Well Played (Well Met #2)(33)
But that wasn’t the case here. I had the big picture, and Mitch had all the puzzle pieces for me. I just needed to put them together.
“I don’t mind,” I said. “It’ll be fun.”
* * *
? ? ?
And it was fun, for a little while.
When I got home that night I downloaded Mitch’s spreadsheet to my laptop, and created a folder with all the other paperwork he’d sent. I logged on to the Faire’s business email account and sent out reminders to the acts that hadn’t confirmed. Easy. A warm thrill went through me when I saw that Dueling Kilts had already confirmed for the summer. Dex. I couldn’t wait to see him again, and that time was coming up so soon now.
Over the next couple weeks the last confirmations trickled in, and we had a full complement of acts for the summer. A few signed contracts were still outstanding, but most of them had come via email, so I wasn’t too concerned yet. Plenty of time.
When I left work one Friday in early June, there were two notifications on my phone. The first was a text from Mitch, saying that the last two contracts had been mailed to him, and to meet him at Jackson’s for happy hour and he’d pass them along. It sounded like a thinly veiled request for a drinking buddy, but what the hell. I didn’t have any plans.
The second notification was a short message from Dex, which I waited to read until I got to the bar. I wanted to savor it with my Friday night glass of wine while I waited for Mitch to show up.
To: Stacey Lindholm
From: Dex MacLean
Date: June 5, 4:37 p.m.
Subject: Weekend
A rare weekend off! This hardly ever happens. And what am I doing? Sitting here in a bar on my own. The other guys are off doing their own thing, and I couldn’t be bothered tonight. All I can think about is you. Which feels . . . strange, don’t you think? It’s been months since I’ve seen you, and I’m not even sure that you . . .
I’m not going to finish that thought. But I’m not going to delete it either. I’m just going to hit Send. July will be here before we know it.
That all sounded so vague, and almost ominous. I sipped my rosé and took a look around Jackson’s. No Mitch yet. I suppressed a sigh and ordered some mozzarella sticks. I never wanted to hear him complain about women taking too long to get ready for anything. I switched from email to text and tapped out a message to Dex.
What a coincidence. I’m alone at a bar myself right now. What do you like to drink when you’re drinking alone?
He wrote back right away. I don’t know if I like the thought of you drinking alone. I’m about halfway through a pint of Guinness right now. You?
I shuddered. Ugh. That stuff is too thick. You don’t drink it, you chew it. No, thank you.
Ha, he replied, dark beer is definitely not something you chug. But it’s my thing. Every new town, as soon as I check into the hotel, I head for the nearest bar and order the darkest beer they have. Usually it’s a Guinness and that’s fine, but sometimes I get surprised by a craft stout. Not so much refreshing as comforting. Really nice after a long drive. I sip it really slowly and center my brain, focusing on the shows ahead.
No shows this weekend, I texted back. What are you focusing on now?
The future.
I frowned. That was a vague reply. But before I could ask for clarification he changed the subject. But you didn’t answer my question. What are you drinking there, alone?
My mozzarella sticks arrived, and I took another sip of wine. Still no Mitch. Rosé, I responded. That’s my thing, I guess. Part of the whole basic white girl aesthetic that I embrace. Can’t help it. I’m a blonde. I love mimosas, Pumpkin Spice Lattes, and my rose-gold iPhone. But I have some standards: no UGG boots and I’m terrible at yoga.
His answer came quickly. There are a lot of words I’d use to describe you. Basic isn’t one of them.
“Hey, there you are.”
I started at the sound of Mitch’s voice and almost dropped my phone onto the bar. “Here I am,” I said back, a little irritated. “Hiding from you right here at the bar ten feet from the front door.”
“Funny.” Mitch took one of my mozzarella sticks and ordered a beer before sliding a folder with the contracts in my direction. “Who you texting? Big date tonight?”
I snorted as I tucked the folder and my phone into my bag. “Hardly. The hottest date I’ve had lately is the battery-powered one I have waiting for me at home.” Of all my friends, Mitch would appreciate a vibrator joke the most.
I was right. He laughed out loud and slapped the bar with the flat of his hand. “Nice!”
His appreciation of the joke made me smile. Same old Mitch. He was another one who’d never left town, just like me. But unlike me, I wasn’t sure that he’d ever tried. I watched him polish off the other half of the purloined mozzarella stick and take a swig of beer before I spoke again. “Mitch,” I asked, “do you ever wish you’d left home?” I wasn’t sure where this change in subject had come from, but texting with Dex always made me feel a little wistful. A little lonely. A little stuck. Was I the only townie who regretted staying behind?
His expression turned thoughtful, an odd look for him. “Not really,” he finally said. “I never really thought about it, if you want to know the truth. I like it here, my family’s here, and I’ve got a pretty good thing going. Other people are destined for bigger things in bigger cities. But not me. Besides . . .” He shrugged. “If I weren’t here, who’d get the baseball team to State? Simon?”