Still, he’d been worried enough to show it to his brother that evening. But Asher was right—it couldn’t be real.
“I wish I were kidding,” Kevin said, sounding annoyed. “But unfortunately this is no joke.”
Ben scoffed, though his heart was a jackhammer in his chest. He couldn’t exactly claim to remember New Year’s Eve in Las Vegas with several of his teammates well enough to say a hundred percent that this marriage certificate was just a really good fake. But…“Quit messing around, man. There is no way that thing is real. I would have had to have been unconscious or drugged to get married.” Full stop.
“Well, you look conscious in the video from the chapel.”
“What video?” The cool, early-spring mountain air made him shiver as he stepped through the revolving doors and he raised the collar of his leather jacket higher around his neck.
“The one I just received from the owners of Happy Ever After.”
His gut tightened. There was footage of him in a wedding chapel in Vegas?
“And unfortunately, if you were drugged, the evidence would be out of your system by now, so we will be submitting a drunk and stupid case,” Kevin said.
“What case?” If the guy was messing with him, he could stop anytime. This shit was not funny.
“Your divorce case.”
Crossing the airport parking lot, he climbed in behind the wheel of his Hummer, slamming the door. “I have no idea what you’re talking about. I’m not married.” The guy obviously couldn’t admit to a prank fail.
“According to a Ms. Kristina Sullivan and the Happy Ever After Chapel in Las Vegas, you are. Now, shut up and listen.”
He sat confused and annoyed as Kevin took him through step by step, making sure he was aware of the predicament they found themselves in. For four months, this Ms. Kristina Sullivan had remained quiet, and now after the ninety-day annulment period, she’d resurfaced to ruin his life, claiming she wanted a relationship with her “husband.” Kevin had immediately brought it in front of a judge, but the woman had lawyered up, turning what could have been a minor inconvenience to a full-fledged shit-storm.
“This is bullshit. I don’t even know this woman.”
“Since when has that ever mattered to you?” Kevin asked.
Ben ran a hand through his hair. It was true that he liked the company of women. His reputation was one he couldn’t dispute, but married? Hell no. Right? Damn, he wished he could remember that night clearly enough…or at all…to be sure.
“Ben—this is not going to just go away quietly or quickly,” Kevin said when he was silent.
He sighed. “Fine. What do we do now?”
“We’ll file the required papers to start the divorce process and just pray that this Kristina Sullivan chick doesn’t contest them. In the meantime, her lawyer is requesting a face-to-face.”
Fantastic. He wouldn’t have been able to pick out his new “wife”—he cringed at the thought of the word—from a police lineup if his life depended on it, and now he would have to sit across from her and ask that she be reasonable enough to let him out of this shit-show without too much headache? He had his doubts this meeting would go smoothly. “When’s the meeting?” he asked, stabbing the button to start the vehicle. He didn’t have time for this. In four days, he planned to lead his team to a four-game, shut-out victory in the third round of the playoffs. He couldn’t afford stupid distractions like this.
This Ms. Sullivan better prepare herself for a battle, because he was pissed. He didn’t know what kind of game she was playing, but he wanted nothing to do with it.
“Tomorrow morning at eleven,” Kevin said. “I’ll email you the address to the law office.”
“We’re meeting at her lawyer’s office? Isn’t that already setting a precedent, giving them the upper hand?” Home ice was where his team felt at ease, comfortable, more confident. The opposition always held an advantage when they met on their ice.
“This isn’t hockey. It’s a boardroom. Trust me, I can do my job anywhere.”
“I hope so.” Because if not, it was game over before it even began.
“Hang in there. Keep breathing, and we will figure this out,” his lawyer said through the speaker phone on the dash.
Where was that note of optimism two minutes ago when the man was explaining in fine detail just how bad of a shit-storm Ben’s life was about to become? “Can we figure it out quickly? Like before the next playoff round?”
“I can’t work miracles, Ben. Talk to you tomorrow.”
Disconnecting the call, he swore under his breath. So much for it being a joke. This was the last complication he needed right now. But one thing was for certain, there was no way he would let a little thing like marrying a woman he didn’t know in a ceremony he couldn’t remember prevent him from hoisting the Stanley Cup that season.
No way in hell.
All Becky wants this holiday season is to get through the month of December with her sanity intact. Not helping? Her ex-boyfriend’s return to
Glenwood Falls…
See the next page for an excerpt from Maybe This Kiss!
Need some help?”
The unexpected sound of a deep male voice made Becky jump and lose her balance once again on the wet floor. Two hands gripped her shoulders to steady her, and she immediately wished he had let her fall. Feeling her cheeks on fire, she turned to face Neil.
His profile picture did not fully capture the hotness standing in front of her. Time had been far too good to him. The young, boyish face had been replaced by a rugged handsomeness that would turn more than one head in the small town, and she immediately felt a pang of irrational jealousy. His solid, square jaw with just the right amount of stubble had always been her weakness, and his dark brown eyes held a look of uncertainty mixed with a friendly familiarity as though no time at all had passed since she’d last gazed into them.
Becky folded her arms across her body, putting up a physical barrier to match the internal one that had immediately sprung up around her heart at the unexpected feelings spurred by the sight of her ex. “What are you doing here? How’d you get in?” Small town or not, she never left her door unlocked. After having a police officer for a husband, she’d known not to adopt a false sense of security.
“Your daughter let me in.” He surveyed the mess of the laundry room. “Washing machine problems?” he asked, removing his jacket to reveal a tight, black T-shirt haphazardly tucked into one side of a hip-hugging pair of jeans.
“Oh no…it’s no…” She clamped her lips together. She couldn’t even remember the question. What was it about his big, muscular arms that turned her brain to complete mush?
Maybe the fact that she still remembered what it felt like to be wrapped up in them?
“Let me look,” Neil said, moving her away by her shoulders and stepping carefully into the water on the floor. It sloshed under his boots and soaked the frayed hem of his faded jeans.
Riding boots. He’d always talked about owning a motorcycle. An adrenaline junkie from an early age, he’d owned his first dirt bike at fourteen and the sight of him on it had done crazy things to her teenage hormones. She remembered sneaking out after curfew to ride on the back of it, holding on tight to him as they sped along the empty dirt roads at night, stopping to make out near the riverbank…“That’s not necessary. I got it under control.”
He ignored her. Opening the lid, he looked inside, then reached into the water, up to his biceps. Sexy, toned, still-tanned-from-the-Miami-sun biceps.
“Really, I’m sure you have places to be. I’ll call someone if it’s something I can’t fix on my own.” Since ending his pursuit of a hockey career, Jackson flipped houses for a living and was quite the handyman. He was her go-to for these kind of things.
“It’s okay. I’m here anyway,” Neil said, not sounding all too pleased about it.
Well neither was she. She certainly hadn’t been expecting a visit from the hottest man to ever leave her weak in the knees
. And she definitely would not have invited him in and allowed him to see her messy laundry room. But here he was. Standing in a puddle of water, his arm disappearing in her washing machine, looking like a sexy gift from handyman heaven.
And she was wearing Star Wars pajama pants and a holiday-themed sweatshirt featuring Grumpy Cat that said DASHING THROUGH THE SNOW…GET THE F*CK OUT OF MY WAY.
Not exactly the way one fantasizes about running into an ex.
She was going to have to have the “don’t open the door to strangers” talk with Taylor again.
“I think I found the problem,” he said, pulling a thin piece of black, lacy fabric from the machine. “These were wrapped around the agitator.” He opened the thong, stretching the thin waistband between his hands. “Nice.”
Her mortification obviously knew no bounds. She yanked them out of his hands and tucked the wet fabric under her arm. She’d worn them under duress earlier that week when she’d had nothing else clean. They were horrible. The lace, the string between her ass cheeks…She shuddered at the memory of how they’d ridden up past her jeans when she’d bent over at the grocery store to pick up an apple that had rolled off the fruit display table, and she’d caught the fifteen-year-old stock boy, Al, staring.
She should have burned them instead of washing them because she would never wear them again. “Thank you for discovering the problem,” she said through clenched teeth. “Even though I said I had it under control.”
He ignored her comment. “Why don’t you plug it back in and see if that fixes things?”
Well, another thong wouldn’t be caught in there, if that’s what he was hoping. A memory of the lingerie she used to wear for him flashed in her mind—matching bra and panty sets, one-piece teddies…The look in his eyes seeing her in those things had made her feel like the sexiest woman in the world. And the way he’d slowly remove the garments from her body had sparked a passion, an intensity, an undeniable need…
Her eyes met his now and she could see her own thoughts reflected in his expression. He glanced away quickly, but it was too late—she knew that look well. She wasn’t the only one struggling with the past.
She plugged in the machine and it hummed as it resumed its cycle as though nothing had happened. As if the ground beneath her feet hadn’t just trembled.
“Great,” Neil said. “Just FYI—You’re supposed to put those things in a garment washing bag.”
“Suddenly a connoisseur of women’s delicates?” Damn, that sounded jealous even to her ears.
“Twelve years is enough time for anyone to change.”
Was it? Then why did things feel so much the same when she looked at him? Too much time had passed, too much life had happened for both of them—she couldn’t claim to know the man he was now. Yet, her heart insisted it did.
Before she could say anything, his hands were on her face. Her eyes widened at the feel of the rough palms against her skin. She opened her mouth to speak, but his lips pressed against hers before she could process what was happening.
What was he doing? What was she doing? That was the better question as her arms circled his neck. And how did the sensation of his mouth on hers feel so damn familiar after all these years?
Shockingly, the anticipated urge to pull away didn’t appear. Instead, she was more conscious of him than she had ever been of anything in her life. Caught in the moment, her sensitivity to every aspect of him was magnified—the glimpse of chocolate brown beneath his half-closed lids, the light stubble across his jaw, the faint trace of a scar above his right eyebrow that hadn’t been there years before. His lips were soft, yet demanding, as though searching for answers, and she willingly opened herself up to anything he might find.
When he pulled away a moment later and his lips brushed across hers, she reached for him instead of letting go. All traces of common sense had vanished as the sensations took over.
He hesitated briefly before connecting their mouths again, his hands tangling in her hair. Pressing her hands to his chest, she felt the contours of his muscles, hard and smooth, through the material of his T-shirt, and her body tingled with a longing she hadn’t felt in four years, two months, and ten days. Or maybe it was longer.
The thought caused her to step back.
He moved away quickly, his hands falling away from her.
“Damn. That was awful,” he muttered, running a hand over his face and chin.
“Wow.” First, he kissed her out of nowhere—a mind-blowing, knee-weakening kiss that had stirred long repressed emotions and desires—and then he insulted her?
“Not the kiss itself…just the kiss. I should get out of here.” He turned to leave. “Sorry about that.” Without waiting for a response, he left the room and headed toward the front door.
She caught up to him as he was stepping outside, and she shivered as the early December mountain breeze blew her light brown, shoulder-length hair across her face. She tried to tuck it behind her ears, but her wispy bangs flew right back into her eyes. Unfortunately, they didn’t block the sexiest view on the planet—Neil Healy walking away toward his motorcycle.
How much longer could he get away with driving that thing anyway? Come on snow!
As he reached for his helmet, he paused. “About what just happened…”
She shook her head. “We really don’t have to talk about it.” In fact, she’d be willing to never talk about it. Her flushed expression was already saying far too much.
“Okay.” He went to put on the helmet, but stopped again.
Oh God, just drive away. For some reason, she was unable to close the door and go inside.
“But I want you to know I didn’t mean to insult you by saying the kiss was terrible.”
Awful had been his exact wording. “It’s fine, really.” He looked ready to try to explain again, so she continued before he could. “I should get back to cleaning up.”
Neil nodded slowly. “He’s a lucky guy,” he said, a hint of jealousy evident in his voice.
She blinked. “Excuse me?”
“Whoever that thong was for. He’s a lucky guy,” he said, putting on his helmet and revving the bike.
She wondered what he’d think if he knew this “lucky guy” was fifteen-year-old Al at the grocery store and that Neil’s unexpected, untimely kiss was the best action she’d actually gotten in years.
About the Author
Jennifer Snow lives in Edmonton, Alberta, with her husband and son. She writes sweet and sexy contemporary romance stories set everywhere from small towns to big cities. After stating in her high school yearbook bio that she wanted to be an author, she set off on the winding, twisting road to make her dream a reality. She is a member of RWA, the Writers’ Guild of Alberta, the Canadian Authors Association, and the Film and Visual Arts Association in Edmonton. She has published over ten novels and novellas with many more on the way.
You can learn more at:
JenniferSnowAuthor.com
Twitter @jennifersnow18
Facebook.com/JenniferSnowBooks
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Maybe This Time Page 27