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Most Eligible Baby Daddy(4)

By:Chance Carter


She threw a few logs of wood on the embers from the night before and  blew on them. In a few minutes, the flames were licking the kettle,  heating up the ice cold water from the bathroom tap. There was a brown  paper bag of freshly ground coffee and she took a long, deep breath of  its smell before heaping it into the coffee pot. There was something  about the rustic simplicity of the attic that she found immensely  pleasing. There was no phone, no internet, no television. She thought  for a minute and then realized she didn't even know if there was  electricity. There must be, she thought. There had been light the night  before. She looked around the room and saw a light switch on the wall.  It was old fashioned, but there was electricity.

What she wasn't so sure of, was whether or not there was hot water. Try  as she might, she couldn't get the water in the shower to run hot. She  ended up washing as best she could in the frigid mountain water and then  drying herself next to the fire while sipping the hot coffee in an  attempt to warm herself up.

She wrapped herself in her blanket as she drank the coffee. Through the  window, the sun shone, giving some extra warmth. The clouds over the  mountain tops in the distance looked so beautiful she could hardly  believe she was really looking at them.

She opened her diary. It was a little leather bound volume that she  brought everywhere with her. It had been in her car when she ran out of  Gris's place. She opened it up to the last thing she'd written. It was a  quote by a French author named Gide. She read it.

*

It is better to be hated for what you are than loved for what you are not.

*

She thought about the words for a moment, wondering about all the things  they could mean. Wondering if she even agreed with them. Then she shut  the diary closed.

She'd arranged to meet Kelly at the diner and she decided there wasn't  much point in dawdling any longer than necessary. If she was going to  start a new job, she might as well get into it.

The door to the attic was latched from the inside and she couldn't lock  it behind her, but there was nothing much to steal anyway, she thought.  Just the kettle and blankets. She didn't even have any clothes. She  climbed down the rickety stairway only to get the fright of her life  when she reached the bottom.

She screamed.

An enormous man in dirty overalls stood in front of her, unshaved  stubble and bushy eyebrows covering most of his face. He looked like  he'd just been sleeping off a hangover in the bar beneath the attic.

"Hold your horses, hold your horses," he said, raising his hands up as if he was actually calming a horse.

"Oh," Elle said, "sorry, you just startled me."

"Sorry about that."

"And I suppose I should be the one who's apologizing," Elle said. "You must be Mister eh?"

"Dennis, that's right. Pleased to meet you, Elle, isn't it?"

"Yes, sir."

"Kelly told me I'd find you here."

"I hope that's all right."

"Of course it's all right. In fact, I prefer it when there's someone here keeping an eye on the place. It feels safer."

"I'm not sure I'd be much use to you in case of trouble."

"Oh, I just like to know there's someone nearby, sweet heart. That attic  has had some pretty terrible tenants over the years. Having you in  there will class up the joint."                       
       
           



       

"Well, I truly appreciate you giving me a place to stay for a while."

"Stay as long as you like, sweet heart. The pleasure's all mine."

Elle smiled.

Dennis remembered something and laughed. "I suppose you'll want the  furnace turned on," he said. "There's not much heat in this place  without it. Certainly no hot water."

"That would be really great, sir."

"Please, call me Dennis."





Chapter 5

Elle

WHEN ELLE ARRIVED AT THE diner, Kelly was already waiting for her with a  hot cup of coffee. There was only one customer there, an old man in  overalls, and he was eating his breakfast at the counter.

"How did you sleep?" Kelly asked.

"I love that place, Kelly. It's so cozy. It's perfect. I even met Dennis  this morning. He's going to turn on the furnace so there's hot water."

"Oh my God, I totally forgot about that."

"That's okay. I managed."

"Well, I suppose the first order of business is to introduce you to the cook. She also happens to be the boss."

Elle followed Kelly behind the counter to the kitchen, where a rotund  woman with rosy red cheeks and a kind face was frying bacon over the  grill.

"Gracie, this is Elle, the newest addition to the family. Elle, this is Grace, the mother of the family."

Elle found herself giving a little bow. "Thank you so much for the opportunity," she said.

"I'm the one who's thanking you, Elle," Grace said. "If this works out,  you'll be really saving our necks. I don't know how much longer Kelly  and I could handle this place on our own."

"I won't let you down," Elle said.

"I'm sure you won't, child."

And true to her word, Elle didn't let Gracie or Kelly down for an  instant. She took to the job with the ease and confidence of a seasoned  pro. She poured coffee, took orders, ran food, bussed tables, and  chatted up the customers like no one Gracie and Kelly had ever seen.  Even when Stumpy, the town drunk came in, Elle managed to put him at  ease, got him to eat, which he rarely did anymore, and he even left her a  tip.

"I can't believe he took to you so soon," Grace said from the grill. "He usually hates new people."

"What's to hate?" Elle said with a smile.

Then she went back to the counter and refilled the coffee mugs of the  row of mechanics, lumberjacks, laborers, and forestry workers who were  devouring their food.

"She's going to work out just fine," Grace said to Kelly, and Elle smiled quietly to herself when she heard it.

There was something about the place, about the whole town, that was  bringing out the best in her. She'd worked her share of diners, but  nowhere before had the customers seemed to welcome her so  open-heartedly, or had the boss been so willing to see the strengths she  brought to the job. At heart, Elle was a people person. She could take a  look at a mother coming in with a bunch of kids, or a laborer coming in  after a hard day's work, and know instantly what they needed. Not food  necessarily, she didn't know what they'd order, but she knew what they  needed. Everyone who came into a restaurant needed something, and Elle  knew it wasn't only about having something to eat. People needed the  company, the interaction, someone to give them a smile and bring a  little cheer into their day.

"You going to stop pouring sugar into that cup before it gives you  diabetes?" she said to a gruff looking park official who worked on the  mountain.

He looked up at her in surprise but she was already gone, grabbing a basket of toast for another guy at the counter.

More than one customer asked Grace about the new girl, and they all had an approving tone in their voice when they did it.

"It seems you're going to work out," Kelly said, when the two girls had a brief moment's rest between customers.

"Do you think?"

"I know it." Kelly turned toward the grill. "Right, Gracie? She's going to work out?"

"If she keeps working like this, and doesn't bring any drama into the place."

Elle shook her head. "No drama, Grace, I swear it."                       
       
           



       

"I don't know," Grace said, kindly. "Girls your age, how old are you?"

"Twenty three," Elle said.

"Same as me," Kelly said with a grin.

"Girls your age attract drama. Romantic drama. Believe me. I know."

"Grace was a bit of a femme fatale in her day, weren't you, Gracie?"

"Those days are long gone now."

"Oh, it's never too late, Gracie. Love might be right around the corner."

Grace laughed, "You two look after yourselves. When I was your age I had  my hands full, I can tell you that much. You both have some catching up  to do."

As if on cue, the door opened and a group of guys in their twenties came  in. There were four of them, accompanied by a cold gust of mountain  wind.

"Oh, boy," Kelly said. "Here comes trouble."

Elle watched the boys come in. They were a a few years older than she  and Kelly but still under thirty. Their clothes bore the logos of  various local sports teams. They wore ball caps and sneakers, despite  the fact that it was below freezing outside.

"Shit, Kelly," one of the boys said, "four coffees, and make that shit fast."

Elle was surprised at how quickly Kelly jumped at the boy's demand.