Grace ground the gears for what seemed like miles before she
pulled into the safety of her driveway and turned off the engine. While she was fired up, she had the ability to
drive the truck just fine. Once the
adrenaline rush wore off, she was suddenly crazy, klutz girl with a
clutch.
Setting the emergency break, she picked up her phone and
looked at the screen.
Under control. Headed home.
See you soon.
Sighing, she grabbed her bag and headed up the walk. A glance at the clock told her it was riding
up on ten, and her stomach growled in protest.
Letting herself into the house, she made her way to Mrs. Maguire’s room to
let her know she was home.
This was so not how she had pictured the night ending. She made quick work of removing her make-up
and changing into a pair of flannel pajama bottoms and the long-sleeved Henley that belonged to Truman once upon a time. Pushing her feet into well-worn slippers, she
grabbed her cell before heading back downstairs.
In the den her dad dubbed his man cave, she fiddled with the
various remotes until she had the large TV up and ready for a DVD. Since she was in the mood for a chick-flick,
she decided to go with While You Were
Sleeping. It was her cousin Abby’s
favorite movie. Holding up the DVD, she
silently toasted her cousin who was currently traveling through Italy.
As the opening credits rolled, Grace made her way to the
kitchen with a detour to the front door when the bell announced a visitor. Positive it was Owen coming to collect his
truck, she didn’t bother to check.
Truman smiled when she opened the door. Holding out the bag in his arms, he said, “I
come bearing gifts.”
Leaning into the door, she said, “So I see.”
Time seemed to stop as they stood on either side of the
threshold studying the other. Clearing
his throat, “I was glad to see you made it home okay.” Turning, he looked at Owen’s truck parked at
the curb, “Do you think he’ll need it back tonight?”
Grace shrugged in response.
“So,” Truman started, “can I come in?”
Another shrug, and Grace stepped back in order to allow him
to pass.
Truman made straight for the kitchen. He knew the layout of Grace’s home as well as
his own. Setting the bag on the counter,
he quickly pulled out the various cartons of food. “I know we never did get our dinner, and I
figured you were probably starving right about now.”
“I was going to make a grilled cheese,” she replied as her
stomach acknowledged his comment.
Truman made a face and responded, “It’s a good thing I got
here when I did. Besides, I brought your
favorite.”
Grace stood studying the young man in front of her. All six foot three of him. From the blaze in his green eyes all the way
down to the soles of his feet. What
was it about him that had her heart all aflutter? She couldn’t even remember when it changed. When he went from being a
friend to the guy she was mooning over.
Was it something he did? Something
he said?
She wasn’t sure if it was a good idea for her and Truman to
even flirt with the idea of dating now. She
knew about the girls at school. Harper
made a point of telling her about each and every one. Also, she’d worked hard and she didn’t want
anything getting in the way of her plans to study in England next year. No one knew she received an early acceptance last
week to study at Oxford. Not even Harper. She had wanted to soak it in a little, before
telling everyone, and then the whole thing with Haas happened, and it just
never seemed like the right time.
Becoming a forensic anthropologist was something she had
wanted to do since she discovered an old arrowhead up at Lake
Geneva during one of their trips when she was nine. The possibilities of who could have touched
or even made that arrowhead seemed limitless and turned a nine year old girl
into a dirt loving fiend that summer.
Harper had been appalled at the idea of crawling through the
dirt, but Truman understood her fascination, encouraged it even. They spent endless hours combing the area
around the lake for more ancient artifacts.
Using a metal detector that Truman’s dad got for them, they discovered
coins, bottles and various other novelties during their searches.
That had been the summer Truman became her friend as
well. No longer just Harper’s annoying
older brother, the two had bonded over long lazy days spent exploring and
cataloging their finds.
Now, he stood before her, more man than boy, with a power
over her he didn’t even know he wielded.
Plus, there was the whole mess with Harper and what happened at that
party. Did he know? Had she told him?
Truman stood still while Grace studied him and watched the
play of emotions as they danced across her face. Forehead scrunched, she chewed on her bottom
lip all the while keeping her eyes steadied on his. He’d always been fascinated with her
thinking process. Or maybe if he were
honest, he had just always been fascinated with her. For whatever reason, he’d deemed her off
limits, deciding she was more Harper’s friend than his. Now, he wished he could turn back the clock
and spend more time with her before he had to go back to school.
Crossing her arms over her chest, “Did she tell you what
happened at the party?”
“No. She didn’t. Gave me some lame bullshit excuse that…”
Truman did a double take when he realized the shirt she was wearing was
his. And his favorite one, too. He thought he left it at the lake house last
summer, “Is that my shirt?”
A lovely shade of red zoomed up her neck and attached to her
cheeks. “Stop changing the subject. Did she tell you?”
Truman looked at Grace, “No.
Do you know what happened? Has
she said anything to you?”
Shaking her head, Grace moved toward the cupboard that held
the plates, “Nope. Let me guess, she
Jedi-mind tricked you again? Right?”
The comment brought Truman up short. “Damn it.
That’s exactly what she did,” he sputtered while holding out a pair of
chop sticks for Grace. “How does she do
that? Every damned time?”
“Girl’s good,” Grace said as she helped herself to Moo Goo
Gai Pan. “Speaking of, is Owen still
with her?”
“Yeah, they were going to scarf down some food and catch a
movie.”
“That’s what I was getting ready to do.”
“Let me guess, Singing
in the Rain,” he asked, positive he was right.
“No smartass,” she sneered.
“While You Were Sleeping.”
“Just kill me now,” he moaned even as he picked up his plate
and followed her into the other room. “I
bet Harper isn’t torturing Owen with a girly movie. That lucky bastard is probably watching an
action pic, even as we speak.”
Looking over from where she had curled up at the end of the
sofa with her plate balanced on her knees, Grace answered, “You could always go
and join them instead.”
Truman stood in the doorway, watching her attack the food on
her plate, taking in her freshly scrubbed appearance, and realized a chick-flick
didn’t sound all that bad after all. In
fact, there wasn’t anywhere else he would rather be and that included watching
the latest Bruce Willis release with his kid sister. Go figure.
4 comments:
Oh, boy. Knees weakened.
I think I may be Team Truman now.
I know, I know, I got the teams all messed up, but damn, I like these boys a lot.
Awww. A sweet scene. And, yeah, Truman is inching ahead. What will Lucky do about that?
I'm still Team Lucky. #justsaying
i'm team cousin abby!
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