Read Life Rewired (Aspen Friends, Book 3) Online

Authors: Lynn Galli

Tags: #Gay & Lesbian

Life Rewired (Aspen Friends, Book 3) (17 page)

BOOK: Life Rewired (Aspen Friends, Book 3)
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I’d switched with one of the new guys so I could take Sunday off. Cassie could throw a mean birthday bash, but I was really looking forward to spending the day with Falyn. Since I worked weekends and she worked on my days off, we hadn’t had a whole day to hang together.

“Wouldn’t miss it.” I waved and stepped up into the house, spotting Miguel first and saying hello.

He looked up as he dropped another stack of sanded boards at his feet. “Good to see you, Molly. You here to help?”

“I’m here to steal Viv.” I watched as Tyler and Curtis nailed the boards horizontally on two of the walls. I’d seen Vivian’s drawings for this room. The boards would be whitewashed, making the room feel more beach cottage than rustic, which suited Vivian’s style perfectly.

I reached for my cellphone and snapped a picture for my mom. We liked exchanging snapshots of whatever was going on around us on our weekly calls. Sometimes she’d just send a picture of what she made for dinner. She could play really dirty, too. If a photo with an entire Polish feast appeared on my phone, she was almost guaranteeing I’d jump on a plane. No one cooked her native Polish food better than Mama.

“Wait, let me take my hat off.” Tyler whipped off the hat and patted down his hair. He stepped directly into the view of my camera and posed, flexing his arms while holding up the board for Curtis to nail.

Curtis moved to block Tyler’s face with his nail gun, shooting me a winning grin. “Who’s getting the pics?”

“My mom. She won’t be coming up until after you’re done with the place.”

“I’m available for all kinds of modeling gigs,” Tyler joked as I snapped one last picture of the downstairs and started for the staircase.

Upstairs, I found Ramón and Natalie installing glass pocket doors in Vivian’s studio slash Natalie’s office. In the guestroom, Cole and Falyn were fiddling with the receptacles. I smiled at the size of the room, just large enough to accommodate their nephews but not large enough to encourage the rest of Vivian’s family to use the room as their own private ski lodge. Typical Vivian.

“What’s up, Molls?” Cole greeted.

“Hey, guys,” I said, stopping to watch their progress.

Falyn tipped her head with a smile. She concentrated on finishing what she was doing before looking at me. “You just stopping by?”

I watched her long fingers deftly straighten the switch and grab another screw to secure it in place. Before meeting her, I’d never found construction work alluring. Now I couldn’t pry my eyes away. “Viv and I are getting dinner. You want to come?”

“I’m going for a bike ride with Lena and Brooke tonight. Thanks, though.”

I felt a twinge of disappointment, but happiness broke through when I realized that she had made some other good friends in town. No more talk of leaving town if she had lots of friends anchoring her here. “Hunter Creek’s a nice trail. If you don’t go tonight, we can try it next time.”

“Hey, you snuck in.” Vivian poked her head out of the bathroom. She and Samantha joined us, loaded down with sample tiles.

“Not quite ready, I see.”

“We’re trying to decide on tiles for the bath up here.”

“Crucial,” I joked and received a shoulder smack.

Falyn and Cole laughed but went back to work as soon as they caught Vivian’s mock glare. Samantha winked at me and hustled back into the bathroom.

“Mama wants pics,” I said, capturing the view from the open balcony to the first floor.

“How is Morela?” she asked. “They’re still coming in November, right? They’ll be able to see it finished.”

“Yep, and she will be expecting a tour.” Usually I went to Phoenix to visit my parents, but I’d be turning forty in November, so they were headed this way to celebrate. “You want in?” I gestured with my camera before lining up a shot that included Vivian.

I turned the camera back to the guestroom and raised my brow in silent question at Falyn. She started to shake her head, but Cole cut her off by throwing an arm around her shoulders and posing them both. I snapped the shot before she could come up with a reason why she’d never shown me a photo with her in it despite seeing every photo album I had. “Thanks, guys. My mom likes to see who I’m hanging with.” And was especially curious about Falyn even without knowing that we’d been intimate once.

“If we’re lucky, she’ll cook for us when she gets here,” Vivian told them. “You thought Tamiko’s gyoza was good, wait till you have Morela’s pierogi.”

“Pierogi?” Ramón asked. “Are you Russian, Molly?”

“Polish,” I told him, feeling the pride of my mother’s immigrant status puff me up. She’d come to America at eighteen and worked as a hotel maid for ten years before she met my dad in a Polish community center. Their marriage came far later in life than her culture would consider acceptable at the time. Everyone else in her family had gotten married by the time they were nineteen. I loved that she’d bucked every tradition without disrespecting any of them. I hoped to do the same.

Falyn glanced over and winked. She knew how much my parents and their heritage meant to me. She didn’t feel the same way about her ethnicity. She was a mix of Scandinavian, Dutch, English and some others she wasn’t sure about. Yet she let me drone on and on about my mom’s story and visiting Poland to meet her side of the family. She listened and asked questions and encouraged me to talk all I wanted about something she didn’t find important for herself. But I did, so she liked hearing about it. She was the best kind of friend.

“First generation,” Vivian added. “Her mom’s got the best accent.”

That was true. I’d been guilty of calling Mama just to let her accent soothe me.

“Will you’ll bring some for us to taste?” Ramón asked.

“I’ll invite you over for dinner when she’s here,” I promised then turned back to Vivian and gestured to the sample tiles. “Which one are you going with?”

“Natalie?” Vivian got her attention. “Got a sec?”

She set the door she was holding against the wall and went to Vivian with a dreamy smile. Now that’s what a woman in love looked like. I might not be completely sure of my feelings where Falyn was concerned yet, but I didn’t look like that.

“Which do you like better?” Vivian laid out the tile samples in the light from the French doors to the balcony off the studio.

She watched Natalie carefully. Falyn and Cole had stopped working to watch her, too. Something was going on, but I couldn’t put my finger on it.

Natalie looked at each sample. Three were different marbles, one was glass mosaic, and another travertine. They were all beautiful and looked expensive, but one of Vivian’s many design talents was finding expensive-looking materials at budget prices. My eyes immediately went to the marble with the greenish tint in the veins.

Natalie considered each then looked up at her girlfriend. “Are you asking because you like all five equally and want my preference? Or are you asking because you think I should have a say in decisions like this?”

Vivian’s lips quirked, a motion I’d seen many times over the years. Natalie had guessed exactly what she was thinking and she was tickled by it. “I’ve been having my way with everything in here.”

“You’re allowed. This has been your dream since you went to design school, hon.”

“Yes, but it’ll be yours, too. You should get some say.”

I swallowed the pang of envy I felt. Vivian and Natalie would be moving in together when the house was done. Something Vivian had wanted since I’d known her. Romance and love and companionship, all of which Natalie provided. It never occurred to me to think about moving in with someone before dating at least a year, but I didn’t think anything of them going for it. Odd that I felt more sure of their relationship than I had about any of mine. My eyes shot to Falyn. Well, maybe not all my relationships.

“I got to choose all the materials we used in the structure. You even redesigned the master bathroom for me,” Natalie continued.

“But that was as much for me as you,” Vivian said and I found myself nodding in agreement. Who wouldn’t want a two-sided shower, back to back vanities and cabinets, a large soaking tub, and separate toilet rooms? I’d seen her do something similar at Lena’s house a year ago, but she’d outdone herself for her own house.

“You’re letting me use reclaimed wood and the best materials.”

“You really don’t mind if I make all the design decisions?” Vivian reached out and grabbed Natalie’s hand. They looked good together, but better, they were good together.

“It’s been your dream, Vivi,” Natalie said sweetly.

I almost rolled my eyes. Was anyone really that sweet to the woman she loved? Okay, yes, Natalie was. I’d had a year of proof to know that. None of my girlfriends were ever that sweet. I was expected to be the sweet, accommodating one.

Falyn shot me a look that said she knew exactly what I was thinking. We’d just witnessed another nauseating moment between our two friends but were both secretly happy about it. Yet another reason she and I made a good pair. Of buddies, of course. But maybe more. In time.

 

 
21
 

We strolled through City Market using one cart for our groceries. Before meeting Falyn, I really didn’t like grocery shopping. It was mundane and tedious. Not being a cook probably added to the boredom of collecting the same kind of food every week. With Falyn, it was an event. Something to do together.

“Did I forget the boys’ beer?” She glanced back and rifled through her half of the cart.

“You did,” I confirmed. “But shouldn’t the boys be buying that?”

“We finished their case last night. I’m not leaving them with an empty shelf.”

I felt a smile pull at my lips. Her courtesy was one of the things I liked most about her. Making simple things fun was another checkmark on her list of appealing attributes. Grocery shopping, folding laundry, even biking around the neighborhood. I’d come to think of my bike as a work tool only. With Falyn, it became a fun activity again. She didn’t care if we were biking mountain trails or streets. She just liked to ride her bike, and I liked riding with her.

“You want spaghetti for dinner?” she asked. “I think the guys are home, so I better get double.”

“Triple,” I inserted. They ate a lot. Normally I’d be disappointed not to have Falyn to myself, but she made hanging out with her housemates almost as enjoyable as spending time alone.

“Let me run back and grab their beer.”

“Are you making the sauce, or should I get a jar?”

“Jar?” She gave me a scathing look at the idea of tomato sauce from a jar. She and my mom were going to get along great. “Thanks for the reminder. I’ll grab enough tomatoes for the sauce tonight and a practice run on the dip I’m bringing to Cassie’s. Meet you over in the bakery aisle for the garlic bread.”

Garlic. No kissing tonight. Not that I should be thinking about kissing my buddy in the middle of the grocery store or anywhere for that matter. Yet, more and more lately, I was wondering why we weren’t kissing and why we’d shut down any sexual intimacy. We were sharing other intimacies. She certainly knew me well enough. She even knew how I’d react to things almost before I did. I’d never had that with friends or girlfriends before.

I wheeled the cart out of the aisle and started for the end of the store. I recognized one of my neighbors. She had her toddler with her, so I was saved from having a long conversation. After a quick hello, I made my way to the bakery section.

“What’s up, Molly?”

Ugh. Cherise. Not my favorite chick, but small town rules demanded politeness. Especially since she was one of an even smaller cluster of lesbians. If I wanted to continue hanging out with J&B, I had to act like I liked Cherise since they were friends.

She was still in her police uniform, which was another thing I didn’t like about her. She was the typical power-hungry authority figure. I’d seen her put a tourist through roadside sobriety tests just because she thought his vanity license plate was obnoxious.

BOOK: Life Rewired (Aspen Friends, Book 3)
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