by Amelia Wilde
Chris crosses his arms over his chest. “Beer.”
“What?”
“You need a beer. This is the most pathetic I’ve ever seen you.”
“Pathetic?”
“You should see your face.” He waves his hand over his own face for the effect. “My heart is almost wrenched.”
I laugh out loud. “Get out of here. Go back to your fancy job.”
“I will,” says Chris. “After dinner. And beer.”
We go two towns over to a massive sports bar that’s loud and full of televisions all showing different games. I don’t give a shit about any of them. I blink at the menu while Chris orders flights of beer.
“So,” he says after the waitress has scampered away to bring us popcorn, “when are you going to sell?”
I must have misheard him. “What did you say?”
“When are you selling that shop?”
“What are you talking about? I’m not selling. It hasn’t been open a month.”
Chris laughs and leans forward to brace his elbows against the table. “You hate that place.”
I shake my head. “You’ve got it wrong.”
“You’re telling me that when you love something you go around making a face like—” He drops all emotions from his face and stares blankly, with dead eyes. “You look like that? It’s fucking creepy, Dash. You smile, but it never touches your eyes.”
I rub my hands over my face. Nothing on the menu looks appealing, but when the waitress comes back, I’ll order a burger to get Chris off my back. “I’m tired. That’s all. I’m single-handedly running the only coffee shop in town.”
“There was another one right across the street.”
“They closed.”
Chris’s eyes sparkle. “Permanently? You’re that good?”
“I don’t know.”
The waitress brings the beers, and I take a swig of the first one. It’s tasteless, but I’m not going to let on. “I know a good realtor,” Chris says casually. “I could have him move that store. You’ve put a lot into it, I can tell, but you’ll still make a profit.”
I stare at his stupid, grinning face across the table. “I just opened.” He nods, taking a dainty sip of his beer. “This was what I was supposed to do when I inherited the property. Jesus, have you forgotten about that already?”
“Listen.” Chris drums his fingertips on the surface of the table. “I loved Grandma and Grandpa as much as everybody else. But they’re gone, Dash. You did it. You opened the shop. Their dream came true.”
“Damn right it did.” There’s a low-key anger bubbling under the surface of my heart but it’s caught there, held back by a numbness that’s crept in little by little every single day I don’t see Ellie.
“What about your dream?”
“What the fuck are you talking about?”
Chris stabs a finger at me. “I came into your shop today and you’re a zombie, Dash. Don’t bullshit me. I saw you before you saw me. You don’t love that place. You don’t even like it. You came here to get over Serena and instead you’re moping about her, doing some job you don’t care about.”
“It’s not Serena,” I growl. I can feel it boiling over, the numbness falling away under a heated pissed-off feeling that only my younger brother can inspire. I hate how he’s always right about this shit.
“The shop, then? Sell it. You did what you came to do. Sell it and do something else. Come back to the city if you want. I can find you a place by next weekend.”
“Jesus,” I say. Gulp some more beer. Look back at him. “I need to finish this.”
“You don’t.”
“I’m not talking about the shop.”
“What, then?” Chris gives me a level gaze across the table. “Or is it a who?”
I drain the rest of the first beer and reach for the second. Is there a point in lying to him? He saw me before I saw him. He already knows. The rest is details. “It’s a who.”
The waitress is on her way back. Chris turns and sees her coming, then looks back at me. “I don’t need her name, but I’ll say this—do whatever it takes.”
“You don’t know—”
“Do whatever it takes. You look dead inside. If you want to run that coffee shop, which I don’t think you do, you can’t do it looking like a sad puppy all the time. Are you having a burger?”
45
Ellery
“Cocktails,” Honey says solemnly.
“No.”
“Cocktails,” she intones. “We’re having some, and I’m buying, so don’t make a big fuss.”
“Fine.”
I don’t feel like cocktails. I feel like crawling into bed and sleeping for as long as humanly possible and then going back to work on projects at Medium Roast. That’s not an option because there are no more projects unless you count opening the store again. I’m not sure I can face that.
Honey flags down the nearest waiter and orders two glasses of something pink and fruity, and the first sip gives me life. It’s like waking up after sleeping for a straight month and discovering you’re in a tropical resort with hot men on either side of you, fanning you with oversized leaves.
“You were right about the cocktails.”
She takes another long sip of hers. “Let’s get down to business. What are you going to do, Ellie?”
“I don’t—” I take another sip of the fruity goodness and stare at her across the table. “What do you mean? I’ve been working on the shop for days. I can finally—” I can finally do what? Let all those customers back in? Pretend to care about what they’re doing between trips to Medium Roast? Never, ever look across the street at The Coffee Spot again? I can’t glance over there for as long as I live.
“You’ve become obsessed,” Honey says simply, cocking her head to the side so that her perfectly messy bun flops another inch toward the earth. “You did not notice that I moved out, or that I went back to work.”
“That’s not fair. You work weird hours when you’re in a painting phase.”
Honey purses her lips. “It’s not a phase. Don’t try to deflect. It’s time to face facts about Dash.”
Hearing his name squeezes something in my chest.
“You’re in love with him.”
“I am not. I’m over him.”
“Ellie,” she says my name softly, and it brings me back to the truth. I look into the eyes of my best friend since elementary school. They’re full of compassion, and I hate that they have to be like that in this moment. “I see you every day trying to forget him. But when you stop thinking about it, you’re always looking toward that store.”
“I gave him the finger,” I say mournfully, the alcohol already taking effect. “I let him know we were done.”
“You’re not going to be done with this man until you talk to him. So text him. Call him. Do whatever you need to do.”
“I can’t—”
“I’m not done. It’s time to move on from Medium Roast. It’s been, what, three months? You need to be behind the camera.”
A choking panic rises in my throat, but it’s followed immediately by a strange ache. I want to feel the weight of it in my hands. I haven’t touched it since the day I went to the park. Shit, those photos...
“I’m not going back to the city,” I say, and then I take a deep breath to try and release the fear. “I don’t want assignments like that anymore.”
“Nobody’s saying you have to go back to the city,” Honey says with a laugh. “I like it better when you’re here. But there’s no reason you can’t start up a little business. You’re professionally trained, for God’s sake.”
“But I’ve never—”
“You can get the hang of it. I’ll start you a page on Facebook tomorrow. I promise you, you’ll have enough clients to quit Medium Roast by the end of July.”
“I can’t abandon my aunt and uncle.”
“This plan also gives you time to train your replacement. Replacements, if we’re being honest about it.
That shop in the summer is not a one-woman job. Even if you are amazing. Which you are.” Honey looks around for the waiter. “Where did he go? We need food.” Then she turns back and eyes my glass. “Drink up. After this, it’s back to work.”
I can’t find the cord to the camera.
That’s the first obstacle when I get home, the sweetness of the drink still on my tongue. I forgot all about these pictures, and I made a promise. What if they’re terrible?
I rifle through my stuff until I find the cord wedged in my computer bag. The computer itself is under my bed. It takes twenty minutes of charging before it’ll turn on. I make popcorn while the photos load, and then fire up my editing program.
Oh, God, are these terrible?
Once the images are on the screen, my nerves settle a little. I feel like I’m back in school, hunched behind a desk in the wee hours, finding the perfect shot for class.
The first few of this woman—I can’t remember her name—are a little awkward, the composition off. But then one comes up on the screen. Her little girl, framed almost perfectly, holding hands. It’s sharp as hell and lovely.
Maybe Honey does have a point.
I’ve always looked down on these kinds of photography businesses. Aunt Lisa and Uncle Fred didn’t pay for me to become a natural light lifestyle photographer in Lakewood, but the more I look through the images, the more I see that aren’t bad. That are actually pretty good. A few adjustments here, a few adjustments there. Make the set look cohesive.
By the time I look up from the computer again, the gallery finished, it’s three in the morning. But I don’t feel tired. I feel awake. I feel alive.
That, plus a decent helping of heartache. I’m buzzing with the accomplishment of editing a stack of nice photos for someone—done on the fly, no less—but there’s nobody here to tell. There’s nobody in my bed waiting for me. The silence is a lonely one.
Fine. I’ll admit it.
I only want that empty space to be filled by Dash.
More than one empty space, really.
With the new burst of energy, I sign up for an online gallery, add a password, and upload the photos. The gallery’s pretty professional for something free. Seeing all the images there makes me feel a funny kind of warmth. I haven’t felt that since...
Since I met Dash.
The woman’s email is on a crumpled piece of paper in my purse. The gallery has an email all ready to go.
Maybe, I think, lying under my covers, still awake. Maybe...
46
Dash
I haven’t slept. Or maybe I have, and I didn’t know it. That’s been known to happen to people, right?
Either way, I’m wired as hell as I drive from Norma’s to The Coffee Spot. Chris’s advice has been rattling around in my brain all night. On the one hand, how dare he? He’s the younger brother. On the other hand, shit, he’s right.
The regulars are waiting like they wait every morning, but there’s been a subtle shift. I go into The Coffee Spot from the side door and peek out onto the street before I turn on the lights.
They’ve divided themselves.
Some are waiting for Medium Roast.
Some are waiting for me.
It’s an edgy kind of standoff, and the vibe on the street is a tense one. Such divided loyalties. I’d laugh, but I know how serious this can get. You can lose a love over it.
You can...but I’m not going to.
Seeing those cars parked out there gives me an idea. It’s a tiny-ass idea at first, not worthy of speaking out loud, but then one of those shadows leans forward and spots me inside the store.
That’s it.
I’ve been looking at this all wrong. In my mind, it’s been me against them, though they’ve been slowly coming to my side ever since Medium Roast went on that strange hiatus. Medium Roast—no, since Ellie went on that strange hiatus. There’s no sign of her, but all the coffee lovers are still out there. They’re torn, but they need caffeine nonetheless.
And I need them.
I have the solution to everything.
All I have to do is convince them to help me.
I sprint back behind the counter and grind enough espresso to start the day, and then get the drip coffee started.
I’m opening early.
It takes some convincing to get Lou Brewer to sit down with me.
He’s been standing across the street since the beginning of all this. I recognize him from Ellie’s description and the fact that he makes return trips throughout the day for refills. He’s not as flashy as Morris and Walt, but he’s been out there, all the same.
I catch him on the other side of the street, waiting to see if today’s the day that Medium Roast will return.
“Sir!” I shout into the summer morning glow.
He ignores me at first.
“Sir!” I try again. “Coffee!” I raise the to-go cup in my hand. I don’t know how he takes it, but I’m hoping he’ll need cream and sugar. That way he’ll have to come inside, and I can get the information I need straight from the source.
He hesitates, his head swinging back to look at Medium Roast.
It’s closed up tight, the butcher paper still on the windows.
Then he looks at me.
Checks his watch.
Looks both ways.
Jogs across the street.
“What is this, some kind of bribe?” he asks as he comes to a stop, eyeing the to-go cup.
“Do you take it black?”
“No,” he says, making a face. “Two creams and a sugar.”
“Come on in,” I tell him. “There’s something I want to talk to you about.”
Lou nestles himself into one of the chairs in the side room, looking down into his freshly creamed and sugared coffee and shaking his head. “I shouldn’t be in here.”
I sit down across from him. Everybody who’s going to be in right now will want drip coffee—they always do—and they can shout if they need to. “I’m glad you are because I need your help.”
That perks him up. “With what?”
“Tell me about Lisa and Fred Collins.”
He narrows his eyes. “Why do you want to know about them? Isn’t it enough that you’re putting them out of business?”
“I don’t want to put them out of business.”
“They’re two of the nicest people I’ve ever met,” Lou says fiercely, not bothering to hear what I’m saying. “They’ve bailed out everybody in this town at one time or another. They bought me a used car when mine died in the middle of the winter forty years ago when my daughter was small. I had a new gig at the cement plant up the highway and couldn’t miss—” He waves a hand, dismissing this for the main point. “You won’t meet more generous people. They’re not here right now to defend themselves from you city sharks because—” He presses his lips together. “I can’t say exactly why, but you shouldn’t be doing this.”
“That’s exactly why I need your help,” I say, trying to appeal to his best nature. “I need to talk to them.”
Lou takes a sip of the coffee, and his eyebrows go up. “This is good.”
“Thank you.” I keep it cool. It’s satisfying to hear, but that’s not the point of this conversation.
“What do you have to say to them?”
I lean in, glancing around like a cartoon character to make sure he gets the point. “I have a business proposition.”
Lou’s eyes glow. “What is it?”
I sit back straight. “I can’t tell you. It wouldn’t be right to tell someone else before—” He nods. Of course. “All I wanted to know is if you had a phone number I could reach them at.”
He looks at me like looking is going to tell him everything he needs to know about what kind of person I am. Is he deciding I’m the monster I’ve been made out to be? Is he realizing that he’s already made a deal with the devil by buying my coffee and liking it?
I look back.
He keeps looking.
“You�
�re not some kind of scammer, are you?” he asks, his voice betraying a hint of uncertainty.
“I swear to you,” I say, raising my hand in the air like a boy scout. “I am not a scammer.” I do wish I could have asked Ellie for this phone number instead, but that’s not an option for the moment.
“Okay,” he says finally, and relief floods my veins. “You got a piece of paper?”
47
Ellery
Two weeks later
“Ellie! You’re not going to believe this!”
Honey ambushes me as soon as I step outside Medium Roast. It’s been a long day, one of the buzzy summer afternoons when everyone seems to want something frozen. I ran out of coffee at two o’clock and had to make people to-go cups filled with watered-down espresso. I never thought I’d say this, but it’s probably best that I had to run those damn blenders for hours in a row.
“What?” I shout back, a little too loud. “What am I not going to believe?”
Honey’s still wearing a studio smock covered in different shades of paint, and she looks slightly flushed like she ran here from her house three blocks away from the center of town. Without the air conditioning, it’s hot, so that probably explains it. “You got a client.”
I roll my eyes. “I had a hundred clients already today. I am so not making any more coffee. The store is clean, and—”
“A photography client.”
“What?”
Honey was true to her word, setting up a Facebook page for my new “business” the same night I edited those photos. When the woman emailed back to say how much she loved them, Honey struck up a conversation, using her as a testimonial.
“They messaged your page to set up the appointment. I’ve been watching, and I already confirmed. You’re closing early tomorrow.”
“Wait, how early? I can’t just—”
Honey’s eyes sparkle. “You can, and you will.” She throws her arms around me and squeals. “Three o’clock tomorrow,” she says, then turns and hustles back down the street. “I’m in the middle of a painting! You’re going to be great!”