Noah
Scarlett,
Here we are again, separated by miles that feel too long at night, waiting for our chance to be together again. Youโve given up so much for me, and here I am, asking for more, asking you to follow me once again. I promise you, once this war is over, Iโll never let you regret choosing me. Not for one minute. Iโll fill your days with joy and your nights with love. There is so much that waits for us if we can just hold onโฆ
โI brought lunch,โ I called out to Georgia as I walked in the front door of her house. Had to admit, it was still a little weird to walk into Scarlett Stantonโs house without knocking, but Georgia had insisted, since weโd started spending our afternoons together last week in what she called Stanton University.
โThank God, because Iโm famished,โ she called out from the office.
I walked through the open side of the French doors and stopped short. Georgia sat on the floor in front of her great-grandmotherโs desk, surrounded by photo albums and boxes. Sheโd even moved the large wingback chairs out of the way to make room.
โWow.โ
She looked up at me and offered an enthusiastic smile.ย Damn.ย Just like that, my mind wasnโt on her great-grandmother or the book Iโd staked my career on. It was on Georgia, plain and simple.
Something had changed between us the day weโd gone rock-climbing. Not only did it feel like we were actually on the same team, but there was now a heightened awareness, as if someone had started a countdown. I couldnโt have written the sexual tension any better. Every simple touch
between us since then was measured, careful, as if we were matches in the middle of a fireworks cache, knowing too much friction would set the whole place ablaze.
โWant to picnic?โ she asked, gesturing to a vaguely open bit of floor at her side.
โIโm game if you are.โ I picked my way across the spread of memories to claim the spot at her side.
โSorry,โ she said with a sheepish cringe, her wide-neck sweatshirt slipping off her shoulder to reveal a lilac bra strap. โI was looking for that one picture I told you about from Middle Wallop and got kind of lost in this.โ
โDonโt apologize.โ Not only did she look better than our lunches, sheโd unlocked a veritable treasure trove of family history and laid it bare for me.
If that didnโt sayย opening up, I wasnโt sure what else could. Weโd come a long way from her hanging up on me. Everything about the woman next to me was soft, from the sweep of her hair into that knot on her head, to her bare, shorts-clad, mile-long legs crossed beneath her. There was nothing icy about her.
โOnce I found the pictures, I couldnโt help myself.โ She smiled down at the open photo album on her lap as I took the boxes of takeout from the bag.
โNo tomato,โ I said, handing hers over. I couldnโt remember if my last girlfriend liked her coffee sweet or black, yet here I was, committing everything about Georgia Stanton to memory without even trying. I had it bad.
โThank you,โ she replied with a smile, taking the box before pointing up to the desk behind us. โIced tea, unsweetened.โ
โThanks.โ Guess I wasnโt the only one committing the details to memory.
โI still think youโre a weirdo for drinking it without sugar, but whatever floats your boat.โ She shrugged and flipped a page in the album.
โThat you?โ I brushed off her commentary and leaned over her shoulder
slightly. Whether it was her shampoo or perfume, the light citrus scent I breathed in went straight to my head, along with other body parts I needed under firm control around Georgia.
โHow can you tell?โ She shot me a quizzical look. โYou canโt even see my face.โ
โI recognize Scarlett, and I highly doubt there was any other little girl dressed up as a princess Darth Vader.โ Scarlettโs smile was proud, just like it was in every picture I saw of her and Georgia together.
โFair point,โ Georgia admitted. โGuess I was feeling a little dark side that year.โ
โHow old were you?โ
โSeven.โ Her brow furrowed. โMom had come to visit before marrying husband number two, if I remember correctly.โ
โHow many husbands has she had?โ It wasnโt that I was judging, as much as the look on Georgiaโs face had me more than curious.
โFive marriages, four husbands.โ She flipped the page. โShe married number three twice, but I think theyโre getting divorced, since sheโs currently back with number four. I honestly donโt bother keeping track anymore.โ
It took a second to connect those dots.
โAnyway, you need the pictures from the forties, and these are mostly just meโโ She moved to shut the album.
โIโd love to see them.โ Anything to help me understand her better. She looked at me like Iโd lost my mind.
โI mean, Scarlettโs in them, too, right?โย Weak.
โTrue. Okay. We can move to the older stuff next. Donโt let it get cold.โ She motioned to the burger I had in front of me.
We ate and flipped through the album. Page after page was filled with pictures of Georgiaโs childhood, and though some of the pictures included Hazel or Scarlett, it was yearsโand my entire lunchโbefore Ava appeared again. Georgia looked like a happy child for the most partโhuge smiles in the garden, the meadow, out by the creek. Book signings in Paris and Rome
โ
โNo London?โ I asked, turning the page back to make sure I hadnโt
missed one. Nope, just Scarlett and Georgiaโwho was missing two front teethโat the Colosseum.
โShe never stepped foot in England again,โ Georgia said softly. โThis was the last book tour, too. She wrote for another ten years, though. Swore it kept her from going senile. What about you?โ
โMe? Am I at risk for going senile?โ My eyebrows shot up. โHow old do you think I am?โ
She laughed. โI know youโre thirty-one. I meant, do you think youโll write until youโre ninety?โ she rephrased, elbowing me gently.
โOh.โ I rubbed the back of my neck, trying to imagine a time Iย wouldnโtย write. โIโll probably write until Iโm dead. Whether I choose to publish it or not is a different subject.โ Writing a book and going through the publishing process were two completely different beasts.
โI get that.โ As someone raised in the industry, she undoubtedly did.
Another page, another picture, another year. Georgiaโs smile was blindingly bright as she stood in front of a birthday cakeโtwelve, going by the decorationsโwith Ava at her side.
In the next picture, which looked to be a few weeks later, the light was gone from Georgiaโs eyes.
โYouโre not going to ask why my mother didnโt raise me?โ She peered at me sideways.
โYou donโt owe me an explanation.โ
โYou really mean that, donโt you?โ she asked softly.
โI do.โ I knew enough of the bare bones to piece it together. Ava had become a mother in high school, but she wasnโt cut out for being a mom. โContrary to what experience you have with me because of our project here, Iโm not in the habit of prying information out of women who donโt want to give it.โ I studied the lines of her face as she looked anywhere but at me.
โEven if it helped you understand Gran?โ She flipped the album page carelessly, as if the answer was inconsequential, but I knew better.
โI promise Iโll never take anything you donโt wholeheartedly want to give me, Georgia.โ My voice dropped.
She turned my way and our eyes met, our faces only a breath apart. Had she been any other woman, I would have kissed her. I wouldโve acted on the blatant attraction that had grown way past any analogy I couldโve mustered. This was no longer a simple zing of electricity, and it had developed far beyond a shot of lust or a surge of overwhelming desire. The inches between us were thick with need, pure and primal. It was no longer a matter of if, but when. I saw the battle raging in her eyes that felt all-too- familiar, because I waged the same war against inevitability.
Her gaze traveled to my mouth. โAnd what if I wholeheartedly want to give it to you?โ she whispered.
โDo you?โ Every muscle in my body tightened, locking down the nearly uncontrollable impulse to discover how she tasted.
Her cheeks flushed, and her breath hitched as she looked away, back to the photo album. โIโll tell you whatever you want to know.โ She flipped through a chunk of the album, landing on her wedding pictures, not formal, but candid.
โYou look beautiful.โ It was more than that. Wedding-Day Georgia wore a look so openly, honestly in love that a stab of irrational jealousy flooded me. That asshole hadnโt been worthy of her heart, her trust.
โThanks.โ She flipped to what was obviously the reception. โFunny, but now when I think about that day, I mostly remember Damian schmoozing anyone he could in Granโs circle.โ She said it easily, as if it was the punch line to a joke.
My brow knitted. How long had it taken Ellsworth to dull her sparkle? โWhat?โ she asked, glancing my way.
โYou donโt look anything like the Ice Queen in these pictures,โ I said softly. โI donโt understand how anyone could ever mistake you for cold.โ
โAh, back when I was all hopeful and naive.โ Her head tilted as she turned the page yet again, this time revealing a shower of bubbles as the bride and groom made their way toward their honeymoon getaway car.
โThe nickname didnโt come until later, but that first time I found out he was cheating on me, somethingโฆโ She sighed and flipped again. โSomething changed.โ
โPaige Parker?โ I guessed. She scoffed. โGod, no.โ
My attention snapped to her face as she turned a chunk of pagesโyears. โHe wasnโt that careless back then. Actresses get you caught, but
eighteen-year-old assistants donโt.โ She shrugged.
โHow manyโโ The question was out of my mouth before I could stop myself. It was none of my business how incredibly hurtful Ellsworth was. If I were married to Georgia, Iโd be far too busy keeping her happy in my bed to evenย thinkย about someone elseโs.
โToo many,โ she responded quietly. โBut I wasnโt about to tell Gran that I didnโt get that same epic love she didโnot when all she wanted was to see me happy, and sheโd just had that first heart attack. And I guess, admitting that Iโd made the same mistake as my mom wasโฆhard.โ
โSo you stayed.โ My voice lowered as another piece of the Georgia puzzle clicked into place.ย Indomitable will.
โI adapted. Itโs not like I wasnโt used to being left.โ She grazed her thumb over a picture, and I looked down to see a colorful autumn tree in a location I recognized wellโCentral Park. Georgia stood between Damian and Ava, her arms around both, her smile a dim shadow of the one just a few years before. โThereโs a warning, a sound your heart makes the first time it realizes itโs no longer safe with the person you trusted.โ
My jaw flexed.
She turned another page, another black-tie affair. โItโs not as clean or impersonal as a break or a shatter. Besides, those are easy to repair if you can find all the pieces. Truly crushing a soulโnowย thatย requires a certain level ofโฆpersonal violence. Your ears fill with this desperateโโflipโย โraspingโโflipโโgasp. Like youโre fighting for air, suffocating in plain sight. Strangled by life and someone elseโs shitty, selfish decisions.โ
โGeorgia,โ I whispered as my stomach turned, my chest pulling tight at
the agony and anger in her words, pausing over a picture from the red- carpet premiere ofย The Wings of Autumn. Her smile was bright but her eyes flat as she posed at Damianโs side like a trophy, both generations of Stanton women at her right. She was freezing over right in front of my eyes, each picture a little colder than the last.
โAnd the thing is,โ she continued with a little shake of her head and another mocking smile, โyou donโt always recognize that wet sound for what it isโan assassination. You donโt register whatโs actually happening as the air disappears. You hear that gurgle, and it somehow convinces you that the next breath is comingโyouโre not broken. This is fixable, right? So you fight, holding on to whatever air there is.โ Her eyes filled with unshed tears, but she raised her chin and held them back as the pages flew by with every sentence. โYou fight and you thrash because this fated, deep-rooted thing you called love refuses to go down with a single shot. That would be far too merciful. Real love has to be choked out, held under the water until it stops kicking. Thatโs the only way to kill it.โ
She flipped again and again, the album a color-streaked kaleidoscope of photos sheโd obviously chosen with great care to send Scarlett, constructing the lie of a happy marriage.
โAnd once you finally get it, finally stop fighting, youโre too far gone to get to the surface to save yourself. And the spectators tell you to keep swimming, that itโs only a broken heart, but that little flicker thatโs left of your soul canโt even float, let alone tread water. So youโre left with a choice. You either let yourself die while they accuse you of being weak or you learn to breathe the goddamn water, and then they call you a monster for what you become. Ice Queen, indeed.โ
She stopped on the last pictureโthis one a mirror of the first premiere, taken only a couple months before Scarlettโs death. The rest of the pages in the album were devastatingly blank.
My hands clenched. I had never wanted to beat the shit out of someone the way I did Damian Ellsworth. โI swear, I would never hurt you like he did.โ I ground out every word, hoping she registered my conviction.
โI never said he did,โ she whispered, two lines forming between her eyebrows as she glanced at me with confusion.
The doorbell rang, startling us both.
โIโll get it,โ I offered, pushing to my feet.
โIโm on it.โ She scrambled, the photo album sliding off her lap as she beat me to stand, barely pausing before she raced for the door, nimbly dodging the piles of photos.
I watched from the doorway as she signed for the package. If I hadnโt been sitting next to her, I never would have guessed sheโd just unloaded the way she had. Her polished smile was at the ready as she made polite small talk with the driver.
She took the substantial box and said her goodbyes, closing the door with her hip before setting the box on the entry hall table.
โItโs from the lawyers,โ she said with a grin, and I wondered for a second if sheโd lost her mind. No one was everย thatย happy to get a box from their attorneys. โHold on a second; I need scissors.โ
โHere.โ I stepped forward, whipping my Gerber out of my pocket and opening the knife attachment so I could offer it to her. โI thought you didnโt close on the new studio for another two weeks?โ I couldnโt wait to see what she created.
โThanks.โ She took the tool, then ripped into the package with childlike glee. โItโs not for the studio. She sends me something every month.โ
โYour lawyer?โ
โNo, Gran.โ Her smile was brighter than any Iโd seen from her as she pried back the edge of the box. โShe left directions and gifts. So far itโs been about once a month, but I donโt know how long she planned it out.โ
โThat might be the coolest thing Iโve ever heard.โ I took the Gerber back, secured the blade, and slipped it into the pocket of my cargo pants.
โIt really is,โ she agreed, ripping open a card. โDearest Georgia, now that Iโm gone, itโs up to you to be the witch of the house, no matter where you are. I love you with all my heart, Gran.โ
My eyebrows shot up at the witch comment until Georgia laughed and
pulled a witchโs hat from the box.
โShe always dressed up like a witch to hand out candy to the kids on Halloween.โ She plunked the hat on her head, right over her bun, and kept digging.
Right. Halloween was in two weeks. Time was flying, my deadline approaching, and I was still empty-handed. Worse than that, I only had six weeks left with Georgia if I turned the manuscript in on time, which I would.
โShe sent you a witch hat and a case of king-size Snickers?โ I asked, feeling oddly connected to Scarlett Stanton in that moment as I peered into the box.
Georgia nodded. โWant one?โ She plucked a bar from the box and waved it.
โAbsolutely.โ I wantedย Georgia, but Iโd settle for the bar.
โThey were Granโs favorites,โ she said as we peeled our wrappers. โBut she said they were called Marathon bars back in England. I canโt even begin to tell you how many pages of her manuscripts had little chocolate fingerprints at the edges.โ
I bit into the bar, then chewed as I followed Georgia back into the office. โAll on that typewriter.โ
โYep.โ She peered at me with a tilted head, studying me carefully. โChocolate on my face?โ I asked, taking another bite.
โYou should write the rest of the book here.โ
โI am, remember? Thereโs no way in hell Iโm going back to New York without a finished manuscript. Pretty sure Adam wouldnโt even let me off the plane.โ As it was, I was ducking his calls left and right. Pretty soon heโd be out here, too, if I didnโt pick up.
โI meanโฆhere, here,โ she said, motioning toward Scarlettโs desk. โGranโs office,ย here.ย Itโs where she worked on it.โ
I blinked. โYou want me to finish the book in here?โ The words came out slowly, stumbling over my own confusion.
She took another bite and nodded, glancing around the room. โMm-
hmm.โ
โI donโt always write on a typical scheduleโฆโ But Iโd be close to Georgia every day.
โSo? You have a key. I wonโt always be here, anyway, not with getting the studio set up. And if itโs ever ridiculously late, you can crash in a guest bedroom.โ She shrugged and hopped over two piles of photos on her way to the desk. โThe more I think about it, the more it fits.โ She walked behind the desk and pulled out the chair. โCome onโtry it on for size.โ
I polished off the chocolate bar and tossed the wrapper in the trash can beside the massive cherry desk, hesitating. That was Scarlettโs desk. Scarlettโs typewriter. โYou protect that thing like itโs the Resolute desk, coasters and all.โ
โOh, you still have to use coasters. Thatโs nonnegotiable.โ She tapped the high back of the chair and laughed. โCome on, it wonโt bite.โ
โRight.โ I rounded the corner and sank into the office chair, then pulled myself forward so I sat at the desk. Georgiaโs laptop lay closed to my right, but on my left sat the famed typewriter.
โIf youโre feeling boldโฆโ Georgia ran her fingers over the keys.
โNo, thank you. First, Iโd probably break it, and second, I make way too many corrections as I go to ever think about using a typewriter. Thatโs hard- core, even for me.โ My eyes caught on the shirt box on the edge of the desk. It was labeled โUNFINISHEDโ in thick, black marker. โIs thatโฆโ
โThe originals? Yeah.โ She slid the box my way. โGo ahead, but Iโm sticking to my guns on this one. Originals stay here.โ
โNoted.โ I flipped the top off, then lifted the stack of papers to the polished surface of the desk. Sheโd typed these pages herself, and here I was, getting ready to finish them.ย Surreal.
The manuscript was thick, but it wasnโt only the word count that stacked up the pages but the pages themselves. I thumbed through quickly. โThis is amazing.โ
โIโve got another seventy-three boxes just like it,โ she teased, leaning back against the desk.
โYou can actuallyย seeย her write it, then revise. The pages are all in different stages of aging. See?โ I held up two pages from Chapter Two, when Jameson had just approached Scarlett where she sat with Constance. โThis page here has to be the original. Itโs aged, and the quality of the paper is lower. This pageโโI waved it slightly, my lips tugging up at the smudge of chocolate at the edgeโโcanโt be more than a decade old.โ
โMakes sense. She liked to revise, always added word count.โ She braced her hands on the edge of the desk. โPersonally, I think she liked living there, between the pages with him. Always adding little bits of memory but never closing the door.โ
That was something I understood. Closing out a book meant I said goodbye to those characters. But they werenโt just characters to Scarlett. Theyโd been her sister. Her soul mate. I read a few sentences from the first page, then the second. โDamn, you can actually see her skill evolve.โ
โReally?โ Georgia adjusted slightly, turning her head to see the pages. โYeah. Every writer has a particular flow to their sentence structure. See
here,โ I pointed to a spot on the first page. โSlightly choppier. By here,โ I selected a different passage on the second, โshe smoothed out.โ Iโd bet my life that the first pages most closely resembled the style of her early works. I glanced up to find Georgiaโs eyes on me.
She failed at stifling a smile.
โWhat?โ I asked, slipping the pages back into the manuscript where they belonged.
โNow you have chocolate on your face.โ She laughed softly. โAwesome.โ I swiped my hand over the stubble closest to my mouth. โHere.โ She slid along the desk, the bare skin of her legs brushing
against mine.
I suddenly wished Iโd worn shorts as I rolled back slightly, hoping sheโd come closer.
She filled the space between my knees, cupped the side of my face, and brushed her thumb over the patch of skin just below the corner of my mouth. My pulse kicked up a notch, and my body went tight.
โThere,โ she whispered, but didnโt move her hand.
โThanks.โ Her touch was warm, and it took everything I had not to lean in to it. Damn, I wanted her, and not just her body. I wanted inside her mind, past the walls even George R.R. Martin would be proud of. I wanted her trust simply so I could prove I was worthy of it.
She swept the tip of her tongue over her lower lip.
My self-control hung by a thread, and the look in her eyes was slowly pulling at the edges of it, fraying the strands.
Still, she didnโt move.
โGeorgia.โ Her name came out as both a plea and a warning. She moved closer. Not close enough.
My hands found the curves of her waist and I tugged, bringing her as close as the chair allowed.
Her breath caught in a tiny gasp that sent all the blood in my body straight to my dick.ย Calm the hell down.ย She slid her hand along my jaw and into my hair.
My grip tightened on her waist through the thick fabric of her sweatshirt.
โNoah,โ she whispered, lifting her other hand to hold the back of my neck.
โDo you want me to kiss you, Georgia?โ My voice was rough, even to my own ears. There could be no mistake here. No mixed signals. There was too much riding on this, and for once, it wasnโt my career I was thinking about.
โDo you want to kiss me?โ she challenged.
โMore than I want my next breath.โ My gaze dropped to that incredible mouth, and her lips parted.
โGood, becauseโโ Her phone rang.
You have got to be kidding me.
She shifted, leaning closer. Another ring.
โDonโtโโ I started.
With a groan, she ripped her phone from her back pocket, then sucked in a breath as her eyes narrowed at her screen. She swiped violently, answering the call and lifting the device to her ear.
โโanswer it,โ I finished with a sigh, letting my head fall back against the chair.
โWhat the hell do you want, Damian?โ