Authour's Note:
This is the finale of Runaway. After a romantic evening in Toronto, Lacey and Noah reach Montreal to discover her family has fallen apart while she's been gone.
Chapters have been marked throughout the story.
Special thanks to the team of people who beta-read and edited this story: BarryJames1952, Bebop3, norafares, OneAuthor, and Steve M. This story would not be possible without them. Any remaining errorsβfactual, grammatical, or otherwiseβare my own.
**
Chapter Ten
"So, Noah. Where are you from, exactly?"
I looked up from cutting my steak at Sean. Noah swallowed the bite of food he'd taken.
"I grew up in the Kootenays. Cranbrook, BC, mostly."
"And now?"
I tried not to glare at Sean.
"A little bit of everywhere. Going back to Toronto in the fall for work."
"Oh, what do you do?"
"Got a carpentry background. Gonna be working on a construction site downtown, I think."
It probably shouldn't have surprised me how easily Noah could talk around those questions without specifically lying. I knew he didn't like talking about his past, so answering the way he had still afforded him some privacy while satisfying Sean's curiosity. My mom, on the other hand, wasn't so easily pleased.
"Do you still have family in Cranbrook?" she asked.
"A few aunts and uncles, I think."
"What about your parents?"
"My dad died when I was a kid. My mom and I aren't close."
Mom had the decency to look slightly ashamed. "I'm so sorry to hear that."
"Thank you."
I thought that was it for the conversation and took another bite. As usual, I was wrong.
"So what were you doing on the train when you met my daughter?"
"Heading up north. Figured I'd work on the patch or something for a few months."
"Do you switch jobs often?"
Noah smiled politely. "I've been trying a few different things out."
"You must have been doing well to be able to drop everything and help Lacey. What did you do before?"
I swallowed my bite of steak barely chewed, almost choking on it. "Mom, come on."
"I'm just trying to get to know Noah," she said smoothly.
"Was out east working on a boat. Figured I'd try fishing." Noah smiled tightly. "Wasn't for me."
"So you just up and left without something else lined up? Or did they let you go?"
"Mom!"
"What, Lacey? It's a fair question!"
"You're interrogating him."
"Noah doesn't mind, does he?" She raised her eyebrows at him.
"No, ma'am." He clearly didn't mean it, given that his tight smile grew even more tense as he clenched his jaw.
"Well, I personally would hate working on a fishing boat," Rick cut in. "I mean, I'm sure being surrounded by hunky fishermen all day would be just dreamy, but I can't imagine the
smell
."
"That's where your mind goes?" Sean laughed. "Being surrounded by a bunch of seamen?"
I nearly choked on my wine as everyone burst out laughing.
"How did you two meet?" I asked Sean when I managed to stop coughing.
"My boss was designing a house with Sean's firm," said Rick. "Damn guy has more money than he knows what to do with but couldn't care less what his house looks like. All, 'whatever, Rick, ask Aspen what she wants in the house.' And she's all, 'I don't care, Rick, I'm barely home. Make sure the bedroom has a bed in it.' So of course, I had to step in and decide how to spend their money."
"He was a nightmare to work with," said Sean. "Doesn't know a thing about architecture but wanted everything laid out just so. I think he was secretly doing it so he had an excuse to spend more time with me."
"Oh, it wasn't a secret, everyone fucking knew that except you," Rick said to another round of laughter. "Theo was so pissed when he found out I'd added two extra rooms and a pool just so I had more excuses to talk to you."
"We finally finish the project and Rick goes, 'Hmm. Maybe you could design a house for me now.'" Sean rolled his eyes. "A year later, we moved into it together."
I was itching to ask how Sean had managed to get a degree in architecture and pay for it after being kicked out at 17, but didn't want to risk the light-heartedness that Rick had so thankfully provided. Instead, I smiled at Sean.
"You guys are so great together. I'm so happy for you."
He blushed, beaming proudly as he patted Rick's hand. "Thanks, sis."
"So, sorry Rick, you mentioned something about being a glorified servant. What is it that you do?" I asked.
"His best friend's famous and Rick's his assistant," Sean answered for him. "He's a professional best friend."
Rick rolled his eyes but took the comment in stride. "He didn't hire me to be his best friend, he's just paying me for all the years I was his best friend for free."
"I swear, I'm going to get you business cards with 'Professional Best Friend' on them."
"Don't seem to mind so much when it keeps you rolling in steaks and bottles of wine."
"You said those were gifts!"
I couldn't stop laughing as they teased each other, sharing a quick kiss before going back to their plates. Noah listened quietly, and I realized the conversation was making him uncomfortable. There didn't seem to be anything we could talk about that everyone was all right with.
I apologized to him after dinner, going to his room under the guise of looking through the rest of the boxes.
"It's fine," he said.
"You were uncomfortable."
"Lacey." He stopped what he was doing, looking at me intently. "I'm not gonna pretend like this is what I'm used to, but it's fine. I just don't know what to say to them that won't cause issues for you."
"I don't want you to think you have to hide who you are."
"We come from different places." He returned to his backpack, digging for his soap and toothbrush. "Never stayed in a house like this before. Dunno what to do or what to say. Your family wants to judge me for my background, that wouldn't bother me. I'm used to it." He looked up again. "You're not. You've gone through enough this week, you don't need more drama because of me."
"Don't leave."
"Promised you I wouldn't."
I bit my lip. "They just... we all just need time, I think."
"You don't trust me? I promised I wouldn't go, I won't go."
"That's not what I meant." I glared at him. "And you know damn well that I trust you."
He shook his head and laughed.
"Careful, Lacey. That's the third or fourth time you've sworn today. Gonna have a mouth like a trucker soon." He crossed the room and kissed me. "Gonna take a shower, clean up a little. Rick said I could use their washing machine so I'm taking him up on it. Can't leave without my clothes, you know."
**
Everyone turned in relatively early that night.
Between the travelling, emotional breakdowns, and startling revelations, all of us were fairly tired.
I put on fresh pyjamas after showering, grateful for the feel of clean, fresh clothing against my skin. When I finished, the upstairs was quiet and the rest of the house was dark, so I went into Sean's office, said my nightly prayers, and laid on the futon. It was extremely uncomfortable, hard metal bars jutting through the thin cushion, and I made a mental note to tell Sean his futon sucked.
I tried for a long time to get comfortable. My body was tired, my mind numbly exhausted. If it weren't for the discomfort of the futon, I might have fallen asleep before the thoughts of worry and frustration invaded my mind, but that wasn't the case. Soon, not only was there a metal bar running across my kidneys, but I was staring at the dark ceiling with annoyance as the day's events played over and over in my head.
When I finally had enough, I told myself to go try sleeping on the sofa. Honestly, I did. I rolled off the futon, my body aching like I was in