by Неизвестный
“You can learn the basics, though.”
Her hands flew up to her face, and within seconds she was wracked with sobs. “It’s no use,” she cried. “I’m terrible at math. I have to use a calculator for everything, even for splitting a stupid lunch bill. They should take away my license.”
I perused the contents of the final folder, waiting for her to pull herself together. A minute later, she was still sniffling and rambling about her incompetence, eyes hidden behind a chipped manicure. At first I’d been mortified, embarrassed on her behalf, but with each passing minute, I softened. Her purse was open enough to reveal the stuffed animal that likely belonged to one of her young children. She was trying to raise a family while building a career, and she had found her breaking point, in my new living room.
“Samantha,” I said gently.
She continued to berate herself, sobbing, “Last week I put a contract into the system with a comma instead of a decimal point, and I nearly blew the whole deal.”
I handed her a tissue. “Mistakes happen.”
She blew her nose and dabbed her eyes dry. “I’m the mistake. This whole career is a mistake.”
“How much sleep did you have last night?”
She looked as if she might start sobbing again.
“Sleep helps,” I said. “But the real issue is Imposter Syndrome. It’s surprisingly common, from academia to the business world and pretty much everywhere in between. It’s that fear you got where you are by the skin of your teeth, and everyone’s going to find out you’re a phony.”
She swallowed hard. “That’s me.”
I shook my head. “That’s most of us. And the only cure is to know your stuff, inside and out.”
“But I don’t know anything,” she said, the water welling in her eyes and ready to go again.
“You weren’t born knowing,” I said. “So you have to learn. Educate yourself, and that feeling will go away.” I took the papers from the folder and spread them across the coffee table between us. “For example, this place has a low asking price because it has no intangible assets, no competitive advantage. They don’t even have a single secret recipe because their baked goods come from a supplier. They’re in a great location, sure, but I see here the lease is up for renewal next year, and the demolition clause is not in their favor.”
I flipped through the papers, picking out numbers and doing quick calculations on the pages, even though I could have done them in my head.
She nodded, almost smiling as it sank in. “So, you’re saying secret recipes would be a valuable asset, along with, um, customer goodwill?”
“That’s right,” I said, flipping over a sheet to write a list on the back. “Here are some good books you might want to check out.”
When I finished and closed the folder, Samantha was leaning back in her chair, a stunned but pleased look on her face.
“Thank you,” she said. “You’re not so scary after all.”
“Someone told you I was scary?”
Her eyes widened, and she mumbled something about being on her way.
“Your last name is Sweet,” I said. “You’re married to Michael Sweet?”
She nodded begrudgingly.
“High school was a long time ago,” I said. “I’ve changed a lot since then, and I don’t throw food on people anymore. Not even if they’re bullying little kids in the cafeteria.”
She said, “That was all that happened?”
“Yes. Michael more than deserved a tray full of mashed potatoes and gravy in his lap.”
Her posture stiffened. “He says you dumped food on him several times.”
“Your husband was a slow learner.”
She tipped her head to the side. “True enough.”
“How’s he treating you these days?” I chuckled as I sipped my coffee. “Do you need me to come over and talk to ol’ Mikey about anything?”
She met my smile with one of her own, a genuine grin. “Things are great, thanks. He’s a wonderful husband and a great father to our kids. I shouldn’t have let your reputation get to me, since you’ve always been as nice as pie in our dealings.”
I raised my eyebrows. “My reputation?”
She jerked into motion, tapping the electronic device on her wrist to check either the time or her messages or both. “I’ll be in touch again soon,” she said. “I’ll read those books, and I’ll get better. Is there anything specific I should keep an eye out for?”
I handed her the folders. “Let’s look wider,” I said. “Let’s not limit ourselves when there are plenty of other towns nearby that are equally good, or better.”
“Better?” Her voice rose up sharply. “Better than Misty Falls?”
I walked her over to the door and passed her the wool winter jacket she’d worn in. It smelled of sweet perfume and was the same green as her eyes.
“Let’s broaden our search,” I said.
We exchanged a few more details about pricing and other criteria, and she left.
I finished my coffee and jotted down some errands for the day. My stomach felt unsettled, even after eating a healthy breakfast muffin.
When I’d suggested looking wider for investments, Samantha had been crestfallen, as though I’d written off the entire town. She wasn’t wrong. The idea that I had a reputation in Misty Falls as anything other than a savvy young businesswoman rankled me.
Why would I keep trying so hard to fit into a place that wouldn’t love me back?
Chapter 2
Broad Avenue runs through the center of picturesque Misty Falls. Like the main streets of other charming small towns, Broad Avenue is lined with colorful storefronts topped by hand-lettered signs and striped awnings. Above the shops, Oregon’s snow-capped mountains rise majestically to frame the sky. If you’re standing in the center of town when snow is falling, and you squint your eyes just right, you’ll feel like a tiny figurine inside a snow globe.
Snow had started falling by the time I steered my car onto Broad Avenue. I turned off the radio to better enjoy the view and the tucked-in-bed feeling of fresh snowfall.
My employee had already opened my store that morning, so I was in no rush to get to Glorious Gifts. I parked behind the building and took a leisurely stroll up Broad Avenue to get a takeout coffee. Things did not go well at the cafe because the little bundle of evil known as Chad had been working. Then I burned my tongue on the latte, but I was determined to look on the bright side for the rest of day.
With a smile on my face, I walked into my store and greeted my employee, Brianna, with her beverage of choice: a mocha.
Brianna squealed and declared, “Stormy Day, you’re the world’s greatest boss! I award you this prize.” She took from the shelf a ceramic mug decorated with the phrase World’s Greatest Boss and handed it to me.
“You shouldn’t have!” I clutched the mug to my chest for a moment before returning it to the shelf. “I’ll keep it right here, with my other ones.”
A trio of customers came in. Brianna went over to see if they needed help. I checked that everything up front was in order, and then went back into the small office to receive the recent orders into the computer’s system. The shop’s inventory wasn’t entirely computerized yet, but I was working my way through the huge undertaking. I anticipated the job being lighter after the busy Christmas season, when much of the existing stock had been sold through.
I’d lost myself in a soothing stream of numbers when a sound startled me. I sat up straight and listened while a loud woman in the store made unreasonable demands.
Her shrill tone carried all the way back to the office with perfect clarity. “When was the last time you dusted this top shelf?” she demanded.
I rubbed my temples and listened as Brianna said, “I’m sorry, ma’am. I’m too short to see the upper level, so I didn’t realize it needed dusting. I’ll get to it right away.”
“Being short is no excuse,” the woman said. “Get yourself a ladder. Chop chop.”
I
heard the ladder squeak as Brianna put it into action. Slowly, I rotated my swivel chair to face the door of the office. So much for my attempt at an enjoyable day. There wasn’t enough room under the desk for me to hide, and soon she’d be coming for me.
The woman in the shop wasn’t just any local know-it-all. She was my father’s girlfriend, Pam Bochenek. The two had met earlier in the year, at a fundraiser where she was handling the decorating. The relationship hadn’t been serious until an injury had him immobilized at home, and Pam moved in “temporarily” to help him with errands. We both thought she’d move back out once I returned to town, but it hadn’t happened yet.
I’d accepted that maybe this was a sign from the universe, and it was finally time for Finnegan Day to settle down with a woman. I would have preferred that woman not be Pam Bochenek, with her wild mood swings and her strange ideas about what types of foods were best pickled, but there was no point in denial. Pam was part of our lives, and I could fight and make things worse, or try to befriend her.
Or I could sneak out the fire exit.
I tiptoed to the office door to check the line of sight to the back door.
“Stormy!” Pam yelled.
Busted. I shook my fist in the air.
She called out, “I know you’re here, so stop screwing around. I saw your car parked in the back. Don’t you think that car is awfully flashy for Misty Falls? People will talk about what a big city hotshot you think you are.”
“And a good morning to you, too,” I said with a pasted-on smile as I emerged from the office.
Pam threw her spindly arms in the air in mock surprise. “She’s come out of her cave!”
“You say that like I’m some hibernating bear.”
Pam squinted at my face. “Have you been sleeping? You have bags under your eyes. That new haircut really draws my attention to them.”
I rubbed the back of my head, my fingers moving easily through my new pixie-cut hairstyle. After years of fighting my naturally curly hair and spending vast sums on straighteners, I’d finally found the haircut that suited me. Unfortunately, it didn’t meet Pam’s approval. Never mind that her own light brown hair was barely inches longer than mine.
“I’m fine,” I said. “How about you? With my father off to Portland, are you bored? Should we wander over to the paint-your-own ceramics place again?”
“I’m busy.” She picked up a plastic pet carrier and set it on the counter with an angry clunk. “I have to get the cat fixed before she goes into heat.”
I peered into the cat carrier, expecting to see her new Russian Blue cat, but the container was empty.
“I’m afraid it’s too late,” I said to Pam. “Your cat has slipped into invisibility mode. The vet won’t be able to fix her if they can’t find her.”
Pam gave me a blank stare. “That sounds like something your father would say. You people are so weird.”
“I’m weird? You’re the one with an invisible cat.”
“Obviously we’ll have to catch the cat first. I need your help. The stupid thing won’t listen to me. I’ve been yelling for her to come home for the last hour.”
I suppressed a smirk. “I can’t imagine why that didn’t work.”
Pam shoved the pet carrier along the counter toward me. “Your father should have taken care of everything before he took off on his trip. He’s got a lot of loose threads he needs to tie up before he goes gallivanting around.”
I bit my tongue. My father hadn’t “taken off” on anyone. He’d left town the day before to get a hip operation done in Portland. He would be laid up in bed for the next few days, hating every minute of it, but to hear Pam talk, you’d think he was off gambling and watching showgirls.
Pam stepped away from the counter and pulled on her winter gloves. “We’d better get moving. The cat is due at the vet right now.”
Again, I bit my tongue. Most people in want of a favor have the decency to ask nicely. Pam, however, had helped me get a discount on my new furniture a month earlier, and ever since, she’d been acting as though one phone call had been an immense sacrifice, and I owed her countless favors.
I patted the plastic carrier. “Don’t worry about the cat,” I said. “I’ll drive over to the house and take care of this. Then we’ll be even for you getting me the discount on the furniture. It’s the least I can do to repay you.”
Her nostrils flared as she eyed me with suspicion. A moment passed. I held my ground in silence.
The ladder squeaked as my employee dusted the upper shelves and pretended she wasn’t listening.
Finally, Pam emitted a sharp acquiescence. “Fine.” We had a deal. She walked toward the exit, calling back over her shoulder, “I just wish other people would take their promises and obligations seriously.”
I followed her outside, onto the snowy sidewalk.
“Trust me with this,” I said. “I can get one little cat to a veterinary appointment.”
She held up one gloved hand and cut me off before I could bring up my credentials. “Just get the cat. Don’t go snooping around.”
“Snooping around?”
She cleared her throat, as though she was about to say something.
I waited.
The snow that had begun falling an hour earlier was getting denser. The snowflakes were thick, delicately weighty on my eyelashes. White crystals settled on the top of Pam’s head, like a melting coronet. She was pretty, which was probably what initially drew my father’s eye. In the soft diffuse light of the snowy day, with the feathery decorative collar of her jacket becoming frosted, she reminded me of a regal character in a fairy tale.
I brushed away the snowflakes on my eyelashes. “Pam, when it’s snowing like this, do you ever feel like you’re a tiny figure inside a snow globe?”
“No.” Without further comment, Pam turned around and walked up the street, muttering about errands and unfinished business.
I returned to the store for the pet carrier and my jacket, rolled my eyes at Brianna, and left to fulfill my part of the bargain. I had to chauffeur a cat to the vet. How much trouble could that be?
Chapter 3
There’s no place like home, and there’s no street quite like the one you grew up on. For me, it was Warbler Street, named after the small, vocal birds. One Christmas, my sister and I were given a beautifully illustrated encyclopedia of local birds. I loved looking at all the warblers and picking which one I felt the street was named for. My favorite was Dendroica petechia, the Yellow Warbler, a bright harbinger of spring.
Spring and summer could never come fast enough when I was a kid. I steered the car past the corner where my sister and I had once sold lemonade by the glass on hot, sultry, endless days. Warbler Street was our jungle gym. We’d play until dusk, hiding and seeking, marking the sidewalks with chalk, refusing to come inside until my father threatened to put out an APB and have us arrested.
Now, the trees and houses seemed to have shrunk. With a blanket of snow over everything, my sunny memories seemed even more precious.
I parked in front of my father’s house. The interior lights were off. Knowing he wasn’t there, inside the home, gave me an uneasy feeling, like a preview of some future I didn’t want to consider.
I pulled my phone from my purse and called him. We’d spoken before my meeting with the real estate agent, so while the phone rang and rang, I worried he’d turned off his phone in preparation for surgery.
He finally answered with a cheerful greeting, his voice colored by his mild Irish brogue. “Talk fast. They’re coming to wheel me away.”
A lump in my throat road-blocked my words. Hospital noises echoed in the background. Someone asked if he was warm enough or needed a blanket. The mental image of my brave, strong father in a blue-green smock, being wheeled into an operating room, took me by surprise. Painful emotions surged through my chest.
“You still there?” he asked. “Stormy, you should have seen the look on the old doc’s face when I gave him his gift, a brand n
ew measuring tape. I told him I wanted both legs the same length, or else every anniversary of the surgery, I’ll come to his house and kick him with whichever leg’s longest.”
“Oh, Dad.” I shook my head and let a laugh ease my pain.
“Don’t you worry about a thing. This doc has a good sense of humor, and he’s got an excellent success rate. I’ll be fine. What’s going on with you?”
“I’m parked in front of your place.”
“The house is still there? Pam hasn’t burned it down?”
I quickly told him about that morning’s visit and my current mission. “Remind me, Dad, what’s the cat’s name?”
He chuckled. “There’s no point in naming something that doesn’t come when you call it.” He told me to hang on while he spoke to someone there with him. “Showtime,” he said when he returned to the line. “Thanks for taking care of Pam for me. I owe you one.”
“Good luck.” I would have told him I loved him, but he was already gone.
I put the phone in my purse. My chest ached if I held still, so I seamlessly moved on to my next task, grabbing the pet carrier and supplies. Everything would go well, I told myself. He was strong and healthy, plus the orthopedic surgeon had a brand-new measuring tape.
The cat was sitting on my father’s porch, looking pretty, all long legs, sleek gray fur, and elegant jade eyes.
I opened the pouch of cat treats as I approached. The goodies had a strong salmon aroma. I blew over the pouch as I shook it, sending the smell to the cat’s sensitive nose. The gray tail swished, but the cat stayed in place.
“What’s the matter? Cold feet? The snow must be cold on your little toes.”
The cat yawned, bored with my simplistic patter.
“Cut me some slack,” I said. “At least I’m not yelling at you, like Pam would.”
The cat’s eyes narrowed at the mention of Pam.
“Not a fan? You and me both,” I said under my breath.
I glanced around, feeling embarrassed about talking to a cat. I saw nobody, but the back of my neck tickled as if I was being watched. I opened the door of the pet carrier, sprinkled a few snacks inside, and got closer to the porch.