Read From This Day Forward: Multicultural Romance Online
Authors: Cassandra Black
“I’m not asking you to hold my job, Mr. Thomas,” she said in a stern voice. “I’m giving you my formal notice, thirty days.”
“Well, I just hope you know what you’re getting in to,” he sighed, as if he were talking to a two-year-old, not acknowledging that she was giving more than the expected two weeks’ notice.
“Thank you. Good-bye, Mr. Thomas,” she said and hung up the phone.
After hanging up the phone, she exhaled.
Doubt immediately began to consume her.
Did I just give my notice?
Am I crazy?
I know how to run a restaurant, but I know nothing about opening one.
But she took a deep breath and said a silent prayer.
After a few minutes, she got excited as she began to realize her new reality. Loretta looked at the calendar. It was the end of February, and snowing and freezing out. Just a little over two and a half months from the day, she knew she’d be in Wine Country, starting a new life!
Chapter 2
Two and a half months later, Loretta peered out the window of the plane as it made its way toward her new life. The coastal cliffs of Northern California were beautiful. The valley was an emerald green and the ragged earth met the vast, blue ocean, as if they were old friends.
She reflected on what her children had said when she told them she was leaving Detroit. She called her daughter and told her to get her brother on the phone so the two of them could be on the line at the same time to hear her news.
“Remember when we went out to California to visit Velma?”
“Yes,” they said in unison.
“And you know how she’s been begging me to move out there?”
“Yes?” they each said with a question in their tone.
“Well, I’m going to do it. I’m leaving Detroit and moving to Bordeaux Valley.”
There was silence for a few seconds.
“Mom, are you okay?” her son had asked. “I mean, you’re not sick or dying or anything, are you?”
“No Terrell, I’m not sick.” Loretta wondered why everyone thought she had to be sick or dying to make a life change.
“I’m in perfectly fine health,” she continued. “This is actually something I’ve been seriously thinking about doing for a long time now, and when I got the money from your uncle, I thought, ‘why not’?”
“Are you going to buy a house out there, mom?” Terrell asked.
“No, it’s way too expensive. I’m going to stay with Velma for just a bit until I can find a place to rent.”
“Cool, I can’t wait to come out,” he said. “When can I come for a visit?”
“As soon as I get settled.”
Loretta was waiting for her daughter to say something.
“Well, Brianna, you haven’t said anything. What do you think?”
“I’m happy for you, Mom. But are you sure you haven’t met someone online on one of those dating websites that you’re going to be with?”
Loretta remembered leaving her laptop open one evening. Brianna was home visiting from college, and Loretta had darted in for a shower. She had been perusing Match.com, thinking about exploring online dating. Brianna came in to use the computer and saw the webpage open.
“No sweetheart, your mama is just ready for a change. And who knows, maybe I’ll meet my knight in shining armor in Cali,” she laughed.
“You never know, Ma,” Brianna said. “And he’d be lucky to have you. What about your job?” Brianna asked. “They are going to be shocked.”
“They already are,” Loretta said. “I gave my notice today.”
“Good for you, Mama,” Terrell said. “Are you going to open that restaurant you’ve always talked about?”
“I’m going to give it a good try,” Loretta said.
“I know you’ll do just fine,” her son said. “I’ll be out to visit on my summer break, so maybe I can pitch in and help you run the place.”
“That would make your mother very happy,” Loretta beamed.
“Count me in,” Brianna chimed in. “I love California!”
Loretta remembered looking at the phone in disbelief after speaking with both of them. Her children were happy for her and very supportive, though that didn’t surprise her at all. What surprised her was that they had both committed to visiting that summer.
“Well, I’ll be,” she remembered saying when she got off the phone. “Thank you, Jesus.”
***
The loud voice came back on the overhead speaker as the plane started descending.
“Ladies and gentlemen, as we start our descent into Bordeaux Valley, please make sure your seat backs and tray tables are in their full upright position. Make sure your seat belt is securely fastened and all carry-on luggage is stowed underneath the seat in front of you or in the overhead bins. Please turn off all electronic devices until we are safely at the gate. We should be arriving in less than twenty minutes.”
Loretta was happy and nervous at the same time.
She was glad she hadn’t traveled with a lot of bags. Most of her heavy winter clothes had been donated to the Salvation Army, and the furniture that she could not sell had been left in the home for the landlord to offer to the new tenants. Selling her old Chevy, she’d only gotten seven hundred and fifty dollars. But that was fine; she’d more than gotten her use out of it.
“Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Bordeaux Valley Airport. The local time is three-twenty p.m. and the temperature is seventy-two degrees. For your safety and comfort, please remain seated with your seat belt fastened until the Captain turns off the Fasten Seat Belt sign….”
Loretta strained her neck to look out the window onto the little airstrip. The valley was green and gorgeous.
As she made her way to the baggage claim, she saw a flood of people hovering about. She noticed she was one of only two African-Americans who boarded the second plane to the tiny airport. The other one was an older gentleman in a business suit sitting in a plush seat near the front of the little plane.
The last time she’d visited Velma, they stayed at her condo in a larger neighboring city. But she’d long since moved to the more rural area of Bordeaux Valley that required she change planes. Her nerves were a little jittery from the flight, but she had landed safe and sound.
Two flights had come in around the same time, so there was a delay in the bags hitting the luggage carousel.
After returning from the ladies room, she stood at a distance trying to get a signal on her cell phone. She knew Velma would be waiting on her out front, but she wanted to call her anyway.
A tall, bronzed man came up and stood beside her.
“If that’s T-Mobile, you won’t get a signal in here,” he offered in an unmistakable Italian accent, watching her fiddle with the phone.
She looked up at him and smiled. Handsome to say the least. His broad frame towered over her five foot, five inch frame, standing at least six feet, two inches. His naturally bronzed skin made him look like he was right off the pages of
Italian Vogue for Men
. The man appeared to be in his mid-40s. He was fit, with a washboard middle. Most men his age had a little belly, but Loretta could see through his shirt he was very fit. He looked like he’d been an athlete in his younger years.
“Thank you,” Loretta said, trying hard to tear her gaze away from the squared-jawed stranger who sported a face full of sexy stubble. The little bit of gray flirting at the edges of a head full of dark, wavy hair gave him a naturally distinctive look.
She did have T-Mobile, and her bars were hovering low on her LCD. “My girlfriend told me I needed to change phoneservicers before I came, but I guess I thought I’d be okay for a little while.”
“You’re welcome to use my phone,” he said, his eyes patrolling her body.
Alonzo didn’t mean to stare, but the woman was beautiful, and her curves were just right. In the little Italian village where he was born and raised, the women had a little meat on their bones, which he preferred.
Something about this lady reminded him of the beautiful women he grew up admiring. She was short, with pretty skin, and a head full of thick, natural hair pulled back in a bun. Her body was shapely with curves springing out from her waist over a full bottom. Her ample bosom could not ignored, and her smile was warm and inviting.
If this was the new help, he was sure to be in trouble, because it had been a long time since a woman had given him a stir like she was doing.
Loretta knew she would have felt his dark eyes on her even if she didn’t see them. They landed right on her generous bosom, as most men’s eyes did. Short, Loretta was a beautiful, full-figured woman. Her curves were accented by jeans and a soft, rose-colored top that came to a low-cut V in the front. A light, silky, pink scarf adorned her neck. Caramel-colored skin that had not seen the sunlight in what felt like ages in the cold Detroit winter would finally get some color in the California sunlight.
“Thank you --,” she started, in response to his offering his phone.
“Alonzo. Alonzo Thornton,” he said, as if she should recognize his name. He smiled and put out his hand to shake hers.
“Thank you, Alonzo,” she said, smiling back, reaching to shake his hand. “But the call can wait.”
The people sure are friendly out here,
she thought.
“Do you have many bags?” he asked, still standing next to her.
“No, just a couple,” she said hesitantly.
“Pep can help take your things to the car out front,” he said, nodding to the uniformed driver who was coming her way with a smile. The short, dark man wore a chauffer’s hat, black suit, and stark white shirt. He came and stood next to Loretta, as if at her beck and call.
“Excuse me?” Loretta said, confused.
There was a look of confusion in Alonzo’s eyes, too.
“I like to personally greet all of our new household hires at the airport,” he said.
“New hire?” she asked.
Alonzo’s brows furrowed. “I’m sorry, are you Nettie Williams, from Domestic Servants International?” he asked.
“Nettie Williams? From Domestic Servants
what
?” she asked, her eyes glaring up at him.
Understanding filled Alonzo’s eyes. “My apologies,” he said. “I thought you were the new maid for the vineyard’s estate. I shouldn’t have assumed.”
“You’re right, you
shouldn’t
have, mister!” Loretta shot.
She looked around at the group of white people staring at her. Her voice was loud. But she didn’t care; she was angry.
How dare he assume she was “the help” because she was the only woman of color in the place?
The chauffer hung his head a little and smiled at her moxie.
The luggage carousel started moving, and lucky for this indignant man, her bags were part of the first few.
Loretta stormed past the dark stranger and his chauffer, yanked her bags off the roller, threw them in the pushcart, and headed for the EXIT sign.
Alonzo watched the pretty, feisty lady strode away. His eyes were glued to her generous backside as she walked away.
The chauffer saw him admiring the lady as she made her way toward the exit. Shaking his head, the chauffer responded, “Mr. Thornton, if you do ever see that woman again, you know you won’t have a snowball’s chance in Hell, right?”
“I’m afraid I do, Pep,” he said, sighing. “I’m afraid I do.”
Digging his hands in his pocket, Alonzo felt like a complete idiot.