by Melissa Blue
Twice Smitten, A Modern Fairy Tale: Book 2
Twice Smitten Published by Melissa Blue
Copyright 2013
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
Contact Information: [email protected]
Cover Art by Melissa Blue
Self-Published Edition 2013
Chapter One
Attending her ex-fiancé’s wedding had to take the number one spot of the top ten stupid things Abigail Johnson had done. Since she regularly did dumb things with her two best friends that was saying something. Those partners in crime had their arms looped in hers, and thanks to a daily workout schedule, Abigail managed to drag them a few feet across the church’s parking lot before they stalled.
“Even for us wedding crashing is too much,” Sasha said.
Abigail eyed her friend on her right, taking in a full view of the attire. Sasha’s severe black dress ended at the knee, and the sharp vee in the front was tasteful but still displayed a Playboy dream-girl’s cleavage. Well, if Sasha had dyed blonde hair instead of siren red. A jagged-heart necklace trailed down the valley of her breasts and was the final touch. Needless to say, the outfit was a show of solidarity.
“It’s not crashing if you’re invited.” Abigail gave a halfhearted tug on their arms. Neither woman moved. Another show of solidarity. “I was. Let’s look on the bright side. Being here will make me stop complaining about possible layoffs at work.”
“You would find a loophole to distract us from the truth,” Emma said. “Invitation or no, this is crashing. And please don’t talk about work again.”
Sasha nodded her head solemnly. “Yet, it’s on the subject. An advertising type job is really like a lawyer if you think about it. Both are trying to sell you bullshit, which you are, by the way. This is crashing.”
Abigail looked at Emma. “Now I see why you get irritated when Sasha and I gang up to annoy you.”
Emma grinned. “The invitation said Abigail Johnson plus guest. Not two.”
Again a show of support with a black pencil skirt and equally black button up shirt. While in the car, Sasha had foisted shoes into Emma’s hands—black satin with cherry red broken hearts decorating the material.
“Greg would have known I wouldn’t come here without you two,” Abigail said.
“The thing is maybe he thought you wouldn’t come. It’s not customary for… ” Emma trailed off and winced.
“For an ex-fiancée to show up to your wedding.” The end of the sentence went without saying, but Abigail had masochist tendencies so she had to point out the elephant pelting peanuts at her already aching heart. “I don’t want him back.” Both women looked at her in disbelief. “No, really. I don’t, but I had to do this.” And I have to see the woman he fell in love with. “You know, full circle kind of thing.”
“You don’t do full circles.” Sasha tried to look contrite but still managed sex goddess. “God, we’re such horrible friends. Why did we let her talk herself into this? We should be doing a dare or getting drunk at McNally’s.”
“We already tried something normal and that didn’t work.” Emma’s grip tightened on Abigail’s arm.
She knew they were stalling and appreciated the hell out of it. “Stuffing ourselves with sweets is an every day type thing. We’ve been desensitized,” Abigail said.
Emma perked up. “Margaritas!”
“Come on. We can’t say no to margaritas,” Sasha said with a little too much cheer.
“There’s a free wet bar at the reception.” Abigail stepped forward trying to drag them with the motion. The women didn’t budge and she was jerked back.
“We are not going to the reception.” Emma shook her head.
Abigail put the only thing that could sway Emma on the bargaining table. “You’ll get to see your competition’s cake.”
Emma’s golden-hued eyes went hot with anger, turning the shade amber. Greg and his bride-to-be had actually gone to her bakery, Sweet Tooth, first. It’s how all of them found out about the wedding.
Of the three, Emma had the least bite. Up until she met Tobias she didn’t have any. Yet, her friend had pulled Greg aside and asked if he had lost his damn mind for coming to her to make his wedding cake. Emma had been just as appalled when the invitation had come, and when Abigail RSVPed.
Another cool breeze wafted around them, fluttering Sasha’s skirt. Abigail barely felt the late summer wind. “We can’t stand out here all day.” She tried for calm she didn’t feel. “We’ll sit and watch the wedding. We’ll get plastered at the reception. I’ll wish him and his bride the best, and this chapter of my life will be over.”
Abigail squeezed both their arms. “Sasha, I need closure as you pointed out not too long ago.”
“We can burn the box of all the stuff of his you still have.” Sasha’s lips formed into a sexy pout as she thought on it more. “Naked,” she added. “And dance around the fire. That’ll be closure.”
“Or, like Sasha suggested earlier, we can do a dare,” Emma said.
Doing a dare for the broken-hearted was a long held tradition for them. Ten years worth. She should have let go of the torch she held for him long ago, but Abigail had begun to suspect he was the one she let get away. The one one. More than once she’d considered looking him up, just to see how he was doing.
When Abigail found out about the wedding there was, of course, horror. There was also relief. She would have put her heart out there to be beaten like a piñata. He would have been nice and gentle in his rebuff, but the humiliation would have felt the same. The sequence of events solidified one fact—love sucked. If she hadn’t believed this truth before, the gold-leafed wedding invitation would have rammed that last nail in.
Once again, finding faux inner calm, she said, “You guys can go if that’s what you want.”
Even her faux calm sounded a little deranged. Abigail unhooked her arms from theirs and marched forward. A sharply whispered argument ensued behind her. A few minutes later, the two women caught up at the church steps. Orange-blushed orchids decorated the rails. Abigail clasped her hands together, not wanting to touch them.
“We want it noted…” Emma supported her left side. “That this is stupid.”
“Duly.” Abigail nodded.
“And we were against it.” Sasha supported the right side. “And we will be getting you drunk at the reception.”
“No,” Emma corrected. “We’ll all be getting drunk.”
“Right,” Abigail said. The ache receded, allowing the nerves to take over. “Ready? That’s a dumb question, but I’ve got nothing.”
Emma stepped up to the plate. “Just FYI, if any of Tobias’ ex-girlfriends show up to our wedding, be ready and willing to kick their ass out the church.”
“I will do my friendly duty,” Abigail said and meant it.
They stepped into the heavily decorated church. The one person she never wanted to see again stood guard at the inner doors. Fortunately, neither friend said I told you so. Unfortunately, the older woman yelled for security.
*****
It shouldn’t have given Drew Carter satisfaction to see the security guards blocking Abigail’s war path into the church. To keep her honest, someone needed to stand in the way of her surefire path, especially when tha
t stubborn line above her brows appeared.
But, any idiot could see the hurt underneath the mask of determination. Then again, Drew saw a lot when it came to Abby. Or, he was delusional. That option was always on the table, especially when it came to her.
When his cousin Greg had popped the question, so long ago, it seemed Drew was the only one to catch on to the stark-raving fear in her eyes, not tears, like a normal reaction.
And therein lay the problem.
He could always see past the hard-edged veneer. He wished he didn’t. When Drew looked at Abigail he wanted to see the militant-straight ebony strands, the sharp cheek bones and chocolate-brown eyes, all telegraphing back the hell off. Unfortunately, he didn’t.
He stared at her for another second, hoping his reaction would ease, but his heart refused to slow. Drew had prepared himself to see her. Not today, but soon. He’d wanted to take one look at her and feel nothing but disgust and loathing. That would be easier. He sighed.
No loathing or disgust, so Drew smiled and ran a hand down his starched-white shirt. The duck tails of the jacket bounced against his legs as he continued down the hallway. It took huge balls to face Greg’s mother and not bail. But the stubborn chin was up, delicate shoulders back and, from the glint in her brown eyes, Abby wouldn’t back down now either. She would see this wedding to the end.
“Abby!” He widened his arms. “You came.”
He vaguely remembered the two knockouts standing on both sides of her. They donned all black. He’d bet money it wasn’t to make sure they didn’t out-show the bride.
“And you brought friends.” Drew wagged his brows as he came to a stop in front of the guards.
Nadine stood at the church’s inner doors, arms crossed. The burnt-orange dress suit creased from the stance. “You invited her? I should have known.”
The disgust he should have felt marred his aunt’s beautiful face. For a woman closer to sixty than fifty there were only a smattering of wrinkles around her mouth and eyes. At the moment, those wrinkles deepened with anger. “For the life of me I don’t know why my Greg wanted you as best man.”
Drew shrugged but smiled at Abby. The fire behind her gaze aimed at Nadine turned in his direction. The burn of the glare made his smile widen into a grin. “He was thinking of his bachelor’s party.”
“You would have strippers on speed dial,” Abigail muttered.
He held back the laugh. “And yet I chose you and your two beautiful friends as my date, Abby.” The smile held at her flinch, but she got the not-so-subtle cue: shut up and go with it.
Nadine’s head looked as if it was about to explode. She sputtered, “Is he the reason?”
“No.” Abigail shook her head. Her friends drew closer when her voice wobbled with unspent tears. “No.”
The tightness around Nadine’s mouth softened, but the steel in her glare didn’t lessen. “If you so much as cough during the service…”
“Yes, ma’am,” Abigail answered.
“Fine.” Nadine transferred the anger from Abigail to him. “Don’t think I’m not talking to your father, Nephew.” The last word could have been exchanged with a choice curse word. She waved a hand at the security guards and they left. “Back row,” she said to Abigail.
Greg’s mother stepped aside to allow them in. Seeing a chance to annoy Abigail, he slipped between the friends and encircled her waist with one arm. One curvy hip pressed against his leg and the other filled his hand. He had to curtail the urge to tighten his grip because good God she was soft.
“Let me show you the way.” His voice could have been made of silk from the slickness of the tone.
Surprise took hold when she placed a hand on his chest, plastering all that softness against him. Drew’s brain misfired and snagged on a hope he’d buried deep. How many times had he imagined this reaction? Up until now it would have been wrong. It would have been a million other wrong and inappropriate things, but Abigail against him now felt right. She stood on her tip toes, brushed her mouth against his earlobe. A groan escaped from his lips. His fingers twitched, wanting to cup her ass and palm the rounded flesh to hold her closer.
She whispered in his ear, “I’m going to break your arm off and beat you with it, later, for touching me.”
The threat dragged him back to reality, but the words still filled him with warmth and made his cock thicken. How sick was he to be so turned on? Very. Yet, a keen sense, honed over years of portraying the man a woman didn’t even tell her friends about, allowed him to hear the challenge underneath.
Or, maybe there was simply something wrong with him, because that was always an option. Pants still a bit snug from the sensation of her lips on his earlobe, Drew said with sincerity, “Looking forward to it, Abby.”
Chapter Two
Shifting uncomfortably on the red pew, Abigail told herself it hadn’t been a shiver that went through her when Drew’s fingers had encircled her waist. The embrace had all been for show, but being a man-whore must have given Drew the skills to make just about any woman pliant and willing beneath those long, strong fingers.
His soft groan had been for show too, not genuine. Nothing about him was. Or nice. Or thoughtful. Or any other quality Greg had, which is why she’d fallen hard…for Greg. He had been everything she didn’t usually date. Wasn’t that the one you were supposed to marry? And still she wasn’t able to beat back the fear when it had come down to the wire.
Greg would have been the last guy she’d ever have sex with. The guy she woke up to in the morning. The father of their two little perfect kids. They would have been the perfect couple, in the perfect house living a Leave It to Beaver life. Nothing wrong with that, except for the little detail of Abigail having to be perfect.
Drew saw perfection and did his damnedest to sully it up, which is why she gave his retreating back a side eye. He hadn’t come to her rescue out of kindness. No, Drew would ride up on a white stallion sans saddle just so he could make a crude joke about going bareback.
“He’ll be back. I’m sure of it,” Abigail muttered.
“Who is he anyway?” Emma stretched out her legs, slipping her feet out of the heels.
“You don’t remember her complaining about him all the time?” Sasha flicked a springy, red curl away from her fair and crossed her legs. She looked pliant and siren-like without attempting to. At a glance, no one would guess she held a position as an art professor at the local university and that in her spare time she had an obsession with painting.
If Abigail didn’t love the woman, she could hate Sasha a little. “I didn’t complain about him that much.”
“He’s a man-whoring lush. Direct quote.” Sasha tilted her head, eyes squinted at him. “He doesn’t look like a lush.”
“Trust me, he has a flask on his person.” Abigail frowned at the band in front. They were playing the greatest love ballads in a soft melody. The music echoed off the high cathedral ceilings. Didn’t stop people on the groom’s side from doing a double take at her in the back.
“Explain then, the slithering all over him.” Emma snorted when Abigail lightly punched her in the shoulder.
“I was promising retribution,” Abigail explained.
“With your tongue in his ear,” Sasha added.
“Tobias is such a bad influence on both of you.” Abigail slouched on the pew and hoped to change the focus of the conversation. Drew disappeared into a room and good riddance. “Considering the amount of conversations going on behind hands, I’d say people are surprised to see me here.”
“This is why ex-girlfriends don’t come to these things.” Emma leaned to the side. “Speaking of the devil…”
The same door Drew had gone into opened, and Greg stepped out. Handsome wasn’t a fair description. He had the kind of looks that made women stop mid-step, especially when he smiled. Like he was doing now, head turned in a side profile. Regret filled her mouth like bile.
“Huh,” she murmured. “This was a bad idea.”
Out
side of Drew, two other men wore duck-tailed suits and filed out of the back room.
“How does that make you feel?” Sasha tried to joke, but it fell flat given the mood.
Abigail turned her gaze to the sign showing the church’s statistics, but that didn’t help because she started to wonder if Bride-to-be was a member. If Greg had finally found what he’d been searching for in religion and started to go himself.
There was no faux calm left in her voice. “It sucks, because even though I know in my gut he isn’t the one, my head says he should have been. There’s nothing wrong with him.”
“He didn’t lie. Didn’t cheat,” Emma added into the hat.
Sasha pursed her lips. “He treated you like a queen.”
The ache in Abigail’s chest started again. “He loved me.”
“You loved him back.” Emma squeezed her hand.
“And still something was missing. If only I knew what the heck it was. That’s why I’m here. I want to know what it is.” She squeezed Emma’s hand back. “I see it with you and Tobias, but for the life of me I can’t put my finger on it.”
“You crashed his wedding,” Sasha said. “It might be safe to say the answer to the question is making you crazy.”
This time Abigail could laugh. Heads turned at the sudden sound from the back pew, and then it was only Greg’s gaze that mattered. Surprise came first, but it was the genuine happiness that tied her stomach into knots. Nadine stood at the same time Greg made his way down the aisle. His mother caught him by the third pew. Greg bent down to her ear. The older woman nodded but got in one last good I-will-bury-you-where-no-one-will-find-you glare at Abigail and sat down.
He slid onto the pew in front of them, facing her completely, smiling the smile that had made her wish for the missing it factor. The one that made Abigail wish her heart skipped because oh, my God he was smiling at her like that. Her heart only warmed because he looked so happy.
“You came,” he said simply, his voice husky and familiar. “You brought the gang as I hoped.” He nodded to Sasha and Emma. The smile went lopsided with good ol’ boy charm. “Wearing black and broken hearts. Good friends as usual.”