by Beth Ciotta
Just then her phone rang. “I’m sorry, Casey. Just let me see … It’s my lawyer in L.A.”
“Go on and take it.”
“I’ll just see what he wants … Al?”
“A heads-up would have been nice, Reagan.”
He didn’t sound happy. “What do you mean?”
“I’ve had six calls in the last forty minutes from various organizations, all vying for your money.”
“What?”
“When you announce to the world you’re devoting your inheritance to philanthropic needs—”
“I didn’t announce anything. Hold on,” she said when her phone blipped with another incoming call. “Sorry,” she said to Casey then, “Yes?”
“Miss Devereaux? This is Shawna Frost of Vermont Today. I understand you’re backing several local charitable organizations. We’d like to interview you—”
Beep.
“I’m sorry. Could you hold please?” She thumbed call incoming. “Al?”
“It’s Chloe. I’m worried Daisy unleashed a monster.”
Rae’s pulse tripped. “What do you mean?”
“I’m not a Hollywood gossip monger, I swear. But I confess to the guilty pleasure of checking in now on omg! or TMZ.”
“What’s on the Net, Chloe?”
“You.”
Rae blinked, swallowed. “Thanks. I’ll be in touch.” She looked at the screen, saw one “on hold” and it wasn’t Al. “Miss Frost? Yes. Thank you for your interest. Crazy morning. I’ll be in touch.” She disconnected then redialed Al. “I lost you before. Sorry. About the news blast … I can explain. That’s a lie. I’ll try to explain. Once I’m clear on what’s happening. Stay tuned. And don’t give my money to anyone without my consent. Not that you would. Sorry. I’m … discombobulated.”
“Advise ASAP, Reagan.”
“Will do.” She turned to Casey. “Apparently I’m in the news. Got a laptop handy?”
Ten seconds later a screen was up and singing the praises of one Reagan Devereaux.
omg!
TMZ
E! Online
“Holy cow,” Casey said.
Rae stared in shock as they tripped upon a few more sites, including a string of mentions on Twitter. The headlines read: TRUST FUND BABY TURNS PHILANTHROPIST!
The articles were short blips. Her father was mentioned. Her mother was mentioned—although not in the most flattering way. Rae’s educational background was applauded and the fact that she was so low-key that she’d been off the media’s radar until now was commended. There was mention of her newly inherited fortune and how she’s devoting her time, money, and effort to worthy causes such as a Vermont-based day care center and a cupcake club that supports troops via cupcakes.
“Talk about coming off as the Mother Theresa of the Me Generation,” Casey said. “Who’s your publicist?’
“I don’t have a publicist. Oh, crap. Maybe I do. May I use your office for a sec?”
“Sure.”
“Be right back.”
Rae moved to the back of the store and instead of calling Daisy direct, opted for a more direct answer from Sam. It would be the first time they’d spoken since he’d learned about her and Luke, but Rae was too focused on this media glitch to worry about the potential awkwardness.
He answered on the first ring.
“Sorry to bother you, Sam.”
“No, bother. What’s up?”
“Daisy sent you a text yesterday, right?”
“About you and your offer to throw your money behind the CL recipe book project. Generous.”
“My pleasure. Except, we’re still under contract with Highlife and it hasn’t been discussed or voted on either way by the club. Nothing is settled, yet word is out.”
“You know the Sugar Creek grapevine.”
“No, I mean, word is out, Sam. In a big way. On major entertainment venues on the Internet. Daisy said she was going to ask you to pick Harper Day’s brain regarding potential publicity opportunities. What did Daisy say exactly and did you share it with Harper? What did she do? Who did she contact? This morning I received a call from a reporter at Vermont Today. Should I brace for Good Morning America? I need to know what to prepare for.”
“Give me time to sort this out. Are you okay?”
“I’m fine.”
“You don’t sound fine.”
“Just caught off guard. Speaking of.” She ignored her unease, needing to get this out of the way. Wanting to smooth things over with Sam. “I’m sorry I haven’t called before now. I know you were blindsided when Luke told you we were involved and—”
“Do you love him?”
“Yes.”
“Enough said.”
Rae collapsed on the one cushy chair in Casey’s office. Why did she keep blurting that? Before long, Luke would be the only one in town who didn’t know the extent of her feelings. “I haven’t told him yet. I haven’t said the words. I don’t know why I told you, except you asked and I … I don’t want there to be hard feelings between us.”
“No hard feelings,” he said in his ever calm tone. “We can’t choose who we love, Rae. Let me talk to Harper. I’ll get back to you when I have answers.”
“Thank you, Sam.”
Rae disconnected, her mind spinning in a dozen directions when Casey cried out, “Oh my God! Someone wrote about you on Huffington Post!”
TWENTY-SIX
Sam reread Daisy’s text from the day before, slowly, word for word.
Just as he’d feared, he’d screwed up.
The text had been so damn lengthy and convoluted and Sam had been distracted. By Harper. Sex with Harper. Kinky sex with Harper.
The roll in the sheets (and a few other places) had been amazing. The moment after, not so much. Harper and her damned rules. He wasn’t supposed to linger. Conversation pertaining to their sex-a-pade, including the sexting, was off-limits. Considering they had nothing in common, aside from an animal attraction and an appreciation for the Rothwell Farm, Sam had been at a loss for words. In fact he couldn’t seem to grasp one cohesive thought. Celibate for two years, Sam had overdosed on Harper’s uninhibited approach to sex.
Sensory overload.
He knew now that he’d definitely experienced some sort of brain freeze because he sure as hell hadn’t been thinking straight when he’d forwarded Daisy’s text to Harper.
He’d felt awkward leaving her bed without a word and as he’d dressed he’d been keenly aware of his surroundings. The room in which an original Cupcake Lover had pined away for her love. Which made him flash on the club and the recipe book and Daisy’s text.
After he’d climbed into his cab, he zipped off a text to Harper, their only comfortable means of communication.
NEED A FAVOR
INTRIGUED
He’d then forwarded Daisy’s text following up with his own message, telling Harper that the Cupcake Lovers would be grateful for any help. He hadn’t expanded beyond that. He hadn’t expected her to act without checking with him first. Honestly he hadn’t thought she’d give the CLs the time of day. It’s not like they were Hollywood celebrities.
She’d texted back: WILL DO. And Sam had pulled away from the farm feeling as though they’d at least had some sort closure on the night and that it wasn’t just some twisted rendezvous. It helped to put him in a better place as he drove to pick up his kids. He’d put the liaison out of his head as best he could, including the bit about Daisy’s text, as he segued back to real life. His life as a single father. He’d managed through the night and morning by focusing on the kids. Not to mention being in his own house, a house filled with memories of his sweet wife had pretty much snuffed erotic thoughts about Harper.
Rae’s phone call had put an end to that.
Sam texted Harper. YOU HOME?
ON A CONFERENCE CALL
COMING OVER
BAD TIME
MAKE TIME
Sam was learning that the only way he got anywhere with Harper was
by bulldozing his way in and over. She was always busy, always headstrong, and always taking control. Yes, sir, he’d gotten a good dose of her domineering ways last night. Sam had allowed so much of it because, hell, it was stimulating, before he reversed roles—even more stimulating.
Five minutes into his drive and he had an erection. What would she be wearing? Skintight jeans or clingy workout clothes? Red lipstick? Pink? Hair loose and wild or swept off that beautiful face? Now that he was out of his house and away from his kids, one erotic thought after another slithered through his brain.
The first thing he noticed when he pulled up to the house was that Leo had repaired and returned her car, which, turns out, she’d rented from the local mechanic and garage owner to begin with. The second was that whoever had shoveled her walk after last night’s late snow had done a poor job. Surely not Leo. Maybe Harper herself. Sam could imagine her hurriedly scraping a path just wide enough to navigate while she yakked on that damn phone. He made a mental note to clear a better path, throw down some salt. He didn’t want her, or anyone else, to slip and fall.
He knocked on the door. Wasn’t surprised she greeted him with a phone pressed to her ear, or when she held up a finger to bid him silent. She waved him inside, engrossed in conversation with someone named Gabby. From what Sam could make out, the woman, girl, whatever, had spent a wild, drunken night in Vegas and someone had snapped compromising shots that showed up on Twitter. Sam wasn’t into the social networking scene but he knew a lot of people who were and he knew that once something was on the Internet it was there forever. If something went viral it was either a blessing or, in this Gabby girl’s instance, a curse.
“Where was your bodyguard when this wild bunch talked you into playing strip pool in their suite?” Harper asked. A beat later she rolled her eyes. “I was afraid you were going to say that. First thing you need to do is to fire that irresponsible reprobate. His job is to keep you out of trouble, not to incite it or, in this case, play along. I don’t care if you begged him to. I don’t care if you’d been dying to see him naked. Yes, I know. Most bodyguards are built. Listen to me Gabby. Gabby! We need to concentrate on damage control. I’ll handle the bulk of it, but here’s what you’re going to do.”
Sam slipped off his coat and sat on the edge of the same red chair Mina had settled into yesterday. Rather than lose patience, he listened while Harper took calm control of a disastrous situation. Apparently Gabby was an up-and-coming star, a featured actress on a show being touted as the next Glee. She played a bubbly cheerleader type, a good girl, and that’s how her fans perceived her to be in real life. Salvaging her now-tarnished reputation struck Sam as a PR nightmare. Yet Harper was on fire, looking as though she were eating up every second of the challenge.
He didn’t get her. At. All.
When she finally signed off, her cheeks were pink, her eyes bright. “What’s up, Rambo? I’ve got a crisis to spin.”
Sam rose, not quite towering over her, but making his presence known. Holding Harper’s attention was a challenge in itself. “That text I sent you last night.”
“You don’t have to thank me. It was nothing. Seriously. I sent a couple of e-mails and texts, pitched the story with an heiress-turned-philanthropist angle. Cake. Caught on like wildfire. Did you see the flurry on TMZ?”
“What the hell is TMZ?” Every time she mentioned it his brain went to DMZ (demilitarized zone). He was pretty sure they weren’t connected.
She scrunched her brow. “What world do you live in?”
“The real world?”
She snorted then took off toward the kitchen. “Did the kids enjoy my cupcakes?”
“Yes. Thank you.”
“Did you try one?”
“No.”
She tossed a narrow-eyed glance over her shoulder. “Why not?”
“About this media hype revolving around Rae. I need you to snuff it.”
“What? Why?”
“Because the Cupcake Lovers are contracted to release that recipe book with a New York publisher.”
“The text specified self-publishing.”
“I know. This isn’t your fault, precisely. It’s mine.”
She whirled then, hands on hips. “What do you mean precisely?”
“Why didn’t you check with me before you took action?’
“Why would I? You said you needed a favor. The text you forwarded me was pretty clear.”
“It was?”
“Clear on wanting to promote buzz regarding Reagan Devereux’s goodwill projects—the school, the recipe book—capitalizing on her mother’s name and her father’s fortune. Drawing attention to Sugar Creek in order to increase tourism. Drawing attention to the Cupcake Lovers to increase sales of their book and inspire additional contributions to their charitable work.”
“You got all that from Daisy’s text?”
“Didn’t you? Look,” Harper said as she turned toward her coffee maker. “Is Rae relocating to Sugar Creek?”
“Looks like.”
“Is she purchasing the local day care center and launching additional educational programs for the local kids?”
“The plan as I know it.”
“Are the Cupcake Lovers in the process of publishing—one way or another—a recipe book that will benefit various charities as well as our troops?”
“Yes.”
“Then I don’t see a problem.” She turned and handed Sam a mug of coffee. “If the club decides to go with the publishing company then I’ll shift the spin. Let me know when you know.”
Sam watched her stir raw unrefined sugar into the mug, watched as she sipped, and tried not to obsess on where those lush lips had been last night. His cock twitched in memory. “How much is this PR spin going to cost us?”
“Nothing.” She glanced at the ceiling and beyond. “I think Mary’s smiling down on me and the fact that I did something in support of the Cupcake Lovers. That’s enough for me.”
“What is it with you and your fascination with Mary Rothwell?”
“Why didn’t you taste my cupcakes?”
Sam was still focused on her mouth and distracted by the sexual tension pulsing between them. When she met his gaze, Sam felt a full-body zap. “About last night—”
“Uh-uh.” She took that as her cue to leave. “Off to save Gabby’s ass,” she said as she pushed away from the counter, mug in hand. “Love the designs you left on the table for the vintage-looking cabinets, by the way. Can you really build those from scratch?”
“Yeah.”
“Impressive.”
“Harper,” Sam said, causing her to pause on the threshold. “I thought you bought this place as a getaway. A place to unwind.”
She cast him an enigmatic look before sliding out of the room. “What do you think last night was?”
TWENTY-SEVEN
Luke was reminded yet again of how much he hated hospitals when he accompanied his dad to the medical center. It didn’t matter that the sun was shining or that it was a balmy seventy-nine degrees. His mood was sour and his blood ice cold. Had his dad taken a turn for the worse? Had the cancer spread? Would he need to undergo surgery? Or had there been a glitch in the previous assessment? Would he be cleared to go home?
Needless to say they were all praying for the latter.
“I hate waiting rooms,” Rocky said as she paced back and forth.
“Join the club,” Luke said. This one, in particular, rattled his composure. The few other people awaiting news about loved ones looked stone-cold miserable. The place was a chaotic mess. Magazines scattered all over. Crushed beverage cups abandoned willy-nilly instead of properly discarded. The ugly blue carpet was sun-spotted and worn from countless visitors, countless worried souls who paced incessantly like his sister.
Luke turned his focus from Rocky and the disheveled room to his composed and ever-tidy mom. Her chin-length hair, curly and blonde like her daughter’s, was pulled back in a neat ponytail. Like Rocky, she wore no makeup. She didn�
�t need it. She was fifty-seven and looked maybe forty-five. She’d married young, had her kids young, and had often boasted about her good fortune. About how her golden years would be her best.
Only they’d turned out to be the worst.
Luke’s heart ached as he tried to read his mom’s mind. She was sitting two chairs down reading a paperback book. Kaye Monroe had been a pillar of strength throughout Jerome’s diagnosis and treatment. She never doubted her husband’s ability to persevere. Never fell apart. Yet Luke knew she was shaken to her kind-hearted core. What kind of strength did it take to keep that kind of intense fear bottled? How the hell did she do it? “You look so calm, Mom.”
“Not calm,” she said. “Patient and optimistic. This has pretty much been my life for the last several months. I’ve learned to cope.”
Luke and Dev traded a look. They were of the same mind. Pissed that their dad had kept his condition a secret for so long. Pissed that their mom had had to “cope” on her own.
Jayce strolled into the waiting room carrying a tray with four steaming cups. “I sampled mine,” he said. “Swill compared to Moose-a-lotta’s coffee, but loaded with caffeine.”
“Come to papa,” Luke said. He’d barely slept last night and considering the bedraggled look of his brother and sister and Jayce, he knew they’d suffered the same restlessness.
Rocky paced by and grabbed her cup without missing a step. When riled or upset, Rocky became a frenzied blur. That was her coping mechanism. “Why is it taking so long?”
“It’s been less than an hour, dear,” Kaye said.
“The scan should be over soon,” Dev said. “I was told the images would be stored electronically on a computer and that after reviewing, the radiologist would inform Dad’s doctor, who promised to expedite the entire process. We should have a report shortly.”
“Pacing won’t help, dear.”
“Cool your heels, Dash.” Jayce moved in and took his soon-to-be-wife in hand. “You’re messing with your mom’s zen,” he said with a soft smile.