The Laws of Attraction

The Laws of Attraction by Sherryl Woods Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: The Laws of Attraction by Sherryl Woods Read Free Book Online
Authors: Sherryl Woods
make this decision. Otherwise he might have drifted along indecisively for a while longer just because being with Stephanie was comfortable.
    “I do love you, you know,” she told him. “Just not the way you ought to be loved. And I want you to be happy.”
    “I want the same for you.” He recalled the lively sounds of the party. “Something tells me you won’t have to wait too long.”
    “What about you?” she said. “What kind of woman do you really want?”
    An image of Ashley resurfaced for about the hundredth time since they’d met that afternoon. He wasn’t about to mention it, though. He wasn’t that foolish. Stephanie might be taking the breakup with a great deal of grace, but he doubted she’d like knowing that he’d found a replacement already.
    “I’ll let you know when I’ve figured that out,” he promised.
    She laughed. “Please do. Will you call me when you get back to Richmond?”
    “Sure, if you want me to.”
    “I’d like us to stay friends,” she told him with unmistakable sincerity. “You’re the best one I ever had. I’m not sure I realized that until tonight, when you set me free.”
    “Then this is a good thing for both of us?” he asked, still worried a bit by her calm demeanor.
    “It really is,” she assured him. “Now go out there and find the woman who’s really right for you, and I’ll dance at your wedding.”
    “You’re amazing,” he said sincerely.
    “I know,” she said, laughing. “I think I’m just now figuring that out, too.”
    Josh hung up and sighed. Relief washed over him. That had gone a thousand times better than he’d anticipated. If only all the other decisions on his plate would go half as smoothly.
     
    Ashley had scrubbed the kitchen floor, cleaned out the refrigerator, rearranged the cupboards and even considered the bags of bulbs that Melanie had surreptitiously left on the back steps. She might be going stir-crazy, but she wasn’t quite ready for a close encounter with the garden worms just yet.
    Still, it was barely mid-morning, and she’d already done every single thing she could think of to do inside the house. She’d passed her limit on coffee for the morning and eaten a bran muffin and a banana, which was more than she’d usually consumed by this hour.
    Normally by late morning, she’d been to the gym and had already been at her desk for hours. There was little question that exercise was what she needed now to take the edge off the stress.
    Suddenly she recalled the kayak that used to be stored in what had once been a garage but was too smallto accommodate anything other than the smallest of today’s vehicles. She found the key to the lock and opened the creaky door. Sure enough, the kayak was still inside, along with its paddle.
    Pushing aside all the boxes that had been stored around it, she finally managed to drag the kayak out. She hosed it down, then dragged it to the water’s edge. She found a baseball cap on a hook in the kitchen, retrieved the paddle from the old garage, then climbed into the kayak and shoved off, praying that paddling was like riding a bicycle, something one never forgot.
    At first she stayed close to shore to be sure the kayak was still seaworthy and hadn’t sprung any leaks over the years. When she was finally satisfied that it wasn’t going to sink and that she still had the hang of paddling it, she grew more ambitious.
    The September sun was beating down on her bare shoulders and glaring off the water. She wiped the sweat off her brow and paused long enough to twist her hair into a knot on top of her head and stuff it under the cap, then began to paddle in earnest.
    It took Ashley some time to find her rhythm and longer to move at a pace that provided real exercise. When her arms and shoulders started aching, she let the kayak drift, leaned back and closed her eyes. The sun felt good now that it was being tempered by a breeze. Her body felt energized and, in an odd way, lazy at the same time.

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