"So… if you're up for it, wanna come with me?" He glanced at his watch before returning his gaze to hers. "Gotta go in a few to make it on time, either way." But his tone was anything but nonchalant, even hopeful if Aiden was honest. A slow smile crossed her lips and she shoved an errant lock of hair from her face, already feeling a little flicker of excitement at the prospect of spending some solo time with Mitch, as well as seeing Jessie again. It hadn’t been too long; Jessie had dropped in for a weekend a few months before, and Aiden had visited her in Chicago a few months before that. Jessie and her parents were only a few of those she’d stayed consistently in touch with. But it was the first time they were both back home at the same time in ages and, combined with the hours-long ride before her, it was a no-brainer.
“I’d love to.” She stood up slowly, making sure her lightheadedness had passed, only to find he’d already stood and taken her arm anyway. “Easy,” he urged, making sure she was steady on her feet before they both headed for the door. “Can’t say I’m disappointed,” he said with a wink, making her breath hitch just the slightest, making her do her best not to read too much into it... or the feel of his strong, capable hand gentle on her bare skin. “And don’t worry,” he added, as she bent to grab her handbag with her good hand. “I’m sure you and Jessie can get in plenty of beach time over the next few days. Just like old times.” Aiden laughed, for the first time that morning feeling carefree and in her element, elated at the sheer luck of the timing. All of them, Jessie, Mitch, herself, and some other long time friends had practically made a career out of life by the shore, taking full advantage of Adelaide’s cottage being right on the water with its own private little stretch of beach, and grateful for every moment. It could prove all too easy to fall back into that breezy rhythm. “Keep talking like that and I might have to extend this trip into the whole summer.” He flashed her a grin as he opened the passenger door to his car - the same old Jeep he’d had since high school, the one that had belonged to his Dad before that, she remembered with yet another flutter of nostalgia as she thanked him and slid into the seat. “Would that be the worst thing ever?” he asked, half teasing again, half serious, tugging another smile to her lips in response. “Maybe, maybe not,” she answered as she slid her sunglasses back over her eyes with a bit of a smirk. “Depends on if you’re asking me, or my checking account.” That elicited a laugh as Mitch hopped into the driver’s seat and smoothly started up the old Cherokee before they both buckled up. “Man, I can’t believe you’ve still got this old beast on the road.” The awe was clear in her voice, no trace of teasing to be found. She remembered well just how much it had meant to him to be given the Jeep on his 16th birthday, the pride he’d taken in it before he even started driving. How every Saturday morning, he’d carefully and lovingly washed and waxed the old Blue Monster, without fail, to work against the effects of the ever-present sand and salt. It had paid off, too; the thing looked almost mint. “How are your parents doing, anyway? I feel like it's been an age since I had a good long conversation with your Mom.” “Enjoying retirement,” he replied, shaking his head as they eased onto the road. “For a guy who swore he’d never quit the practice, Dad's sure having a great time without it. They’re home for the rest of the summer before jetting off on a European tour for an entire month. They just got home from Yosemite a few weeks ago.” “Wow. That’s different. They always seemed like such homebodies to me.” “Me too, but I see now it wasn’t always by choice, you know? Dad didn’t have a good sense of work-life balance as it was, so that didn’t help. But even when you do, its hard to get away long enough to be worth it.” He shrugged, trailing off, as they headed down the little main street that made up most of the social hub of Pebble Point. Most places were still closed that early in the morning, with the eternal exception of a few beach-gear shops and rentals, right along with an already packed Keisha’s Diner pumping its alluring southern-fried, greasy-breakfast-goodness into the air. “That makes sense,” Aiden replied, giving a nod. She could absolutely relate to that, to the inability to get away from a job you actually like, one that sucks you in without warning or care for any of your vague future plans. “I take it you’re still finding your feet with the practice?” “You could say that,” he agreed. “It’s only been about a year.” She nodded again, settling back and resting her injured hand palm-up on her knee. “But you’re taking a few days for yourself, that’s gotta count for something, right?” "It does. I kind of made it a point to build some time in, no matter what. Dad and I don't exactly see eye-to-eye on that, though. Or on a few other decisions I've made about the practice, for that matter." He gave a bit of a shrug, but the fleeting, troubled look on his features hadn't gone unnoticed. "Like what? If that's not too nosey a question, I mean," Aiden added quickly, giving him an out as well as an attempt to gloss over an awkward question she hadn't meant to let slip out quite so fast. He gave a slightly hollow laugh and shook his head. "It's not. It's nothing secret, anyway. But, essentially, boundaries. I joined the practice to a regional health network which does a few things - it gives me a set schedule, it sets me up with a privately-managed on-call instead of everyone having my personal number, and it lets me take a few days off here and there because I have someone to cover me. He thinks I've sold my soul to the insurance companies. And maybe in a way I did, but there's more to it than what's in it for me. It's also good for my patients in the long run. Until there's some kind of national healthcare, this works so much better for them. People can get referred to specialists, or for surgery, much faster because all the medical professionals in the network are already approved for their insurance. And I have a plan and fund in place for people who don't have coverage or coverage that falls short, too." "Selling your soul seems a little dramatic, Mitch. It sounds like you're doing everything right and working with what you’ve got while still taking care of your patients. Everyone deserves some time off... Boundaries are important, too. I didn't realize everyone in town had your dad's number. Eesh." He nodded as he merged the Jeep onto the entrance ramp to the highway, the old truck smoothly kicking up it's speed with well-oiled ease as he shifted gears. "Oh yeah, small town doc thing, I guess. During flu and RSV season, especially, the phone would ring off the hook some nights. She took awhile to get there, but Mom was at her wits' end with him. Let's just say the Christmas before last was tense. I'm pretty sure she gave him an ultimatum." His mouth pulled up at one corner in a half-smirk as a scoffing sound huffed past his lips. "To be honest, I'm surprised it took her that long," he half-muttered. "Woaaaah," Aiden said before letting out a long, low whistle. "Go Momma Cynthia, I guess? That's crazy. I didn't think that was her style, but I guess getting that fed up will do some things to a person." "Yeah, seriously. He ended up announcing his anticipated retirement that January and I took over right after I finished up my residency. He stayed on awhile to get me up to speed… and, I suspect, to try and make sure I kept things the way he wanted them. But Mom nipped that in the bud fast and started booking them on trips." He laughed and shook his head. "She waited that long to enjoy life with him, but I was and am grateful for the assist, no matter her motivation." Aiden shot him a grin at that. "I'm sure. Your dad always has been 'just so' about a lot of stuff. I can imagine it's been hard for him to let go and stay out of your hair." "You got that right. But he's getting a little better about it… for the most part. It helps that they're busy all the time. Even when they’re home. Mom’s even got him looking over active adult community brochures; you know, the places with golf, and pickle ball courts, bocchi clubs… stuff like that,” he said with a fresh laugh. “You think they’ll move?” Aiden asked, surprised at both the prospect and the unexpected twinge of sadness somewhere deep in her middle. Jessie and Mitch’s house had been like a second home for her, with Cynthia looking after her just as carefully and lovingly as she had her own children. She’d spent many nights sleeping over when Nan had had to be away, and countless days, too, at the house just a few blocks from the beach. Aiden's mother and Cynthia had been best friends, too, so it was all but a given. Mitch gave her a sidelong, curious look and a slight shrug. “Who knows? It’ll be the end of an era, though, if they do. We had a lot of great times there…” “Yeah it will, and yeah… we did, didn’t we?” A smile on her lips covered the pain at the thought of how those good times had slowed down to a trickle before they dried up, at how another piece of her childhood was starting to slip away. A sigh was hefted and she glanced out the window, trying to quell the emotions warring for prominence as she got lost, for a few moments, in her thoughts. “We did,” he agreed softly, taking her uninjured hand in his, though his eyes stayed trained on the road for a long beat. At last, he cleared his throat and glanced at her again. "Penny for your thoughts?" But he didn't move his hand away, a move that stirred up a little flutter of delight."Gosh, well… there are a lot of them flying around in there right now. But I guess I'm mostly thinking about how much everything's changed and how, for the first time, it's really hitting me. Them selling the house sort of… sends that feeling home."He nodded. "If it's any consolation, I don't think they're ready to do that just yet. They're just feeling out plans, you know? And besides… if they do decide to sell, I'm probably the one who's going to take it on." "You're really planning on staying here then? I have to say, I'm surprised, but I'm not mad about it."He laughed, giving a little shrug. "You know, it surprised me, too. I didn't start out thinking I'd end up back home, but somewhere in the middle of my residency, I started getting real homesick. Not just for my family, but for all of it. The town, the beach, just… even knowing it wasn't the same, I wanted to be back here. So, I did something kind of 'out there' and took some psychic advice. The girl I was sort of, well, ser
"So," he said, giving her a sidelong glance. "What about you? Anyone serious? Any strange tales of woeful breakups heralded from the Great Beyond?" She shook her head with another laugh, blowing out a bit of a sigh of her own. "Oh, no no. Just the regular sort. You know, 'You work too much. You're married to your job. You don't have any time for us.' There were a few more colorful things tossed in, too." She shook her head. "I mean, maybe it was all true, but I didn't think working hard was a bad thing. Clearly, he thought otherwise, even though he worked just as much." She smirked. "Eric ended up being a little too traditional for my tastes." "Ouch. When did all that go down?" "Oh gosh," she breathed out, stalling a bit over how recently it had happened because she felt anything but upset over it and maybe that wasn't the best look, even if it was honest. "A couple months ago. He moved out the weekend I had my latest big project going on. Full three day thing. I come home at the e
Jessie gave a laugh and shook her head. “Okay so… that’s because I wasn’t seeing him then, yet. We’ve been friends for a long time, though. And we got a little tipsy one night at a work thing, went back to mine, messed around, he stayed the night, you know,” she murmured under her breath with raised brows. “And then… he kind of never left?” She shook her head with a grin. “I know its all so fast, but it feels like our whole friendship was leading up to this. He proposed last week!” She let out another giggle. “My parents don’t know yet…no one does, actually. I’m only about 15 weeks along, and I wanted to be sure everything was all good before we told them in person. Actually, I’m kind of glad Mitch picked me up instead of Mom. She would be excited, but… you know.”Aiden nodded. She did indeed know. Cynthia was one of the sweetest women and best moms, but she was a little on the old-fashioned, traditional side. But Cynthia also knew her daughter and her ways quite well - Jessie had alw
“You really are relentless. You know that, right?” At this, Jessie simply shot her a grin.“I know. Its both my most toxic trait and my most endearing quality.” Aiden shook her head and disappeared into the bathroom to scrub her face, reapply some deodorant, and brush out her hair. Already feeling better, she next headed for her closet to see what she had left behind that was both appropriate and comfortable. But Jessie was way ahead of her, up like a shot and sifting through what was there. “Ohhh, this one is perfect!” She exclaimed, pulling out a pretty, fit and flare sundress, pale pink and covered in a delicate flower pattern. It was perfect for the warm summer evening they were headed for. But Aiden shook her head.“Nope. I am not dressing for a date, Jess.”“Oh stop. Its cute, you’ll look casual and sexy, and it’ll give Mitch all the right ideas.”“No thank you!” she said firmly, starting to look through her drawers instead. Eventually, she pulled out a pair of light blue capr
"That could have gone worse," Aiden quipped as she and Mitch headed back out the door a few hours later. "To be honest, I figured once they knew a grandkid was on the way, they'd be alright." "True," Aiden agreed, shaking her head with a laugh.Cynthia had been all geared up to go off on Jessie's lack of notice about a guest, but Jessie artfully intercepted her mother's protests as she pulled Jacob inside to speak with both her parents. Cynthia simply raised her hands to the heavens with a shake of her head and followed them inside after pausing to greet Jacob. Because if there was one truth about Cynthia, she was a stickler for good manners and being a good hostess, and no family uproar would detract from that.Aiden and Mitch had hung back to allow them a few moments, making small talk, and after a happy cry sounded from inside, they exchanged a grin and headed in to find both parents hugging and kissing Jessie and Jacob, their excitement quickly palpable. Cynthia and Paul next ma
“So, my grandparents met right here in this bar. I’m not sure she ever told anyone else the story. But they hated each other at first, or at least, she hated him, and it was hilarious.”“I know you never met him - hell, I barely remember him - but from what my parents say, they were head over heels for each other. So that does not track at all. I can’t wait to hear this.” He leaned on his elbow and rested his chin in his palm, all ears.“So he was new to town, and was just getting his shop set up. He came here one night to blow off some steam after a particularly hot day. Sunburn plus a few too many beers equals…”“Extra drunk,” Mitch finished with a laugh.“Especially for someone not used to the summer sun out here,” Aiden said with a laugh of her own. “Nan was on a date with someone else. The way she tells it, she was trying to get over someone, though, come to think of it, she never mentioned who. But anyway. Grandad was a little too happy go lucky and when Nan’s date went to the r
“That was… interesting,” Aiden said, still looking at the photo. In it, her Nan was holding the soldier’s hand with both of hers and making doe eyes at him while he was smiling adoringly down at her. She hadn’t been a short woman, but the soldier, a darkly handsome, clean-shaven man of about twenty, towered over her. Mitch moved to look over her shoulder, pressing closer than she would call strictly platonic and she felt her breath hitch deliciously in her throat as she pressed just slightly against him in turn. He felt warm, and sturdy, and was just enough of a distraction for the moment from the photo in her hands. She placed it down on the table and turned to look up at him, questions pouring from her gaze as it met his, but she only found a content, determined look there in return. “What are we even doing?” She breathed out, finally putting words to the flirtatious but evasive feeling that had permeated throughout the entire day and evening.“This,” he said, simply, before slidin
This time when he kissed her, the world stood still as the heat crackled between them, the blissful feeling of need and want coming together and slipping through her veins to coil somewhere deep in her core. Blindly, she set her glass down beside his on the side table before her fingers delved into his hair, pulling him close. The embrace grew insistent, hungrier by the moment as he pulled her tight against him, his fingers possessively gripping her upper thighs as she moved, boldly, to straddle his lap. As they inched higher to hook into the delicate, lacy band of her underwear before he gave a playful tug, a gasp slipped past her lips. Her own mindless fingers were already eagerly unbuttoning his shirt, pulling it off his shoulders as she went, before one hand snaked back to unzip her dress. He stopped then, just for a moment, breaking the kiss off as her breath left her in short, sharp bursts, her entire body trembling with pending disappointment that warred with hope all the whi
“So… If money were no object, how and where would you plan your wedding? What would be the ideal dream day?” Aiden asked her best friend with a lackadaisical expression on her face, a relaxed slant to her posture. Her body language was giving nothing away, but Mitch, the only one of the group who knew what she was about to share, caught the mischievous glint in her eye and couldn’t help the smile he quickly hid behind his napkin. The meal of tapas-style small plates had been nearly finished and the most recent round of wine had been drained from oversized glasses. Jessie had been happily downing virgin mocktails all night, trying the most interesting concoctions on offer and had declared about halfway through that they were so good, she didn’t even miss having a glass of wine with dinner. And now, as they waited for dessert, Aiden finally broached the subject she’d been dying to share with them. Having thought over the best way to tell them, the wedding had crossed her mind more tha
“Ughhh, do we have to?” Aiden asked on an exaggerated whine, an arm thrown over her eyes as she kicked the sheets away from her bare form. Mitch had pulled out and rolled off of her to check the text messages that had piled up in the last half hour or so and she let out a sigh as he nodded and returned to her side.One strong hand slid up the length of her torso to cup a breast and she shivered in delight. Only moments ago, he had all but had her screaming the house down in pure ecstasy during a sultry, hard and fast tumble in the bed while they waited for Jessie and Jacob to decide where they wanted to go that night. “‘Fraid so. We’re all booked for Cuvee tonight.”“Leave it to Jessie to pick a wine bar when she can’t even drink,” she giggled softly.“Well, in all fairness, they do have pretty good food now,” he said, joining in on the laughter. “She must be craving something in particular is my only guess.”Aiden shook her head and rubbed lazily at her eyes. “I’ll trust her judgment
A small smile played on her lips as she found herself getting lost in her grandfather’s words, the scenes playing in her head as he retold the story of the night he met Adelaide. She was almost giggling out loud by the time Mitch came back with the drinks. She looked up with a smile and the relief washed over him to see it. “What did you end up picking?” she asked with growing curiosity. “Grown up variety dirty vodka martinis,” he replied with an answering grin. “Perfection,” she said with a happy sigh and moved over so he could drag his chair to sit beside her. “Look. It’s his version of the night he met Nan,” she said, pointing at the start of the story. Mitch settled in close beside her to read, laughing every now and then at Bill’s colorful language and masterful turns of phrase - ‘rat bastard’ was one that stuck out at him, and an echo of Bill’s voice saying that exact thing sounded off in the depths of his memories. “From what I remember, he was quite the character,” he said
Stacks of deposit books, some old-looking certificates, and a small, leather-bound journal greeted her gaze. Under the journal were a few small velvet jewelry boxes. Aiden felt her brow furrow before she looked up, confused, and opened the journal. The same scrawling hand from her grandfather’s note covered the pages and she quickly glanced over the contents. Like the letter, it was addressed to her. She thumbed through a few pages while Mitch stood by, patiently waiting for it to dawn on her just what everything in there meant. “It’s… wow. It’s basically a long letter to me about his life and how he met Nan…” She smiled. “It’s actually really beautiful to hear all this from his perspective.” One line in particular caught her eye and her gaze widened just so. “Well. That’s how he knew my name,” she said with a slightly emotion-choked voice. “My parents let him pick it.”She smiled up at him with just a hint of tears shining in her eyes and he drew her in for a soft kiss at that momen
“What do you mean, what was left in his care?” Aiden asked, slightly confused. She knew from the note that there was some story awaiting her, but even though Edward had passed, she figured whatever it was had died with him. TJ cleared his throat and came to a stop outside a heavily locked door. “Before he passed the torch to me, my father informed me of a few client files that had some… extra requirements attached to them. You were expected to turn up years ago, according to what is in his notes. Bill died under… unusual circumstances, you see. Maybe even suspicious ones. So when you didn’t, and no one else came calling, my father wrote down his account of Bill’s story and put it together with a file he kept under lock and key… Until today, I guess,” he finished up before unlocking the heavy door and pushing it open. “I’ll have to ask you to wait out here before we head to your deposit box.”Aiden was speechless, barely registering that Mitch had taken hold of her good hand while eye
At that, Aiden couldn’t help but laugh, doing her best to smother it behind her hand and failing miserably. “A stage five clinger,” she murmured between giggles, still trying not to give him too hard a time while also trying desperately not to call Sammy’s attention back their way. But she couldn’t help herself; if she were honest, it was a refreshing break from the questions that had been filling her head in the short time since they’d found the passageway. Mitch finally gave in, too, and gave a laugh of his own. “It’s ridiculous, isn’t it?”"Well, I mean… she's ridiculous, and that's why I'm having a hard time keeping a straight face, not because of the situation. Throwing herself at you isn't a good look at all. But on a serious note, no means no, across the bar." Mitch nodded in agreement just as Sammy wandered back into the lobby and Aiden couldn’t help but send a look her way as the teller was trying, too obviously, not to get caught staring, seemingly trying to determine if Ai
A short while later, Aiden had hopped out of the passenger side of her Thunderbird and waited, almost impatiently, for Mitch to join her on the sidewalk. Dutifully, she’d allowed him to drive so she didn’t bust her hand open again, but it had only served to give her too much time to think, leaving her antsy and unable to calm down without the benefit of concentrating on a tangible task. She could barely contain the growing anxiety and curiosity over just what might be in that safety deposit box, but she was also dreading it. The cryptic note had been repeated over and over in her mind and both she and Mitch had taken it apart and tried to consider everything it might possibly mean. As Mitch slid his hand into her good one, she practically dragged him through the doors before they made their way to the counter, the mysterious key dangling from her fingers. The teller at the counter eyed them up before her eyes honed in on the key, then their joined hands, before her gaze moved back t
"Whoa!" Aiden exclaimed as they jumped back just in time, steadying themselves against the back of the loveseat."Holy shit. A secret passage," Mitch said, peering inside the dark space. "Did you have any idea this existed?" Aiden shook her head, more than a little interested but also a little freaked out. How had she never known about this, in her own home no less? "No way. I don't think my Nan ever mentioned anything about this." She took a step closer, grabbing her phone and turning the flashlight on, trying to see further inside the extremely narrow passage. "Look, there's a small staircase, just ahead."They exchanged a look. "Do you want to check it out?" Mitch asked, sensing her hesitation. Aiden nodded, but held up one finger. "Yeah, but let me text Jessie first… just in case." "Good call."After she was sure the text went through, Aiden clicked the flashlight back on and they siddled through the narrow passage, toward the short stair. Mitch went first, ducking slightly due
“I don’t know,” Aiden whispered, trying to get it together. “I do. You'd be miserable, both of you, wondering about what could have been. Are you going to keep coming home for holidays when he eventually brings someone new around? Or when he marries her and has kids with her? Not likely.” At the thought of him with someone else, loving her and marrying her and starting a family with her, her middle gave a painful twist, far worse than she could have anticipated. She sucked in a breath. “You’re probably right,” she said quietly. “I’m absolutely right, Aiden. I love you and I love him. And I’m gonna tell him the same… if I see him at all this week, that is,” she couldn’t help but add in with a sly grin before she grew serious again. “Don’t be stupid about any of this. He needs to give you time and space to figure things out, even if its just mental space, but you both need to think good and hard about what you’re willing to compromise to make this work. And don't give me any of tha