Discreet by Nicole French

5

Twenty minutes, one canoe, a pair of garden shears, and one very disgruntled mountain man later, I was sitting in an Adirondack chair on the deck of Goldilocks’s old cabin, enjoying his elevated lake view from behind a camouflage of pine trees halfway up the hill. I had lived here my whole life, taken countless cruises in our boat around the lake’s perimeter, but I had never known this place existed. That’s how well it blended into the forest.

I leaned back in the chair, catching my breath and spying my house directly across the water, while my yeti man tried to repair my knotted leash. I couldn’t swim safely back across the lake without a buoy, and I had a feeling he wasn’t interested in driving me home again. I looked up at the sky. The sun was rising higher, and several more boats and jet skis were already buzzing around. It was possible swimming wouldn’t be an option anyway.

“So, are you stalking me or something?” Goldilocks asked while he sawed at the lily pad stalks with a camping knife.

I jerked my head back at him. “What?”

He shrugged, keeping his eyes trained on his task. “Twice in a week when usually I can go three times that without seeing anyone. I did tell you I wanted you off my property, didn’t I? If you wanted to meet me that badly, there are better ways to do it than trespassing.”

I recoiled into my chair. “Someone certainly thinks a lot of himself.”

Okay. So maybe it wasn’t the smartest thing in the world to be goading a man who not only had come to my rescue, but who also seemed to have a relatively short temper. But I couldn’t help it. I didn’t even know this guy, but I resented the hell out of him. I resented him for being kind of a dick the first time we met. I resented him for not having enough manners to even shake my hand. And I really resented him for getting inside my head all week, and now having that kind of body, the kind I probably wouldn’t stop thinking about for another month.

Goldilocks ground his teeth. “You should be more careful. If you’re not a stalker—and jury’s still out on that one—then you’re obviously accident-prone. What were you doing this time, swimming with your eyes closed? You’d think you would have learned your lesson.”

“Listen, Gold—” I stopped, took a deep breath. But it was no use. “Do you think you could at least tell me your name if you’re going to lecture me? Otherwise, I’m going to keep calling you Goldilocks in my head, and that basically makes me one of the three bears. I’m not sure I’m cool with that, since you’re the one being a dick.”

The man froze with an expression halfway between irritated and shocked. But his eyes practically sparkled in the sunlight, and his lips pressed together into a crooked line under his beard.

“Goldilocks?” he asked.

I looked pointedly at the wild riot of blond. “If the shoe fits.”

He picked a lock off his shoulder and examined it critically. “Huh.” He set the buoy and his knife on the ground and stood up. “Hold on.”

He disappeared into the house, and when he returned, wore a shirt, just as ratty as the one from the last time I saw him, and had tied his hair into a bun at the crown of his head. I thought I had gotten my fill of man buns from the hipsters in the Village, but this guy…well, let’s just say there’s something different when a man ties his hair up out of expediency instead of pretension. With his hair pulled away from his face, revealing high cheekbones and the hint of a strong jaw that couldn’t totally be masked by his beard, he had gone from feral and somewhat yummy to freaking delectable. Seriously. What was wrong with me?

“Better?” he asked as he resumed his task.

I just stared. “Um…yeah. I guess.”

Again, there was the hint of a smile. I couldn’t help wondering what it looked like when it was all the way there.

“Will,” he said quietly, maintaining focus on the mess of stems.

“What?”

He looked up again, and this time, the sparks in his eyes were even more potent. Or maybe that was my heart thumping in response.

“My name,” he said a bit louder, “is Will. So no more of that Goldilocks bullshit, all right, Lily pad?”

I scoffed. “Lily pad?”

He glanced at the mess of stalks and leaves dripping on the deck, and this time that hint of smile was even more pronounced. “If the shoe fits,” he said and went back to his cleaning.

A breeze rose through the trees, and I rubbed my arms, bracing myself against the chill. Now that I was out of the water and in the shade, I was getting kind of cold. Will looked over at the motion, and his eyes drifted briefly over my chest, which I realized was showing quite clearly just how cold I was through the thin Lycra. The path of his gaze didn’t stop, falling over my bare legs, suddenly making me feel the very opposite of cold. I wondered if his touch, which I already knew was just as warm, would have the same effect.

This was wrong. Three months ago, I put the final nail in the coffin of a nasty, years-long relationship by sending my ex to jail for what he had done to me. My heart and my soul were currently in tatters. And here I was, flickering like a live fire under the gaze of some weird mountain hermit with a sharp temper, crazy hair, and a beard like Gandalf. What was going on?

Will cleared his throat audibly. “So, the biking, the swimming. Are you training for something, or just messing around?”

I shrugged. “Well, there’s that triathlon that the inn is doing on the Fourth. I used to compete in events like that in high school, and it sounded like a good way to get back into shape.” And back to myself, I wanted to add, but didn’t. This stranger didn’t need to know more about my issues.

Will examined me for a moment. “What’s the inn?”

I looked at him, surprised. “The place down by Muzzy Cove? The Forster Inn, you know? The family has owned it for three generations, I think. It’s literally the only place to stay on the entire lake other than vacation rentals.”

Will shook his head. “What’s Muzzy?”

My frown deepened. “The cove on the northeast leg of the lake. Don’t you know the basic geography? When did you move here?”

He shrugged. “It’s not on the map. I came about four years ago,” he replied. “I just keep to myself.”

“It’s pretty hard to keep to yourself in a community like this unless you’re purposefully avoiding people.” I looked out to the lake, which I knew was full of gossips. There’s no way that Barb, my mom, the Forsters, or any other number of people out on a cocktail cruise around the lake’s perimeter, had missed the fact that a stranger had been living in this old cabin for the last four years.

But then again, it was pretty well hidden. I hadn’t even known it was here until today.

Will sawed at a particularly stubborn piece of stem. “When I see boats driving by, I go inside. I don’t bother them, and they don’t bother me. I moved here to get away from people, not see more of them. I don’t really get along with most.”

Shocker, I wanted to say. But instead, I just hugged my knees to my chest. “Well, maybe you should. People around here are nice, for the most part. And it’s good to have some neighbors who care about you.”

He looked at me like he didn’t believe me.

“What if your house burns down?” I continued. “What if you need sugar in the morning? No one’s an island, much as they might want to be.”

Will just stayed quiet, staring fixedly at my leash. His hands stilled, but the one holding the knife grasped it so tightly, his knuckles were white.

“I don’t like sugar,” he said finally, and then went back to his work more intently than before.

I looked up at the house and back at him. “So, what do you do all day, then? Do you have a job or something? Do you work from home?”

Will looked up sharply. All humor vanished. “Why do you want to know?”

I frowned. “Whoa, buddy. I was just making conversation. Most people ask those kinds of questions when they are getting to know someone, you know?”

His fierce expression didn’t waver, but this time, I was ready for it. No flinching. Instead, I sat up straight.

“Okay,” I said. “I’ll go first. My name is Maggie Sharp. I used to be a waitress-slash-musician. I was out in New York for a while trying to break into the industry, but I fail—I just got burned out of being a starving artist. And when my mom’s life fell apart, she needed some help getting her shit back together, so I decided to come home and help us both recalibrate and figure out our lives.” I cocked my head at him. “Okay, your turn, mountain man.”

In return, I got a withering glare full of disdain. But this one didn’t cut like the others. Instead, it made me giggle.

“Don’t make me start calling you Goldilocks again,” I warned him.

One side of his face tugged upward into a half smile. Even just that half managed to tug equally at something unnamable in my chest. Damn.

“Okay,” he said as he went back to picking at a particularly nasty knot of greenery. “My name is Will…Baker. I used to work in, um, advertising. But after I made some money, I decided to cash out and move someplace where people couldn’t fucking bother me anymore.” He looked back up, and his eyes danced with mischief. “Clearly that’s working out really well for me.”

I grinned. That half smile broadened a little more. I stuck out a hand just like I had yesterday, and after looking at it for a moment, he took it in his much larger one.

Yeah. Sparks.

“Nice to meet you, Will Baker of Connecticut,” I said. “Thank you for rescuing me, twice now.”

His expression flared. “How did you know I was from Connecticut?”

“You told me yesterday, remember?” I tapped my head. “I’m like an elephant. I never forget.”

His sudden temper receded, and the half smile returned. Jeez, this guy was hot and cold.

“Ah. Okay. Well, nice to meet you too, Maggie Sharp of Newman Lake. And, um, sorry about yesterday. You caught me by surprise. I don’t really do well with surprises.”

“I gathered,” I said, leaning back in my chair. “So you’ve really been here for four years and haven’t met anyone?”

“Nope. Don’t want to, either.”

“But how is that even possible? I get that you stay off your dock, but I grew up here. People on this lake are nosy. No one ever walked over a casserole or came and knocked on your door?”

Will shrugged. “It’s easier than you might think. I have most of my food sent here so I don’t have to go shopping. I hike, camp, read, write. My house sits on five acres, way out of sight for most people. It’s easy to be here, alone.” He looked up. “You think I’m some crazy psycho, don’t you?”

I twisted my mouth around uneasily. “Well…”

His shoulders hunched. “It does sound crazy,” he murmured to himself, and the sadness in his voice caused any anxiety on my part to melt immediately.

“Hey,” I said, reaching to touch his arm gently.

It was just as warm as it had been before, but it still caught me by surprise. Will looked at my hand for a moment, but didn’t pull away. When he looked up, his eyes were wide, almost mournful.

“You don’t sound crazy,” I told him. “Maybe a little lonely, though.”

Will blinked. “Ah, well. Yeah. Maybe.” With a quick jerk of his knife, he freed the last of the lily pads from the leash. “There you go,” he said triumphantly, holding the buoy out to me. “You’re free, so to speak.” He glanced out to the water, where even more boat traffic now congested the water. The sun was high, and weekenders were making an early start. “I don’t think you should swim back, though. You’ll get tangled with someone’s propeller instead, and that would be a lot harder to fix.”

I nodded with a smile. “If you have a phone, I can call my mom to come grab me.”

But Will shook his head. “No, that’s all right. I’ll give you a ride. I should get out more anyway.”

* * *

Again,we rode in silence. Will notably kept the radio off and the window down. This time, I didn’t mind. Although when we drove by the store where Cathy was just unlocking the door for the morning, Will’s eyes widened when she raised her hand in greeting, clearly interested in just who was giving me a ride at nine o’clock on a Saturday.

“Who was that?” he asked over the roar of the engine as we sped by the emu farm and started twisting up my hill again.

“Cathy McDonald,” I called back. “She took over the store after her dad passed last year. She buys our eggs.”

Will’s mouth quirked again. “Your eggs?”

I shrugged. “We have chickens. They’re kind of assholes, but they’re good layers. We gotta make some extra cheddar somehow, right?”

“Right,” he murmured.

This time, instead of stopping at the top of the gravel driveway, he turned the truck down it, navigating down the rocky incline until he stopped just above the stairs.

“I assume this is you,” he said, nodding in the direction of the house below.

I nodded, opening my door. “Thank you again for the rescue. Again. And the ride…again.”

We shared another almost-smile together. One of these days I was going to get him to break and grin completely. It was a new goal, just like the triathlon. And somehow, I wanted this one more.

I stepped out onto the stairs and turned to shut the door, but Will stopped me. “Wait, Maggie.”

His words were stunted, like he hadn’t done this in a long time. I waited patiently for whatever it was he wanted to say. I suspected that underneath all of his surly bravado, Will really needed a good friend. I understood the feeling, better than he knew. I didn’t have that many myself anymore.

“Yeah?” I asked.

“Would you…” His words were measured, yet drifting, like he didn’t quite speak the language. “Would you…do you…would you like a partner? To, um, to train with?”

My eyes widened. Whatever I had been expecting, it wasn’t that. “You want to do the triathlon? You know that means running, and swimming, and biking, all with a large crowd of people. Those weird, two-legged creatures you go out of your way to avoid.”

He shook his head, causing a few loose strands of gold to fly around his temples. “No, I’m not going to compete in something like that. But I’d train with you. If—if you want the company.”

“Now we’re going from ‘get the hell off my property’ to running buddies?” I teased. “I thought you didn’t give a shit who I was, Goldilocks.”

I tipped my head, enjoying the flush on Will’s cheeks. I didn’t know why, but I liked poking the bear, so to speak. He was giving me a peek of his soft underbelly, and I wanted to scratch it. Mmmmmm scratching Will’s belly… Down, girl.

“Well, I won’t if you keep calling me that,” he said, though the new spark of friendliness in his eyes said differently. “But you obviously need someone to keep an eye on you. I don’t want to worry I’m going to have to run you to the emergency room next.”

I scoffed, but didn’t argue with him. I told myself it was because I was just being nice, and not because I actually wouldn’t mind seeing him running, or swimming, or biking with me. And not because the summer heat would probably mean a high probability that he’d be doing one or all of those things shirtless. With his hair up in a knot. Just…like…that.

“So, bike ride tomorrow?” Will interrupted my daydream. “Or maybe a run?”

I couldn’t think of a reason to put him off. So instead, I grinned. Will’s smile wasn’t full—not yet—but this time both sides of his mouth seemed to broaden a little.

“Meet you in front of the corner store at seven,” I confirmed. “I got new tires by the way. So no more sliding on the pine needles.”

Will’s mouth quirked once more in acknowledgment as I shut the door to his truck.

“See you, Lily pad,” he said softly through the open window, and for a moment, I was mesmerized by the last hint of smile in his eyes.

I sucked my lip between my teeth. “See you, Will.”