face in my hands, I looked him straight in the eye and announced, “I’m not going anywhere. I’m here to stay, mister. For you, for me, for us.” My grin was shaky with excitement and hope. “And I’m going to see if I can buy the bookstore.”
Twenty-Four
It was fair to say that Lucas and Viola’s love story eclipsed Roane’s proposal and our consequent engagement. Of course people congratulated us when they saw us, and we’d gotten a few free drinks during the past week, but the whole village was abuzz with the young couple who defied a thirty-year-old feud.
West Elliot found out after the scene at the pub. Viola told me tearfully a few nights ago that West had forced Lucas to choose between family and her. He’d chosen Viola, and to no one’s surprise, the Taits had taken him in.
“His room is on the other side of the flat to Vi,” Milly had told me. “Otherwise Dex would kill him. Funny thing is, I can tell Dex likes the boy. Would probably learn to love him if he wasn’t trying to defile his only child.”
Unfortunately, I imagined it was difficult for Dex to wipe the imagery of walking in on his daughter having sex.
Viola was mortified and claimed she would never get over it, but then, as I told her, they probably shouldn’t have tried to get away with having sex in her bedroom!
“I thought everyone was downstairs working,” she’d whined.
Still, I thought it was pretty big of Dex to let Lucas stay with them because he had nowhere else to go, and it confirmed to me that West Elliot was an immature asshole, even though I’d yet to meet the man. I had seen him from afar. He was very much like his son, and it surprised me that age hadn’t dulled his handsomeness, considering how bitter he obviously was.
I’d gone out to run errands and found myself standing in the small cookie aisle in the convenience store, trying to decide if I should succumb to the temptation of the rich tea biscuits I liked to dunk into my cup of tea while I watched the store.
My belly could really do without those biscuits, and I had fitting into a wedding dress to think about sometime in the near future.
I was getting married.
It was so surreal.
“Well, the young Elliot and Viola Tait situation has taken attention away from Roane Robson, and it baffles me,” I heard a voice say in the aisle behind me and felt my heart pound at overhearing gossip pertaining to Roane.
“Oh, I know,” a second woman said, “you would think one of his closest friends would talk to the lad. Obviously, he’s let that American overcome his good sense with her talents in the bedroom. I’ve heard Americans are very loose in that respect.”
My jaw dropped.
Say what?
Glaring through the shelves of products, I crossed my arms over my chest and waited to hear if they said more. Their voices began to travel as they moved.
“Clearly she’s muddled his good sense. Never mind the ridiculous notion of marrying someone you’ve only known for three months—”
“Oh yes, we’re not the only ones who think he’s being reckless.”
“He should be settling down with a girl from good English stock. Even a Scot would be better than an American.”
“There’s nothing wrong with Scottish blood,” the other woman sniffed. “I’m Scottish on my mother’s side.”
“Oh, I meant no offense, Harriet.” A gray-haired lady came into view at the top of my aisle. In a light sweater and a long skirt, her back hunched slightly, the woman was named Lilith something or other. I knew who her companion was before the blue-haired lady in the pantsuit appeared at her side. Lilith and Harriet were two of the oldest villagers, but the bracing coastal life had made them hardy. If it weren’t for their severely wrinkled faces, it would be hard to tell they were in their eighties by the sturdiness of their bodies and youthful gait.
I’d admired them from afar.
Not so much now.
They turned toward my aisle and both froze in shock to see me there.
Pressing their lips together tightly, they blanched as I walked slowly toward them, eyeballing them in disapproval.
The truth was I’d known there would be talk about how quickly Roane and I had fallen in love and decided to marry. We’d discussed it lying in bed and decided we wouldn’t care what other people thought. We knew that this, us together, was what we’d been waiting