Noah
Scarlett, my Scarlett,
How are you, my heart? Do you think you could bring the roses here? I hate to think you and Constance put in all that work just to leave it behind. I promise you, when we get to Colorado, Iโll build you a garden you never have to move from and a shady place to sit and write on sunny days. Iโll build your happiness with my own two hands. God, I miss you. Hopefully Iโll find us some digs in the next few days, because Iโm losing my mind here without you. Kiss our sweet boy for me.
I love you with my entire soul,
Jameson
Use the opt-out.
That wasnโt going to happen. I signed a contract that Iโd complete the book, and I would. But keeping my word meant getting closer to the only woman who made me want to kiss the shit out of her as she drove me up a wall.
This was dangerous territory, but I couldnโt bring myself to care. Georgia had me just as knotted up about her as I was the damned book. The two were so closely intertwined that I couldnโt separate them. She was just as stubborn as Scarlett had been the first time Jameson met her, but unlike Jameson, I didnโt have a Constance to help me out.
Unlike Scarlett, Georgia had already had her trust and heart broken.
I was zero for two when it came to Georgia, and at an impasse when it came to the book.
Georgia was right. Scarlett wasnโt a character; she was a real person
who had really loved Georgia. Given what Iโd seen from her mother and the asshole ex, she might have been the only person in the world who had truly, unconditionally loved Georgia.
Thatโs what I kept in mind as I stood on Georgiaโs front porch with one last pitch and an armful of what I hoped would be goodwill. Iโd been in Colorado for two weeks, climbed two easy fourteeners, and as of yesterday, I had two plot lines ready to write. In a few days, Iโd only have two months until my deadline.
โHey,โ she said with an awkward smile as she opened the door.
โThanks for seeing me.โ One day I would get used to those eyes knocking me off my feet, but today was not that day. Her hair was up, too, revealing the long line of her neck. I wanted to run my lips along the column, thenโย Knock it off.
โNo problem, come on in.โ She stepped back, and I walked through the door.
โThis is for you.โ I handed over the muslin-covered root ball carefully so she didnโt prick herself on the thorns of the plant above. โItโs an English tea rose, aptly named Scarlett Knight. I thought you might like it for the garden.โ It was quite possibly the most awkward gift Iโd ever given, but here I was giving it, because I somehow sensed that even a tiny blue box wouldnโt move this woman.
โOh! Thank you.โ She smiled, real and true as she took the plant, appraising it with a gardenerโs eye. I knew that eye well. My mother had it. โItโs lovely.โ
โYouโre welcome.โ My gaze skipped over the table in the entry, catching on the vase. The edges of the glass wave had the same frothy texture as the piece in New York. โYou made this, didnโt you?โ
Her attention shifted from the rosebush to the vase. โYes. Right after I got back from Murano. I spent a summer apprenticing there after freshman year.โ
โWow. Itโs remarkable.โ How did someone capable of doingย thatย just stop? And what kind of man married a woman with that kind of fire and
then systematically snuffed it out?
โThanks. I love that one.โ A wistful look crossed her face. โDo you miss it? Sculpting?โ
โLately.โ She nodded. โI found the perfect space for a studio, but I canโt justify the cost.โ
โYou should. Iโm sure youโd have no trouble selling pieces. Hell, Iโd be your first customer.โ
Her gaze jumped to mine, and there it was again, the indescribable connection that kept me up at night, thinking about her. โI should put this in the greenhouse.โ
โIโll come with,โ I offered, swallowing back the ball of nerves that had worked its way up my throat like I was sixteen again.
โOkay.โ She led me through the kitchen and out the back door, but instead of heading straight into the garden, she turned left, walking me along the patio to the greenhouse.
The blast of humidity was almost enough to make me homesick as I followed her into the glass building. Both the size and variety of flowers in here were impressive. The floor was cobblestoned moss rock, and there was even a small fountain in the center, blocking out any potential noises from the outside world with the steady trickle of water.
โDo you maintain this yourself?โ I asked as she carried the rosebush to a potting bench.
โGod, no.โ She snorted. โI might know a thing or two about plants, but Gran was the gardener. I hired a professional about five years ago when she finally started to slow down.โ
โAt ninety-five,โ I added.
โShe was pretty unstoppable.โ Her smile was instant and had the added bonus of acting like a vise around my chest. โShe got so mad at me, too. Said I was making assumptions about her health. I argued that I was simply freeing up the time it took her to water.โ
โYou were making assumptions about her health.โ The corners of my lips tugged upward.
โShe was ninety-five; can you blame me?โ She set the rosebush down on the bench. โIโll pot it later.โ
โI donโt mind waiting.โ Or delaying what I was about to offer her. Somehow Georgia had mastered what college and deadlines had failed to do: sheโd turned me into a procrastinator.
โYou sure?โ
โPositive. And Iโm the last person to tell you about rosebushes, but I thought this guy was more of an outdoor one?โ At least that was what the picture online had shown.
โWell, yeah, usually. But itโs almost October. Iโd hate to stick him in the ground and hope for the best when his little root system wouldnโt have had a chance to develop before the first frost.โ She opened the large cabinet next to the shed and hauled out a container and a various assortment of small bags.
โSo youโre saying itโs a bad gift?โ I half teased.ย Shit. Why hadnโt I thought of that?
Her cheeks pinkened. โNo, Iโm saying it has to live in the greenhouse until spring.โ
โCan I help?โ
โYou donโt mind getting dirty?โ She took in my athletic pants and long- sleeved Mets tee.
โI prefer dirty.โ I shrugged with a grin.
โGrab the potting soil.โ She rolled her eyes as she rolled up her sleeves.
I pushed my sleeves up and walked over to the cabinet, which was much deeper than it initially looked. There were at least three different bags along the bottom.
โWhich one?โ
โThe one that says โpotting soil.โโ
โThey all say โpotting soil.โโ I met her teasing gaze with a raised eyebrow.
She leaned around my side, brushing against my arm as she pointed to the blue bag on the left. โThat one, please.โ
We locked eyes, and the inches between us charged. She was close enough to kissโnot that I was going to do something that reckless, but damn did I want to.
โGot it.โ My gaze dropped to her lips.
โThanks.โ She stepped away as color flushed from her neck to her cheeks. She wasnโt immune to me, either, but Iโd known that from the second our eyes met in the bookstore. It didnโt mean she wanted to act on it.
I grabbed the right bag, then ripped the top open and poured it into the container when she told me to.
โThatโs perfect.โ She stepped in and added handfuls from the various smaller bags, then mixed it all together.
โThis feels very complicated.โ It was fascinating to watch her pick and choose from the soil amendments.
โItโs not,โ she said with a shrug, using her bare hands to plant the rosebush. โPlants are way easier than people. If you know what plant youโre working with, then you know what pH it likes the soil to be. If it likes it well drained, or saturated. If it prefers nitrogen or needs a calcium boost. Does it like full sun? Part sun? Shade? Plants tell you what they need right off the bat, and if you give it to them, they grow. Theyโre predicable that way.โ She leveled the soil out carefully, then washed her hands at the potting bench sink.
โPeople can be predictable, too.โ I hefted the now half-empty bag back to the shed. โIf you know how someone was damaged, you have a good idea of how theyโll react in a situation.โ
โTrue, but how often do you know someoneโs damage before you start that relationship? Itโs not like we all walk around with warning labels on our foreheads.โ
I leaned back against the bench as she filled the watering can. โI like that idea. Warningโnarcissist. Warningโimpulsive. Warningโlistens to Nickelback.โ
She laughed, and an ache flared in my chest, demanding to hear the sound again. โWhat would yours read?โ she asked.
โYou first.โ
โHmmโฆโ She shut off the faucet, then lifted and tipped the watering can over the rosebush. โWarningโtrust issues.โ She lifted a brow at me.
That made perfect sense. โWarningโalways right.โ
She scoffed, finishing up with the can.
โIโm serious. I have a really hard time admitting Iโm wrong, even to myself. Iโm also a control freak.โ
โWell, youโre wearing a Mets shirt, so at least you chose the right New York team.โ She smiled and put the can back on the bench.
โI grew up in the Bronx. There is no other team. I keep forgetting that you lived in New York.โ The pictures Iโd seen of her from the net showed a glossed and polished Georgia, not the gardener with a messy bun and ripped jeans. Not that I should have been looking at her jeans or the way her ass filled them outโฆbut I was.
โFrom the day I got married until the day I met you, actually.โ Her smile faded and she crossed her arms over her chest. โSo what exactly did you want to talk to me about? Because I know you didnโt go to the trouble of ordering that rosebush just to deliver it. I saw the label.โ
Here went nothing.
โRight.โ I scratched the back of my neck. โI want to make a deal.โ โWhat kind of deal?โ Her eyes narrowed. That was quick.
โThe kind where I ultimately get more than you do, admittedly.โ My lips flattened.
Her eyes flared with surprise. โWell, at least you admit it. Okay, shoot.โ โI think we both need to get out of our comfort zones when it comes to
dealing with each other and this book. Iโm not used to having someone dictate my endings, let alone an entire story, since two-thirds of it is already written, and you donโt trust me farther than you can throw me.โ
Her head tilted slightly, not bothering to deny it. โWhat do you have in mind?โ
โI will spend some time getting to know Scarlettโnot just the character
she wrote herself as in the book, but the real woman, and then Iโll write two endings. One will be the one I want, and the other will be what Iโm known forโwhat you want. You can choose between the two.โ I grabbed my ego in a choke hold to keep the asshole quiet.
โAnd I have toโฆโ She lifted her brow.
โGo rock climbing. With me. Itโs a trust thing.โย Smooth. Real smooth.
โYou want me to put my life in your hands.โ She shifted her weight, clearly uncomfortable.
โI want you to put Scarlettโs life in my hands, which I think starts with yours.โ Because she valued Scarlettโs more. Thatโs what the trip to the gazebo and the internet had taught me. She was ruthlessly protective of her great-grandmother, while sheโd allowed her husband out of their marriage with little to no consequence.
โAnd the final decision is still mine?โ she clarified, her forehead crinkling.
โOne hundred percent, but you have to agree to read both endings before you decide.โ Iโd win her over one way or another. I just had to get her to read it my way.
โDeal.โ