Tempt Me: A First Class Romance Collection

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Tempt Me: A First Class Romance Collection Page 36

by Jessica Hawkins


  Two women.

  Their faces unfamiliar, but both had to be around my age, maybe twenty-eight or thirty. One was dressed in something like I would have worn to the office back in San Francisco. A perfectly fitted pencil skirt, blouse, and heels, her black hair done up in an intricate twist. The other was more casually dressed in trendy jeans and a flowy tee, her hair cropped and messy.

  Dusting off my hands on my jeans, I walked their direction. “Can I help you?”

  “You must be Corrine Dayne’s granddaughter.”

  I gave a slight nod.

  “We heard you were coming into town,” she said. “I hope we’re not intruding, but we wanted to introduce ourselves. I’m Lillith Redd.” The woman in heels stepped forward with a welcoming smile and pushed her hand out in front of her.

  I rounded the corner and shook her hand. “It’s nice to meet you, Lillith. I’m Rynna.”

  The other woman laughed. “Ah, forget that ‘Lillith’ nonsense.” She hooked her thumb in her friend’s direction. “This one right here goes by Lily Pad. Don’t fall for that suit-wearing, straightlaced attorney vibe she’s rockin’. She’s actually kind of a wild child when you get to know her. And we finally get to meet the Rynna Dayne, not to be confused with Grandma Corinne. I pretty much feel like we’re already best friends since your grandma never stopped talking about you. I’m Nikki Walters.”

  There was a kind, playful confidence about her, no hesitation when she reached out to take my hand.

  Confidence.

  Right then, I scrambled within myself to find it. To remember who I’d become in the years I’d been away. The strength and boldness I’d found. It was crazy how coming back to this town incited the instinct to cower and hide. “It’s really nice to meet you, Nikki.”

  I glanced between the two of them. “So, you two knew my grandmother?”

  It actually felt nice to find someone other than Frankie and her dad who remembered my grandmother. The fact I was there by myself and facing this alone was beginning to set in. That loneliness growing bigger with each second that passed.

  It didn’t help Rex Gunner had quite literally slammed a door in my face last night.

  Standing on his porch like a fool as I’d offered myself up, only to have him so callously reject me, had stung. I wanted to hate him. To think him nothing but a jerk. But I couldn’t.

  Maybe it was the way my grandmother had raised me. To slow down and look deeper. Beyond the surface and the shallow to what was concealed underneath.

  God knew I’d been judged enough as a child. I might as well have been on trial for my appearance alone, a thousand convictions made with each passing, sneering glance. And I had looked deeper at Rex. What I saw was pain and fear and a rickety defense lurking right under the hostility that seeped from his pores like poison. There was something so ferociously protective behind the shield of venom and animosity.

  It filled me with the urge to break through it. To chip it away, piece by piece. To dig deeper until I’d discovered everything that was hiding underneath.

  It didn’t help that one look at him made my stomach shiver and shake.

  I had no idea what it was about this guy, but every time I saw him, I was struck with an overpowering shock of attraction. The kind that spun my head and left my knees weak with the impulse to run my fingers over the hard planes of his body.

  Which was crazy. I didn’t know him. But I couldn’t scrape the idea from my consciousness that I was supposed to.

  Nikki’s eyes widened as if my question had been absurd. “Of course we knew your grandma.” With a moan, her eyes rolled back in her head as she tipped her face toward the ceiling. “She made the freaking best pies. Like, to die for.”

  Wistful laughter tumbled free. “Yeah, they kind of had that effect on people, didn’t they? Now that woman could bake.”

  Her pot pies were almost as legendary as her sweet pies.

  “Tell me you’re actually reopening this place and you have all her secret recipes,” Nikki pleaded as if my answer might save her life.

  I glanced around the diner that had been shut down for the last two months, but with the poor shape it was in, you’d think it had been vacant for years. The entire place was covered in an inch of dust, the red pleather booths cracked, some torn. More concerning was the equipment in the kitchen that was old and in far worse shape.

  Resolve set into my bones. “I’m going to try.”

  Lillith laughed a tinkling sound. “Oh, if you’re anything like your grandma made you out to be, I think you’ll fair just fine.”

  A sad smile emerged at just the edge of my mouth. “I think there’s a chance my grandmother might have played me up to be something I’m not.”

  “Psh.” Nikki waved a flippant hand. “As long as you have those recipes, you’re golden.”

  “Well, following her recipes is the easy part. It’s the two hundred thousand dollar loan I need to whip this place back into shape that I’m worried about,” I returned, trying to make it a joke and not let the reality of it bring me down.

  All the while, I wondered why these two set me so at ease that I felt comfortable sharing such personal details with them.

  But I did.

  Concern flitted across Lillith’s face, her expression knowing. “I heard there was a tax lien?”

  I sighed, but there was satisfaction behind it. “There was, but I was able to sell off some of my things back in California to pay the lien, as well as the back payments due on the house. That left me with the keys to both.” A wry chuckle rumbled out. “And you know, about five dollars to my name.” I wasn’t quite that destitute, but it was close.

  “Hey, a strong woman can work magic with five dollars,” Nikki said, her grin wry.

  “I just might need a little magic to come into play if I’m going to make this happen.”

  Sympathy lined Lillith’s face. “I’m so sorry your return is under these circumstances. I hope you know your grandmother was a huge asset to this community and an even better friend. She is greatly missed. If there’s anything we can do, don’t hesitate to ask. I’m an attorney, and I’ll do whatever I can to help you get this place reopened, whether you need me to file anything or need legal advice or even if you just need a friend to talk to.”

  Her words were carefully phrased, but there was a genuineness that seeped out with them.

  “That’s really nice of you. Thank you. I may need to take you up on that offer,” I told her.

  She smiled. “The entire town is really excited by the prospect of the diner reopening, especially with the hotel going in across the street. The whole intention of the Fairview Street Restoration Project is to mesh the old with the new. A cohesive fusion of the past and present, and I’d personally love to see this diner become a part of that.”

  Pride lifted in her expression when she looked over her shoulder and out the window at the construction taking place directly on the other side of the street.

  Nikki almost rolled her eyes. She dropped her voice as if she were whispering conspiratorially, though not low enough that Lillith couldn’t hear. “You’ll have to excuse her. Her fiancé’s company has the hotel going in, and this one right here is kind of pathetically in love.”

  Lillith swatted at her. “Shut it.” She looked at me, grinning. “Nikki is the one who pretty much insisted I give him a chance, and now that we’re together, she won’t stop giving me crap about it. I think she might be jealous.”

  “Hey, don’t act like you don’t want to kiss my feet for bringing the two of you together. That was nothing but pure matchmaking skill. Think of all the orgasms I earned you.”

  “Nikki, what is wrong with you?” Lillith smacked her again.

  Nikki set her hand over her heart. “I’m just a speaker of the truth. And yes, for the record, I am very, very jealous of all the orgasms. I mean, not that I want Broderick to be the one giving them to me. That would be kind of gross and wrong.”

  Nikki sent me a wink. �
�You know, considering we’re best friends and all. I’m just envious of the sheer number of them.”

  She feigned a sad shake of her head. “It’s a little greedy if you ask me. No one person needs that many orgasms.”

  “Oh, believe me, I need them all.” Lillith was both fighting a grin and the redness on her cheeks when she said it, once again looking behind her to the construction site.

  It was a large section of land cordoned off by a chain-link fence, the frame of a massive building just starting to take form.

  I smiled at her dreamy look. It was impossible not to like them. They seemed polar opposites; yet, I was unable to imagine one without the other.

  Lillith turned back to me almost reluctantly. “We’d better get out of your way so you can get back to work, but we wanted to stop in and introduce ourselves. Honestly, if you need anything, let us know.”

  “I’m glad you did, and I definitely will.”

  “Oh.” Nikki’s eyes lit up. “It’s Friday!”

  My brow rose in question.

  She looked at me as if it should be obvious. “Um . . . hello? Friday Funday? That means you totally have to come out with us tonight.”

  “Really?”

  Okay, maybe I was a little overenthusiastic. But I missed Macy like crazy and the truth was, I needed that—companionship and friendship. The true kind. The feeling of belonging when the last couple of days had made me feel as if I’d stepped out of bounds, directly into a place I knew so intimately but still so far removed.

  Lillith nodded. “Oh, good idea.”

  “Of course it’s a good idea,” Nikki shot back.

  Lillith widened her eyes at me. “For the record, if you say no, chances are Nikki will just come drag you out anyway. It’s best to just concede and go along for the ride. God knows, I do.” It was all soft, playful affection.

  “At least you know what is good for you,” Nikki tossed at her before she grabbed me by the wrist and shook my arm around. “Come with us. Please! I already feel like I know you, and . . . well, I think that you might be the missing three in our amigo. You complete us.”

  With both index fingers, she drew a heart in the air.

  “See?” Lillith asked. “Just go with the crazy.”

  I grinned. I was totally going with the crazy. Forget the fears. It’d been eleven years. Who would even recognize me? And if they did, why would they even still care?

  A shiver trembled through me.

  What if they did?

  Shaking it off, I smiled. I could do this. I wanted to do this. “That sounds like fun. Where should I meet you and at what time?”

  Nikki slung her arm around my shoulder, and I walked with them toward the entrance. “Eight at Olive’s. It’s on the corner of Macaber and 5th.”

  “Why do I get the feeling you know this place well?”

  Lillith widened telling eyes. “That’s because Ollie owns it. This one can’t stay away.”

  Nikki sighed dramatically. “Ollie. Hottest man in all the land. Friend-zoner extraordinaire. But one day, I will make him see what he’s missing.”

  “Ah, things are beginning to make sense now,” I said.

  Nikki feigned sadness with the grim shake of her head. “No, Rynna, men make absolutely no sense whatsoever. There is no sense to be found.”

  I laughed. God, I really liked them.

  “Isn’t that the truth?” I said.

  Lillith pushed open the glass door. It was smudged with its own layer of greasy dust, and the white logo on the front claiming Pepper’s Pies was barely visible. Still, I could read it as if I’d drawn it myself. It was a shaker tipped on its side, flecks of pepper pouring over a tumble of pot pies and sweet pies and pizzas.

  Gramma’s offerings had always been unique and perfectly peculiar.

  Just like the woman behind it.

  I was washed with another wave of warmth, and I couldn’t help but think I was supposed to return. That no matter what the past held, this was where I had always belonged.

  We stepped out into the hot Alabama summer day, and I blinked against the sudden glare of sunlight and the rush of sticky humidity.

  Clouds threatened in the distance, building in the sultry heat.

  Lillith hummed with a near imperceptible bounce on her toes. Her attention locked on the small group of men across the street, who’d gathered in a circle just inside the chain-link fence.

  Most of them were in work clothes: jeans and long-sleeved shirts and boots. Though a single man with his back to us wore a black suit and a yellow hard hat.

  Nikki leaned in and mock-whispered in my ear, “Suit-guy would be the fiancé, Broderick Wolfe. You know, the one who constantly has this one’s panties on fire. Look at her . . . she can hardly contain herself.”

  I bit back laughter, my whisper just as faked. “How long until she goes running over there?”

  “Oh, I’d say about two point five seconds.”

  Lillith swatted at my arm, and God, for the first time since I’d returned, I felt truly, completely as if I were home.

  “Stop it, you two. Like I don’t hear you over there.”

  We both laughed. Nikki dropped her arm and moved to face me, pulling her cell phone from where it was tucked in her back pocket. “What’s your number in case you get lost?” she said with a grin hugging her mouth as she dipped her head to look down. Her fingers were poised to input my number.

  I almost got the entire thing out before my mouth went dry and the numbers came to a sluggish, sticky halt, my tongue unable to form a sound.

  The man standing next to Broderick had turned around and was looking in our direction.

  The smile slid right off his gorgeous face when he saw me staring at him. But somehow, the transformation into the hard scowl was just as mesmerizing.

  Just as hypnotic.

  Maybe more so.

  Because I felt weightless beneath his glare.

  Fluttery and uneasy.

  Mesmerized.

  Those sage eyes were so hard and intense. Capturing me. Holding me hostage. So dark they should have held the power to conceal the fire that raged in the depths, scored like markers in his spirit.

  But I saw it. Felt it where it stuck in the heated, stagnant air.

  The pain buried underneath.

  Nikki lifted her head in question, her fingers ready for the last two numbers. “Hello?”

  Snapping out of it, I cleared my throat. “Oh . . . um, sorry, six-two.”

  “Got it,” she said before she gave me a salute and backed away. “Eight o’clock, my friend. Don’t make me hunt you down. You know I will.”

  I tore my attention from the man pinning me to the spot from the other side of the street. His hold was just as heavy as if he were right in front of me, physically restraining me with those massive hands.

  “I’ll be there,” I told her.

  “You’d better be.” She winked.

  Lillith squeezed my hand gently before she backed away to cross the street. “It was great to finally meet you, Rynna. This is going to be good. I can just feel it. I’m so glad we took the chance and stopped in.”

  She said it without realizing the impact her words had on me. The way they flooded me with warmth and hope. The way they nudged the aspirations at the root of who I was, freeing them from where they’d been trapped deep inside.

  My gaze roamed, drawn back to the man who hadn’t moved an inch. Hostility rippled off him like heat waves.

  I had no idea why I felt it. Compelled. Driven toward a man that seemed so rigid, so dangerous to my sanity.

  But I felt it. He needed someone to revive his faith just as desperately as I did.

  Because looking at him?

  I suddenly knew he had none of it. That something had gone dim inside him.

  That was the thing about chances.

  We didn’t know their outcomes.

  If we’d succeed or if we’d fail.

  It didn’t matter.

  I had to t
ake a chance on him.

  6

  Rex

  “You sure you want to be here tonight?” I asked Ollie. Guilt was threatening to consume me. Suck me down. Take me under.

  I fought it, trying to be strong, because it wasn’t fucking right for me to be the one falling apart.

  Ollie, Kale, and I were in the back office at Olive’s where it was quiet. Private. The elevated voices from the throng of people out front were dulled, barely seeping through the walls, the evidence of the live band little more than a throb that vibrated the floors.

  Ollie roughed a tattooed hand over his mouth like that single act might hold the power to erase the burden. A low, humorless chuckle rumbled from his chest. “Doesn’t make much of a difference where we’re at, now, does it? Fuckin’ day will follow us, anyway.”

  “Yeah,” I mumbled. Doubted there was a statement I agreed with more. This fucking date haunted us no matter where we went. No matter how much time had passed. There was no outrunning it.

  Kale rocked back in the office chair where he sat at Ollie’s desk. He had spun the chair around so he could face us, his long legs stretched out in front of him and his fingers threaded at the back of his head. “Twelve years. Twelve years, and it doesn’t get any easier, does it?”

  Ollie dropped his head back on the wall he rested against and squeezed his eyes closed. “Twelve years.” Ollie’s voice was nothing but a moan, close to tears. “Shut my eyes and, I swear to God, it feels like yesterday.”

  Ollie was a big, burly asshole, who was covered in tats, and if you didn’t know him, he was intimidating as fuck. I’d seen grown men cross the street when he was heading their direction.

  He’d bought Olive’s back when it was little more than a dive, when the place was in shambles and going under. I’d come along beside him, doing the physical labor to restore the interior. But it was his vision that made it the most popular bar in Gingham Lakes.

  “And a fucking century at the same damned time,” I said, shifting on the file cabinet I was leaning on.

  “I just . . .” Kale trailed off, unable to say the things every single one of us were thinking.

 

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