“Hobie?”
“What now?” Hobie turned to face Baylor and stopped breathing for a moment. BJ’s short hair dipped into her face, covering one eye. She looked exactly as she had on the night the two women first met. Any harsh words that Hobie might have been prepared to say over Baylor’s previous behavior melted away on her tongue.
“Baylor?” Hobie only hoped the catch in her voice hadn’t been audible.
“Yeah. Um, you got a sec because I have something…of-of the...of the...utmost importance to speak to you about.”
Baylor’s body swayed back and forth ever so slightly. Hobie realized that the rakish charm Baylor possessed was due to the same influence as their first meeting. Baylor Warren was dead drunk.
“Something important, eh?” Hobie felt herself wanting to smile. It was so difficult to be cross with a woman who looked so adorable.
“Yes, yes...important, very important. Life threatening, in fact,” Baylor slurred.
Hobie finally smiled, perturbed at herself for it, but only slightly so. Baylor was beautiful and charming. She had a heart, even when she pretended not to, and there was something innocently childlike in her ability to see nothing beyond the task before her. Even though she was so drunk that she had to hold on to the back of a chair to keep her body upright, Baylor still had the ability to enchant Hobie.
“So...” Hobie prompted.
“So what?” Baylor’s brow furrowed together.
“You wanted to tell me something life threatening, as I recall.”
“Huh? Oh, yeah. No, life altering, not threatening.”
“I see.” Hobie waited again, but Baylor just stared at her with a cute half smile. “And it would be?” she finally asked.
“Oh! Yes. Um, honey…Hobie, I mean Hobie!”
“Yes, Baylor?” Two hours earlier, when Baylor had last approached her, Hobie had wanted to pick up a heavy object and plant it in Baylor’s skull; now she wasn’t sure how to describe what she felt. It was as though being with Baylor this way took Hobie back to that night in Chicago. The night when every part of her being screamed at her to be sensible, but instead she said “what the hell” and allowed Baylor to kiss her anyway—and that one kiss was something Hobie wouldn’t give back for the world.
Baylor brushed the hair from her eyes and tried to focus on what she wanted to say. “Hobie, I...Hobie, will you—”
“Hobie Lynn, can we have just a moment of your time?” Peter Mason, the head librarian, called out. He added that he wanted Hobie’s opinion as a board member regarding some of the funds they had collected that evening.
“Sure, Peter, just give me a minute,” Hobie said. Unfortunately, by the time she turned back to face Baylor, she was in a heap on the floor.
“Oh, Baylor,” Hobie said to the unconscious woman.
“Hey, mate. Come on, wake up.” Juliana lightly slapped Baylor’s face a few more times until she saw that she was coming around.
“Stop that!” Baylor pushed Juliana’s hand away.
“She’s back to her testy self.” Juliana looked up at Hobie.
“I guess that means she’s fine,” Hobie said. “Baylor, can you stand up?”
“I thought I was,” Baylor said.
“Okay then.” Juliana shook her head with a chuckle. “Up you go, mate.”
Hobie looked Baylor over and peered into her eyes before declaring that, while she was inebriated, she hadn’t hurt herself.
“My God, you weigh a lot,” Juliana said to Baylor, who leaned heavily against her. “I better get you home.”
“Here, let me give you a hand.” Hobie moved to Baylor’s other side and slipped her arm around her waist. They made their way from the party, Baylor in the middle with her arms around Juliana and Hobie’s shoulders.
“I hate to make you do this,” Juliana began, “but I’m not sure I can handle Miss Temperance here by myself.”
“No problem,” Hobie said. “That’s my pickup over there. We can all fit in the front seat.”
Baylor’s legs had trouble moving at a steady pace. Her knees seemed to turn to liquid with every few steps, and the cast made things worse. She rocked between her two navigators until she nearly hung on Hobie.
“You smell good,” she slurred. “Thank you.”
“I mean you smell really good. Doesn’t she smell good, Jules?” Baylor swung her head toward her old friend.
“A veritable flower garden,” Juliana said.
“I’m serious.” Baylor looked between the two women with the childlike expression that only someone who is quite drunk can muster up. “You always smell so good.”
“All right, enough smelling. Duck your head and get in there,” Hobie ordered with a smile when they reached the truck.
They rode in silence until Baylor began nudging Hobie’s elbow.
“What?” Hobie finally blurted out in exasperation. “I don’t feel so good.”
“Oh, no, you don’t, Baylor Warren. If you throw up on me, I swear I will toss you into the pickup bed.”
Juliana laughed at Baylor’s expression. “You better pull over, Hobie.”
As soon as the truck stopped, it took all of five seconds for Baylor to bolt from the cab and lose the contents of her stomach. A packaged moist towelette and a few mints later, Baylor settled herself in the pickup once more.
“I feel much better. Where are we going now?” Baylor may have felt better, but she continued to slur her words badly. “I have an idea,” Hobie said.
“Cool.”
“How about I drop you two off at home so you can sleep it off? Then I go home and go to bed.”
“That doesn’t sound like any fun at all.”
Hobie’s laughter was an unexpected surprise. “Yep, it’s the curse of being good. Just call me Hobie ‘no fun’Allen.”
Baylor leaned against Hobie. “Maybe that’s because nobody ever gave you a good enough reason to be bad.”
Hobie felt her stomach flip. She was thankful that Juliana was in the car with them because if they had been alone, she knew she would have pulled over and ravished the woman beside her. Instead, she took a deep breath and gripped the steering wheel even harder.
They eventually reached Evelyn’s home. Juliana and Hobie assisted Baylor inside and deposited her on the couch.
Hobie held out two aspirin and a glass of water for Baylor. “Take these, they may help in the morning.”
Baylor swallowed the pills obediently. “Don’t go yet, Hobie,” she pleaded.
“What is it?” Hobie sat on the couch beside the now prone woman.
“I...this all started because I had something to say to you... something very important.”
“I remember. ‘Life altering’ I believe is the way you put it.” “Right, right. Life altering.”
“And it would be?”
Juliana stood in the shadows watching them. “Huh?” Baylor looked confused.
“What did you want to tell me, Baylor?” Hobie enunciated each word carefully.
“Oh, yeah. I wanted to say...” Baylor squinted her eyes. “Um... I wanted to say...”
“Yes?” Hobie was afraid to hear what it was, but she was more terrified to think that it wouldn’t be what she was expecting. She didn’t have the nerve to come out and say it herself. “You wanted to tell me something important?”
“Yeah. Hobie, I...I...damn, I can’t remember.” Baylor looked at her surroundings as though something would jog her memory.
“Right.” Hobie rose. “If you think of it, just holler,” she added with a gentle smile. How could she find fault with Baylor’s inability to speak when she herself couldn’t gather the courage to speak openly about her feelings? How could Hobie take the chance of opening her heart when Baylor might not have had that in mind? How big of a fool would she look then?
She grabbed the blanket from the end of the couch. Baylor was already asleep by the time Hobie pulled the covering over her. Hobie was almost thankful for that. It gave her the opportunity to look down on Baylor unobserved.
“I better go.” Hobie pulled her gaze away from the sleeping figure.
“Let me walk you out,” Juliana said.
The air surrounding them still felt humid as they stood on the porch, welcoming the light breeze that brushed against their skin.
“I appreciate your help in getting Baylor home.”
“That’s all right.” Hobie turned and smiled. “It wasn’t a big deal.”
“She had a pretty good reason for getting as hammered as she did. Do you want to know why?” Juliana tilted her head and made eye contact with Hobie.
“No. No, don’t tell me.” Hobie lowered her head to hide a sudden blush. “I’d kind of like to use my imagination as to what she was going to say to me.”
“Hobie, if you’d like to change your mind about tomorrow—” “No,” she said softly. “I wouldn’t. I just hope you won’t be too disappointed.”
“At what—being second choice? Nah, I’ve been Baylor’s friend for so long that I’m used to losing out to her.”
“Look, we’re—”
“Dear God, if you say ‘just friends’ I’ll scream.” Juliana sat against the porch railing. “Hobie, I’m not looking for anything magical to happen between us. It’s just been a long time since I’ve been out with a beautiful, intelligent woman...a nice woman. I’m simply looking forward to seeing that wonderful smile across the table from me tomorrow, nothing else, no strings.”
“You two.” Hobie shook her head. She paused to push her glasses up. “Between you and Baylor, I swear, you’ve got more charm than two women ought to be allowed to have. I think a night out with you sounds like fun, Jules. Thanks for asking me. Do you think Baylor will be able to handle you going off on a date while you’re a guest?”
Juliana laughed as if that question were an inside joke. “I don’t think she’d mind so much if I was going out with someone other than you. No, I fully expect the top of her head to blow off. You know, it’s been a long time since Baylor’s cared about anyone to get this worked up. Matter of fact, I don’t ever remember it being this bad.” She gave Hobie a devilish grin. “I think it’ll be good for her.”
“I’ll see you tomorrow then.” Hobie turned to leave. “Say about six?”
“Sounds good. Baylor doesn’t know it yet, but I plan on using her Jag.”
“I don’t want to be around for that fight,” Hobie said as she walked away. She waved goodbye and wondered for the millionth time that night why she was going out on a date with the best friend of the woman she really wanted to go out with.
Tomorrow should be an interesting day, Hobie thought.