No, I’d woken up and decided to fully embrace this hairbrained idea with reckless optimism. Adalee was right—at least The Cakery was going to happen. The Cakery was my ticket to a fresh start, my next chapter. I just needed to get through the tangled mess of Boone, Gibbs, and everything else standing in my way.
“I woke up knowing we need a plan before Clay walks back in here in a couple of days,” I said and folded my arms across my chest.
“And that plan involves going to the store?” he drawled, his tone dripping with skepticism.
I pulled out a chair and sat down across from him and tried to channel some calm. “Yes. I can’t have my computer or anything electronic since Dice burned them, so I need pen and paper. Other supplies.”
He raised an eyebrow at that. “What are these ‘other supplies’?”
“Whatever the store tells me I should buy,” I said with a shrug as if that explained everything.
“You got money?”
I nodded. I still had some cash from when I’d cleaned out part of my savings before coming here. It wasn’t a fortune, but it was enough for what I needed. “I’ve got enough for paper and pens.”
Compass leaned back in his chair and smirked. “I’m sure I could find you some paper and a pen lying around here.”
I pursed my lips and leaned forward. “Can I be honest?”
His eyes narrowed slightly, but he nodded. “Shoot.”
“I need the hell out of here, Compass. And as much as I want to walk out that door and never look back, I know I can’t. So, I’m trying to accept my fate and deal with what’s in front of me. That starts with getting some paper and pens. And maybe a pretty new sweater, too.”
His lips twitched, and a smile broke through his stony expression. “The store gonna tell you to buy the pretty new sweater?” he chuckled.
I shrugged and leaned back in my chair. “God only knows, Compass. I’m just trying not to be stupid and sneak out of here. I even tried asking Adalee and Fade, but neither of them answered this morning when I knocked on their door.”
“So I’m your last choice before you do something stupid.”
“Pretty much,” I said with a shrug.
His smile widened with a mix of amusement and exasperation. “Yeah, you are being honest.” He pushed his chair back, stood, and stretched his arms over his head. “Give me ten minutes.”
A grin spread across my face. “Really?”
He reached for his coffee and nodded before taking another sip.
“Sweet! I’ll meet you by the front door!” I sprang up from the table and headed down the hallway, practically skipping.
That was a hell of a lot easier than I thought it was going to be. I guess asking nicely was better than storming off on my own. Who would’ve thought?
Compass
“Waiting for a bus?” Yarder strolled into the common room and headed straight for the coffee maker.
“Fallon,” I grunted.
Yarder filled his cup and turned to face me, eyebrows raised. “Why?”
I leaned against the wall and crossed my arms. “Because she asked to go to the store instead of sneaking out. Figured since I didn’t have anything else going on, I could take her.”
“What store?” He took a long drink of his coffee.
I shrugged. “Not fucking sure.” That was a detail I figured I would find out soon enough.
Yarder grabbed the coffee pot again, refilled his coffee to the top, then walked to the fridge. He plucked a piece of paper off the door and held it up. “While you’re out, pick up some groceries and shit.” He flipped the paper around, showing off a list that looked like it had been written by five different people. “The girls have been adding to it all week. It’s both sides.”
I groaned, already regretting my decision. “Have one of the other guys grab that shit.”