Forever and For Always. Sophie Love
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу Forever and For Always - Sophie Love страница 7
She realized as she approached the table that Mr. Kapowski had fallen asleep. Unsure whether to be relieved or annoyed, Emily put the tray down and began to back silently out of the room.
Mr. Kapowski’s head suddenly sprung up. “Ah,” he said, glancing down at the tray. “Breakfast. Thank you.”
“I’m afraid I don’t have any eggs or tomatoes or mushrooms today,” she said.
Mr. Kapowski looked disappointed.
Emily went out into the corridor and took some deep breaths. The morning had been incredibly labor intensive, considering the amount of money she was ultimately making for her effort. If she wanted to sustain the business, she was going to have to become a little more efficient. And she needed a contingency plan in case Lola and Lolly had another lay-less day.
Just then, he emerged from the dining room. It had been less than a minute since she’d delivered his food.
“Is everything okay?” Emily asked. “Do you need something?”
Once again, Mr. Kapowski seemed reticent to speak.
“Um…the food is a bit cold.”
“Oh,” Emily said, panicking. “Here, let me heat it up for you.”
“Actually, it’s okay,” Mr. Kapowski said. “I need to be getting on really.”
“Okay,” Emily said, feeling deflated. “Do you have anything nice planned for the day?” She was trying to sound like a B&B host rather than a panicking girl, although she felt much more like the latter.
“Oh, no, I meant that I need to be getting home,” Mr. Kapowski corrected.
“You mean you’re checking out?” Emily asked, taken aback.
She felt a cold chill spread over her body.
“But I had you down for three nights.”
Mr. Kapowski looked awkward.
“I, um, just need to get back. I’ll pay in full, though.”
He seemed in a hurry to leave and even when Emily suggested knocking off the price of the two breakfasts he hadn’t eaten he insisted that he just pay the bill in full and leave immediately. Emily stood at the door and watched him drive away, feeling like an utter failure.
She didn’t know how long she stood there, lamenting the disaster that had been her very first guest, but she became aware of the sound of her cell phone ringing from inside. Thanks to the terrible reception she received in the old house, the only place Emily could get a signal was by the front door. She had a special hall table just for her phone – a beautiful antique piece she’d recovered from one of the closed-off bedrooms in the B&B. She paced over to it now, bracing herself to see who it was.
There were not many good options. Her mom hadn’t been in touch since that emotional late-night phone call they’d shared in which they discussed the truth about Charlotte’s death and, more specifically, Emily’s role – or lack of – in it. Amy also hadn’t been in touch since her cavalier attempt to “rescue” Emily from her new life, though they had made peace since. Ben, Emily’s ex, had called numerous times since she’d upped and left but Emily hadn’t answered a single one of his calls and now the frequency of them seemed to be diminishing.
She braced herself as she peered down at the screen. The name blinking up at her was a surprise to see. It was Jayne, an old school friend from New York. She’d known Jayne since she was a very young girl, and over the years they’d developed the kind of friendship whereby months would lapse before they spoke, but the second they got together it was as if no time had passed at all. Jayne had probably heard from Amy, or somewhere on the grapevine, about Emily’s new life and was calling to probe her about the sudden and abrupt change she had made.
Emily answered the call.
“Em?” Jayne said, her voice bumpy and her breath ragged. “I just bumped into Amy during my jog. She said you’d left New York!”
Emily blinked, her mind now unaccustomed to the fast-paced style of talking all her New York friends shared. The idea of jogging while having a phone conversation was alien to Emily now.
“Yeah, it was a little while ago now actually,” she said.
“How long ago are we talking?” Jayne asked, the sound of her pummeling footsteps audible over the line.
Emily’s voice was small and apologetic. “Um, well, about six months.”
“Yikes, I need to call you more often!” Jayne panted.
Emily could hear the background traffic, the honking of car horns, the thud of Jayne’s sneakers as she pounded along a sidewalk. It evoked a very familiar image inside Emily’s mind. She had been that person just a few months ago, always busy, never resting, cell phone latched to her ear.
“So what’s the gossip?” Jayne said. “Tell me everything. I’m guessing Ben is out of the picture?”
Jayne, like all of Emily’s friends and family, had never liked Ben. They’d been able to see what Emily had been blind to for seven years – that he was so not right for her.
“Truly out of the picture,” Emily replied.
“And is there anyone new in the picture?” Jayne asked.
“Maybe…” Emily said coyly. “But it’s new and still a bit unsteady so I’d rather not jinx it by talking about it.”
“But I want to know everything!” Jayne cried. “Oh, hold on. I’m getting another call.”
Emily waited while the line went silent. A few moments later, the noises of a New York City morning filled her ears again as Jayne reconnected.
“Sorry, babe,” she said, “I had to take that. Work stuff. So look, Amy said you have a B&B up there or something?”
“Uh-huh,” Emily replied. She felt a little tense talking about the B&B, since Amy had been so vocal about it being a stupid idea, not to mention the whole switch in Emily’s life being ill thought through.
“Have you got any rooms available at the moment?” Jayne asked.
Emily was taken aback. She hadn’t expected such a question. “Yeah,” she said, thinking of Mr. Kapowski’s now abandoned room. “Why?”
“I want to come!” Jayne exclaimed. “It’s Memorial Day weekend, after all. And I desperately need to get out of the city. Can I book it?”
Emily faltered. “You don’t have to do that, you know. You can just come and stay as a visitor.”
“No way,” Jayne replied. “I want the full treatment. Fresh towels every morning. Bacon and eggs for breakfast. I want to see you in action.”
Emily laughed. Of all the people she’d spoken to about her new business venture, Jayne was being the most supportive.
“Well, let me book you in officially