Her eyes narrowed slightly. “You thought I’d be some latte-sipping city girl who’d try to turn the building into an artisan wine cave?”
“I didn’t think you’d care about Reckless River.”
She looked away at that, toward the taped-up swatches. “I care too much, actually. That’s kind of my problem.”
I stepped a little closer. “Why’d you really come here, Lydia?”
She looked back at me. “Because I was stuck. Because I lost someone and needed to start over somewhere that didn’t look like my old life.”
That hit me like a punch to the chest.
Loss…
I didn’t know what I expected her to say, but it wasn’t that. Not something real. Not something that matched the ache I’d been trying to hide in myself for years.
I didn’t answer.
Couldn’t.
And she didn’t fill the silence. She just stood there, watching me.
Open.
Honest.
Vulnerable in a way I wasn’t ready for but couldn’t ignore.
“I didn’t mean to cause trouble,” she said finally. “I just want to build something that lasts.”
I let out a slow breath. “You picked the right town for it.”
Her smile was small and a little sad. “Not everyone agrees.”
“I didn’t say I didn’t agree.”
She arched a brow. “You sure had a funny way of showing it.”
I stepped in before I could stop myself, close enough to smell the citrus in her shampoo and see the freckles on her collarbone.
Her eyes widened just slightly.
“Maybe I just didn’t know how to say it.”
We were standing so close now that I could feel the heat coming off her skin. She tilted her chin up slightly to look at me, and I swear the entire room held its breath.
“You don’t strike me as someone who struggles with words,” she whispered.
“I do when they matter.”
Her mouth parted just a little.
I leaned in, just an inch, barely even a movement, but her breath hitched like it was a kiss.
It wasn’t.
But it could’ve been.
If I let it.