The Perfect Match (20 page)

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Authors: Kristan Higgins

BOOK: The Perfect Match
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“By the way,” he said. “I got you this today.” He picked up the small velvet box and handed it to her.

It had taken a surprisingly long time to pick out a ring. He’d figured he’d go into the first store he saw, ask for a ring in his price range and wham-bam-thank-you-ma’am, he’d be done. Instead, he’d looked at every damn ring in the store before settling on this one.

Honor opened the box. “Oh,” she breathed.

“Like it? If not, I’ll return it, and you can pick out something more to your taste.” Tom realized belatedly that he was holding his breath.

“No, no. This is...it’s beautiful.”

“It’s an antique.”

“Yes.” She raised her eyes, and Tom glanced away from the soft, sweet emotion there and looked out the window instead. “Thank you,” she said softly. “It wasn’t necessary.”

“Of course it was. If we’re madly in love and getting married, you should have a ring.” He finished his whiskey and stood up. “Glad you like it. I’ve got to correct papers. And I should call Charlie and listen to him breathe at me.”

“Okay. Thank you again. For...you know. For everything.”

Bollocks.
You’d best be careful, mate,
his conscience warned him.
Wouldn’t want to hurt a nice girl like her.
But she wasn’t a girl. She knew what they were about. At least, she should.

With that, he went upstairs, leaving her sitting on the couch, looking at her ring.

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

“I
T

S
NOT
MY
stuff that’s cluttering up the house. It’s his.” Goggy folded her arms and glared.

Grandparenticide. It held more and more appeal these days. Honor sighed. Theoretically, she had better things to do on a Saturday morning than try to declutter her grandparents’ house. She could get another Pap smear, for example. It would be more fun than this. “Goggy, the two of you are this close to being hoarders.”

“Oh, we are not. You kids. I have laundry to fold.”

“I’ll fold it! Goggy, you can’t be going up and down the stairs so much. They’re a death trap.”

“How else will I get my exercise? Jeremy told me I should exercise. So I exercise.” She gave Honor a triumphant look.

“Speaking of that, there’s a gorgeous pool at Rushing Creek.”

“Where people drown,” Goggy said.

“No one has ever drowned there.”

“It’s just a matter of time.” Goggy turned her back and clumped up the narrow, dark, terrifying stairs of the Old House, one hand on the railing, one hand on the wall.

Faith had tried to help the cause last weekend, managing to sneak one of Goggy’s more hideous cardigans out of the house, which, considering that Goggy could give Pharaoh a run for his money in the stubborn department, was pretty good. Prudence had been less successful; she’d pointed out that they really didn’t need four rusty flour sifters, which had led to Goggy calling Williams-Sonoma, ordering two more and still refusing to part with the other four.

Maybe her grandfather would be more agreeable. He’d been sitting at the kitchen table, ignoring both females in favor of doing the crossword puzzle. “Okay, Pops, let’s take a look and see what we can get rid of, okay?” She tugged on a kitchen drawer, which was stuffed full of crap. Pointless crap, she thought, groping around inside to clear the logjam. Took care not to catch her ring.

And what a ring it was.

Funny, how she thought she loved the stark simplicity of Dana’s ring, that unadorned diamond flashing for all to see. The ring Tom had chosen was an Art Deco style (original, she thought). A square diamond surrounded by two triangular diamonds, encased in engraved platinum...ornate and unusual and utterly, hypnotically beautiful.

The drawer jerked open with a clatter. “Good God.”

“I need those,” Pops said, not looking up from the paper.

“Pops. Come on. How many corkscrews do you need?”

“I’m a winemaker! I need a lot!”

“There are...what...two dozen corkscrews in here? Come on.” She paused for a second, counting. “You don’t need twenty-seven corkscrews.”

“I know how many there are.” The old man scowled at her.

“And you really need every single one?”

“Yes.”

She squeezed the bridge of her nose. “Pops, wouldn’t it be nice to live in a clean, sunny, organized place where you had more than one outlet per floor? Where you could use all the doors because you didn’t have to nail one shut to cut down on drafts? Where you didn’t have to worry about falling down the stairs and breaking your neck?”

“Your grandmother’s the one who runs up and down those stairs fifty times a day. I never go up there.”

“What if Goggy fell and broke her hip? How’d you feel then? Oh, stop. You’d be devastated.” Surreptitiously, she slipped a corkscrew out of the drawer. If she couldn’t get Pops to agree to purge, she’d just steal all his crap and bring it to Goodwill. Not that there was a booming market for used corkscrews. “Seriously, Pops. You can’t be up on the ladder cleaning out gutters anymore. It’s not safe, and it’s not smart.”

He groaned. “When you’re my age, you won’t want anyone telling you what to do, either, sweetheart. If I can’t clean the gutters, what’s next? I can’t dress myself? I can’t feed myself? This is my home. These are my things. Don’t make me a helpless old man who sits around in diapers.”

She felt a tug of sympathy. “No, Pops, that’s not the point. But you have to be realistic. Your balance isn’t great anymore, and it’s way too easy to trip in here. Let alone fall off the ladder like you did last year.”

“You might have a point. Probably not, but maybe. Now put that corkscrew back. That’s my favorite one.”

A knock came on the kitchen door, and Honor looked up.

It was Tom. And Charlie.

“Hallo,” her fiancé said. “Thought we’d lend a hand.”

“Oh! That’s...that’s really nice of you.” She’d mentioned where she was going this morning over breakfast. Hadn’t expected him to turn up.

“Mr. Holland,” Tom said to Pops. “You remember my stepson, don’t you?” The boy sighed with gusto and rolled his eyes, apparently unable to summon the energy to correct Tom on the title. “Charlie, say hello.”

“Hi,” Charlie said, shaking her grandfather’s hand.

“Hello, young man!” Pops said, clapping him on the shoulder. “Maybe you can be on my side and keep these marauding invaders out of my things.”

Charlie’s lips tugged, and Honor glanced at Tom.

His face was full of...yearning, like a dog at the pound who’s been passed over too many times but can’t help pricking up his ears at the sound of footsteps just the same.

Then he saw her looking, and gave her a quick smile that covered up any hint of loneliness.

He was a tough one, Tom Barlow. She felt like she knew him less now instead of more.

“When are you two getting married, anyway?” Pops said.

“Um, soon,” Honor said.

“We should take care of that, shouldn’t we?” Tom murmured.

They should. Once they filed for a marriage license, they had sixty days to get married, or Tom would be deported. Which was exactly why she hadn’t filed yet. What had seemed like a good plan now seemed as thin as March ice, and as sharply dangerous.

“Pops,” she said, “Let’s go down to the cellar. I know there’s stuff we should throw out down there.”

“I have to check the vines,” Pops said.

“Don’t run off, you coward. You said you’d tell me what I could throw away.”

“Nothing. There. I made it easy for you.”

Goggy reappeared in the kitchen, wearing a different dress and a little scarf, indicating that she was going out. “Hello, boys! Give me a kiss! I never know when I’ll get to kiss a handsome man, and here I have two!”

Tom obliged. Charlie did, too, and Goggy patted his cheek. Sweet, how she didn’t berate him for his black eyeliner and earrings. If he was a Holland, he’d never hear the end of it.

“I have a church meeting,” Goggy said. “There’s a huge debate over whether or not to replace the altar cloth. That Cathy Kennedy gets downright vicious sometimes! See you later, dears! Don’t touch anything upstairs, but by all means, get rid of some of your grandfather’s junk.”

“It’s not junk, old woman,” Pops retorted. She ignored him and left in a cloud of Jean Naté.

“I’m here,” came a weary voice. “As ordered. Like I don’t have better things to do on a Saturday.” Abby came in the back door. “Hi, guys,” she said. “Oh, hey, Charlie. I didn’t know you’d be here. Another slave for my aunt to boss around?”

Charlie’s face flamed. “I guess,” he mumbled. Ah, adolescence. Honor had been just as awkward around Brogan, come to think of it. Sigh.

“Let’s get to work,” Honor said. “Rubber gloves are under the sink, and I have plenty of trash bags, and stop glaring at me, Pops.”

“This would be a great place to hide a body,” Abby announced as they went down the warped cellar stairs. “Charlie, this place was built in—what, Pops?—1781?”

“That’s right, sweetheart,” he said. “The first Holland got this land as a reward for fighting against your people, Tom.”

“Is that right?” Tom said. “Seems more of a punishment with this weather we’ve been having.”

He had a point. The temperature had dropped to twenty last night.

“Okay,” Honor said. “We can definitely get rid of some of this stuff.” She reached for a likely candidate.

“Put that down,” her grandfather said. “I need that.”

“Pops, it’s a moldy piece of cushion foam. And it’s torn.”

“So? I can wash it and use it for something.”

“Like what? When would you need moldy torn cushion foam?”

“It’s gross, Pops,” Abby said.

“I’m not going to stand here and watch you make fun of my things,” Pops said. “I have vines to check. Nice to see you, young man,” he said to Charlie. “And you,” he added to Tom. “Marry my granddaughter and make an honest woman out of her.”

“Yes, sir.” Tom shook his hand, and Pops clumped up the old wooden steps.

“He’s gone. Maybe we can just burn the place down,” Abby said.

For the next hour, they stuffed bags with Pops’s precious belongings, which included a bent golf club, a broken mirror and newspapers from the 1960s. Abby talked almost nonstop, bless her, and Charlie answered, shyly at first, then with more confidence as their talk turned to music.

“And what have we here?” Tom asked from the far end of the basement, bending down to examine something. “Hallo. These might be worth something.” He looked up at Honor and grinned.

It was a pile of magazines. Men’s magazines, to be specific.

Tom opened one up. “Miss September, 1972. Not bad.” He straightened up. “Think we should check eBay and see what these are going for?”

“Oh, ick.”

“Nothing ick about her. She’s lovely.”

“Shush. Just toss them.” Man! There were dozens.

“Hopefully we don’t read about a priceless collection of
Playboy
s found at the dump later this week.” He glanced across the cellar at Charlie. “You’re right, though. Best get rid of these before the lad sees them. Hard enough being a pubescent boy without this kind of stimulation.”

They shoveled the magazines into a black trash bag, and amid the smell of stone and old paper, Honor caught a hint of Tom’s soap.

It felt like years since they’d slept together.

When the
Playboy
s were bagged, Tom stood up and pulled off his gloves. “Honor, do you still want to get married?” he asked, his voice quiet.

She jerked her gaze to his. “Sure. Yes.”

“Because if you don’t, I need to make another plan.”

“No. I do.” She took a deep breath. “Do you?”

“Yes.” His face was solemn.

“Are you sure?”

“Yeah. Seeing naked women has only lit a fire to get it done.” He grinned, and Honor’s knees practically buckled. On the one hand, it’d be awfully nice to have a serious conversation with him for more than one or two seconds; on the other, that smile went straight to Down Under.

“Guys! Look what we found!” Abby said, and the two teenagers came over.

Tom looked away. “Is it alive?” he asked.

“Yeah!” Charlie said, holding up his find.

It was a snake.

“Snake!” Honor shrieked, leaping behind Tom. “Snake! Snake!”

Charlie jerked back, and, oh,
fungus,
he dropped it, the snake was on the floor, wriggling and black and evil. Then it was gone in a hideous, lithe movement, and Honor was climbing onto the garbage bag full of
Playboy
s and crawling onto Tom, clutching his head and awkwardly heaving herself onto him.

“Bit of a phobia, darling?” he asked gamely, boosting her a bit.

“Where is it? Where is it?” she said, already sticky with sweat. If that thing went over her foot—or in her pants—oh, God! The idea of its hideous, cold, twisting body against her skin made her dry-heave in terror.

“I forgot you were scared of snakes,” Abby said.

“Well, it’s gone now,” Charlie muttered, squatting down.

Tom hoisted her so she was basically piggyback on him. “Settle down, love, you’ve scared it.”


I’ve
scared
it?
Who in their right mind picks up a snake and holds it! What if it’s poisonous?”

“It was a garter snake,” Charlie said.

“What if was a poisonous garter snake?”

“No such thing, darling.” Tom shifted.

“Don’t put me down! Please! Get me out of here.” She tightened her grip around his throat, earning a choking sound. Couldn’t be helped.

“Here it is,” Charlie said.

“No! Stop it, Charlie! Please!” She gripped Tom with her legs so hard he wheezed.

He loosened her chokehold around his neck. “Charlie, get rid of it, mate.”

“Do you want to hold it, Honor?” Charlie asked sweetly.

Honor burst into tears.

“Oh, man, I’m sorry!” the boy said, looking stricken.

“No, no, she’s got a phobia. Obviously,” Abby said, putting her hand on Charlie’s shoulder. “Let’s get it out of here, okay?”

“I’m
sorry,
” Charlie said, and already resentment was darkening his face.

“Me, too. Sorry,” Honor said, tears still streaking down her face. “I’m afraid of snakes.”

“Yeah. I got that.”

Oh, God, this was so embarrassing. She was wrapped awkwardly around Tom and shaking with revulsion, but she wasn’t about to set foot on the floor, either. Not when the place was riddled with nests of vipers, no sir.

Tom started to put her down.

“No!” she barked, making him flinch, as her mouth was right next to his ear. “What if there are more? Don’t put me down! Don’t move! Don’t drop me!”

“All right, settle down. But here, slide around so I can see you,” he said, and he pulled at her, Honor still gripping him like a jockey, her arms locked around his neck. “Christ, you’re not making this easy, are you?”

“I can’t! I’m afraid, okay? Sue me.”

His shoulders shook. He may have been laughing, the wretch. A few more tries, and he tugged her so that she was facing him. Well, she would be facing him if she could bring herself to, um, face him. Instead, she buried her face in his shoulder, shuddering.

“There, there, sweetheart,” he whispered. “It’s gone.”

He smelled so good. An hour of working in a damp and filthy cellar, and he smelled like soap and rain, and he was warm, and solid, and safe.

After a minute or two, her breathing returned to normal, and the involuntary tears stopped leaking out of her eyes.

“Can I put you down now?” he asked.

She couldn’t stay like this forever. And it was rather, ah, intimate, her legs wrapped around his waist.

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