A Book Store Romance
Chapter
1
There was something in the
air today. Something crisp and beautiful
about the walk from her house to the bookstore around the corner- The Bookworm-
it was where Hailey McKay spent most of her free time. Most people her age were out partying and
enjoying being young and vibrant, buy Hailey had to be honest and admit that
she just wasn’t that person. While
everyone else was having keg parties in the sorority house, or drinking wine
coolers at clambakes- she was in the campus library studying.
Hailey-since she wasn’t an
overly social person- really didn’t have many friends. She always felt like an outsider who really
didn’t belong with everyone else. It
wasn’t that she felt like she was better than anyone else- in fact, she felt
like she wasn’t cool enough. She usually
wore her brown hair straight normally, and mid-length. She dressed casually for the most part-
usually in jeans and a comfortable t-shirt or sweatshirt. She frequented libraries and bookstores, and
she often took one of her new acquisitions with her to the local coffee shop
The Coffee Bean. Anyone could guess that
Hailey was a bookworm. She didn’t wear
them when she went out, but she wore Cat-Eyed glasses when she read, or
sometimes, she wore what she called her Nerd Glasses- which were rectangle
lenses in a black rectangle frame- thick frames that made her look ever-so
smart. Today, it was a self-imposed
toss-up day where it came to her fashion.
She had just bought a new pair of jeans that she had to love because
they played up what few curves she had.
They made her look fabulous, and they looked even better with the gauzy
navy blue peasant top which was actually fitted perfectly and had a lovely
floral print which wasn’t too flouncy.
She had worn her brown sweater jacket which went well with the navy
shirt and dark jeans. She wore brown
leather ballet flats and her hair was in a loose braid with the stray tendrils
curled, framing her oval-shaped face. Her makeup was more daring as well, dark
blue eye shadow and a burgundy lipstick.
She wore some gold-backed earrings with bold navy blue tear-drop-shaped
stones with a matching necklace. She
looked very well-put together and she was proud of her early autumn ensemble. The
sun was still shining and it made her pale skin glow. Her purse was slung over her shoulder and she
walked. When she walked in the front
door of the shop, the owner, Caleb Thornton grinned, “Hailey McKay, come on
down!” He said in a game-show announcer voice.
“Ooh, I have a chance to play The Price is Right! I
must tell you though; I’m abysmal at this game. I happen to know, however, that
the book I’m needing today was listed at $25.00- hardcover… which I think is a
bit of money, but you know me, I’m a sucker for a good book.”
Caleb practically howled with
laughter. “I know exactly what you mean,
honey. Don’t worry, you buy so many
books here that I’ve decided you should have a discount-always. I’ve been meeting with my business partners
and we’re going to have a rewards program, but the great thing about this
program is that patrons don’t have to have a card. They can just put it under
their email address. They can also use
their number, or we can make our store system recognize the GPS Signal when a
patron enters the store with their phone or tablet.”
Hailey smiled brightly and
said, “That’s a great idea.”
“Well, I’m glad you think so. It’ll roll out in a week
or two, but I’ll give you a thirty-percent discount today to make that
expensive book a little less expensive.”
“I appreciate that.”
“What book do you need? I’d be happy to get it for
you.”
“It’s that Edgar Allen Poe collection with the red
cover.”
“Are you feeling edgy today or something?”
“A little.” She laughed.
“Do you want anything else?”
“I’ll look around a little and see.”
“Cool. Let me know if you need anything. You know where I’ll be.”
She did. He was pretty much always at the front, in
front of the register, or he was in the back getting books to stock the shelves
with. Either way, there wasn’t really much
other place for him to be- the store wasn’t all that big.
Hailey went through the store
with the confidence of a pro. She was in
there almost every day for something or another. When she wasn’t buying a book, it was a
notebook, or a magazine. Sometimes, she
simply came in there to buy some coffee and a bookmark… But she bought more
books than she cared to admit… She was
good at reading- she loved doing it, so she went through books extremely fast. She constantly ran out of books to read and
had to pop in to see if he had anything new at the shop. Quite often, she felt a little like Belle
from Disney’s Beauty and the Beast
where she walked in asking if there was anything new and Caleb would chortle
and say, “Not since yesterday.”
She liked that he also had
movies and CDs- that gave her something to keep her status as a frequent
customer. Sometimes, she’d read a book like Pride and Prejudice which has many
adaptations on the screen- and she’d compare and contrast, even taking notes in
whatever notebook she was writing in that week.
In addition to being an avid reader, Hailey was a writer. She wrote stories-novels. And she had to constantly keep up on her
reading. She was always studious- which
meant that she treated even free-choice reading like she was going to really
learn from it, so she’d take notes in her pretty penmanship and she’d highlight
passages that meant a lot to her. Hailey
knew she took it a little bit far, but she wanted to be knowledgeable. When she graduated a few years ago from
college, she had a double major- English and History. She also did extensive studies in creative
writing and even wrote on the school paper.
When she graduated, her family was all very proud of her. She had high honors, and was second in her
class. She would have been first, but
one of her professors had nit-picked her last paper- and she ended up not doing
as well as she would have liked, but all-in-all, it was ok. The person who was first really needed the status-to
get into Harvard. While Hailey was smart
and bookish, she didn’t want to be in school anymore. As Hailey perused the shelves, she picked out
another book for fun, in the Young Adults section called The Fairest Beauty because it looked interesting and wasn’t overly
expensive. As she slipped it into her
basket, she thought about her family-who all were proud of her accomplishments
but wished that she was more social. Her mother, Anna McKay was a petite
brunette who had married right out of college- already being engaged. She was
Anna Baxter then, and studying Psychology.
She ended up going on to get her Master’s Degree in it- and had an
office downtown. Eventually though, she
got pregnant with first- Hailey’s oldest brother, Samuel- and then a year
later, her brother Timothy. It became
too much and she gave it up. It was a
good thing and Anna hadn’t regretted it because she soon had Hailey and her
sister, the baby of the family, Rebecca.
They were a happy family and Anna was fine with being a stay-at-home
mom. In her spare time, she wrote a few
books on Psychology and she became fairly well-known. Hailey and Rebecca were really close and did
a lot of stuff together. They met for
lunch whenever they could. Tim and Sam
were boys so it was a little harder to bond with them, but Hailey went to
football games or baseball games with them- she also went over to their houses
and babysat for their kids. They were
both married. Sam married when Hailey
was a Sophomore in high school. By the time she was a Junior, Sam and his wife,
Courtney had their first child, a boy named Patrick. Tim had a steady
girlfriend by then and asked her to marry him that Fourth of July- they were
married by Senior year with a baby on the way by the end of her first year of
college. Hailey liked both Courtney, and Lynn (Tim’s wife)- and when little
Emma was born, Hailey was happy for them. It didn’t take too long for another
go-around to start and soon there were two new additions to the McKay family,
Allison and Daniel. Sam and Courtney
were so happy to have a girl- as happy as Tim and Lynn were to have a boy. And Anna and Steven McKay were thrilled to be
grandparents. But with the boys out of
the way, Anna and Steven kept on their oldest daughter to get more social so
she could meet a guy and they wouldn’t have to worry about her anymore.
And Rebecca, who wasn’t much
more social than her older sister was dreading what they’d say to her once she
was out of college, where she was studying both Business and Culinary as a
double major. Rebecca wasn’t a great
student, but she was trying really hard to make good grades and was succeeding.
Hailey sighed as she thought of all the things that Rebecca had done to study
harder.
By now, Hailey had picked up
about five books and figured she should stop.
She noticed that Caleb was on the phone by Checkout and he seemed to be
both very happy-and also very stressed about something. She wondered what it was but figured she’d
know soon enough. Caleb was very
forthcoming with things and she was usually the first customer to know the
goings-on. After meeting Caleb at
Hailey’s last birthday celebration, her parents kept trying to say that she and
Caleb were a good match, but she had to stop them right there. “For one, he’s
thirty. I’m 25… and two, he’s married
and has twins.”
“Do you know his wife?”
“Her name is Laura and she’s wonderful.”
“Well then, you need to find somewhere else to spend
your time. Maybe you should join a book
club or something- you’re always reading.” Her father said.
“I’m in a
book club, Dad.” She had said.
“Well maybe you should learn to play an instrument.”
“I play guitar.”
“Maybe a different instrument.”
“I don’t think so.”
“Maybe you should volunteer.”
“Doing what?
And when?! Whenever I’m not at work, I’m reading for my book club,
reading for me, writing for the local paper and for my blog- and practicing my
guitar… If I have time left, I already volunteer as a library assistant.”
“Well maybe you should sing Karaoke or play a sport,
or something.”
“I suck at sports.
And I do Karaoke at the bar once a month.”
Her parents had been
surprised. “We never knew you did any of
those things.”
“Well, I do. And I have put myself out there a lot
more than I care to… Hopefully it’ll pay off.” She had sighed.
And even now, as she thought back on the
conversation; she was pleased with how it had ended. By now, she was heading up to the counter to
pay for her books. Caleb chuckled, “Are you sure you got enough?”
“Oh, shut up.
This won’t take me very long, and there’s Halloween coming up- the store
is closing early that weekend so you can set up for the annual party… What
would I do if I ran out of books?!”
“Um, you could go to the library…”
“They are very weird about their hours… Plus, the
weekend librarian hates me. She thinks
I’m trying to be a smart aleck.”
“Well then, drive a few more miles and go to Half
Price Books- or go on Amazon and order some… Or download them on your
Kindle. You can buy a giftcard here and
order anything you want at home…”
“Well if you don’t want the almost $70 I’m planning on
handing you for all these items, then I can go somewhere else.”
“I’m only teasing you, Hailey.”
“I know. I’m just being a smart aleck.”
“No wonder Nancy hates you.”
It was a small town and
everybody knew everybody for the most part. It was like Mayberry- just a little
bigger. Hailey rolled her eyes at the
joke, but had to admit that it was funny.
Then Caleb said, “I was just on the phone with the secretary for W.
Sherman –the author of,”
“Eternity.”
Hailey interrupted before thinking.
Caleb waved to say she was
right. “Yes- and she said that his new book, Haunted Cottage will be coming out soon and he wants to do a book
signing.”
“Here?”
“Yes! Isn’t
that great?”
“It’s spectacular! When is it?” Hailey asked putting
her books on the counter one by one.
Caleb grinned with a sparkle
in his eye- “Next week- the day before Halloween.”
“How appropriate!
Sounds like fun- you can count me in.”
“Are you ok with doing what you did last time?” Caleb
looked afraid that she’d say no.
“Yeah. I don’t
mind being part of your staff that night to keep the lines moving and the
refreshments coming…”
“Thanks, Hailey, you’re a big help.”
“Anything for you, Caleb. You supply these great devices for
entertainment called ‘books’- that I heartily enjoy, so I am forever in your
debt… This is the least I can do.”
And so it was agreed, and
Hailey went home to her little yellow house with the lovely front porch. She
unlocked her front door and walked in, setting the bag of books on the table by
the door. She dropped her keys in the
damask-patterned bowl on the same table.
She grabbed the mail out of her mailbox before she shut the door, and
then went inside, making herself some tea as the sun started to go down
outside. Her dinner was in the Crock-Pot
and would be done in about a half hour, so she had time to read the last
chapter of the book she was currently reading- Salem Falls by Jodi Picoult.
It had been a very good day,
and she felt secure in the fact that she wouldn’t run out of things to read
that weekend.
Chapter
2
He carried the last box into
his new place. It was dark now, and he
was hungry. Kevin Townsend had just
moved to the neighborhood that day. He
lived not too far away- in the next town- and his company had went out of
business, so he found another job. He
was actually relieved because he hadn’t been happy at his old position
anyway. This one was a much better fit
for him. He was a book editor and he
worked for a firm now called Malloy and Benjamin. So far, he liked it here. The town was quiet and unassuming, and it
wasn’t drastically different than the town he lived in before. So far, the people were nice and helpful, and
he really liked the house his company had found for him. They had been so wonderful about helping him
relocate and for that, he was grateful.
And as much of a pain as moving could be sometimes, Kevin was actually
glad that he had to do it. A part of him
felt like he was running away but in all fairness to him, the other office
closing had nothing to do with him, and this new job was everything he wanted
and didn’t really get with the other company.
As he set the box down on the
dark hardwood floor, he felt his cell phone buzz in his pocket and saw that it
was the absolute last person he wanted to talk to- Sandra Dalton. He didn’t answer and she hung up before
letting the call go to voicemail. She
wanted to pester him in real-time. But a
minute later, she texted him- “You didn’t say goodbye, honey- you just up and
left.”
“So I did. No different than what you did. Stop bugging me.”
And he vowed that as soon as
things settled down a little bit, he was going to go have his number changed.
He began to unpack, which he
had to admit was one of his least favorite things about moving. But, as he faced the window, he looked across
the street, not really meaning to- and noticed someone inside the house across
the street. He finally could make out a
female form bathed in lamplight inside the house. It was kind of hard to tell from the great
distance, but he could tell she was lovely.
She was curled up in a plush purple reclining chair with a book- not
just some small romance novel- a hefty almost encyclopedia-sized tome, reading
glasses perched on her nose. The lamp in
back and to the side of her was a floor lamp with multiple bulbs. Each shade was a different color of pink or
purple. He couldn’t see much more but he
knew that she looked contented. The next
box took him away from the window and away from the girl across the street,
which was probably a good thing. He felt
a little creepy staring at her like that.
Plus, he didn’t want to think about women right now. Sandra had kicked the stuffing out of him and
he wasn’t in a hurry to get back into a relationship where the same thing could
happen again. The whole thing with
Sandra had been a mistake from the beginning, even though he didn’t want to
admit it at the time. She was very needy
and demanding. She never let him breath,
and nothing he did was ever right. And then she started acting like she owned
him and everything he did had to be run by her first, which was really weird
for him because he was the man and he was supposed to wear the pants in the
relationship. It wasn’t that he let her
walk all over him because he didn’t- she just didn’t care and went off the
deep-end. He had been taken in by her
model’s body and her wispy blonde hair.
He didn’t see how controlling and vindictive she really was. It took him a minute to discover that she was
controlling him because he hadn’t thought it possible, but when he did, he had
to stand his ground, and she really didn’t like that. They said some horrible things to each other
and then his company folded and he was grateful to start over again. He got a new job and was happy that he could
find a new job that allowed him to move away.
Sure, it wasn’t a far move, but still, it would be a while before he was
accosted by Sandra again. So, he wasn’t
too keen on women at the moment. The box
he was unpacking now was kitchen stuff.
He got out the toaster and the blender, along with some dishtowels and
washcloths he had used to keep the things from jostling. He sighed and when he was done unpacking, he
got the next box. This one went
upstairs. The next one was a box of
coats. He didn’t want to deal with those
quite yet, and really couldn’t because for some reason, the coat closet didn’t
have a rod in it. He’d have to fix
that. It was fall now and soon it would
be winter. So, for the meantime, he just
put it on the floor in the closet and went on to the next box- all stuff for
the bathroom; towels, soap, toilet paper, mouthwash, toothpaste, shaving cream,
shampoo and conditioner… All that… He realized that he had been in such a hurry
to leave his old place that he had left his shower curtain at the old apartment
and would have to make a run to the local Target to fix that. Maybe he’d dig out that box of office
supplies next and make a grocery list.
That’s just what he did, and went back downstairs- finding his next box-
one of books. That one had been
heavy. He had another box, so he opened
that one too. Before he did anything
more with those boxes, he decided that he should move the bookcases where they
belonged so he wouldn’t have to think about it once the books were in there. There wasn’t anything more of a pain than
having to take everything out of the furniture and move it and then put
everything right back where it was.
Kevin sighed as he moved the bookcase, wishing that he had been able to
tell the mover exactly where he wanted it. But there hadn’t been time for
that. Kevin pulled all the books he
could out of the first box with two hands, and set them on the coffee table.
Then he grabbed another handful and another.
By the time he got them all out, he was already annoyed, mostly because
he had just seen the book that Sandra had given him on his birthday. He was not over the whole thing yet, but he
was definitely over Sandra.
He spent a few minutes
organizing his books and then started putting them into the shelves. He then realized that he was hungry, and
since he hadn’t unpacked anything and there was nothing cold to drink-nothing
to make anything with; he decided to order a pizza and a salad, along with a
2-liter. Then he’d have something to eat
tomorrow too. He thought that moving
would be a way to get away from everything- like a new beginning, and yes, it
was; but he felt really alone and had a hard time admitting it because he
really had never felt that way before.
After he ordered his dinner, he unpacked while looking out for the food.
He saw the girl again- sitting on the couch this time with a TV Table set up
and a plate of food in front of her. He
could tell the TV was on even if he couldn’t see the picture on the screen. She looked to be enjoying whatever she was
watching. And he couldn’t see that well,
but he noticed that she was farther in her book than he thought she’d be. He also noticed the bag of books sitting on
the coffee table. Man! She really likes
to read. And it annoyed him that he was thinking about her so much. He
decided to distract himself from her and set up a TV table of his own, putting
his laptop on it, and plugging it in, booting up. He logged in and connected a set of speakers
to it. He had some stuff on Netflix to
watch so the evening wouldn’t be a total loss.
When he got the pizza, it was none too soon and he was glad to be able
to have a distraction from the lovely girl across the street.
Hailey watched Alfred
Hitchcock’s highly under-rated The
Trouble with Harry which was a dark comedy.
She had a very morbid sense of humor, she admitted. She ate her Angel Chicken which was chicken
cooked all day in a crock pot with cream cheese and some seasoning. And after the leftovers were put away and the
dishes were clean; she went back to her book, playing some classical
music. She ready a few chapters and then
decided that she should put on her PJs and go upstairs to read another chapter
or two. Once comfortable in her pink
sweat pants and grey sweatshirt; she put on some macabre music since she was
reading Edgar Allen Poe. It was a mix
she had made for Halloween ambiance. She
pulled back the hot pink with black damask-patterned comforter along with the
Magenta sheets, and flipped on her bedside lamp; a pull-chain table lamp from
Target that went with her damask comforter.
She was happy that she had replaced the old ceiling fan and light with
one that had a remote because it saved her from having to get up when she was
exhausted. She actually got through the
whole CD, which was pretty much 80 minutes long- and she still wasn’t tired, so
she put on a shorter CD- this one was the soundtrack for Pirates of the Caribbean 3: At World’s End and she read till the
end of it. Then, she finished the next
chapter and decided that it was time to go to bed- but still – she felt she
could stay up a little longer… So she finished the story and read a few of the
poems. And a half hour went by before
she fell asleep with the book resting on her belly- reading glasses sliding off
her nose. It was two thirty eight in the
morning. She only awakened when her
glasses finished sliding off her nose and onto her chest. She shook herself awake- set the book on her
nightstand after putting the bookmark she had made from scrapbooking paper a
few weeks ago in to mark her place. Then
she put her glasses in a hot pink zippered case which had a key ring on it
allowing her to hang it on a hook by her bed.
She turned the light off via remote and found herself asleep by the time
her head hit the pillow.
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