“You are no fun.”
“I’m just trying to make sure your liver lasts until you get back to the city.”
“My liver is in incredible shape.”
“Was in incredible shape. You’ve pickled it since the last time you looked.”
He went to serve the others and she sipped her coffee, watching him. He said, “Last drinks, boys,” and gave one of the men a beer and the other one coffee.
“I wanted a beer,” the man snarled.
“I know you did,” Jake said. “It’s a damn shame.”
“Yeah,” the guy said sadly. He sipped his coffee.
“How do you do that?” Kate asked Jake when he came back.
“What?”
“All these tough guys get ready to bash you and then they don’t.”
“You mean Henry? Henry McCrum wouldn’t hurt anybody.” He picked up a glass from a tray under the bar and began to polish it. “Henry’s my old biology teacher. In fact he still teaches. Great guy, Henry. His wife, Millie, runs the bakery.”
“He’s a teacher and he drinks?”
“That’s why he drinks. The man’s been teaching biology to teenagers for twenty-eight years. It’s a miracle he’s sane. Sober would be too much to ask.”
“And the other man?”
Jake glanced over. “That’s Early. He’s my uncle, and he’s walking home.”
Kate shook her head, marveling. “Do you know everybody around here?”
“Mostly. I grew up here.”
“And then you moved to the city.”
“Yep.”
“And then you came back here and saved Toby’s Corners.”
Jake scowled at her. “I did not. I told you before, Will did. Who fed you that garbage?”
“ Nancy,” Kate said. “She’s offered me a job. She’s going to teach me to be a barmaid.”
“You’ll drink the profits.”
“I will not.”
“Kid, I’ve only known you two days and I’ve seen you plastered three times.” He shook his head. “A bar would not be a good career move for you.”
“Twice.” Kate held up two fingers. “You’ve seen me plastered twice. I tried to get drunk at the luau, but it didn’t work. I was perfectly sober when I pushed Lance into the pool. I’d do it again in a minute, too.”
“Well, it’s good to know you don’t have any regrets.”
“You make it sound like I’m a lush. This is only the second time I’ve been drunk in years.”
“And I got to be with you both times.”
“Sorry.”
“It’s okay. Just try not to pass out on me before I get you into bed.”
Kate dropped her coffee cup.
“Let me rephrase that,” he said, wiping up the spill. “Hauling your unconscious body into your cabin and dumping it on your bed is work for a younger man than I.”
“I’m not that heavy.”
“As a dead weight, you are.”
“Forgive me.” Kate drew herself up from the bar with dignity. “I will certainly stay conscious.”
“Good. Hold that thought.”
Jake went off to take Henry and Early’s money.
“So you’ve got a mortgage on Nancy ’s bar,” Kate said when he came back.
Jake winced. “Did she show you her underwear, too?”
“What are you talking about?” Kate asked.
“Well, she seems to have spilled her guts about everything else.”
“She was just explaining to me that if you wanted to close this bar, you could foreclose on the mortgage.”
“Why would I want to close this bar?” Jake asked, bewildered.
“So you can open one at the resort,” Kate said.
“Oh, right.” Jake nodded. “The Valerie angle. You can forget that. It’s not happening.”
“Valerie,” Kate said, shaking her head. “She seems to think we’re two of a kind. She wants me for a role model. Do you think I’m like Valerie?”
“No,” Jake said. “You’re not at all alike.”
Kate closed her eyes. “Thank you,” she said. “I would really have hated it if you’d thought we were alike.”
Jake looked thoughtful. “So you told Nancy about Valerie’s idea?”
“Penny said we should warn her. I thought we should stay out of it, but then I met Nancy, and, well, you know…”
“I know. Is Nancy worried?”
“No. She thinks you and Will are Santa Claus.”
Jake grinned. “And what do you think?”
Kate looked at him. “I don’t know Will at all, but you are definitely not Santa Claus. I don’t know what you are. Disturbing, I guess. But I trust you. Nancy ’s right. She’s safe. But, boy, somebody’d better stop Valerie.”
“Oh, somebody will,” Jake said mildly. “What do you mean, disturbing?”
“I don’t know,” Kate said, studying him. “I haven’t got it figured out yet. Don’t I disturb you?”
“Constantly,” Jake said. “Drunks make me nervous.”
“You’re ducking the question,” Kate said. “But I’m so tired, I don’t care. Say good-night, Jake, and take me home.”
Jake saw her to the door and left. Nice man. Kate stripped off her clothes. She had pajamas somewhere, but they sounded like too much effort. She fell naked into the bed and it creaked under her. Nice sound. She crawled under the covers and curled up to sleep.
She’d had a wonderful time tonight at the bar. They were all such good people. And she was really looking forward to helping Nancy with the bar. That could be a lot of fun. A small business, not a big corporation. Running everything herself. Maybe she’d buy a bar when she got home.
She tried to picture herself with a little neighborhood bar, and it looked wonderful until her father walked in and sneered at it, the way Donald had sneered at Toby’s Corners all day. They were wrong, but she knew that it mattered to her. She had to work at something she could be proud of. Come on, Kate, she told herself. Back to your plan. You’re wasting time hanging out with Jake. Tomorrow you’re going to get serious about finding a man you can build a successful business with.
That wasn’t particularly appealing so she added, And tomorrow you’re going to save Nancy ’s bar. She closed her eyes and smiled to herself and when she opened them again it was very early morning, the sun coming weakly through the window as it crept its way into the sky. I feel so good here, she thought. I can do anything here. I can even possibly save a bar bare-handed.
She thought of how proud Jessie would be of her, and then of how proud Jake would be, although he’d never tell her so, and Jake made her think of the lake, and then she remembered Jessie, saying that somebody exciting would swim in the nude. This early, the lake would be deserted and cool, so cool. The water would slide over her like silk.
I’m exciting, she thought. So there, Jessie.
She pulled on a cotton shift and left the cabin to walk down the path to the lake.
It was cold in the woods, and she shivered a little. She breathed in the smell of the woods and the breeze and the lake, smelling the water even before she saw it.
It was even more beautiful in the early morning, like rippled glass.
This was it. She took a deep breath and then kicked off her sandals and pulled off her shift and went naked into the water as if going to a lover.
It was cold, but she walked into the water steadily, feeling her skin tighten and the muscles in her stomach contract When she was hip-deep, she dived in.
The water broke over her head, and she twisted in the cold, reveling in the feel of the water on her body as her muscles tensed. She came to the surface and stretched out her arms as she trod water, feeling the cool early-morning sun on her face, and then dived and swam again and again, as free as if she were ten years old, as alive as if she’d been making love. She never wanted to put on clothes again.
After half an hour, she turned to swim back to shore and saw Jake sitting by her clothes. At least she figured it was Jake. It was certainly his hat.
She swam in to the shore until she could almost stand shoulder-deep in the water. He just sat there, his forearms on his knees, his hands dangling in front of him, watching her tread water.