That Summer Thing. Pamela Bauer
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“She doesn’t need to. As I told you, she owns half this boat.” He sprinkled shredded cheese and onions over the eggs.
“So this Steele guy left both of you the boat?”
“Yes.”
“Weird.”
“Yes, it is.”
“He must not have known she gets seasick.”
“Possibly.” Charlie pushed the eggs around with a wooden spoon.
“How come you don’t like her?”
Charlie paused to look over at Nathan. “What makes you think I don’t like her?”
“Duh. You were pretty rough on her.”
“Me? You’re the one who accused her of being a stowaway.”
“She didn’t tell me it was her boat. Is that why you’re pissed off at her? Because you didn’t get the whole boat?”
“I hope you don’t talk that way around your grandparents,” Charlie said, tempted to give Nathan the treatment his own father would have given him had he used profanity in his presence. “You could get grounded for such language. And just to set the record straight, I’m not angry at Beth.”
It was the truth. Anger was definitely not what he’d felt when he’d seen her standing there in her skimpy pajamas with her hair falling about her face in disarray. Bothered would have been a better word to use, but he didn’t want Nathan to know that she caused such a reaction in him.
“Who is she, anyway?”
“I told you. Her name is Beth Pennington. She was a close friend of my sister Lucy when we were kids. She lived next door to us.”
“Was she a River Rat?”
“Sort of. Your toast is up. Butter’s in the fridge.”
Charlie was relieved that Nathan had a one-track mind, and the task of getting the toast buttered appeared to be the track it was taking. However, the subject of Beth apparently held enough fascination for him, because he quickly came back to it.
“That must have been her titty-holder in the bathroom,” he said as he put two more slices of bread in the toaster.
Charlie could hardly believe that Nathan had used such a word. “It’s called a bra,” he said in his sternest voice.
At the memory of the lacy scrap of material, Charlie’s body warmed. Then he remembered what it had been like as a teenager when he’d seen Beth naked. Heat rushed through every limb in his body, and he forced himself to push such thoughts aside.
He needed to deal with the issue of Nathan’s vocabulary, not daydream about an old lover. “I don’t think your mother would have appreciated you calling one of her undergarments by that name.”
“I wouldn’t have used it around her.”
“Do the BDs talk that way?”
“I didn’t swear. I just called it a titty-holder. I suppose you’re going to ground me for that, too.” He stalked away and threw himself down on the sofa.
“Come back over here and finish making the toast,” Charlie demanded.
“What’s the point?” Nathan said sullenly.
Charlie counted to ten, then walked over to the sofa. He stooped in front of the teenager so they were face-to-face. “Look, Nathan, it’s been a long time since I was fourteen, and until I met you and your mother, I had no idea how to be a dad, either.”
Nathan didn’t meet Charlie’s gaze. He sat with his eyes downcast, arms folded across his chest, mouth tight.
“I want this six weeks to be a good time—like we used to have. You want that, too, don’t you?” Charlie pleaded.
Nathan nodded, but continued to look down.
“Great. Now, we can do one of two things. Continue on as we have been, or forget about everything that’s gone wrong this morning and start over. Clean slate. What do you say?”
He waited while Nathan contemplated his options. Charlie wondered what the big decision was, but knew better than to voice that thought. Nathan’s grandmother had warned him that trying to be a parent to a fourteen year old was tricky. He now knew what she was talking about.
When Nathan finally raised his head, his eyes didn’t meet Charlie’s, but looked beyond him to the galley. As they widened, Charlie turned around to see why.
Beth was at the stove. “Good grief, Charlie. Only you would leave eggs frying unattended. What are you trying to do? Burn up our inheritance?”
CHAPTER FOUR
BETH GRIMACED at the mess in the pan. “I thought you would have learned to cook by now,” she said to Charlie as he came up behind her.
“I know how to cook,” he told her.
“No, he doesn’t,” Nathan piped up. “That’s why he eats breakfast at the Sunnyside every morning.”
“I don’t eat there every morning,” Charlie said.
“Lucy says you do,” Nathan shot back, then made a face as he gazed over Beth’s shoulder into the contents of the frying pan. “That stuff looks disgusting. It smells bad, too.”
“Nathan, that’s enough.” Charlie’s voice held a hint of censure.
Beth reached for the pot holder on the hook behind the stove. “This isn’t going to be easy to clean,” she said, eyeing the scorched mass of eggs, onion and cheese that coated the bottom of the pan.
“Let me do it.” Charlie tried to reach for the frying pan, but she pushed his arm away.
“No. I want it done properly.”
“Properly?” Charlie echoed. “You think I don’t know how to scour a pan?”
“I know you don’t,” she told him, relieved to see he’d slipped a T-shirt on over his bare chest. It was less intimidating staring at white cotton than sunbronzed pecs. He was still standing much too close for her comfort, though.
“He hates doing cleanup. That’s why he never cooks,” Nathan added.
“That doesn’t mean I don’t know how,” Charlie insisted.
“Throwing a pan in the garbage is not cleaning it,” Beth told him, remembering when they were newlyweds and he’d burned spaghetti sauce in an old pot. Instead of trying to clean it, he’d chucked it into their garbage container.
The look he gave her told her he was remembering