want to have this talk in front of your brothers and dad.”
“What talk is that?” With a sidelong glance, Arianne tried to assess the expression on his ruddy face. Shane was handsome in a boyish kind of way, but she’d never been attracted to him.
“Did Tanner happen to mention we ran into each other this morning?”
She nodded, stopping at the recessed alcove where they kept the coffeemaker. “Sugar? Cream?” she asked.
He shook his head. “Just black, thanks. I saw you yesterday, as I was leaving the diner after breakfast. Chatting with Gabriel Sloan.”
“Yeah. He wanted to discuss the fall festival.”
She reexperienced the triumphant surprise she’d felt when Gabe agreed to help with the fair and the stab of unexpected disappointment when he’d admitted that he’d be leaving Mistletoe soon after. Her instinct had been to protest that leaving was a mistake, but how could she? She’d been the one to question his being here in the first place! If she wanted to make an argument for his staying, she’d have to be patient and bide her time. She’d ended their conversation by promising to be in touch soon. There’d been a smirk in his voice when he replied, “I don’t doubt it.”
“The fall festival?” Shane echoed.
Arianne handed him his coffee and poured a second cup. “That’s right. Why, what did you think?” She wasn’t sure it was a good idea, but she was curious to view the encounter through someone else’s eyes. What had Shane seen that would make enough of an impression for him to tattle to her big brother?
“I…I don’t know. My sister, Ruthie-you remember her?-she lives in South Carolina now, but back in the day, she was friends with Shay Ortz.”
Shay Ortz Templeton.
“Sloan makes me wary,” he admitted. “His reputation with women…”
“What reputation?” Arianne asked. “The man barely dates.”
He gave her a fond smile that somehow set her teeth on edge. “Just because he’s not buying ladies nice dinners doesn’t mean he doesn’t get around. I heard kitchen tile wasn’t all he laid for Nicole Jones. Tara Hunaker hired him to refinish her basement and likes to giggle to anyone who’ll listen that the room never did get done, but that Gabriel was worth every penny.”
Arianne’s stomach lurched. “Tara Hunaker is a floozy reputed to have hit on her husband’s attorney in the middle of her divorce proceedings. I’m not putting a lot of stock in what she has to say about Gabe. And I don’t see what any of this has to do with me.”
Shane shoved his free hand through his hair. “Nothing, really. Except that after I talked to Tanner this morning, I realized that I’d sounded…jealous.”
Some of the starch went out of her spine. “So did you come over here to set the record straight?” she asked hopefully. “Make sure Tanner didn’t give me the wrong idea?”
“No.” Shane swallowed, suddenly making Arianne wish she could add a belt of Irish whiskey to her coffee. “I came because I forced myself to admit I
“Like Quinn?” Arianne asked, her tone ice. “Or Barb Echols?”
“Well, n-no.” Shane’s complexion flushed dark red as he tried to regroup. “Obviously not them. They’re decent women. Like you! You’re the one I wanted to talk about, not him. Arianne, I think…I think there could be something special between us.”
Arianne had seen “special.” She witnessed it firsthand every day. Even after all these years, her parents’ faces still lit up when they saw each other across a room. Tanner had given up life in Atlanta and came home to Mistletoe because he’d never been able to forget Lilah Baum. And David had experienced love at first sight when he met Rachel, the wife for whom he would gladly move heaven and earth.
“Shane.” She kept her voice gentle, biting her tongue against every bad cliche she’d ever heard. What was she supposed to do, tell him she treasured his friendship? That she loved him like a brother?
When the only words she could think of seemed trite to the point of insulting, she simply shook her head. “I don’t feel that way.”
He blinked. “But would you be willing to give it a shot? Maybe go on a real date sometime and see-”
“No, thank you. But I’m flattered that you asked.” She started to pat his arm then checked herself, not wanting to be condescending. “I should get back to work now.”
“Yeah.” He didn’t meet her eyes. “I don’t want to hold you up. Thanks for the coffee.”
He fled as if his jeans were on fire.
“Is it safe for us to come back now?” she heard Tanner ask from the doorway. His voice was sympathetic. “We didn’t want to interrupt.”
“I appreciate that,” she said. Her brothers were pains in the butt, but she adored them.
“Everything okay?” David asked.
“Just peachy.” She smiled at them, then rejoined her father in the main part of the store. He was busy helping bald Mr. Jebson compare camping equipment.
Business picked up over the next hour, and Arianne was grateful to stay busy. She answered gardening questions for two little old ladies, ordered a new shipment of saws, rang up purchases for four customers and told a woman over the phone that while they didn’t officially have gift cards for purchase, Arianne would print some sort of certificate for her husband’s birthday and have Zachariah sign it.
Eventually she hit a lull and couldn’t help thinking about Shane’s unanticipated confession, his optimism that they could build something special. Arianne knew instinctively that she would never reciprocate the sentiment. In fact, one of the reasons she’d always felt so at ease in his company was because he was so…safe. There’d never been any sexual tension.
Arianne was known among family and friends as being cheerfully fearless-which was mostly true-but Waides didn’t mess around when it came to love. They fell hard, and Arianne had never been one for half measures. She dated, but with the exception of some high school heartbreaks, she’d guarded her heart.
She hated to think what could happen if she carelessly gave it to the wrong guy.
Chapter Five
Gabe had just started cooking dinner-which, tonight, involved dumping a can of soup into a pot-when his cell phone buzzed and vibrated across the countertop. He saw Waide Supply on the caller ID and considered not answering. What had he been thinking yesterday? He’d been in a strange mood after encountering his father. When he’d seen Arianne, it had been as if something clicked in his brain-help her with the festival, make that his casual farewell after thirty years in this town.
By the time he’d arrived home with his groceries, the idea had begun to seem like more damn trouble than it was worth. There wasn’t anyone here to whom he owed a farewell. Still, he’d given his word.
With a sigh, he snatched up the phone. “Gabe Sloan.”
“You know, for a guy whose living is dependent on paying customers being able to contact you, you’re not that easy to track down,” Arianne scolded lightly.
“Yet you managed.”
“Ever thought about getting business cards? If you need help creating them-”
“Don’t tell me. When you’re not managing the store or drafting community volunteers, you design business cards.”
“Me? No. But Chloe Malcolm does some great marketing work. She put together our Web site for the store.” She paused. “I don’t suppose you have a Web site?”
“Miss Waide, as much as I appreciate your helpful advice-”
She guffawed, an unfeminine but admirably unselfconscious sound.