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Walk on the Wilder Side: Wilder Adventures, Book 2

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by Serena Bell




  Walk on the Wilder Side

  Wilder Adventures, Book 2

  Serena Bell

  Para Aimee, Chloe, y Milagros.

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Epilogue

  Excerpt from Wilder With You

  Also by Serena Bell

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  1

  Rachel

  On the day my life goes off the rails, the first sign of trouble appears at 9:18 a.m. That’s when my boss hands me a chocolate-frosted donut and a cup of coffee.

  I stare at her, confused, because Hettie has never brought me anything before, even though we share an office in the children’s department of the library. She’s a petite Black woman with corkscrew curls, a no-nonsense manner, and an iron hand. A good boss, but not a donut bringer.

  She delivers the bad news quickly, like an experienced nurse giving a flu vaccine. I’ve been laid off, effective next month.

  My position has been replaced city-wide by a kiosk equipped with artificial intelligence that can recommend books to patrons and read books out loud to children.

  I stare at her with my mouth open. “Are you serious?”

  She winces. “I’m afraid so.”

  “Does the kiosk wipe their noses if they cry? Does it remind them to wash their hands after they use the bathroom? Can it shelve every book in the YA section without having to look up the series order?”

  “I’m so, so sorry, Rachel.” Her face softens with pity and apology. “You’ve been amazing. The perfect employee, on every axis. You work hard, you’re good with the patrons—big and little, I can always count on you, everyone likes you. This has nothing to do with you. It’s all about money.”

  “I know,” I tell her, because she looks as miserable as I feel.

  “We’ll miss you so much, Rachel,” she says helplessly.

  She tells me to take the rest of my notice period as paid vacation and sends me home.

  I’m not one of those people who has a ton of stuff to pack up. I leave behind the office supplies, because the library never has enough money for good pens or staplers, and grab my coffee mug, my water bottle, my lip balm, my photos, and the small sign that hangs over my desk.

  Stick to the Plan! it says. Then, below, in smaller letters: (First, make a plan.)

  Oh, God, this so does not go with the plan!

  I toss the donut in the trash can—no appetite—and drive home in a blur of panic. I’ve never not had a job. From the time I was a little kid, I was a good girl: respectful, obedient, high-achieving. I’m careful. I pay my bills early. I toe the line. I make plans. (And stick to them.) I had my first job lined up before I finished my library science program, which was part of my master plan:

  4.0 in high school

  College

  Grad school

  Great apartment

  The library job of my dreams

  Awesome boyfriend

  Meet the parents

  Get engaged

  Get married

  Have two point five kids (I can’t decide between two and three)

  Live happily ever after

  Getting laid off feels like getting a C on a test I studied really hard for. I can’t even bring myself to call my parents or my best friend Louisa, because even though I know I didn’t do anything wrong (“the perfect employee,” Hettie said), I still feel oddly ashamed.

  Okay, I tell myself, as I circle for parking near the Somerville apartment I share with my boyfriend, Werner (step six). I got laid off, and that sucks. Tonight, however, I will be able to check off number seven on the master plan. I am meeting my boyfriend, Werner’s, parents. And meeting the parents is the perfect stepping stone to number eight.

  Werner’s and my one-year dating anniversary is just a few weeks from now, and I’ve been fantasizing that he’ll propose.

  Candlelit dinner, champagne, a ring box, or, better yet, a ring atop a chocolate lava cake or a tiramisu… And Werner on one knee, eyes glittering with love, telling me that since the moment he first saw me at the college alumni event and crossed the room to talk to me, he’s known that this was where we were headed…

  Then a nine-month engagement, a spring wedding, a year of getting to know each other as man and wife, and the two-point-five kiddos (step ten)…

  (I will make up my mind by then. I’m not planning to deal in fractional kiddos, I swear.)

  The layoff is a minor setback, I tell myself. As a step in the plan, it isn’t even essential to the success of the next few steps.

  Whereas meeting the parents is key. And—silver lining—the early dismissal today gives me plenty of time to finish cleaning the apartment and make a few pies. It’s only 10:22.

  I slide my Prius into a skinny parking space and walk the three blocks to the two-family where Werner and I live. As I unlock the door and let myself in, I can smell the roast I left simmering in the slow cooker. And the cleaning products I used this morning as I started the process of making everything perfect for the parent visit.

  I take another step and trip over something, a pile of black slinkiness on the foyer floor, a tossed-aside heap.

  Absentmindedly, I bend down and pick it up.

  It’s a short, black skirt with a lacy hem. Pretty. Sexy.

  My mind stops, like someone jammed a stick into the spokes of the hamster wheel.

  This is not my skirt.

  And then I hear the sounds. Two voices. One low, familiar, grunting, the other higher-pitched, whimpering.

  My brain races to provide any possible explanation except the obvious one. And part of me must not want to know the truth, because I start making up reasons I shouldn’t walk towards the grunts and whimpers.

  There might be an intruder in our apartment.

  Werner might be doing something private (all alone) (by himself) he doesn’t want me to walk in on.

  A dying animal somehow got into our bedroom?

  Or it’s just the television.

  Despite my brain’s attempt to save me from the truth, my feet carry me inexorably toward the bedroom door, past a woman’s blouse and Werner’s shirt, both discarded on the floor. By now, my denial is morphing into a slow-growing rage. I turn the knob. Push the door open.

  I see Werner’s pale butt first. I recognize it, somehow, even though I’ve never seen it from this angle. I know what it’s doing, even though I’ve never seen it clenching and thrusting like that. We’re not the type of couple that uses mirrors or makes videos of ourselves. We have plain vanilla missionary sex under the covers, because that’s how we like it.

  That’s ho
w Werner said he likes it.

  Right now, however, he is standing at the side of the bed, pounding into someone who is on all fours on his—our—bed.

  “What the hell?”

  That’s my voice. Which is remarkable for two reasons. One: I didn’t mean to speak. And two: I never swear.

  Werner yanks himself free of the woman underneath him so fast I’m surprised he doesn’t break something, er, valuable. Which offers me a totally different unwanted backside view—ugh.

  It takes the owner of this view a little longer than Werner to realize what’s going on, but when she does, she gasps and grasps for anything she can find to cover herself. Even so, as she clutches Werner’s quilt to her body, tugging it off the bed, I catch the front view: lacy red teddy and breasts pushed up to her chin.

  Is that thing crotchless? my mind demands to know, despite the urgency and absurdity of the situation.

  I’ve never seen her before, which is very slim relief.

  “Get out,” I snarl at her, and, to her credit, she gets, grabbing her clothes as she rushes out. I can hear her beginning to cry as she removes herself.

  I’m alone with Werner now. He’s desperately trying to get himself back into his tighty-whities. I guess it’s a survival instinct, covering up your parts when you’ve been caught. He’s red and breathless and saying my name, begging me.

  “Rachel, please, it’s not what it looks like.”

  “I don’t think that’s even possible.” A weird calm settles over me. If someone turns out not to be the man you thought he was, can you fall instantly out of love with him?

  If someone disappoints you completely, does he lose his power to break your heart?

  Or am I just in shock?

  Shock is the more likely option. But I plan to take advantage of the numbness and clarity of mind while it lasts. “You were having sex with another woman in our bedroom. It’s exactly what it looks like.”

  The bedroom I never stopped thinking of as his bedroom, my mind observes.

  Shut up, mind.

  “Rachel, please, listen. You’re the one who’s meeting my parents tonight.”

  “Oh, my God, is that supposed to help? You’ve just shown me your butt. Literally! The butt of a man who’d have sex with one woman on the same day another one is cooking for his parents!”

  “Rachel, please. You’re the girl I want to marry.”

  Those words stop me cold for half a second. Because they are—were—the prize I coveted.

  And then I come to my senses: Werner is not a prize.

  He’s a total and complete loser who just did the lowest thing a boyfriend can do.

  “Sure.” I barely recognize my voice. It is hard, dark, cynical. “She’s just the girl you…”

  But apparently I have used up my ration of curses this morning, and I don’t finish the sentence.

  “Rachel, listen to me. If you leave because of this, I’ll never forgive myself. You’re my perfect woman.”

  My perfect woman.

  And what did Hettie call me at work today, just before I was replaced by a kiosk? The perfect employee.

  Perfect.

  Perfect.

  What horse pucky.

  This being perfect thing?

  It’s not working out for me.

  2

  Brody

  How does a bad boy end up hosting a book club on his boat?

  I’ve asked myself this question several times over the course of this wretched night. We’re on my 30-foot fishing boat, currently anchored in the middle of Sentinel Lake. The sun has not yet dipped behind the mountains. The air is warm, the water still, the birds starting to sing. By most measures, I should be in my happy place.

  Yeah. Not so much.

  “You’re out of toilet paper!” One of the book-clubbers, a whippet-thin, pale-skinned blond woman named Jennifer, pokes her head into the cockpit as she returns from the head. Jennifer has her mini-poodle-chihuahua mix—Chicklet—in a sporty sling-bag obviously made for that purpose. He has been intermittently yapping and whining, and I feel his pain—he’s zipped up to his ears. “I used the last. Where do you keep the extra? I can swap it in.”

  “What do you mean, out of toilet paper?”

  “I used it up,” Jennifer says. “Also, the toilet’s clogged.”

  I close my eyes. “You’re kidding me. How many squares did you use?”

  She shrugs.

  “Didn’t you hear me say four squares?”

  She crosses her arms. “I thought you were joking.”

  I’d given all the book-clubbers a lecture about the perils of too-much TP in a boat head.

  Which they had apparently ignored.

  My jaw aches from clenching it.

  Jennifer tips her head to one side. “Anyway, where’s the extra TP?”

  “There’s no extra TP. That should have been enough TP for several book clubs.”

  “Seriously?” She raises two perfectly arched eyebrows.

  “Seriously. And no one can use the head now. There’s no way I can get that thing unclogged without a snake or a pump.”

  Jennifer makes a noise I’d translate as “harumph” and turns to join the other book-clubbers in the bow. I step away from the center console helm, intending to see how much damage she’s done to my head, but before I even reach the cabin door, I hear a sharp ziiiippp, followed by yapping and scrabbling. I turn to see her freeing the doglet for a putter around her feet.

  “Watch him,” I say sharply. “I’m not going in the lake after him.”

  “Oh, is that service extra?” she snaps back. “Like toilet paper?”

  I swallow my urge to engage, and go belowdecks. I take one look at the contents of the head—and oh, fuck, it definitely needs to be pumped. And is that—

  Oh, no, she didn’t.

  Menstrual pad.

  I rub my hand, hard, over my forehead, hoping the pad will vanish, but no such luck. Then, gingerly, I reach in and extract it with two fingers and drop it in the trash.

  I wash my hands, frowning at myself in the mirror.

  This trip is a total failure. There’s no way to sugarcoat it.

  And there’s definitely no way to stave off the inevitable rotten reviews.

  How was I supposed to know that I’d need more than two bottles of wine?

  Or more than a small bowl of jelly beans and a big bag of Doritos? My clients finished both in thirty minutes and asked me where the refills were. One of them asked if I had any healthy snacks. Another wanted to know if I had sparkling water. I had to choke down the urge to point out the sun reflecting off the lake. Sparkling! Water!

  Also, they hate the book, which is by some guy named Nicholas Sparks.

  (I would not have chosen a book by a guy whose last name was clearly made up.)

  The book choice is not my problem, but I feel like it’s making the situation more dire. As are the mosquitoes—which have been worse in our area in the last few years.

  I forgot to bring the nice-smelling bug wipes my brother’s girlfriend bought for this occasion. Also, the sunscreen—Jennifer’s nose is a scary shade of pink, and even with a couple of months of base tan on my white-boy skin, I’m probably hurting too.

  I go back to the helm.

  The women—my clients—are now talking about me in whispers. Which, unfortunately, I can hear perfectly because of the weird acoustics of the boat on water.

  “He was engaged to Zoë Milano, wasn’t he?”

  “Mmm-hmm. But he broke it off.”

  “I guess that’s not a huge surprise, right? I mean, those tattoos and that leather jacket don’t exactly scream husband material.”

  “They scream something. Or maybe screaming is just what any of us would do in bed with him?”

  Lots of throaty laughter.

  These women on my boat are all mid-thirties to early forties. They’re the yummy-mummy type. If you’d asked me to assess them as they were climbing on board, I’d have said I wouldn’t kick any
of them out of bed. But right now? I want this night to end so I can get them off my boat.

  I didn’t used to mind being women’s bad boy fantasy. But lately, I do.

  Every woman wants to fuck the bad boy, but no woman trusts the bad boy to take care of her and the things that matter. It’s a lesson Zoë knocked into my head.

  I fidget with the fishing fly I keep in my pocket. It’s one my dad made when I was a kid. He cut the hook off and let me keep it. Some guys have rabbit’s feet, I have a “woolly bugger,” with most of the feathers worn off.

  “He’s the baby’s father, right?”

  The fist that never quite leaves my chest clenches a little tighter. That baby they’re talking about is Justin. My Justin.

  Not my Justin.

  “No,” someone says. “He’s not. That’s what the fight was about.”

  I close my eyes, which is one of those dumbass things you do when you really want to close your ears but it’s physically impossible.

  “Len Dix is the father.”

  The name physically hurts. Like a fishhook through the heart. Barbed.

  “Wait. I thought he was the dad.” He, meaning me.

  “Zoë told him he was the dad.”

  If the news is out, it’s only a matter of time before everyone I know—including all my family members—learns it, too.

  I know that means I’m living on borrowed time. I need to tell them before they hear it like this, from strangers at a book club.

  I can’t take anymore. I start the engines, throw us into gear, and jam the throttle. There’s a scream, a splash, and, “Chiiiiickleeettt!”

 

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