so a few hundred strangers crash it.”
“Cute.”
“I’m fine, Ford. And Nina’s here for the weekend, and I have Val.”
“Is Val around? Her car was gone when I left this morning.”
“Yep. We’re planting flowers in her deck boxes for her party this weekend right now.”
“Party?”
“She’s having a barbecue with her friends.”
I’d forgotten she’d mentioned her best friend was coming out for a long weekend.
“Oh yeah. Alright, good.”
“So…since Nina’s here and Val has company this weekend, you really don’t need to come back out. I’ll be fine.”
I knew she was right. Even though I hadn’t wanted her out in Montauk by herself when we’d first talked about it, spending time out there made me feel a lot better about it. She could stay on her own for a weekend. Though…I had a party to crash on this particular one.
“I’ll see you tomorrow anyway,” I said. “Be good.”
Chapter 12
* * *
Ford
“Morning.” I walked out onto my back deck and nodded to the woman sitting on the adjacent one. Val’s car wasn’t in the driveway, but one I didn’t recognize was.
The woman took off her sunglasses and smiled. “You must be Ford.”
I smiled back. “And you must be Eve. Is it a good thing or a bad thing that you know my name?”
Eve got up and walked over to lean on the deck railing that faced my house. She sipped out of a mug. “You’ve been a hot topic of conversation lately. I was hoping I’d get to see you. Are you coming to the barbecue today?”
“I wasn’t invited.”
“Well, let me rectify that. Ford, would you like to come to the barbecue today? We’d love to have you.”
I grinned. “Absolutely. What time?”
“Two.”
“What should I bring?”
She winked. “Just your A game.”
***
“Hey.”
Valentina opened the front screen door. The look on her face told me her friend hadn’t mentioned I’d be coming. I extended the bottle of wine I’d brought.
“Eve invited me.”
She shook her head. “Of course she did.”
“You want me to leave?”
“No. No. It’s fine. Come on in. The neighbors on the other side are stopping by, too.”
Not exactly a warm reception, but at least she didn’t send me packing. A man came down the stairs as the two of us stood at the door. I thought it might’ve been her dad.
“Tom,” Valentina said. “This is Ford.”
Tom stuck out his hand right away. “Nice to meet you.”
She finished the introduction while we shook. “Tom is Eve’s husband.”
I had to work at not letting the surprise show on my face. This guy was her best friend’s husband, not father?
Tom held up a pair of sunglasses. “Eve needed bigger sunglasses from upstairs. Apparently the ones covering half her face already weren’t cutting it.”
Val smiled and nodded toward the kitchen. “She yelled for you to bring her sunscreen, too, but you were already upstairs. There’s some in the cabinet next to the stove. I was about to make a batch of margaritas.”
I followed the sway of her ass to the blender. Once Tom walked out the back door, I stood behind Val and whispered into her ear. “Your best friend is married to a much older man, huh?”
She poured mix into the blender. “It’s different.”
“How?”
Val turned to face me. “She was thirty-three when she met him. She got to experience life.”
We stood in almost the same exact spot as we had two nights ago when we kissed.
“I’ve experienced life. Maybe we should argue about it again. I liked the way the last disagreement we had in this spot ended.”
Val sighed. “Why don’t you go outside? I’ll be out in a minute.”
I would have preferred to stay right here, but didn’t want to push. So I put the wine I’d brought into the fridge and gathered the margarita glasses on the counter to carry outside with me. I almost forgot the other thing I’d brought, until I reached for the door handle.
Glancing back over my shoulder, I saw Val wasn’t paying attention. I slipped the yellow sticky note I’d written from my pocket and stuck it on the back door right at her eye level before heading out. Sleep with Ford really should be on her to-do list anyway.
Eve pulled out the chair next to her the minute I walked out. She patted the cushion. “Come sit. I want to get to know you better.”
Her husband shook his head. “That’s Eve-speak for I’m about to interrogate you. Sorry, man.”
I smiled and took the seat. “It’s fine. Interrogate away.”
A minute later, Valentina struggled to open the back door while holding a