Beauty and the Beach (24 page)

Read Beauty and the Beach Online

Authors: Diane Darcy

She wished she could go back in time. To the beginning. To that day when he’d asked her out and she’d realized she’d really wanted to go. When it had just been a boy asking a girl if she would date him. Everything had been level then. They’d been equals.

His face flashed into her mind--his agonized expression as she’d left him--and her sobs escalated, racking her body. She pulled into an overlook on the side of the road, turned off the car, and, clinging to the steering wheel, pressed her face into the backs of her hands.

She was going crazy. The further she got away from him, the more she wanted to run back to him.

It wasn’t like she wouldn’t see him again. She would. She just needed some perspective. She needed some breathing room, some time to think. She needed to be with her family and she needed to feel in control again. She was sorry to have hurt him today, so sorry.

When she reached that place, when she was in control of herself and her world, she’d give him a call and hope he still wanted to talk to her.

It could never be perfect again, the slate would never be quite clear. But if all went well, they could start fresh and see what, if anything, could happen between them.

 

~~~

 

When Isabelle was out of sight, Adam slowly walked toward the house. He stopped, leaned his hand against a section of brick, gripped it hard enough for the stone to dig into the skin of his fingertips, and forced himself to breathe. He wanted to go after her. It was taking everything he had in him not to follow her home and beg her to come back.

Maybe he shouldn’t have been so pushy? Maybe he shouldn’t have brought up their kisses? He especially shouldn’t have told her he loved her. Not yet, anyway. Had she seen his feelings as a complete surprise? Unwanted pressure? Needy and pathetic? She’d left as though the hounds of hell were following.

He finally pushed away from the wall, walked into the house, and ended up in the kitchen. His gut clenched and it physically hurt to be where they’d made so many meals together.

Seeing the laundry room door open, he hurried inside and looked in the washer and dryer, hoping to find something, but she’d cleaned it out.

He hurried across the living room, up the stairs, and into Isabelle’s bedroom, hoping she’d left something behind and given him a legitimate excuse to follow.

He opened the drawers, the cupboards in the bathroom, the desk drawer. He looked under the bed. The entire place was clean and sterile. A guest room. There was nothing of her left behind.

He pulled the Starfire out of his pocket and studied it for a long moment. He gripped the piece, the sharp edges digging into his skin. Something hard and ugly tightened in his chest. His jaw tightened and with long strides he hurried to his office and opened his safe. As hard as he could he chucked the necklace onto the bottom shelf where it bunched in a corner with a soft chink. He locked the safe. He never wanted to see the wretched thing again.

He changed into workout clothes and headed to the basement. He didn’t bother putting on gloves, but surged forward and punched the bag. Slam. Slam. Slam.

He was an idiot. Jab.

He should never have told her he loved her. Jab. Punch.

He’d scared her. Slam, jab, punch.

He should have played it casual. Punch, punch, dig.

He stepped back and loosened his shoulders.

Maybe what he should have done was caught her up and kissed her.

He should have locked her in her room, with him, until she could give him a different answer about where she was staying tonight. Where she was staying for the rest of her life.

He pictured her, out there, at work, the mall, the grocery store, the bus, finding someone new. Someone better. Someone with an easy smile, who matched her in beauty and kindness. Some blond pretty boy, with smooth skin and an easy stride. His jaw hardened. Punch. Punch. Punch. Slam.

Darkness overwhelmed his vision as his fists pounded out a solid rhythm. Punch. Punch. Jab. Stab. Punch. Punch. Jab. Stab.

His knuckles burned and it felt good. Smash, smash, jab.

Twenty minutes later, sweating and exhausted, he collapsed back onto the weight bench.

He clenched and unclenched his reddened fists. He breathed in and out for a long time, trying not to think. But he couldn’t stop. What did he do? Wait outside her place? Rent the place next door? Buy her building? What could he do without coming across as a stalker, or worse, needy and pathetic.

He lay back, panting, waiting for his heartbeat to slow. As hard as it was to accept it, there wasn’t a blasted thing he could do. If she wanted to call him, he’d answer. If she wanted to come back to him, he’d be waiting with open arms. If she so much as hinted she wanted to see him, he’d drop everything and go find her.

He pushed the heels of his palms into his forehead. In the meantime, he didn’t have a choice. He had to let her go.

 

~~~

 

Over three weeks later, Isabelle walked with Courtney through a tunnel and down to Crystal Cove Beach. Both carried beach bags, beach chairs, and milkshakes from Ruby’s Shake Shack.

They walked past beach cottages, avoiding piles of kelp, and moved to a clear spot on the narrow strip of sand.

“This looks good.” Courtney dumped her bag, opened her chair, and sank onto it.

Isabelle did the same. While Isabelle ate ice cream and watched two little boys searching for sea creatures in the tide pools in front of her, Courtney dug through her bag, pulled out a hat, and placed it on her head. She sank back onto her chair, her feet digging into the sand in front of her as she scooped ice cream onto her spoon. “Okay, I’m ready.”

Isabelle turned and met Courtney’s light-brown eyes. “Ready?”

“You know, for all the questions.”

Isabelle felt like she’d walked in on the middle of a conversation. She studied her sister’s pretty face. “Questions?”

Courtney licked her spoon clean. “Yeah, you know, like have you bought everything you need? How much money do you have in the bank? Are you worried about your new roommate? Do you have enough underwear?”

Isabelle laughed and dug a cookie chunk out of her Oreo-mint shake. “Well, do you?”

“Ha!” Courtney pointed with her spoon. “I knew it. I knew that’s why you brought me down here.”

Isabelle grinned. “What? I can’t just enjoy a beach day with my sister?”

“Sure, you could, but you won’t until we get these questions out of the way.”

Isabelle chuckled. “Fine. Just tell me vhat I need to know,” she tried faking a Russian accent. “Zen ve can enjoy the beach.”

Courtney giggled. “That was terrible. You sound like Dracula.”

“Sorry. I haven’t interrogated anyone for a while.”

“Okay, here goes. I’ve gone through my list, I’ve checked it twice, and I have everything I need. I’ve been working my summer job for three years now. And I think I have enough money to last me at least through next summer. Then I’ll come home and work again. Also, I’m planning to get a job on campus as soon as I get there. So that’ll help.”

Isabelle nodded encouragingly.

Courtney shrugged. “I’ve been chatting with my new roommate on the phone, texting, and a little bit of e-mail, and I think we're going to get along just fine.” She lowered her sunglasses to look at Isabelle over the top. “As for my underwear situation, I guess I need to remind you you’re my sister, not my mother. So, basically, MYOB.”

Isabelle laughed, and lifted her spoon in the air. “Okay, fine. I’ll let you worry about your own underwear.”

“I’m thinking about getting my own car, just a cheap one to get me around, but I’ll have to see what it’s like at the university first. If there’s parking and all.”

“That reminds me. I never did ask you why you borrowed my car.”

Courtney glanced up, then ducked her head. “Do you really want to know?”

Something in her sister’s voice had Isabelle’s brows pulling together. “Nothing illegal, I hope?”

“Define illegal.”

“Courtney, what on earth did you do?”

“I may have broken into the limo driver’s apartment to have a look around.” She shrugged. “Actually, he left his place unlocked, so I didn’t have to actually break anything to get in.”

Izzy’s mouth was hanging open.

Courtney glared at her. “And don’t lecture me, either. I know it was stupid. The guy almost caught me, too. As I was leaving, he was coming home. I barely got out of there in time.”

Isabelle shook her head. “You could have gotten hurt, arrested.”

Courtney shrugged. “I know.”

“Was that all you did?”

Courtney shrugged again. “I also tracked down the guy with the metal detector from the beach. I had to go at five in the morning to catch him. When I confronted him, he admitted he’d found a necklace. He showed it to me, but it wasn’t Adam’s. When I showed him a picture of the Starfire, he was amazed. He said he was going back to the beach to look for it again. I told him if he found it, I’d give him a reward, but he said he wouldn’t make me any promises.” Her gaze cut to Isabelle. “He’s probably still looking for it.”

Izzy couldn’t help it. She laughed, and once she started, she couldn’t stop.

Courtney watched her, chuckled, then said, “The limo guy was a total slob. I had to go home and shower after I searched his place.”

That made Isabelle laugh even harder, and after a minute or so, she sank back into her chair, exhausted. “I know I should lecture you. Breaking and entering--”

“Just entering.”

“Looking for strange men in the early hours of the morning--”

“He was strange, I’ll give you that.”

“But I won’t. I’m glad you’re okay.”

Courtney grinned as she looked out at the ocean. A minute later, she said, “I’ll miss this, you know?”

“What? Me lecturing you? Me asking uncomfortable questions?” Isabelle teased.

Courtney smiled. “That, too. But what I meant was, the ocean, California, family.” She glanced at Isabelle. “Are you going to miss me?”

Isabelle heard the underlying insecurity in her sister’s voice. “Of course I will. How can you doubt it?”

Courtney glanced down and dug her feet into the sand. She shrugged. “I don’t know. I just, you know, wonder if you’ll be happier without me around. Without having to take care of me and clean up my messes.”

“Of course I don’t feel that way.”

“It must’ve sucked, you know, being more than my sister.”

“On the positive side, I got to boss you around more than most sisters do.”

Courtney frowned at her. “I’m being serious.”

“Seriously, Courtney? You know how much I love you.”

“I know, it’s just that…I guess what I’m trying to say is, I’m happy for you, you know? I’m happy you get to finally live your own life. Have you found an apartment yet?”

Isabelle looked out at the gently rolling ocean. She felt bad that Courtney was right, that she was relieved to finally be able to step into the role of sister. “Not yet. Still looking.”

“Dad’s really happy in his new job. But after everything that happened, it was pretty cool of Mr. Wilder to offer to give him his old one back.”

“It was.”

“So, do you think about him anymore?”

A sharp pain hit Isabelle in her chest. Did she miss Adam? She took a shuddering breath. “Only all the time.”

Courtney’s mouth parted. “You don’t hate him?”

Isabelle shook her head, her gaze dropping to her half-eaten shake, her stomach suddenly queasy. “Nope.”

“Then why don’t you ever talk about him? Why don’t you call him?

Why are you acting like none of that ever happened? I’ve been scared to talk to you about it, because I don’t know what to say other than I’m sorry again.”

Unexpected tears welled in Isabelle’s eyes. “I felt like I had to leave, but now I miss him, you know?”

Courtney sat up. “Oh, my gosh, Izzy. Are you in love with him?”

Isabelle laughed and, embarrassed, wiped away tears. She shrugged. “I don’t know. Maybe.”

“Why don’t you talk to him?”

“I…I don’t know what to say.”

“But it’s been three weeks. You haven’t even spoken in that whole time?”

Isabelle shook her head. “He came by the hospital for a checkup twice, and when the other nurses tried to get me to go in to see him, I just couldn’t face him.”

“Why don’t you just go over to his house?”

“I’m trying to work up the nerve. In the meantime, I’ve got things to do. Get you off to school, get an apartment, be there for Dad.”

“Mr. Wilder’s been asking Dad about you. Did you know that?”

“Dad’s mentioned it.”

“Anyway,” said Courtney. “What about Dad? Erin’s there for him. You don’t need to worry about us anymore. What do you want?”

“I don’t know.”

“Don’t forget he was a jerk and made you move in with him and all.”

Isabelle shrugged. “That wasn’t his fault.”

Courtney didn’t say anything for a long moment. Finally she lifted her head. “So just say it. You do love him, don’t you?”

Other books

Road to Casablanca by Leah Leonard
The Long Weekend by Savita Kalhan
The Wedding Wager by Regina Duke
Zachary's Gold by Stan Krumm
The Bite Before Christmas by Jeaniene Frost, Lynsay Sands
Exiled by Nina Croft
Code Breakers: Alpha by Colin F. Barnes
Fine-Feathered Death by Linda O. Johnston
Waste by Andrew F. Sullivan