Her Perfect Mismatch (A Town Named Eden Book 2) (13 page)

BOOK: Her Perfect Mismatch (A Town Named Eden Book 2)
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How could she explain how she’d been feeling since meeting Mitch?

Huffing out a breath, she slowed down, turned off the road and brought her little car to a stop at a lookout point with an uninterrupted view of the town below.

“Okay, Elizabeth. Out with it.” Why had she allowed the slightest glitch to throw her off balance? Everything had been perfect, even the day she’d spent thinking Mitch had lost interest in her. The depth of her disappointment had to be an indication of how she felt about him. Sure, the sex had been… great, but she wanted more from him, she wanted to experience more with him.

She’d been nothing but light relief. A source of entertainment.

You’re annoyed because you were kept in the dark.

“Too right.” Andrew had kept her in the dark, always knowing what was best for her, always expecting her to go along with his decisions without expressing the slightest doubt.

She reached inside her handbag and drew out the notebook and pen she always carried. This crossroads moment called for a pros and cons list. “And something to fire me up,” she said ripping the wrapper off a candy bar. As her teeth sunk into it, she slumped back on her seat and sighed.

She could sugarcoat that morning’s episode and say it was all part and parcel of living in a small town where everyone knew everyone else’s business. And maybe she was making too big a deal of it. “So what if Eddie and the girls wanted to have some fun… at my expense?”

She pressed the tip of her pen against a blank page and drew a small bullet point circle. Taking another bite of her candy bar, she savored the chocolate concoction and plucked the first thought that came to mind.

…We know who the owner is but he’s trying to keep the fact he owns the place a secret…

Eddie!

“Leader of the gang,” she wrote. Pro or con?

Eddie had been supportive. Massively so. Then again, she’d also been…

Elizabeth tapped the candy bar against her lip. “A duplicitous practical joker having a laugh at my expense… maybe, I’m not sure.” Mostly, she’d been accepting of Elizabeth. On their first encounter, she’d shied away and Eddie hadn’t held it against her. Acceptance, Elizabeth told herself, was a two way street. She had to give it as well as receive it…

There’d been no real harm in the prank. But had there been an attempt at maneuvering her?

She reached for another candy bar.

Had Eddie tried to bring her in direct conflict with Mitch?

Elizabeth shook her head.

“Nope.” She’d bet anything her intentions had been harmless.

An hour later, surrounded by candy wrappers, she looked at her list of pros and cons. The scales tipped heavily toward the positives, and every negative she’d listed had positive flip sides to them. She turned the page and scanned the list she had scribbled under Mitch’s name.

He’d known she was stealing his rhubarb. “And he didn’t say anything.” Andrew would have been quick to use it to his advantage while Mitch had…

She filled one page and then another and another. Half an hour later she sat back and watched the sun dip over the horizon. “I should get back.” In a minute, she thought.

Setting the notebook aside, she leaned back and closed her eyes.

 

Chapter Thirteen

 

 

“I found her.” Mitch hung up the phone and peered inside the car. Elizabeth had curled up into a ball, one hand clutching a candy bar and the other a pen. He considered going back to his car and turning the high beams on, but then that might startle her. He tested the driver’s door. Locked. The windows were up, and so was the soft top.

“Elizabeth,” he said firmly.

She stirred and, in the process, brushed her cheek against the candy bar.

He tapped the window with the tip of his finger. She stirred again, this time pressing her cheek against the window and leaving an imprint of chocolate.

He’d found her. That was all that mattered.

He could breath easy now.

She hadn’t left.

Stepping back, he drew out his phone and selected her number. Within seconds, her phone rang. He’d already tried calling her several time and she hadn’t answered. Had she been ignoring him?

After a couple of rings, she jolted upright. For a moment, she sat there staring at her hands, as if trying to understand why she was holding a pen in one, and the candy bar in the other.

When she turned and saw him, she scrambled away from the window and gradually leaned back to peer at him, the chocolate smudge turning her lip into a half smile.

Brushing her hair away from her face, she unlocked the car door and stepped out.

“I fell asleep.”

She sounded dazed.

“And—” She brushed her hand across her cheek and frowned. “What are you doing here?”

Mitch smiled at her. “Looking for you.” He took a step toward her. “You had us worried. You told Glenda you’d be back by lunch at the latest.”

“Oh. I got caught up… I was busy. I worked on a list. In fact, I worked on several lists. Thinking time on paper works best for me.” She held up a finger and then dove inside the car. Moments later, she emerged holding a notebook. Tearing off a page, she waved it at him. “These are the reasons why I should stay.” Flicking through her notebook, she found what she wanted and tore another page off. “This page is blank because I couldn’t think of any reasonable excuse to pack up and leave.” The page fluttered to the ground.

“Elizabeth, are you all right?” Her voice had a high lilt to it, the words running into each other, as if pushing and shoving to be heard.

“I’m great. And…” she tore off another page. “These are the reasons why I’m sure I have feelings for you and, despite everything…” she frowned at her notebook, “I wrote it all down… Anyway, I’m fast on my way to falling in love with you—”

“You are?”

She nodded. “But I’m not supposed to tell you that because you’ve sworn off women and you’re not interested in anything serious. In fact, you only want fun and games, especially the sort that involves me stealing your rhubarb, but I’m willing to overlook that because I shouldn’t take things so seriously, see… I wrote that here… somewhere. And in hindsight, I suppose it was funny… to you and everyone else and eventually, I might even find it amusing…”

“Yeah, I’m sorry about that.” She was falling in love with him. Mitch took a deep swallow and tried to remember what he’d been about to say. “If I’d known you were going to take it to heart—”

She gave a vigorous shake of her head. “Nope, it’s not an issue. I know I made it one, but I was wrong.”

“Um. Do you need some water?”

She shook her head and clutched the notebook against her chest. “How did you find me?”

“A driver spotted your car.”

“You had people out looking for me?”

“You didn’t answer your phone. We used
twitter
to put the town on alert.
HashtagWheresElizabeth
.”

“You made a hash tag for me? I’m touched. No one’s ever done that for me.”

“We would have found you sooner, but not much traffic comes out this way, that’s why it took so long.”

“I wasn’t lost, not in the way you think. I know where I am.” She looked around her, her brows furrowed. “And I know where I want to be.” Her eyes bounced back to him.

“Okay.” He shoved his hands inside his pockets. “It’s dark and it gets cold out here at night. How about I drive you back home and you can tell me all about it. We can collect your car tomorrow.”

Dropping her notebook, she clutched her stomach. “I feel queasy.”

“How much chocolate did you eat?”

“I don’t know. Some. A lot. I nibbled, so it’s hard to tell.”

Mitch stepped forward and wove his hand around her waist. “Come on, I’ll take you home and you can have a cup of Glenda’s magic potion.”

“Potion?”

“Lemon verbena. Good for upset stomachs, and… hangovers. She grows it in her garden.”

“I need my notebook. It has all the reasons why…”

… she was sure she loved him.

He reached inside her car, brushed aside the candy wrappers and grabbed her handbag. Then he stooped down and collected the notebook and scrunched up pages.

“You’re rescuing me again.”

“Looks like it.” He smiled and guided her to his car.

They both settled in, stealing glances at each other.

He was about to turn the ignition on, when she stopped him.

“Can we talk for a bit,” she said.

“Sure.” After a few minutes, she still hadn’t said anything, so Mitch cleared his throat. “So… you have feelings for me and you think you might love me.”

She shrugged. “I only got as far as deciding that… yes, I do have feelings for you and it’s okay if you don’t. I’ll deal with it. I’m happy I have feelings. It means I’m getting on with my life, and I’m not afraid. Sure, I’m still a little wary, but I’ll get used to having so many people in my life who take an interest and care. I haven’t experienced that before.”

He sat back and stared down at the valley. “You have some catching up to do.”

“What do you mean?”

“We like you. Of course we care.”

“And you came looking for me.”

“We do that out here.” And if she’d packed up and gone back to Melbourne, he would have followed, just to make sure she was okay. Then, maybe in time—

Everyone deserved a second chance. If she had feelings for him, then…

He didn’t have the benefit of a sugar rush, so he took his time sorting out his thoughts. Whatever he said to Elizabeth would determine the next step, and the next…

And he was fine with that. He wanted to take steps and to move in one direction. Towards Elizabeth. But he didn’t want to scare her off, or rush her into something she’d regret.

…she was sure she loved him.

That was a good start.

“Um, what I said earlier—”

“I’m sorry about leaving the way I did. I panicked and I wasn’t really listening. But some of it came back and I wrote it down. You know how you can look at something but not really see it? Well, the same applies to listening. I heard you, but nothing really sunk in. That’s why I came out here. I needed to regroup…”

“Yes, but what I said about you being Tom and Luke’s type…”

“Oh, that. I spent a day with them. They’re nice and helpful. And very knowledgeable but… They’re not you.”

Mitch savored the words. Who needed chocolate for a sugar rush when he could listen to Elizabeth saying Tom and Luke were nice but they weren’t him… “I’m glad to hear that because I didn’t mean it.”

“Is there… um… any chance I might be your type?” she asked.

He leaned toward her and caressed her cheek, brushing his thumb over the smudge of chocolate. “I don’t know if you heard, but I’ve sworn off women.” He thought about mentioning the reasons why, but something more important took precedence.

“Oh… yes, I did hear.”

“But that’s because I want to make room in my life for only one woman.”

“You do?”

He nodded. “In fact, I know I have a lifetime’s worth of room for one particular woman. And that means… I want to be your type. I know you’re my type and I think we could be good together. I already know I love you. I’m not sure about all the reasons why, but they’ll come to me. I know they will. Every day, I’ll find something new to love about you. And that’ll be half the fun. And if you let me, I’d like to build you a hothouse for your rhubarb.”

“You love me?”

He laughed. “Yes. I haven’t looked at or thought about anyone else since you stole my parking space.”

She shifted in her seat.

“Crap,” he said under his breath. A simple yes would have been enough. But he was desperate to make her understand. To make her believe he could love her so soon. As crazy as it sounded, he knew that in twenty or more years’ time, he would look up from whatever he was doing and tell her he loved her, and it would sound as exhilarating as it did right that moment.

“I stole your—”

“I was hoping you’d missed that.”

“When?”

“That first day you came to Eden.”

“Oh.” She sat back and sighed. “I was a different person.” She laughed softly. “Actually, come to think of it, I was already the new me.”

“Does that mean you’re going to make a habit of stealing car spaces?”

“And rhubarb.” She clamped her hand over her mouth. “I’ve become a delinquent and a daredevil. I told Glenda I wanted to wear a gossamer gown and dance under a full moon but I really wanted to dance naked—”

“I’d like to see that.”

They sat in silence for a while.

Mitch thought about how she made him feel.

He brushed his hand across his face. “It feels like having a honing device inside me. I can sense you’re nearby.”

“Have we known each other long enough for that to happen?”

“Do we need to?”

She looked down at her hands. “After only a day of living in Eden I knew I loved it. One bite of Joyce’s Puff Doughnut was enough for me to decide I loved it. But Eden’s a place and the donut’s a thing. People are… complicated.”

“I know and sometimes people do and say the wrong thing.”

“It’s okay, so long as they don’t mean any harm.”

“If I had to start working on a list, I’d say I love you for the person you are and the person you’re becoming.”

She gave him a big smile. “It’s a relief to be able to be me. If that makes sense…”

“It sure does.” He reached for her hand. “I’m patient enough to wait for you to decide how you really feel about me. There’s no hurry. You have a business to grow and some more settling down to do in Eden. More people to meet.”

“I suppose so. Although… I could decide now…”

“Tomorrow will be soon enough.” He brushed his lips against the edge of her mouth. “We have plenty of time.”

“I like the idea of having something special to look forward to tomorrow. But, why do I need a hothouse?”

He laughed. “I’ll tell you on the way back home.”

 

 

* * * * *

 

 

 

I hope you’ve enjoyed this story. For updates and tidbits on the characters appearing in this story, as well as updates on upcoming releases, please visit
soniaparin.com
or follow me
twitter.com/soniaparin

 

Please keep reading for an excerpt from Her Irresistible Troublemaker by Sonia Parin

 

 

 

BOOK: Her Perfect Mismatch (A Town Named Eden Book 2)
13.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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