Fairytale Come Alive

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Fairytale Come Alive Page 13

by Kristen Ashley


  Then he turned away and asked, “Turn the lights out, will you?”

  Then he walked up the stairs and disappeared from sight.

  Chapter Seven

  Elle

  Prentice

  Prentice stood on the terrace of the pub, whisky in hand, eyes on the sea.

  Two days it had been since he’d discovered Isabella had not abandoned her best friend in her hour of need but, against the odds (and Annie could be stubborn so Prentice knew the odds were most assuredly against Isabella), she nursed Annie back to her old self.

  Two days it had been since he discovered she’d endured only the beginning but most definitely not the end of a fairytale.

  And two days since he’d discovered that, at eight years old, she’d found her dead mother in a pool of her own blood.

  His hand tightened on the glass as his jaw tensed.

  He hadn’t handled that last very well. In fact, he’d been a complete, selfish jackass.

  It had been two days and those two days had not been uneventful.

  To say the least.

  The first morning after dinner with Mikey, Prentice had woken up to find his closet full of ironed shirts.

  When he went downstairs, he found the coffeepot full.

  Isabella was not there, however, and didn’t make an appearance until the children came downstairs.

  Then she arrived wearing jeans and a thin, mostly see-through, skintight, scoop-necked, cream t-shirt with a camisole under it. Her feet were bare but her wild, tangle of hair had been sleeked and pulled into sophisticated ponytail at the back of her head and she’d made up her face.

  She also had a band of white gauze wrapped around her hand.

  She’d arrived to make breakfast, chat with the children and ignore Prentice.

  Sally was unaware of the drama the night before though she was highly curious as to the white gauze which Isabella airily informed his daughter was “nothing”.

  After what occurred the night before, Jason, it appeared, had formed some kind of motherless-child bond with Isabella and decided to cast himself as her protector. He was watching her carefully as if she was made of fragile crystal and he was going to be there to catch her before she fell and shattered on the floor.

  Isabella quickly realized this and just as quickly (and skillfully) teamed up with Sally, using his daughter’s constant good cheer and Isabella’s own charm to tease and joke with Jason until he was smiling and even laughing.

  It was quite a feat but she mastered it effortlessly.

  When the children disappeared to get their books, without a word, Isabella headed to the hall.

  “Isabella,” he called, she stopped and turned polite eyes to him in enquiry.

  He looked at her and realized they were, indeed, playing a game.

  It was the game of life. His life and his children’s life.

  And also Isabella’s.

  Too much had passed, he’d moved on and so had she, neither, it seemed, to things that ended well.

  But this game didn’t have to end ugly and his children needed every friend in their life they could get.

  And Prentice thought Isabella would make a good one.

  With a new strategy in mind, Prentice walked directly to her and got close.

  She stiffened but didn’t retreat, simply tipped her head back and looked at him, eyebrows raised.

  “We need to talk,” he told her.

  “There’s nothing to say,” she replied, her tone cultured, controlled, remote.

  “You’re wrong,” he returned.

  Her face remained polite but expressionless. “Well then, there’s no time. You have to take the kids to school and I’m going to Annie’s and I won’t be home tonight. It’s her hen night tonight, it’ll go late and I’ll probably crash on the couch at Fergus’s.”

  “We’ll talk tomorrow.”

  She shook her head. “Tomorrow is the day before the wedding. I’ll be tied up all day helping Annie and tomorrow night is Dougal’s stag night.”

  He got closer and her body went solid as a rock.

  This he took as a good sign.

  He dipped his face close to hers, willing for some flash of something to light in her eyes but he got nothing.

  “You don’t have to explain the schedule to me, Isabella, I know it,” he said quietly.

  “Then you know there’s no time to talk.”

  “We’ll make time.”

  She remained silent and remote.

  He decided to change subjects and asked, “How’s your hand?”

  Then it came.

  Her eyes flashed and her gaze moved over his shoulder.

  “It’s fine.”

  “That’s good,” he replied softly.

  Her eyes shot back to his.

  She opened her mouth to speak but he got there before her. “I have to admit, you look nice, Elle, but you look better when your hair’s a mess and you aren’t wearing that mask.”

  And it came again.

  Her eyes grew slightly wider and her lips parted softly.

  He took in her open expression of astonishment and finished by muttering, “Beautiful.”

  Then he walked away.

  * * * * *

  That day, on a visit to one of his building sites, Prentice approached Nigel Fennick who was a laborer on the site.

  Nigel gave him a chin’s up and said on a grin, “Dougal’s stag night still on for Friday?”

  “Aye,” Prentice replied. “Annie’s hen night is tonight.”

  Nigel’s grin widened. “Annie can be a wild one.”

  Prentice knew that, hell, everyone knew that. Even so, he didn’t return Nigel’s grin.

  “I want to talk to you about Hattie,” Prentice said and Nigel’s grin faded.

  “Had calls from Fergus. Dougal too,” Nigel surprised him by saying. “They gave me an earful, mate, but you know Hattie.”

  Prentice did, he’d known her all his life and he never really liked her. He liked her less after her behavior at the picnic.

  “She going on Annie’s hen night?” Prentice asked.

  “Aye,” Nigel nodded.

  “She’ll be nice to Isabella,” Prentice stated.

  It wasn’t a request, it was a demand.

  Nigel gave him a look. “Never was able to control Hattie.”

  He was right. Nigel and Hattie had been married for nearly two decades and she wasn’t nice to her husband either.

  “You’ll have a word.” Another demand.

  “Already did, after Fergus and after Dougal. She’s got it in her head –”

  Prentice cut him off by repeating, “You’ll have a word.”

  “Prentice –”

  “Nigel, have a word with her.”

  Nigel’s look turned probing. “Mate,” he said softly, “things have got to be rough with Fiona gone but you’re not… not again.”

  Prentice got closer. “This isn’t about me and Isabella. This is just about Isabella. She’s here for her friend and she’s been good to the children. If you won’t have a word, I’ll have a word.” Prentice pulled his mobile from his back pocket. “Give me her number.”

  Nigel’s look turned incredulous and, Prentice noted with surprise, slightly fearful. “Now?”

  Prentice’s look was already hard. “Aye. Now.”

  Nigel hesitated then he sighed, “I’ll have a word.”

  Prentice nodded. “It doesn’t work, Nigel, and I hear Elle didn’t have a good night then I’ll have a word with Hattie.”

  The threat hung in the air for a moment before Nigel dipped his chin in acknowledgement.

  Prentice was a man known not to make idle threats.

  “See you Friday,” Prentice said by way of farewell.

  “Aye, Friday.”

  Prentice turned and walked away.

  * * * * *

  The children had not had to endure takeaway that night.

  This was because, when Prentice and the kids came home, Jason fo
und a note on the counter from Isabella informing them there was a shepherd’s pie in the fridge, explaining how to heat it up and telling them that the vegetables were already cut up and ready for boiling.

  Jason may have found the note but Sally honed right in on the homemade chocolate cake that was sitting on the counter.

  “PS,” Jason read as Sally was screeching about the cake, “tell Sally I’ve made cake for pudding but she has to eat all her broccoli. There’s ice cream in the freezer.”

  When he was finished reading, Jason’s eyes moved to Prentice.

  Sally danced around the kitchen chanting how much she loved chocolate cake.

  Prentice smiled at his son.

  His son smiled back.

  * * * * *

  Mikey was right.

  Isabella could cook comfort food.

  The shepherd’s pie was delicious.

  And the cake was fucking exquisite.

  But Prentice overcooked the vegetables.

  * * * * *

  It was pitch dark when Prentice jerked from a deep sleep, body alert after hearing the crash.

  Tense, he listened to the sounds of his house for a moment and he could have sworn he heard a loud, drunken giggle.

  He threw back the covers, knifed out of bed, exited his room and flipped the light switch on at the top of the stairs.

  The lamp by the couch was on the floor, its ceramic base in pieces.

  He was walking down the stairs when he saw movement in the hall. It was Isabella walking into the room wielding a broom.

  Or, more accurately, Isabella weaving into the hall wielding a broom.

  When she saw him, she stopped dead but her body swayed.

  Then she smiled a huge, radiant smile that started at her hazel eyes and lit her entire face.

  At the sight of her smile, Prentice felt the warmth of that satisfying weight hit his gut.

  “Hi!” she cried happily as if it was the height of pleasure to see him.

  “Isabella.”

  She stared at him a moment or, more to the point, she stared at his mouth a moment. Then she looked at the broom in her hand as if she’d never seen one before and had no idea why she was carrying it.

  Light dawned, her face fell and she looked back at Prentice, admitting, “I broke your lamp.”

  He started to come into the room. “I can see. I could also hear.”

  “I’ll buy you another one,” she told him immediately.

  He shook his head. “You don’t have to buy another one.”

  Her face lit again and she declared gleefully, “I’ll buy you three!”

  He barely stopped himself from laughing. “You definitely don’t have to buy me three.”

  “Lamps are good to have around,” she informed him authoritatively. “Even if you don’t use them all, you can keep them in storage as backups.”

  This time, he couldn’t contain his chuckle.

  She was rat-arsed. Completely drunk.

  “It isn’t a common occurrence that we break lamps, Elle. We don’t need backups.”

  This seemed to confuse her as if she broke lamps with great regularity and had a ready supply to act as replacements.

  “Just in case,” she muttered then her eyes narrowed on him and her face became severe. “Don’t take another step.”

  He’d neared her and didn’t stop moving while he said, “Sorry?”

  He barely got out the word when she suddenly, for some drunken reason, swung the broom at him. He had to jerk his torso back to miss being hit.

  This movement sent her off-balance, so much so, she collided with the chair. Twisting to right herself, she dropped the broom and Prentice swiftly moved forward and caught her at her waist, yanking her upright and into his body.

  He watched her profile as she glared at the chair.

  “Who put that there?” she snapped, continuing to scowl at the chair like she was willing it to disintegrate from the heat of her gaze.

  “It’s always been there.”

  She twisted her neck to look at him and announced, “It has not.”

  He was finding it very difficult not to burst out laughing but somehow he succeeded in this task.

  “It has,” he said.

  “It hasn’t,” she retorted.

  “It has.”

  “It. Has. Not.”

  He chuckled as he said, “Elle, it has.”

  “Well!” she snapped. “That’s a silly place to put a chair. It’s dangerous, especially with the children around.” She caught his eye and advised stoutly, “You should move it.”

  He put his hands to her hips and started to push her to the hall murmuring, “I’ll consider it.”

  She suddenly stood stock-still and cried, “You’re barefoot!” She whirled to face him and announced, “Not another step, Prentice Cameron, you might cut yourself. I’m going to clean up the lamp.”

  “I’ll clean it up after we get you to bed.”

  “I broke it, I’ll clean it up. And anyway, you’re barefoot,” she returned.

  “I’ll put on shoes. You’re in no state to clean up the lamp.”

  She tilted her head, her face a wild range of expressions as she considered this.

  Prentice watched her face, explicitly reading every thought that passed through her mind and enjoying the show.

  Then she nodded. “Okay, you can clean it up but you have to promise to get every… single… piece so Sally doesn’t accidentally hurt herself.”

  Her concern for his daughter also settled in his gut, it also was a warm, satisfying feeling and Prentice gently turned her around and pushed her again toward the hall while saying gruffly, “I promise.”

  “All right then,” she gave in.

  With difficulty he guided her through the hall. She couldn’t walk a straight line if paid a bigger fortune than she already had to do it.

  “I thought you were staying at Fergus’s,” he remarked.

  “I thought so too but Annie said no. No, no, no, no, no. No friend of hers was sleeping on a couch. We were all in the taxi and she made them all come right here. First! Even though Fergus’s is closer to the village,” she finished this story and slipped on the stairs, nearly going down, her hand thrown out to catch her fall but Prentice was close and hooked an arm around her waist again.

  His arm tightened and he lifted her, carrying her the last two steps to the landing. He put her down and moved her around the corner, keeping his hands on her waist as he guided her up the last flight of steps.

  When they hit her rooms, he let her go, flipped on the switch and she meandered in a random zigzag pattern to the bedroom.

  All the while she meandered, she chattered.

  “I love your children. They’re the best. But I especially love Sally.” She stopped, swayed, righted herself, twisted to look at him and said, “No, Jason. I especially love Jason.” Then her eyes went unfocused and she bit her lip before saying, “No, Sally.” Then her face filled with confusion before it cleared and she finished, “Oh hell, they’re both great.”

  Then she swayed back around and zigzagged into the bedroom toward the lamp.

  He quickly followed her as she got close to the lamp, deciding it best at that juncture that he operate the household electronics. He gently moved her and turned on the lamp.

  She plunked down on the side of the bed and bent double, her hands going to her shoes. Prentice prepared to leave her to it.

  But he didn’t when she spoke. “We had so much fun.” Her head tilted back sharply, her ponytail flying and she smiled radiantly at him. “People were even nice to me.”

  The different, unpleasant weight settled in his gut.

  She turned her attention back to her shoe. “I know it was for Annie’s sake but still, I could pretend.”

  Looking at the back of her head, Prentice had the odd but very strong desire to wrap that sleek, shining ponytail around his fist, pull her head back and kiss her.

  Before he could process this disturbing t
hought, she lifted her torso up jerkily and twisted her leg at an impossible angle so her knee was wrenched, her calf was on the mattress at her side and her hand went back to her ankle.

  “What is with these straps?” she muttered in frustration, yanking at the strap of her sexy, high-heeled sandal.

  Prentice crouched in front of her and moved her hands away. “I’ll do it.”

  She pushed at his hands, declaring, “I’ll do it.”

  He pushed at her hands. “I’ll do it.”

  “I can do it!”

  He caught her eyes and said low, “Elle.”

  She stared at him then huffed out a sigh, “All right, you do it.”

  Then she whipped her leg out, he reared back to miss being hit by her flying foot, and she held it out for him to take off her sandal.

  He straightened and took the back of her heel in one hand, the fingers of his other working the strap.

  But his eyes were on her.

  He should have focused on her shoe.

  He watched as she yanked out her ponytail holder and tossed it on the nightstand amongst a tidy display of pumps and jars and a stack of leather-bound journals.

  Then she mussed her hair, the heavy, blonde locks flying everywhere.

  It was an extraordinary show and Prentice felt his body instantly and pleasurably tighten in response.

  Christ, he had to get out of there.

  He unfastened the strap and slid her shoe off, dropping it to the floor.

  She immediately lifted her other foot to him while using both hands to lift her hair up at the nape of her neck then she plopped back onto the bed, throwing her arms wide. Her long hair splayed on the bed around her and his mind took that opportunity to consider what Isabella, and her hair, would look like, and feel like, if she was underneath him.

  Naked underneath him.

  His mind moved swiftly away from that delightful mental image, his gaze moved away from the equally delightful vision of Isabella on her back on the bed, his hand curved around her heel and he went for the other strap.

  “Annie’s so happy,” she whispered wistfully and at her words Prentice’s eyes sliced back to her. Her gaze was as wistful as her tone and it was on him. “All these years. I never thought I’d see it, Pren.”

  This time, his gut tightened.

  No one called him Pren but Elle. His mother hadn’t allowed his name to be shortened when he was a lad and Prentice just stuck.

 

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