Read Catch a Falling Star Online
Authors: Unknown
“A shelter that caters to transitioning families.” I picked up a
stray sandwich wrapper that had blown our direction, wadding it
up as we walked.
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“You mean homeless?” His eyes settled on a little girl in a red
sundress at the nearest table.
“For now. But the Welcome House has successfully placed
over two dozen families this year in affordable housing. Give up
that trailer of yours and it could be one more.”
Parker suddenly materialized out of the shadow of a nearby grove
of slender maples, giving Adam a little nod. Adam’s face darkened.
Parker was with a woman who screamed journalist with her
notebook and crisp white sundress and sandals. The cameraman
tailing her like a puppy also gave her away.
Adam tensed beside me, whispering, “That’s Robin Hamilton
from
Watch!
magazine. She’s doing a story on me while I’m here.
She seems sweet, but don’t get sucked in — she’s ruthless. Don’t
say too much to her.”
“Okay.”
As people started noticing Adam, the energy shifted. A woman
in a Giants T-shirt grinned up at me from where she sat at a nearby
picnic table. “Whoa, you’re here with Adam Jakes? That’s wild.”
“It
is
wild,” I agreed as Parker sauntered up, his hands stuffed
into the pockets of his expensive linen pants.
He nodded at the group in front of us as if he were surveying a
set. “We should get some lovely shots here.”
A woman in a blue flowered dress joined us, nervously fiddling
with the fabric of her skirt. I nodded to her. “Adam, this is Julie
Meyers,” I told him. “She’s the director of the Welcome House.”
Adam flashed his smile. “Hi, Julie.” Julie turned pink and
managed a breathy hello. “This is really great work,” he told her.
She thanked him, glancing at me. I smiled encouragingly,
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knowing how tongue-tied people got in front of Adam. “What can
we do to help?”
“Good idea,” Adam said, moving toward the table where Dad
passed out sandwiches. “Can I help you with that?” He signed an
autograph for a woman and her tween daughter, who stared up at
Adam with a stunned sort of grin.
“I never turn down help.” Dad motioned toward an ice-filled
cooler. “Each person gets a sandwich, some chips, a cookie, and
one of those sodas.”
I joined them at the table, handing a sandwich to a man I’d
seen last week. “How’d your job interview go, Bob?”
He smiled, accepting the sandwich and choosing a pack of
Cheetos. “They’re going to let me know by next week.”
I patted his arm. “Fingers crossed.”
Robin Hamilton sidled up to the table. “I didn’t know that
homelessness was one of your causes, Adam.” Her voice dripped
with a sugary sort of falseness, a candy corn voice.
Adam gave her his floodlit smile, the kind I’d noticed he could
conjure up on cue. “I’m here with Carter and her family to support
the work they do with Julie at the Welcome House.” He held up his
hands. “Just a pair of extra hands today.”
Parker jumped in. “But Adam has a fabulous announcement.
He’s going to donate ten thousand dollars to the Welcome House
fund so that Julie and the Moons have the money they need to keep
Sandwich Saturdays going well past our departure from Little.” He
whipped out one of those dorky checks, the oversized ones that
people held up at ribbon cuttings and lottery announcements.
He’d clearly had it stashed and ready for this moment.
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Adam did a good job hiding what was obviously news to him.
“Right. These families all need our support.” He posed as the cam-
eraman grabbed a shot of him with the giant check.
Not as skilled at hiding sudden news, Dad cleared his throat,
stunned. “Oh, Adam — that’s, well, that’s terrific. I know the
Welcome House thanks you, too.” Julie nodded enthusiasti-
cally, her face going pink again. “Thank you,” Dad repeated. “It’s
too much.”
“Nonsense!” Parker leaned in as the cameraman also shot a
picture of him with Adam and the giant check. “It’s the least we
can do for such a great cause.”
Robin pinched her lips together. “Did you know about this
before today, Mr. Moon? Ms. Meyers?”
They both shook their heads. Dad said, “We didn’t. But we’re
very grateful.” Dad’s discomfort rolled from him, shimmery sheets
of unease. Julie stood by silently, gaping at the check.
More pictures. Adam with Julie, Dad and the check, Adam
with the check and several families, including the starry-eyed
tween who’d already gotten his autograph, Adam with Parker,
Julie and the check. The check got its own mini–photo shoot by
the spread of food. Parker wandered over to me as Adam signed
autographs for a family with two small boys and nudged me, his
face smug. “Well, they’ve just had the best day of their lives.”
I tried to keep a smile fixed to my face. “I’m sure they had a
good time.” What I wanted to mention, but didn’t, was that the
best day of their lives happened two days ago, when they’d been
green-lighted for community-supported housing.
I set about helping Dad and Julie clean up the garden.
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Mik pulled the Range Rover in front of my house. My hand paused
on the door handle. “I hope you liked your tour — I had a few
more things planned, but . . . well, you said you had to get back to
work since we spent the afternoon at Sandwich Saturday.”
Adam leaned toward me a bit and said quietly, “I’ll tell you
what . . . it beat those Hollywood tours by a mile.” His eyes, dark
and drawn, drifted over my shoulder. “We’ll finish it, I promise.
Can I keep this?” He held up the map.
“Of course.” I hesitated. “About the check . . . that was really
generous of you.”
“I wish Parker hadn’t sprung that on you guys.” He watched
the same kids who’d been clutching Super Soakers that morning as
they squealed through a spinning sprinkler, their faces pink with
too much sun. Turning back to me, he said, “I feel bad that it
turned into a circus back there.”
“It was fine.” My voice betrayed my discomfort.
There was his hand again, just above my knee. “I could tell it
bothered you.”
I tried not to think about how all the energy in the world
seemed concentrated in that warm space between his hand and my
thigh. “We really appreciate your contribution, seriously. I hope I
didn’t seem ungrateful. I’ve just gotten to know these families,
and I’m not too comfortable with them being, well —”
“Used?” He gave me a sad sort of smile, his hand slipping to the
leather seat. “Look, Parker means well, he does. I’m sure he
thought it was a win-win for everyone, you know?”
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“I know.” I fiddled with the door handle. “It’s just hard for
them, and I hate seeing it used as a publicity stunt. At their
expense.”
He gave me the sort of melty eyes I’d seen in some of his mov-
ies. “I’m sorry. He could have handled that better. I’ll talk to him.”
I shook my head. “No, don’t.”
“At least it’s a publicity stunt that helps out at the end of the
day, right?”
I opened the door slightly. “True. That money’s going to help
so much. We’re really grateful.”
His eyes softened. “You mentioned that.” His phone buzzed.
Frowning, he ignored it and sighed. “Look, next time we’ll just
hang out. Not as a job, but just as, you know, friends.”
“Right, friends.”
His phone buzzed again. Rolling his eyes, he snatched at it.
“I’d better take this before Parker has an aneurism.” He clicked
it on. “Hold on a minute,” he said into it sharply. To me, his voice
softer, he said, “I have to shoot tonight and tomorrow until, like,
four but maybe we can hang out tomorrow afternoon? Maybe have
a coffee or something?”
“I’d like that.” And, as I said it, I realized it was true.
I slipped out of the car, giving him a little wave before closing
the door. In seconds, the car disappeared down the street.
Across from me on the opposite sidewalk, a man in baggy
jeans and a black Metallica shirt stood taking pictures of us.
I turned and fled into the house.
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eleven
the next afternoon, Adam decided to wait in the kitchen until I
was done with my shift. The café was crowded, and I could tell he
didn’t want to be mobbed. He was having the opposite problem in
the kitchen. When I left him, he’d been trying to convince Jones
he was at least worthy of a glance in his general direction, saying
something like, “So, you’ve got some interesting tattoos.” Poor
Adam. I didn’t tell him Jones was a lost cause. It took him six
months to acknowledge Chloe when she started working here.
And she made him cookies.
Out front, I retied my apron and started to clear some dishes
when the entrance jingled. It was a bit after the rush, so we didn’t
have a line. A woman closed the door behind her. Tall and slim,
she wore an expensive plum-and-black yoga ensemble and had
wound her thick blond hair into a severe knot at her neck.
Sunglasses the size of coasters perched on her head, and she let her
violet eyes graze our café, barely hiding her disgust.
Arching a blond eyebrow, she surveyed our chalkboard menu
hanging on the wall behind me with a look that suggested we had
dead bodies on display. “An iced tea. Herbal if you have it. And” —
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her eyes strayed over the pastries on the counter, the quiche and
salads in the cold case — “ugh, that’s it.”
“For here?”
“I think not.” She checked her phone and tucked a stray lock of
hair behind her ear with a quick flick. If I were that lock of hair, I
wouldn’t try that move again.
“We have passion fruit or lemon tea.”
“Lemon.”
“Small or large?” My hands hovered over the stacks of cups.
“It doesn’t matter.” Her eyes didn’t leave her phone.
I filled a large to-go cup with ice and poured the tea. Clipping
some mint from a sprig, I started to dust the tea with some leaves.
“What are you doing?” I suddenly had her full attention.
I hesitated with the lid. “Um, getting your drink.”
“Um,”
she exaggerated, “I didn’t want . . . whatever that is.”
She motioned at the mint as if it were rat poison. “And for the
record, I don’t really want your germs
all over
my tea.”
Without missing a beat, I set the cup aside and filled another
cup. I handed her a mint-free tea and a napkin.
“A lid?”
I started to reach for the lid from her first cup, thought again,
and grabbed a new one. Careful not to put my germy hands
all over
it, I placed it gently next to her cup.
She sniffed. “Is this the large?”
“Yes.” I caught Mr. Michaels’s eye across the room, suppress-
ing a grin when he scrunched up his face at her.
The woman started to push a five across the counter, but her
eyes caught on something behind me. “Oh!”
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At some point, unnoticed, Adam had come through the door
and was standing behind me. He’d seen the whole interchange
between us. “Wow, Leila, you can be a real witch when you’re not
kissing my butt.”
The woman’s face went from pale to a flash of red. “Adam!
What’re you doing here?”
“Hanging with Carter.” He crossed to me and put his arm
around my shoulders. “My
girlfriend
.”
The ice queen melted. She proceeded to bumble, explain, and
apologize all at once, flashing me a toothpaste-commercial smile,
a trained look that said,
I didn’t know
.
“You can go, Leila,” Adam interrupted, and she hurried from
the café, leaving her tea on the counter.
My body hummed, either from the exchange with Leila or
from Adam calling me his girlfriend. Probably both. “Who was
that?” I dumped the tea in the sink, my hand shaking.
“That was my trainer. Who just arrived today and who will
now also be leaving today.” He waved in the direction of her exit.
It was sweet how offended he looked. “Please accept my apology
on behalf of my
ex
-trainer.”
“Oh, she was nothing.” I pulled out a new creamer for the self-
serve counter and gave it a little shake before heading to the
stainless server.
He followed me out from behind the counter, causing only a
minor stir. Our regulars had already learned to ignore us. “She
was a she-devil. Why didn’t you say something to her?”
After refilling the creamer, I organized the little bowl full of
sugar and Equal packets. “Because it’s not about me. She’s not mad
137
at
me
. Dad says to just stare at them when they act like that and say,
‘Okay,’ and not take it personally.”
Adam shook his head, following me back behind the counter
again. “No way. You should’ve refused to serve her.”
I didn’t mention the dozens of people who couldn’t refuse to