Then he turned and started to walk away.
“I’m not going to town with you,” I announced.
He turned back and asked, “Why not?”
“Because you called the taxi company and told them not to send a taxi.”
“And?”
“And, as delighted as I was to be offered a beer by Arlene coupled with the opportunity to experience town like a local, I wanted a taxi.”
He grinned again. “Arlene’s friendly.”
“I think Arlene’s a little nutty.”
“Friendly ain’t nutty, darlin’, it’s friendly.”
“It would have been friendlier if she sent a taxi.”
He tipped his head to the bed and noted, “You got a nap.”
“Yes.”
“And you got your color back.”
I fought the urge to touch my cheeks, won my fight and said, “So?”
“So, you got rest, except for bakin’ cookies. It’s what you needed.”
“Max, what I need is to –”
He turned and started walking away, saying, “We’ll talk over burgers.”
“Max.”
“Burgers,” he said before he hit the staircase.
“Max!” I shouted.
He didn’t answer.
God, he was so annoying.
He was hungry? He wanted burgers? He wanted to talk over burgers? I was hungry too, actually famished. So we’d talk over burgers.
I went to my suitcase, pulled out my hair drier and my makeup case and snatched up the converter. He wanted to go to town to talk over burgers; he’d have to wait until I did my hair and makeup. I didn’t go anywhere without doing my hair and makeup.
Unfortunately that morning I didn’t sleep. I tried but it wouldn’t come. So I made cookies instead. Then it was time for lunch, so I made lunch. Then I put the sheets in the drier, cleaned up after the cookies and lunch and tried to read but I was too tired so I went upstairs and slid open the doors to the TV and VCR. Max had a selection of shoot ‘em ups, some Westerns, horror, a few espionage, lots of explosion movies. I picked an espionage, made the bed, watched the movie, went downstairs and folded the sheets then went back upstairs to watch another espionage, which, obviously, I fell asleep while watching.
Now, it was dinnertime.
I blew out my hair sleek, gunked it up with some stuff I liked that contained any fly-aways and then did my makeup. Not full-on Nina makeup since I was in the Colorado mountains and if makeup-less, mountain fresh Becca was anything to go by the girls in the Colorado mountains didn’t do full-on Nina makeup. I went light, I might have got some of my color back but not all of it and I needed a bit of help.
Then I walked out of the bathroom, put away my stuff in my suitcase ever ready to escape, spritzed with perfume, put on some gold hoop earrings, a bunch of gold tinkly bracelets and wrapped a thin, lilac scarf edged with an inch of gold once around my neck, letting the long ends fall down the front. I pulled on some socks then my high-heeled tan boots. Then I stomped downstairs.
“Ready,” I announced when I hit the bottom.
Max was standing in the kitchen, looking like he was sorting through mail and he was eating another cookie.
“You’re eating another cookie,” I accused.
His head came up and his eyes did a full body scan before he said, “Duchess, you were up there a year. I didn’t have another cookie, I’d starve to death.”
I’d made it to the bar and put my hands on it. “I wasn’t up there a year.”
“Felt like a year.”
“It wasn’t a year.”
His eyes did a full face scan before he said in a softer voice, “Though, it was worth it.”
That voice and his words made me feel funny in a way I wasn’t willing to explore.
Therefore I said, “Can we go?”
He grinned before he replied, “Yeah,” then he put the rest of the cookie in his mouth and dropped the mail.
“Do you know where my coat is?” I asked.
“Closet,” he answered, going to the dining room table and nabbing his leather jacket off the back of one of the chairs.
I walked to one of the doors under the loft, guessing and guessed right. There was a big storage room, some hooks on the wall, lots more man stuff. My tan, shawl collared, belt cinched at the waist, falling to the hip, cashmere coat was on a hook. I grabbed it and shrugged it on, flipping my hair over the collar as Max stood at the opened front door.
“You look like you’re gonna meet the queen,” he said, giving me an indication that even toned down I might be a bit more fancy than the normal Colorado mountain town look.
“You don’t meet the queen in jeans,” I explained, walking through the door and cinching my belt.
“You would know,” he muttered.
I swallowed back a growl and headed to the Cherokee.
He flashed open the locks but didn’t come around and open my door. This didn’t surprise me. He didn’t seem a door opening type. Neither was Niles. Then again, Niles didn’t drive, didn’t know how, never bothered to learn and it didn’t bother him that he couldn’t. Firstly, I could drive and when we went somewhere together I did. Secondly, he could take a taxi to a train and you could take trains most everywhere. Then, once you got there, you could take a taxi to where you were going. Any town, even small ones, had more than just Arlene at Thrifty’s.
I pulled myself up into the cab, settled and belted in.
“I’d like you to call Arlene and lift the boycott on a taxi for Nina,” I told him once he started up, did a swift, somewhat hair-raising, three point turn and headed down the lane.
“You goin’ somewhere?”
“I might wish to and, without the keys to the rental that would be difficult.”
“We’ll see.”
“We won’t, you’ll call her.”
“Not big on women tellin’ me what to do.”
“Max –”
“Or anyone,” he finished and I turned to him, incredulous.
“You’re not big on women, or anyone, telling you what to do but you’ve essentially stolen my car and told the only taxi service in town not to give me a ride, which is, in essence, telling me what to do.”
“In essence,” he agreed pleasantly.
“I… I…” I stammered, “I don’t even know what to say.”