Kiss My Cupcake Page 58

“Or we could do it together.” I pull the apron over my head.

He grins. “Okay. Sure.”

“Sheesh, I feel like I’m watching foreplay. Come on, babe. Let’s leave them alone.” Aiden claps Ronan on the shoulder. “Make sure you wash your hands if you put your fingers in places you’re not supposed to.”

“Aiden! Enough, or she’ll never come back!” Leslie swats him on the butt with a dishtowel.

“Get your head out of the gutter. I meant places like his nose. All the pheromones must be getting to you. Should we go upstairs for a few minutes and check on that light bulb that needs to be changed?”

“What—” Her confusion turns into an eye roll. “Celia is napping upstairs, but nice try.”

He ushers her out of the kitchen, leaving the two of us alone. I split the dough into several bowls so I can add the cinnamon apples, dried fruit mix, and the raisins to some. While I work on the add-ins, Ronan puts on a seventies-era apron and starts dropping balls of dough into the pot of boiling oil.

“Sorry about the razzing from my brothers. And the girlfriend designation. That probably should’ve been a conversation prior to me opening my big mouth.”

I shrug, not wanting to give him a hard time about it. “It’s cute.”

He cringes. “Cute?”

“Okay, maybe cute is the wrong word, considering you’ve turned a really horrible green color. How about sweet? I think it’s sweet that you introduced me as your girlfriend. I like you, Ronan, a lot. And as your girlfriend, I can say I’m definitely interested in repeating the events of last night on a very regular basis.”

He pulls me into him. “I can certainly accommodate that request. Once we’re finished stuffing our faces with donuts.” He gives me a quick peck, and then we get back to work.

Half an hour later, we have three bowls piled high with oliebollen. We have honey, sugar, powdered sugar, cinnamon sugar, and a delicious maple butter for dipping.

Celia comes down from her nap as we’re getting settled at the dining room table. Ronan introduces me, and she promptly bursts into tears, blubbering about how she’s so glad Ronan is finally settling down and how they’ve always wanted him to find someone.

Once she’s no longer sobbing all over Daniel’s shirt, he tucks her into the table and flits around, making sure she’s comfortable. Then he loads up a plate for her, careful to make sure the maple dipped ones don’t touch the cinnamon sugar.

“Sorry about that,” Ronan mutters as we fill our plates.

“I think it’s sweet that your family cares so much about you. It’s nice to see.” So much nicer than my boyfriend-stealing sister and my attempted-boyfriend-thieving cousin.

No one talks about which famous person they ran into last week, or the newest keto diet, or which plastic surgeon botched up what surgery. As predicted, the stock market comes up a couple of times, but Ronan is quick to shut down the hard sales pitch Daniel lobs my way.

They regale me with stories about Ronan and his science experiments as a teen. Apparently the desire to brew started early. Pre-legal drinking age early. By sixteen he’d made his first batch of moonshine.

He shrugs. “Booze was expensive and hard to get ahold of. I found a way around it.”

After we stuff ourselves silly, we retire to the living room. Just like the rest of this house, it’s a time warp back to the nineties. The carpet is an awful rose color, the furniture is boxy and worn, and the curtains boast a garish, retro floral pattern. It’s horrible and homey and wonderful.

“I just need to help Daniel with something. You’ll be okay for a few?” Ronan asks.

“Of course, you go right ahead.”

He kisses me on the cheek and I cross over to the fireplace so I can check out the pictures on the mantel. A sixtieth wedding anniversary photo sits in the middle, Henry and the late Dottie dressed up as though they were ready to party. As I take in the background I realize they’re in The Knight Cap.

“That was my Dottie.” Henry picks up the framed photo, his smile fond but also sad.

“You look like you belonged together.”

“Aye. We did. Met when we were just kids. I was eighteen and a fool. She smiled at me and I was a goner.”

“Just like that, huh?”

“Sometimes you just know.” His thumb smooths along the edge of the frame.

“I believe that. I love the wall of photos in The Knight Cap. It’s like watching the progress of your love through still shots.”

“Every year I made sure to put a picture on that wall so we could walk by and see our good times together. I know in this day people don’t really make photo albums, but we always had one going.”

“Will you show me?”

Henry’s face lights up. “I’d be happy to.” He ambles over to a bookshelf lined with photo albums. It’s five shelves high, and there have to be at least ten albums on each shelf. He taps his lip. “Where to start. Ah!” He lifts an album from the shelf and motions for me to take a seat on the couch.

Setting the album between us, he flips to the first page. Old, yellowed, black and white images with captions and dates line each page.

The very first image is of a young woman, a teenager based on the softness of her features and the innocence of her smile.

“That’s the first picture I ever took of Dottie.” He taps the image. “Our parents were against us dating. I was a few years older and she was serving tables at the time, but love doesn’t care about approval. We kept it a secret.”

“Eventually they must have realized you were made for each other, though.”

“Aye. Got married in that bar the day she turned eighteen, and then there was nothing anyone could do to keep us apart.” He winks. “And grandbabies have a way of making people come around no matter what. We did every little thing together. She was my entire world for more than sixty years.”

“I can see that.” I flip to the next page and find more pictures of a teenage Dottie in various stages of laughter.

He clears his throat. “She had a heart condition. Born with it, and there wasn’t a thing we could do to fix it. Despite that she loved damn hard, and you couldn’t stop her from doing things she wanted to because she always said life was too short to be afraid of the end.”

“Sounds like a smart woman.”

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