Maysen Jar Box Set

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Maysen Jar Box Set Page 35

by Devney Perry


  When Finn and I had broken up, it had destroyed me.

  “I’m not doing this again.”

  No. No, I wasn’t. With a sure nod, I shut off the water and stepped out of the shower. I dried my body with angry strokes then secured the towel around my chest. I twisted up my hair and marched out of the bathroom.

  “Finn, get up.” I shook his shoulder, then whipped the comforter off his back.

  “Huh?” He sat up, dazed, blinking. Then he dropped his head back into the pillow. “Five more minutes.”

  “Finn,” I snapped, pulling the comforter down even farther before poking his side. “Get up and get out. You need to leave before the kids wake up.”

  I was going to forget about last night the second the door closed behind him. The kids would never be the wiser.

  They’d had a hard time with the divorce, Kali especially. It had taken her years to understand that her parents lived separate lives and were never getting back together. She didn’t need to see her father naked in her mother’s bed.

  “Finn.” I poked him again. God, why was he such a deep sleeper? “Wake up.”

  “Molly, five more minutes.” He lifted his sleepy eyes and blinked. Then they widened. “Fuck.”

  He leapt out of bed, hissing a string of curses as he scanned the floor for his clothes. When he found his jeans, he dove for them so fast he’d have rug burns on his knees.

  I rolled my eyes. I’d had a similar reaction, but he’d been asleep. He could have at least tried to hide his mortification from me.

  “What happened?” he asked as he zipped up his fly.

  I glared at his flat stomach. Those abs were to blame for this mess. They’d always been my weakness. Last night, I’d touched one of the six and, well . . . here we were. Divorced men in their late thirties weren’t supposed to have that V along their hipbones. How was that fair?

  Finn’s hair was a mess thanks to my fingers. The matching scruff on his jaw was no less sexy than his half-naked body. He searched the floor for his shirt, going to the bed and throwing up the covers. He ducked down to see where it had gone.

  “Where’s my shirt?” He found it under the bed before I could help him search, then he put it on faster than a human being had ever donned a piece of cotton.

  I ignored the sting of that too, along with the fact that he wouldn’t look me in the face.

  He picked up his watch from the floor and took a step for the door, but then stopped to look back. “Molly—”

  “You need to go.”

  He still wouldn’t look at me. “We should—”

  “Go, Finn. I don’t want the kids to see you here.”

  He sighed, then nodded and walked to the door. His bare feet made no noise as he snuck out of the house. The sun was beginning to shine through my bedroom window.

  The front door opened and clicked shut. Thankfully, my bedroom was on the main floor and the kids were upstairs. Then I waited, listening for his truck to start up and rumble down the road. When it was silent again, I sank down on the edge of my bed.

  He was gone. We weren’t going to talk about last night. We weren’t going to discuss the monumental mistake of sex with an ex-spouse. We were going to pretend it had never happened.

  Once my disheveled bed was put to rights, I’d take a Magic Eraser to last night’s memory and scrub with fury. Those damn things worked on everything. Surely one would work on my brain.

  But instead of ripping the sheets from the mattress, I sat frozen, staring at the pillows.

  I still hadn’t gotten rid of Finn’s pillow. He’d ordered it online because it was supposed to be good for stomach sleepers. I thought it was too firm and too thin, but I hadn’t been able to toss it out. I washed its case weekly. I fluffed it each morning.

  It had been there for him to sleep on last night.

  When Finn had moved out, he’d taken my side-sleeper pillow by mistake. It had been one of the mix-ups in the his and hers shuffle. Instead of mentioning it and making a swap, I’d stayed quiet. I’d kept his pillow and bought a new one for myself.

  Stupid pillow. I snagged it and threw it on the floor. Stupid Molly.

  How could I have brought that man back into this room? Prior to last night, his memory had finally faded, but now I’d have to start the forgetting process all over again. I’d have to retrain myself that sleeping alone was better than sleeping with company because you got more leg room. I’d have to un-remember how his hands felt on my skin and the weight of his hips between my thighs. Or how it felt to tangle my legs with his before drifting off to sleep, draped over his back.

  Delete. Delete. Delete. What I wouldn’t give for a mental backspace button.

  It was yet another mistake to survive.

  Starting with making the bed.

  I picked up Finn’s pillow and straightened the twisted sheets. Laundry would have to wait until the weekend, meaning I’d have to live with his manly scent for one more night. Maybe I’d sleep on the couch until I could do the wash. I would have to vacuum too. A few blades of grass had hitchhiked into my room on his jeans.

  This weekend, I’d clean it all away.

  But first, I had to get through my Friday.

  I finished the bed and hurried through my morning routine, getting dressed in a pair of jeans and burgundy tennis shoes. Then I chose a fitted T-shirt, one of many from my closet. Today’s was white. The restaurant’s emblem was printed on the chest pocket.

  I took the time to put on a full face of makeup. I tamed my curls, brushing them out before spraying a leave-in conditioner that would keep the frizz at bay. With three hair ties on my wrist, I went upstairs to get the kids ready for school.

  The familiarity of the morning routine eased most of my nerves and irritation. There wasn’t much headspace to fret about Finn when I was shouting at Max to brush his teeth and at Kali to remember her library book as I made them breakfast. We all ate. We all put our dishes away. And we all marched outside to the Jeep.

  “Did we forget anything?” I asked as they buckled into their seats. I scanned to make sure they had their backpacks and I had my purse.

  Kali smiled. “Nope. And I have my library book.”

  “I didn’t brush my teeth,” Max admitted.

  I sighed. “Then do it twice tonight.”

  “Okay.” He nodded. “It was fun having Dad stay last night.”

  My heart jumped into my throat. There was no way he could have known that Finn had stayed all night. Was there? I searched his cute face for any sign that he was talking about more than pizza and the movie, but as the seconds wore on, he just stared at me like I’d gone crazy.

  Kali spoke up first. “Uh, Mom. We’re going to be late.”

  “Right.” I spun around to the wheel, turning on the car and reversing into the street. “I want to grab the mail, then we’re outta here.”

  “Can I get it?” Max asked.

  “Sure.” I pulled forward, close enough to the curb that Max could roll down his window.

  He had to unbuckle to reach out and open up the mailbox’s hatch. He leaned out and came back with a stack of envelopes and a catalog.

  “Thanks.” I took it from him and tossed it all onto the passenger seat as he got resituated.

  The drive to school didn’t take long with the kids chatting the entire way. We waited in the drop-off line, and when it was our turn, I waved as the kids hopped out and ran toward school. Kali shot me one last smile as she pointed out the Jeep to her circle of friends.

  I inched forward. The line to turn out of the parking lot was always slow.

  “And now, we wait.” I frowned at the line of cars ahead and a green sedan with its left blinker on.

  Next year, Kali would be going to middle school. I wasn’t sure how early we’d have to leave the house to get Max here, wait in this atrocious line, then deliver Kali to her school seven blocks away.

  But we’d make it work. That was the life of a single mom. We made the impossible happen daily.
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  The line was especially slow today, so I reached over to the stack of mail and brought it to my lap, thumbing through it as I crept forward.

  It was mostly junk mail. Everything would be tossed into the trash except for one bill from the power company.

  And a letter.

  I turned the white envelope over in my hand. There was no return address. There wasn’t a stamp. The handwriting on the front wasn’t familiar. I slid my finger into the corner to tear open the top but stopped when a horn beeped behind me.

  “Sorry,” I said to the car behind me and drove ahead, getting out of the school’s loop. Then I set off across town toward the restaurant.

  As I drove, I continued to glance at the letter in my lap. I so badly wanted to open it, but I also wanted to arrive at work alive, so I waited, resisting the urge to dive in at a stoplight. Instead, I took one of the hair ties from my wrist.

  My hair was so full and thick, I quickly stretched out the elastic ribbon I preferred to wear, which meant I had to keep a backup or two handy. I gathered up my curls and was in the middle of tying them into a bun when the neon-green band snapped.

  No. My stomach dropped.

  My grandma had died of a heart attack the day a hair tie had broken. My car, the one before Beluga, had been sideswiped in the grocery store parking lot after a hair tie had broken. And Finn and I had signed our divorce papers the day a hair tie had broken.

  There were other, more minor examples, but these broken hair ties had become an omen. On the days they didn’t just stretch but actually broke, bad found me. God, I hoped today was just a flat tire or a shitty time at work.

  My eyes dropped to the letter. Was it the bad thing headed my way?

  The sinking feeling continued all the way to work, and the second I had the Jeep parked, I tore into the envelope.

  The envelope’s handwriting was unfamiliar. But the script of the actual letter was unmistakable. Finn was the only one who drew the first peak of the M in Molly that way.

  Even with the college-ruled paper firmly in my grip, I had to read the letter twice before my brain registered it as real. The letter was short, only taking up about half a page.

  Finn had written this fifteen years ago. He’d written me a letter after our first date and never sent it.

  I just might have to marry you.

  Those words jumped out even as I read them for a third and fourth time.

  He’d married me, all right. He’d divorced me too.

  How long had it been since I’d seen the name Molly Todd? How long had he kept this letter to himself? And why would he give it to me now?

  My fingers dove into my hair. What was happening?

  In a flash, my phone was in my hand and I’d pulled Finn’s name up on the screen. But I couldn’t bring myself to call.

  I wanted answers. But I wasn’t ready to talk to Finn yet. Not after last night.

  Instead, I tucked the letter into my purse and got out of the Jeep, heading into the restaurant.

  The rear entrance to the restaurant was for employees only and it led right past the office and into the kitchen. I set my purse inside the office and came into the kitchen. Poppy was at the large stainless steel table in the center.

  “Morning.” She smiled, her hands covered in flour as she rolled out a large oval of pie crust.

  “Morning.”

  “So? Tell me about last night.”

  My jaw dropped. “What? How did you know?”

  Damn it, Finn. Couldn’t he have kept last night to himself? Or at least have given me a warning that he was going to tell his sister we had sex?

  Poppy gave me the side-eye. “Because you told me.”

  “I did?” Maybe I was still drunk from last night. “When?”

  “Yesterday.” She nodded. “We were sitting in the restaurant. You had your computer. We were drinking coffee while you showed me pictures of the Jeep before you went to the dealership.”

  “Oh, the Jeep.” I smacked a palm into my forehead. “Sorry. Not enough coffee this morning. Buying the Jeep went great. The kids love it.”

  “Good.” She went back to her dough. “What did you think I was talking about?”

  “Nothing,” I said too quickly. “Nothing at all.”

  “You’re acting weird this morning.”

  “I’m not acting weird. I’m just here at work. Nothing weird about that. It’s the un-weird.”

  Poppy blinked and her hands stilled. “The un-weird?”

  “I’m having an off morning. Let’s just leave it at that.”

  “Okay. If you want to talk, I’m here.”

  “I’m fine. Really. But thank you.” I smiled. “So how has the morning been going?”

  “Good. The coffee rush was busy, but it’s pretty much died down so I came back to start on some potpies for lunch. Mom has the front covered if you want to keep me company. There’s fresh coffee.”

  “Bless you.” I hurried over to the pot and filled up one of the ceramic mugs we kept in the kitchen. They were enormous and reserved for staff. After it was full, I leaned against the side of the table, taking slow sips until I started to feel more human.

  My wine hangover had been temporarily chased away during the kick Finn out of my bed fiasco. But now that the adrenaline was gone, my headache came roaring to life. Living with it would be my penance.

  “Want some help?” I asked as she started cutting circles in the dough.

  “No, drink your coffee and hang out with me.” She used the back of her wrist to push a lock of red hair off her cheek. The florescent lights of the kitchen always seemed to make her blue eyes even brighter.

  Our restaurant T-shirts matched today, but she’d covered hers up with an apron that her kids had made her last Christmas. Tiny green and red handprints had been pressed into the cream canvas with MacKenna and Brady written beneath.

  She smiled more when she wore that apron. Though, Poppy Goodman smiled almost constantly these days. She deserved every ounce of joy she’d found with Cole and their kids.

  Poppy had endured enough heartbreak.

  “I received a confirmation email from the newspaper yesterday that they’re going to do the feature for the anniversary celebration,” I told her.

  “Perfect. And that was the last item on your checklist, so we should be all set.”

  The Maysen Jar was turning six next month and we’d been planning our annual anniversary celebration for months.

  It was hard to believe six years had passed since Poppy had turned this building into one of Bozeman’s most popular cafés. Once an old mechanic’s garage, this place was now widely known for delicious food served only in mason jars.

  The Maysen Jar was named after her late husband, Jamie Maysen, who’d been murdered in a liquor store robbery eleven years ago. The anniversary of his death had been a couple weeks ago.

  When he’d died, it had shattered us all.

  I’d never known such darkness could take over a human being until I saw what Jamie’s death did to Poppy. But she’d put her broken pieces back together by finishing Jamie’s birthday list. To honor his memory, she’d done the things he’d wanted to do most. Along the way, she’d met Cole and he’d filled the cracks in her heart.

  Poppy’s last name wasn’t Maysen anymore, but because of the sign on the front of this building, Jamie’s name lived on. And every year, we celebrated the place where so much healing had begun.

  For me, The Maysen Jar had been my life raft.

  Finn and I divorced just months before the restaurant opened. In the weeks before we signed our papers, Poppy begged me to work with her as the café manager.

  I clung to the job, and it kept me emotionally afloat as I adjusted to a new way of life.

  Six years later, we were more profitable than I’d ever imagined, and it would stay that way. For Poppy. For Jamie.

  For me.

  This restaurant wasn’t only a job. It was my safe place.

  On the lonely nights when I di
dn’t want to go home to an empty house because the kids were with Finn, I stayed here, visiting with customers or the part-time staff. On the days when I needed an extra hug, my best friend was right here with open arms. When I needed to give my brain a workout, there were always spreadsheets and graphs waiting with new challenges.

  As manager, I oversaw every aspect of this business, and in six years, I’d created a well-oiled machine. Poppy took care of the menu and preparing the food, but I did all the ordering and budgeting for supplies. I was in charge of finances, marketing and social media. I hired, fired and supervised the employees. I was a waitress. A barista. A dishwasher. An administrator.

  I did whatever had to be done so Poppy could focus on her passion: the food that brought people in the front door.

  She’d even won an award for Bozeman’s best restaurant last year.

  In the beginning, the two of us had put in crazy hours, but we’d learned to delegate. She came in around six or six thirty weekday mornings to open by seven. Then she left to get her kids by three. Since Kali and Max were older and had after-school activities, I came in around eight and stayed until five. If the kids were with Finn, I’d stay and close down after eight.

  Lunch was our busiest time, so Poppy and I made it a point to both be here. But we’d built a solid foundation to give us the flexibility to put our families first.

  Our staff of two college kids and Poppy’s mom, Rayna, covered the hours when we were home.

  Rayna had been a chef in Alaska, where Finn and Poppy had grown up. But eventually, the draw of grandchildren had been too much. She and David, her husband, had moved to Montana. She came into the restaurant most days to be with Poppy and because she simply loved to cook. She still made me my birthday cookies every year because she knew how much I loved them.

  Even after the divorce, Rayna had kept me close. It was her nature to pull people into her circle and never let them go. And I think it was because she’d never really accepted that Finn and I were through.

  But we were. We were through. So why had he given me that letter? Last night was fuzzy, but I did remember he’d been the first one to make a move. He’d started that kiss.

 

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