Authors: Lisa Wingate
Tags: #FIC042000, #FIC042040, #FIC027020, #Texas—fiction
I found myself watching, imagining the feel of that moment, yearning for something, until finally I pulled my gaze into the room again. At the corner table, Clay and Amy were talking intently, completely oblivious to everyone else in the room. Clay drew something on a piece of paper, pointed to it with his pencil.
Tap, tap, tap.
I wondered if he was breaking up with her, maybe telling her the truth, finally. The communication there definitely didn't look romantic, but neither did it look adversarial. I wasn't sure what to make of it.
The waitress grabbed menus and motioned for us to follow her to a table. Blaine said hello to my brother before I could get close enough to see what Clay was writing. Quickly flipping the place mat over to the preprinted side, Clay stood to shake Blaine's hand in greeting. Amy tackled Blaine with a hug, and he kissed her on the top of her head. I was weirdly jealous, which seemed almost perverse. Amy hugged me next, and I felt like a heel. I couldn't help thinking about Clay's text message from Tara.
I should tell her,
I thought.
Someone really should tell her. . . .
The opportunity seemed to present itself a short time later. Just after Blaine and I had ordered catfish platters, Amy left Clay's table at the same time that the postmaster came by our booth and pulled Blaine into a conversation about the roads in Chinquapin Peaks, mail delivery, and the upcoming debate in the county commissioner's race.
I excused myself and crossed the dining area to the rest room line, where Amy was standing alone.
“Well, hey,” she said, in a way that instantly made me feel guilty for arriving with the intention of bursting her bubble. Maybe I should just let things happen on their ownâtake Blaine's advice and relinquish control to the powers that be.
Then again, if I were Amy, I'd want to know.
“You and Clay look like you're having a good time.” Actually, they didn't. I'd been watching from the corner of my eye for a while, and for the most part, their dinner looked like a business meeting.
“We were talkin' about the restaurant,” she said, quickly enough that the response didn't ring true. “He's got big plans.” She nodded along with the words, as if to give them substance.
I wasn't sure what to think. “Oh. Seems like what he'd really need to be doing is actually working here. You know, learning how to run the place.”
Amy fidgeted. “I guess he does that during the day when I'm at work.”
“No. He really doesn't.”
Amy blinked, her blue eyes wide, earnest, painfully clueless. She cut a nervous glance toward the bathroom door. I heard the toilet flushing.
“I imagine he's got it all figured out.” Amy shifted a step closer to the rest room. “I love this place. My pop-pop and my nana met here, right after World War II. It was love at first sight. First dance, really. She was the only one he ever met who could follow his lead like that.”
An acidic feeling drained from my throat to my stomach.
Please don't tell me you're in love with my brother. He has a girlfriend in Fort Worth. . . .
I bit down on the words, unable to say them. The bathroom door opened, and the front-desk nurse from the rural medical clinic came out. Her hair was gray now, but her face hadn't changed. Amy bolted for the door like she'd been catapulted from a crossbow.
I returned to my table, where the catfish platters had arrived. Blaine and I chatted as we ate, and I was once again trying to steer the conversation around to the subject of Clay and Amy when the band returned from a break. We paused to clap along with the rest of the crowd, welcoming the band back to the stage. They weren't half bad, the music a combination of country and Cajun, the perfect atmosphere for a floating catfish joint. My gaze drifted to the deck, where couples were dancing againâthe pastor and his fiancée, an elderly couple, a guy in a uniformâprobably a park ranger or game wardenâand a dark-haired woman. Clay and Amy were out there, too. I remembered the story about Amy's grandparents. Love at first dance. What would that be like? How would it feel?
I wanted to know. I was afraid I never would. I was afraid I didn't have it in me.
“Want to dance?” Blaine offered, perhaps misinterpreting my dewy-eyed look as a desire to hit the outdoor dance floor.
“I don't know how.” I hated to admit that, but it was the truth. While kids like Blaine were scooting a boot at the rodeo dance or having parties at backwoods hangouts, I was home cooking supper, taking care of my little brother, washing clothes for school, or helping set up for funerals at Harmony House so that I could earn a little money to keep us from being total freeloaders until the insurance company paid off my father's policy.
“It's just a two-step,” Blaine pointed out, finishing the last bite of his coconut cream pie. “It's not that hard. One-two-three, one-two. You're the math genius, remember?”
I studied the deck again, pushing the remains of my dessert away. A part of me, the girl who'd sat home on Saturday evenings dreaming of a moment like this, wanted to be out there under the stars, twirling off into the night. But the woman who practically lived in her office spoke up instead. “No way I'm dancing in front of everyone.”
Blaine's gaze tangled with mine, and I felt the two of us toying with the ends of the rope in a playful tug of war. “C'mon . . . where's that sense of adventure? What are you afraid of?”
“Ummm . . . let's see . . .” I sifted for an answer.
Looking like a dork in front of everyone
, was on the tip of my tongue, but I was reaching for something more clever, more . . . charmingly coy.
The man in uniform and his dance partner came in the back door and stopped at our table, and Blaine introduced me. Mart McClendon, the local game warden, and his girlfriend, Andrea. Blaine asked about Andrea's broken wrist, and she held up a pink cast, offering a wry smile and saying she would never again let her son talk her into skateboarding down the driveway. The conversation went on from there, but I lost track of it. I was watching Blaine and marveling at the fact that he seemed to have a rapport with everyone in town. Not only did he have rapport, but he knew about their lives. He asked after their health and well-being. Either he was a natural-born politician, or he genuinely cared. It was no wonder Clay liked him. He was incredibly charismatic.
As he was wrapping up the conversation, I glanced at the takeout counter and spotted someone familiar. My stomach sank, lead-lined all of a sudden. Blaine's stepmother had just finished putting in an order. She was turning around, her gaze slowly sweeping the room from left to right. She offered finger waves here and there. I sank in my seat, working toward invisibility, but the game warden moved away just in time to leave me directly in her line of sight. She stiffened immediately, her chin coming up. In my head, I heard the sound that alley cats make when they meet in the nightâan unholy noise between a scream and a growl. One of Mrs. Underhill's eyes narrowed more than the other, squeezing almost closed as if she were sighting down a rifle at me. Good thing she didn't have one in her hands.
Blaine, completely unaware that we had gained an audience, leaned across the table, pat-tapped me on the shoulder, and said, “C'mon, let's go. I've got an idea.”
I was fully in agreement with the
Let's go
part, except for the fact that Blaine's wicked stepmother was standing by the door. “Let's head out the back way,” I suggested, nodding toward the exit onto the deck.
“Let me get the bill first.” Before I could stop him, he started across the room. I vacillated between following and staying put, then finally proceeded to the counter. I wasn't letting that woman put me in a corner anymore. I was no longer some shy, messed-up teenager. I was Heather Hampton. I could travel the world, handle demanding clients, bridge cultural barriers, mediate difficult situations, find solutions, impress the bigwigs, create tall buildings with a single stroke of an electronic tablet. Surely I could handle an aging small-town belle with an attitude.
“Heather.” My name appeared to have a bad taste to it at first, then she forced a smile. “I'm surprised to see you here.”
Blaine cleared his throat and sent her a warning glance over his shoulder. I had a sense that, in the few moments I'd been deciding whether or not to cross the room, they'd had a conversation about me. Mrs. Underhill pressed her lips together, wrinkles forming around the edges. “I meant to say that I thought you wouldn't be in town for long.”
“I don't plan to be.” With some luck, I could allay any reason she might find to either give my family trouble or sic the casserole ladies on me. They undoubtedly loved Blaine as much as everyone else did. They wouldn't want to see him out to dinner with me, of all people.
I had the sense of being watched from behind. Perhaps some member of the casserole mafia had called Blaine's stepmother when Blaine and I showed up at Catfish Charley's together, and that was why she was hereâdoing recon, so to speak. “Just a little longer than I thought,” I added lamely.
“Oh.” Another pucker-lip punctuated the response. “Well, have a lovely trip home, if I don't see you again.”
In other words,
Don't let the door hit you in the backside on the way out.
A gush of water-laden night air pushed past us, and when I looked up, Mama B was working her way in the door, the hood of her pink sparkly jacket blowing over her face. Pushing it back impatiently, she spied Blaine at the cash register. “Well, hi, darlin'! What're you doin' here?” Without waiting for an answer, she swept him into a hug and rocked him back and forth before letting go.
He actually blushed a little, which was cute. “Just having catfish, Grandma.” He glanced my way, and Mama B honed in, her gaze traveling back and forth between Blaine and me. “Well, my lands, are y'all out on a date?”
Blaine's stepmother gasped, horrified at the concept. “Of course they're not. I'm sure Heather just wanted to see the restaurant before she
went home
. To
Seattle
.”
Mama B scowled at her. “Oh, for heaven's sake, Claire Anne, mind your business. The boy needs to meet some gals he hasn't known since kindergarten. Maybe he'll get interested.”
The wash of color in Blaine's face crept down his neck, giving him the look of a little boy having his cheeks pinched by the old ladies in church. A laugh tickled my throat, and I coughed to cover it up. Was it my imagination, or was Blaine in a remarkable hurry to get his wallet back into his pocket? The teenage checkout girl tried to suck him into a conversation, and for once he didn't respond. He turned back to me and said, “Ready?”
I definitely was. Mama B patted my arm and gave it a little squeeze. “Y'all have a good time this evenin'. Go look at the stars or somethin'.” Then I exchanged a lemon-juice good-bye with Blaine's stepmother and hit the door before Blaine could even open it for me. An awkwardness descended over us, and as we climbed into his boat, I couldn't help asking myself what I was even doing. What could I possibly hope to accomplish?
I'd be better off back in the cottage, curled up with Roger. At least a half-dozen times during dinner, I'd tried to bring up the subject of my brother, and Blaine had deflected the conversation every time. Now he turned the boat away from Harmony Shores, rather than toward. “Where are we going?” I bundled my coat tighter and sank down into the furry collar.
“Just across the cove.”
I knew what was across the coveâthe legendary Blue Moon Bay, a little inlet with an old campground where the teenagers probably still congregated on summer weekends. Not much ever changed in Moses Lake. I'd never been to the Blue Moon, except in a few ridiculous teenage dreams.
“You're taking me to the Blue Moon?” I didn't have to work at it to sound incredulous. The Blue Moon was also known as the place where kids who were fortunate enough to have access to a waterborne vehicle went parking.
“Ever been?” His tone was intimate, slightly suggestive. It flowed over me like warm water, raising goosebumps on my skin.
“Oh, sure, lots of times.”
He knew that wasn't true, of course. The trouble with spending time around someone who remembers you from high school is that you can't gloss up the past. In Seattle I had total anonymity. I thought I liked it that way, but now there was something alluring, even freeing, about not having to hide.
I tried not to focus on it too much as we crossed the cove. The night and the location seemed too perfect to be tainted by worry. Overhead, the winter moon hung large and heavy, casting a soft light that reflected off the quaking leaves of the live oaks, making them wink and shine as if each leaf had been freshly washed just for us. The air smelled cold and sweet, and Blue Moon Bay, with its overhanging cliffs and ancient, gnarled trees was, indeed, as beautiful by moonlight as I'd always imagined it would be.
“They have a private dance floor here, you know.” Blaine's voice held just enough volume to be audible over the low rumble of the boat, as if he were taking care not to disturb the peace of the night. When he cut the motor, I could hear the twangy rhythms of music drifting over from the dancing deck at Catfish Charley's.
“A private . . . wha . . .” I stammered as we floated up to the wide, flat rock shelf where tiny crystals reflected the moonlight like a sprinkling of sugar. I gathered his meaning as he grabbed a scraggly cedar to tie on. “You realize that would be, like, taking your life in your hands?” I imagined our feet tangling, and the two of us tumbling off into the lake, potential hypothermia only minutes away.
“I'm not worried.” He climbed out of the boat in three agile stepsâone on the seat, one on the side rail, and one on the rocks. He made it look easy enough.