32. Rosie
Chapter 32
Rosie
Forrester Sibling Group Chat
Rosie : Don’t worry.
Jules : What am I not supposed to worry about?
Haydn : Anytime she starts a conversation like that and then ghosts us, I’ve already gone twenty steps past worry and straight into panic.
Jules : Bennett’s not answering his phone.
Haydn : His location last shows somewhere out at sea, so he must be on an excursion. Rosie’s at the store.
Jules : Rosie.
Jules : Rosie!
Jules : ROSIE HOPE FORRESTER
Jules : Why even have a phone if you’re not going to respond to texts.
Jules : Worse—throw a bomb in the group chat and THEN not respond to group texts.
Jules : It’s been twenty minutes. I’m calling the police station.
Jules : Okay, just talked to the sheriff. He said Rosie’s roof caved in last night from a bad storm, and she’s staying with his family until Bennett gets home.
Haydn : Holy crap. Is she okay?
Jules : She’s fine, but it’s going to be a while before she can get back into the store.
Haydn : I wonder why she isn’t staying in her boathouse. I know it’s up for sale, but she could still live there while it’s on the market.
Rosie : Sorry, my insurance company called right then!
Rosie : Sheriff Savage just sent a deputy by to tell me to look at my texts. So that’s not embarrassing.
Jules : Thems the breaks when you don’t respond.
Haydn : Do you need us to come into town?
Rosie : NO. I’ve got it all under control.
I had literally nothing under control, but I couldn’t have all three of my brothers snooping around while Dad was still in town. Especially not when they were already starting to question why I wasn’t just sleeping on my boat.
Dylan and I spent most of the afternoon and evening going through my store, wrapping and boxing up my artwork. We were about two hours in when a man in his late fifties knocked on the door frame.
“I’m here with Alaska Restoration to come up with an estimate for the insurance company.” I stood and Dylan paused the movie on his tablet. “Can you show me where the damage is?”
Dylan kept working while I led the man upstairs into my apartment. It looked even sadder than it had this morning, now that the wood and drywall had some time to soak in the water. Yellowish water stains crept up the walls, and the laminate floors bubbled and buckled as we walked toward the bedroom.
I sucked in a deep breath for courage, then opened the door to reveal where the ceiling was destroyed. While the restoration worker looked up, I stared at my mural.
It was also worse than I’d hoped. The drywall was peeling and stained, leaving the mural looking like something from a horror novel, rather than a beautiful fantasy land. Hours and hours of work destroyed in one night.
I braced my hand on the door frame and tried to listen as the man cataloged all the problems. In a daze, I led him to the other apartment, where the damage was less acute, but still significant. His stream of words buzzed in my ears.
We went downstairs, and he noted the staining and buckling in the ceiling, plus the water that had been absorbed into the cabinets and walls.
“We’re going to need to gut the place,” he said grimly. “New drywall on the walls and ceiling, the flooring and cabinets will need to be replaced, and we won’t know what kind of damage has been done structurally to the wood until we pull all the drywall off. But with damage like this, generally the leak has been going on for a long time, and I would expect we’re going to need to replace a lot of the wood.”
“How long will something like that take?” Dylan asked when I remained silent.
He tilted his head to the side. “I’d say roughly six months.”
Dylan’s arm went around my waist, and I let him hold me up. Six months. Could I sleep on Bennett’s couch for that long? My brothers were all going to demand to know why I wasn’t pulling my houseboat off the market and sleeping there instead.
I tightened my grip on Dylan’s waist. One problem at a time.
I signed the paperwork saying that the restoration worker had come, and then he left. I looked around at my empty store. Things could change so quickly in just a short amount of time.
“Let’s finish up.” I pulled away from Dylan and went to work, needing to keep my mind and hands busy. It took a few more hours (and a whole other movie) before we were finally done. While Dylan went inside to grab the last painting, I headed toward the truck to get my keys from my purse. I paused when I spotted a figure off to the side of the building.
“Dad.” Hope brought tears to my eyes. He’d come. On the worst day I’d had in a very long time, he was here to help.
He looked toward the door where Dylan was walking out with a painting and motioned for me to come to the side of the building with him. I couldn’t blame him for not wanting to cross paths with Dylan again after how things went last time.
Dad pulled me into his arms and hugged me tight. I closed my eyes and leaned into his embrace. It was everything I’d always wanted.
“I haven’t heard from you in a few days,” Dad said as he pulled back from me. He stuffed his hands in his pockets, and I could see a small frown in the depths of his long mustache and beard.
“It’s been awful,” I told him. “The storm last night damaged my store. It’s going to take months to fix.”
“Oh no. That does sound terrible.” Dad rocked back on his heels as he squinted up at the sky. “And I really hate to ask this, but I haven’t gotten your tips for a few days.”
It took a blink for his words to sink in. My tips? Maybe he didn’t understand what I was telling him here.
“It wasn’t just a little leak,” I explained. “I won’t be able to live here for months while they’re fixing it. I’ll have to run my shop entirely online, when the bulk of my sales are in-person, people walking in from the cruise ship.”
He winced and then gripped my arm gently. Fatherly. “I can’t imagine, hon.”
“Thanks—”
But he continued, speaking over me, his grip tightening just enough, it might have been my imagination. “But I’m counting on that extra money. I’ve got a few investments. I know my little girl doesn’t want to let me down.”
I opened my mouth, but no words came out.
He stared at me, and my hope crumbled and disintegrated like the drywall under my mural.
“I don’t have them with me,” I said quietly as I stared at the ground.
“That’s okay,” he said, his voice soft and reassuring. “We can meet up later. You’re working at the restaurant tomorrow, aren’t you? I’ll grab all your tips from you then.”
I nodded numbly. “Yeah. I get off at nine.”
“I’ll meet you outside of work.” Dad hugged me again and kissed the side of my head. “Love you, Rosie-posie.”
He turned and walked away, whistling a soundless tune.
Sheriff Savage met us in the driveway when we pulled up and helped us unload all of my artwork into his garage. He must have spent most of the evening clearing it out for me and pushing things to the side to make room.
I was distracted with thoughts of my dad as I unlatched my tailgate. He didn’t offer to help or seem to understand that I couldn’t give away all my money right now. Maybe he didn’t get the scope of the damage, even though I’d been really clear about it. And what investing ? I thought he was using my server tips for food and toiletries, and to save up money to get back on his feet in his own place.
Sheriff Savage reached onto a shelf to pull down some old worn quilts that were torn in some places and stained in others. He spread them out on the garage floor to protect my art from the hard concrete and oil stains. He carried each painting like it was precious, made of glass, and Dylan followed his lead.
My eyes welled with tears that I dashed away before the men could see. Or, at least, I thought I did it before they could see.
But Dylan’s hand brushed mine and gave it a tender squeeze as he passed. And Sheriff Savage disappeared inside and came out a moment later with my favorite kind of candy bar. “Here,” he said as he handed it to me. “I picked it up at the gas station earlier.”
I stared at it in my palm. Sheriff Savage knew my favorite candy bar. He was inconveniencing himself to help me out. He always advocated for me in court to get the lightest sentence possible and had looked the other way more than once when I was caught doing something I shouldn’t.
All while my dad was trying to desperately scoop water from an empty well.
One tear turned into several and then dozens. I stood, frozen, and let the devastation wash over me.
Dylan and his dad shared a concerned glance and communicated something soundlessly, yet I couldn’t bring myself to be embarrassed. I swiped at the tears, but they fell quicker than I could wipe them away. I’m sure they thought I was crying about my apartment and store. About the lost income and the time it was going to take to get everything right.
Dylan’s arms came around me, and I cried into his chest like I’d lost everything.
“I’ll unload the truck,” Sheriff Savage said quietly. “Why don’t you two go inside and eat, and maybe we can all watch a movie or play a game later.”
I felt Dylan nod and let him lead me inside.