had such a curious dream!” said Alice. “There was a White Rabbit and he was in a terrible hurry. And a Mad Hatter—that is to say, a man who was quite mad in a very large hat. And there was a cat, but this cat was nothing like dear Dina. It smiled until it completely disappeared behind his its grin! And a deck of cards, but not just any deck of cards; there was a queen and a king, and the queen wanted to chop off my head!”

  “It was a curious dream, dear, certainly: but now run in to your tea; it’s getting late.” Alice exited the stage, but as her sister gazed at the audience, she said, “If I close my eyes, I can half believe in Wonderland, although I know as I grow it will change to dull reality. The grass will rustle because of the wind, and not a rushing White Rabbit. Ponds will ripple to the waving of the reeds and not from the oars of a mouse in his boat—the rattling teacups will only be the tinkling sheep-bells, and the Queen’s shrill cries the voice of the shepherd boy—and the sneeze of the baby, the shriek of the Gryphon, and all the other queer noises, will change to the confused clamor of a busy farm-yard.

  “Someday, my dear little sister will, in the after-time, be herself a grown woman; but I hope she will keep, through all her riper years, the simple and loving heart of her childhood, and gather about her other little children, and make their eyes bright and eager with many a strange tale, perhaps even with the dream of Wonderland of long ago. I pray she will feel with all their simple sorrows, and find a pleasure in all their simple joys, remembering her own child-life, and the happy summer days.”

  The audience burst into applause. Nora, beaming with pride, clapped until her hands stung, while Chelsea climbed on the stage to take her bow with the girls.

  Cole, beside Nora, clapped the loudest.

  Her dad elbowed her. “I’m so proud of you, pet.”

  “Thanks,” she whispered. Her gaze slid past her dad to her mom. Katheryn clapped along with everyone else, a smile hovering on her lips. Nora skated at glance to Irena on the other side of Cole. She looked radiantly happy. Blake and Teddy stood on the other side of Irena, both smiling and hooting as Alice, the Cheshire Cat, and all the other Wonderland creatures took their places on stage.

  It takes all sorts of creatures to make a family, Nora thought. And even though hers was more unconventional than most, she loved them all.

  Cole shot her a quick loving glance.

  “You are the man of my dreams,” she said.

  He laughed and kissed her.

  “I mean that quite literally,” she told him.

  “I’ve lost my head for you, too,” he said.

  THE END

  Thanks for reading Dreaming of You and Me. If you liked this story, you’ll be sure to enjoy its companion book,

  The Tick-tock

  Between

  You and Me

  By Kristy Tate

  Copyright 2018

  Darby thought she had love all figured out until she heard the tick-tock of a clock.

  Darby Elliott thinks she’s in love with her long-distance boyfriend until he arrives on her doorstep. Now, she’s not so sure about him or how to get her car and money back. Which is embarrassing, because she’s a hot-shot accountant and money isn’t supposed to slip through her fingers... or into her boyfriend’s wallet.

  Chad George and his girlfriend, Jessica have been together since they were kids. The trouble is, Jessica thinks Chad should convert his grandfather’s dying horse ranch into a cosmetic surgery recovery spa, and Chad thinks his grandfather should maintain the ranch as he wishes.

  When Chad’s grandfather hires Darby, she discovers the ranch is full of untapped potential and hidden treasures including a clock that only seems to tick when she and Chad are together. Does the clock have a hidden message? Can Darby and Chad save the ranch before time runs out?

  USA Today bestselling author Kristy Tate returns with another clean and wholesome romance that will be sure to warm the hearts of Hallmark movie fans. If you like sweet romances with a touch of magical realism, be sure and pick up your copy of The Tick-tock Between You and Me today. You'll never look at your clock the same way again.

  London

  November, 1941

  Gustav, stooped with age, hunkered down on his stool in front of his workbench, oblivious to the screeching and screaming of death and destruction falling around him. The comforting sounds of a hundred tick-tocking clocks provided a blanket to muffle the bomb’s whistling and rocketing explosions.

  His gnarled fingers quivered as a blast shook his shop and decimated another, but that was more from age than fright. He had lived a long life—much longer than he, or anyone else, had expected. He glanced out the window at the nearby flickering flames. The sudden rise in temperature caused beads of sweats to form on his brow. He removed his glasses, patted his forehead, and resumed his work.

  A barking dog loped past his window. A woman clutching a basket followed. Footsteps padded down the steps that led to his shop and banging rattled his door.

  “Gustav!” A young man’s voice called. “Come, we must go!” The door reverberated as the pounding grew more and more incessant.

  Gustav, put down his tools and unfolded his long limbs, stiff from sitting in a prolonged position. He didn’t answer the door to save his own life, but out of concern for his neighbor, Wilbur—a young man with a wife and children who, thank God, had already left for the safe countryside. Wilbur had a reason to live, while Gustav did not. He didn’t feel the need to explain to Wilbur that running away was a young man’s game.

  “I will stay here with my clocks,” Gustav told him. “They know when my time will come. But you must go. Do not worry about me.”

  Wilbur tried to argue with him, but to prove his point, Gustav firmly closed his door and flipped the lock. Settling down at his workbench, he picked up the tiny gears of his current project, a clock that would be the wedding gift for his grandson. The rosewood case matched the color of his own Gretel’s hair, the ivory face the color of her porcelain skin. As he worked, he hummed the song played at his own wedding by his uncle’s fiddling band.

  Eac
h clock was a labor of love for Gustav, but this one was special, because, he suspected, it would be his last. This thought didn’t bring him fear, but rather warmed him with the knowledge that this clock would continue to tick-tock long after his own heart stopped beating. Clocks, he knew, are like love, they continue when everything else fails.

  MY GRANDFATHER'S CLOCK was too large for the shelf,

  So it stood ninety years on the floor;

  It was taller by half than the old man himself,

  Though it weighed not a pennyweight more.

  CHAPTER 1

  Modern Day

  Los Angeles International Airport

  Darby stood in the line snaking its way toward the crowded Starbuck’s counter. She shivered, but this had more to do with nerves and anticipation than the over-zealous air-conditioning or her lack of caffeine. She glanced at the board announcing the arriving flights and consulted her watch.

  Benjamin’s plane had been delayed. Again. She tried to wrap her head around this. After all, it was August, not the dead of winter when one might expect turbulent weather. Of course, he was flying from London—and when she had flown from London to L.A., her flight path had gone over the North Pole, where rotten weather was sure to happen. She needed to be patient, but she was tired of being patient. Other than on FaceTime or social media, she hadn’t seen Benjamin in three whole months.

  Not that she had known him for much longer.

  A sudden splash of burning hot wetness pulled Darby’s thoughts away from Benjamin. “Ow!” she pulled her blouse away from her chest and stared at the brown stain spreading like a fungus.

  “Oh! I’m sorry!” A man with large hands grabbed a handful of napkins from the dispenser on a nearby table and tried to pat her chest.

  She flinched away from him and noticed his face for the first time. Aside from his embarrassed and apologetic expression, he was incredibly gorgeous, like a young Paul Newman—blond, blue-eyed, rugged and weathered as if he spent a good deal of time outside. He was almost as good looking as Benjamin, but in a completely different way. But of course, Benjamin was a model and an actor who made a living with his beauty. This man was a silky-blouse-staining moron.

  “It’s okay,” Darby said, even though it obviously wasn’t because the coffee was burning hot, her blouse was probably going to be ruined, and, worst of all, she’d now have to welcome Benjamin to L.A. with a giant brown spot on her shirt. She moved away from his clumsiness and wads of napkins.

  “Oh no, I can tell you’re upset.” He shook the coffee off his own hands, making her realize he’d burned himself as well. “Let me pay for your dry -cleaning, at least.”

  “No, don’t be silly,” she said, edging away from him, which wasn’t easy to do because of the crowd. Most people were ignoring them, but a few watched with open curiosity, waiting to see her response. Darby gulped back her frustration, mostly because she didn’t want to make a scene, but also because the man was cute and remorseful—a little like a puppy who knows his paws are too big.

  “How about I buy you lunch?” he said.

  Darby glanced at the board, noting that Benjamin’s flight had been delayed another hour. “Okay,” she agreed, tempted by a free lunch...and the handsome man.

  His smile transformed him. He was actually much better looking than she’d originally thought. Maybe even a close match to Benjamin. Not that looks mattered. She didn’t love Benjamin for his (stunning) appearance. Looks had nothing to do with their almost instant and incurable attraction.

  “I’m waiting for my boyfriend’s delayed flight,” Darby told the blouse-destroying stranger, just so he would know he didn’t stand a chance with her because her heart was pledged elsewhere to another, much less, clumsy man. This was just a free lunch.

  He looked at his watch, an intricate timepiece on a leather band. He had strong, thick wrists covered with blond nearly transparent blond hair. Darby shivered again. She hated when men had dark gorilla fuzz, and she tried to recall Benjamin’s arms, but couldn’t. This bothered her.

  “My sister’s flight is also late,” the man said as he guided her into a nearby restaurant, separated from the airport’s concourse by a fountain running down a glass wall and spilling into a black marble ledge. The water garbled happily, it’s sound masking the airport’s bustle. The scent of barbequing steak wafted through the air.

  “Weird, right? I mean, it’s August and sunny and warm.” Darby glanced around at the linen-clad tables and glass and chrome decor. It was hard to believe that just a watery partition separated the restaurant from the noise and chaos of the rest of the airport.

  “Not all delays are weather-related. I’m Chad George, by the way,” he said, sticking out his hand.

  “Darby Elliot,” she replied, liking his strong grip.

  A waitress name Kayla led them to a table overlooking the tarmac. They passed a window to the open kitchen where men and women in white coats and tall ballooned hats grilled a variety of meat over open flames. The smell made Darby’s mouth water. She hadn’t realized how hungry she was.

  “What do you do, Darby Elliot, when you’re not waiting for boyfriends in the airport?” Chad asked once they were seated.

  “I’m an accountant,” she said, unfolding the linen napkin and placing it on her lap.

  He leaned back. “Really?”

  “Why do you look so surprised?” Darby fussed with her napkin, slightly miffed because his response was typical. Most people had the same reaction when she said she was an accountant, and it bothered her that no one seemed to take her seriously. Being the youngest in a family of seven kids didn’t help. But she was used to her family’s dismissal and had grown to expect it. She didn’t like it from strangers.

  “You just don’t look like an accountant.”

  Darby sat a little straighter, trying to add inches to her five-foot-three frame. “And what do you think accountants should look like?”

  “Well, for one thing, they don’t wear strappy red sandals and New Occult jeans.”

  “Maybe not to work.”

  “Although they might wear silk blouses. Just not with big brown stains on them.”

  Darby didn’t mean to scowl, but she couldn’t help it. She picked up a menu to hide her expression. “I’m actually freaky good with numbers.”

  He lifted a skeptical eyebrow. “Really?”

  She lowered the menu. “Yeah. Go ahead, test me.”

  “Okay, what’s three-thousand and forty-nine divided by sixty-three?”

  “Forty-eight, about.”

  He typed the math problem onto the calculator app on his phone. “You’re right. Amazing.”

  She shrugged and went back to studying the menu. After a moment, she settled on a shrimp salad. “What do you do?”

  “I’m a teacher at a small private school.”

  This surprised and concerned her because teacher’s salaries usually didn’t stretch to cover fancy airport restaurants. “That’s noble,” she said. “It must be really rewarding.” Just not financially. She quickly changed her mind about the shrimp salad and selected a cup of soup.

  “Sometimes,” he said with a smirk.

  Kayla the waitress came to take their orders, and Chad surprised Darby by asking for the steak. Her gaze wandered to the chefs in the kitchen and she wondered if the steak would taste as good as it smelled.

  “Are you sure you just want soup?” he asked.

  She nodded, even though she wasn’t quite so sure anymore. After all, the sun glinting off the airplanes told her that it had to be warm outside away from the air conditioning. The thermometer had been pushing toward eighty when she’d been in her car and that was before it was even noon.

  “I love tomato soup,” she said. “I practically lived on it when I was in London.” Where it was cold and dreary most of the year.

  “You lived in London?”

  She nodded. “That’s where I met Benjamin—my boyfriend, the one I’m waiting for.” Just saying Benjamin and boy
friend in the same sentence sent a happy tingle down her spine. She recalled his face to remind herself of how much she loved him and how perfect he was for her and how romantic their first meeting had been—much more romantic than some doofus spilling his coffee on her and ruining her favorite blouse. “You know, if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to see if I can salvage my shirt.”

  “Sure,” he said, looking disappointed, but not surprised.

  She found the restroom near the bar and once inside, she peeled off her shirt, doused with water and squeezed some hand soap onto it. While she scrubbed, her thoughts bounced between Chad and Benjamin. She found herself comparing them, and even though this made her uncomfortable, she couldn’t stop herself. Chad, a teacher, according to her parents, had the noblest of vocations. Benjamin, an actor and model, again, according to her parents, probably had the least admirable vocation. It also bothered her that she continually measured things and people with her parents’ yardstick, but that was normal, wasn’t it? She hadn’t intentionally patterned herself after her parents, but even at twenty-nine, she still sought their approval.

  Except when it came to Benjamin. She loved him in spite of her family’s warnings.

  After a final rinse and a couple of blasts from the hand-dryer, Darby put her shirt back on. The damp fabric clung to her skin and bra and she wondered if she’d just made the situation worse. She left the restroom with her feelings toward Chad almost as chilly as the wet blouse. It didn’t help that he smirked when he took one look at her blouse.

  She sat across from him and launched into her How-Darby-and-Benjamin-Met story. “Benjamin literally fell into my life!”

  Chad leaned back as Kayla returned with their food, placed a thick slice of steak with a side of a baked potato oozing with butter and a serving of steamed vegetables in front of Chad and a cup of steaming hot tomato and basil soup in front of Darby.

 

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