Text copyright ©2016 by the Author.
This work was made possible by a special license through the Kindle Worlds publishing program and has not necessarily been reviewed by Erin Nicholas. All characters, scenes, events, plots and related elements appearing in the original Sapphire Falls remain the exclusive copyrighted and/or trademarked property of Erin Nicholas, or their affiliates or licensors.
For more information on Kindle Worlds: http://www.amazon.com/kindleworlds
Going Haywire
A Sapphire Falls Kindle World Novella
Rachelle Ayala
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Description
Giving up sugar right before Halloween. Brilliant.
Going on vacation with an ex. Not so bright.
Honey and her ex-husband, Max, travel to Sapphire Falls to give their two young children the perfect Halloween treat. Max wants Honey back, and he’s counting on the magic of Sapphire Falls to seduce her into a second chance.
Honey is leery of Max and his tricks, but when he woos her with a Halloween romance complete with bonfires, hayrides, parties, and paintball, Honey warms to the idea of a new beginning.
Unfortunately, there's something off about Max that Honey can't put her finger on. When their vacation goes haywire, Honey must decide whether the treat of true love is worth all the terrible tricks life can play.
List of Characters:
Original Erin Nicholas Characters: Adrianne Scott Riley, Mason Riley, Phoebe Sherwood Spencer, Joe Spencer, Travis Bennett, Lauren Davis Bennett, Tucker Bennett, Delaney Callan Bennett, Hope Daniels Bennett, Kate Leggot Spencer, Hailey Connor Bennett, Ed (Sheriff)
Rachelle Ayala Characters: Honey Myers, Max Wolff, Mattie Wolff (age 4), Sara Wolff (age 16 months), Troy Caine (Max’s friend), Candi Myers (Honey’s sister), Carl Wolff (Max’s father), Anne Wolff (Max’s mother), Max’s brothers and sisters, Don (Max’s business partner)
By special permission from PG Forte: Liz
Dedication
To Erin Nicholas for creating a wonderful world of characters and sharing them with us.
Praise for Going Haywire
Going Haywire is a wickedly fun and hauntingly heartfelt journey of giving love a second chance. – Amber McCallister
A very sweet Halloween filled with love, breakups, kids and hope in Sapphire Falls. – Angelica Berglund
Funny, warm and engaging story of second chance at love. – Cathy Zaramba
A sweet and sugary treat filled with twists that will leave no question as to why it’s trick or treat! – Corissa Palfrey
A great family addition to Sapphire Falls. – Jess Bates
LOVE is sweeter the second time around. – Jessica Cassidy
This story has awesome suspense just like you expect at Halloween. – Keli Morgan
Sometimes things are in the eye of the beholder. – Kris Woltzen
… full of surprises and true romance. – Maria Cantu
Love this heartwarming funny story about second chance love. – Reggaewoman
… a romance, a haunted house, scary hayrides among other Halloween stuff, what more could you ask for! – Mari Flores-Baca
Friends, family and things that go bump in the night. – Sherelle Ellis
It couldn’t be better. - Sophie Koufes
A rollercoaster of emotions. The proof that we all need second chances and someone that can understand our efforts. – Vera Neves
Who says you can't fall in love with the aid of mummies, spiders, ghouls, monsters, witches and vampires? – Yomari Suarez-Rivera
An awesome read from an amazing writer! – Megan Wilkins
… such a loving and wonderful story which people can relate to in real life. – Dianne Kenes
A good Halloween story with a little romance. – Patricia Rose
The magic of Sapphire Falls oozes into Max and Honey's life, even at Halloween! – Christine Krueger
Table of Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Epilogue
Going Toe to Mistletoe Excerpt – Chapter One
COME TO SAPPHIRE FALLS!
Also by Rachelle Ayala
Chapter One
Honey Myers had never been known for making good decisions.
If she had, she wouldn’t have:
1. married and divorced Max Wolff
2. agreed to go to Sapphire Falls with her ex-husband
and
3. decided to give up sugar right before Halloween.
So here she was, waiting at the taxi stand at a tiny airport in the middle of Nebraska with her son, Mattie, age four, and baby daughter Sara, barely sixteen months.
Problem? The last taxi had left the stand, the other passengers were busy piling into assorted pickup trucks, jeeps, and large jalopy sedans.
“Mommy? I’m hungry,” Mattie whined.
Sara babbled, chewing on her fingers and drooling, clearly overdue for a feeding.
“Where are we?” Mattie’s voice grew more high-pitched. “Why isn’t Daddy here?”
Good question.
When ex-Max, that was her nickname for him, had suggested a fun, family-filled vacation to the annual Sapphire Falls Halloween festival, Honey had been resistant. After all, ex-Max grew up in that small town and couldn’t escape it fast enough. He’d hated it and told her a million reasons why he would never, ever set foot in that boring one cow town till his dying day.
Clearly, he wasn’t dying, or one could hope. But as ex-husband’s went, ex-Max wasn’t too bad. He paid child support, he didn’t flaunt his dates around her, if any, and he even affirmed her decisions for Mattie’s preschool. He was also a good father during the few weekends he was around.
And not being around was his major failing.
Like now.
“I’m cold and I want a hotdog.” Mattie looked up at her with the pale blue eyes he inherited from his father. “Please?”
Sara squirmed in her stroller and her face scrunched, letting out an irritated cry for food.
Honey scrambled in her bag and handed both her children juice boxes, yes, full of sugar, but being abandoned by her ex-husband at a Podunk airport called for emergency rations.
She barely felt guilty as she fumbled with her cell phone for the Uber app to find a driver. They’d had a long flight and she had to get to the Rise & Shine Bed & Breakfast and find food or risk a double toddler meltdown.
“Ma’am, I can take you where you want to go,” a deep, booming male voice said, as a man jumped out of his extended cab pickup truck.
“Are you an Uber driver?” Honey narrowed her eyes at the broad-shouldered man who’d started picking up her luggage. As country boys went, this guy wasn’t bad at all. Square jaw, pale blue eyes, and dark brown hair made him quite the package. She could easily see him on a billboard selling tractors.
“Nope, this here’s Ford country.” He hefted her suitcase into the truck bed.
“Wait, I can’t go with you if you’re not from Uber.” Honey grew up in the big city, and she wasn’t about to become another statistic.
> “I’m hungry,” Mattie shared with the towering farm boy who wore bib overalls, a plaid flannel shirt and a brown corduroy jacket.
“Here, have a Tootsie pop.” The man dug two wrapped Tootsie pops from his pocket.
Honey held up her hand. “I’m afraid we can’t accept that or the ride. Please take my luggage from your truck.”
But did anyone pay attention to her? Her son took the candy and gave the man a high-five.
Her daughter squealed with delight and clapped her hands, and her suitcases were soon joined by her roller bag and Sara’s stroller.
“It’s getting dark,” the man said, helping her into the cab. “Max said I’d find you here. He’s already at the Rise & Shine waiting for you.”
Which was why he was the ex-husband and she was going to need a lot of chocolate to get her through this haunted Halloween weekend. Except she couldn’t have chocolate—at least the kind with sugar in it.
“I’m Troy Caine, Max’s best buddy growing up.” The man introduced himself after making sure both Sara and Mattie were strapped into their car seats.
If it hadn’t been for the kindness of strangers, Honey wouldn’t have even made it to the taxi stand with luggage, children, and all their paraphernalia. But then, this trip had been the first time Max was able to leave his investment banking job for four days straight, and he wanted the kids to enjoy a small town Halloween.
Honey, too, had always been curious about Max’s love-hate relationship with Sapphire Falls, so when he'd mentioned an all-expense paid trip to his hometown, she’d jumped at the chance—right after she’d bet her sister, Candi, that she could kick her sugar habit, cold turkey.
“Well, thanks for picking us up.” Honey remembered her manners. “How far is it to Sapphire Falls?”
“About thirty minutes.” Troy steered the pickup onto the interstate.
They drove by miles and miles of empty fields with grain silos sticking like sentinels every so often. The sky was a cloudy gray and the landscape was flat.
“Is there really a waterfall in Sapphire Falls?” Honey imagined a trickling spray of bright blue water.
“No actual waterfall, but we do have an awesome river.”
“That’s not the same thing. How can you get away with the name Falls in a town without an actual waterfall?”
Troy snickered and rubbed his nose. “That’s because it’s not water that’s falling at Sapphire Falls.”
“Come again?” Honey noticed the sign on the turn off for Sapphire Falls, population 1221. Someone had put a line through the 1221 and painted 1388.
“It’s people.” He slowed down as the road narrowed. “They come and fall in love, and they never leave.”
He ended that sentence with a wicked laugh.
Whatever retort Honey was about to huff was swallowed at the sight of the town square. Four tall Christmas-looking trees were festooned with a white web-like substance, while large, colorful spiders dangled from their branches. Most of them were sapphire blue, but bright pink, shiny purples, and electric green ones appeared scattered in the midst.
A white gazebo at the center of the square was draped with black cloth, and piles of pumpkins were scattered by bales of hay lined up to provide seating for an outdoor concert.
The little red barn in the corner looked more like a broken down crypt in a haunted cemetery, and gravestones marred the area surrounded by a broken down picket fence.
“Here we are,” Troy announced, parking the truck next to the creepy barn.
“We’re not staying there, are we?” Honey gaped at the furry wolf with red glowing eyes howling between the gravestones. Its jaws snapped and it rose on two legs and snarled, as if about to pounce.
Next to it was a zombie struggling to get out of a grave. A black cat hissed and arched its back, its eyes glowing green.
Honey glanced in the backseat and swallowed a breath of relief. Both Sara and Mattie were fast asleep.
“Nah, we’re just stopping by to pick up a pet for the kids,” Troy drawled as he hopped from the cab.
No way was Honey getting out now. The sun was setting, and the eerie glow of the sky beyond the buildings made the square feel spookier than ever.
Troy opened the passenger door and hooked her by the arm.
“Can we just get to the Rise & Shine?” Honey’s teeth chattered. She would have texted Max if she hadn’t been so upset that he’d sent this country yokel to the airport. The problem with having as much money as Max had was he hired everyone to do the little things a loving, caring husband and father would have done.
If he really couldn’t wait to see the kids, he would have been at the foot of the runway waiting for them.
“Trust me, you’ll want to see this.” Troy hefted her off the passenger seat and set her in front of the barn with the graveyard. A sign read, “Petting Zoo” and someone had added the words, “Pet or Die,” underneath it.
“I don’t think so.” She dug in her heels and glared at the man who was at least a foot taller than her and had her by a hundred fifty pounds. “I’m calling Max right now. How do I know you’re not some serial killer sent to kidnap me and the kids? Maybe Max isn’t even in town. Maybe he’s still at the airport waiting for us.”
“This is the first stop.” Troy remained firm and unyielding, blocking her way back. “Go into the barn and pick out a pet. I dare you, city girl.”
City girl? Was this an insult around these parts? And what happened to the supposed small town charm and friendliness?
“Tell me this is some kind of joke. I’m tired. Hungry. Got up at three this morning. Feet are sore. Need a shower and you want me to pick a pet?”
“Sounds about right.” Troy practically swallowed his words. “Go ahead. Do it for your little ones.”
She took a step forward as a couple with two boys strolled out of the haunted barn, laughing and comparing their stuffed monsters.
“Hi there,” the woman said, eyes twinkling. “You should see what all’s in there. Stuff you’d never find at a department store or anywhere online. Made right here by the Blue Brigade. All proceeds benefit a charity for fresh water in Africa.”
Honey looked over her shoulder to see if there was anyone else within hailing distance. Once she realize they were talking to her, she smiled and said, “Oh, hi.”
The man who held the two boys nodded by way of introduction. “I’m Mason Riley, wife Adrianne and my two sons. Welcome to Sapphire Falls.”
“Honey, uh, Myers. Kids are asleep in the truck, but nice to meet you.”
“Are you related to—” Mason paused, waiting for her to fill in the blanks.
“No one,” she stammered. “I’m with Max Wolff?”
“Ah, the Wolffs! Fine family. Live a few miles out past the river bend.” Mason tilted his head in the presumed direction of the Wolff family homestead. “Well, see you around.”
“So nice meeting you.” Adrianne waved. “Stop by the Scott’s Sweets booth sometime and have a toffee or chocolate turtle on me.”
“Uh, sure, thanks.” Honey wasn’t about to stop at any sweet shop, especially ones with toffee or chocolate turtles.
After the family sauntered down the path toward the gazebo, Honey breathed in and out, slow and steady, prepared to do her part in contributing to charity and giving her kids something to play with.
Nothing to be afraid of here. Everything was fake. Those were animatronics. Powered by electricity. See? The zombie kept moving up and struggling, but then slumped down again. The wolf snapped its jaws three times with every turn of his head. She could hear the whirring motors and see the wires threaded to the barn. So what if it was dark inside? There had to be instructions for leaving money and someone there to make sure no one stole all of the stuffed monsters.
Then why was she shaking at her knees as Troy pushed her up the path, past the picket fence made of bones? Oh gawd, no! Was that a chattering jaw half buried in the dirt?
She stepped through the door which c
reaked and into the dim light of the barn. It was dark and silent, but as her eyes adjusted, her pulse calmed and she explored the “pet store.”
The Blue Brigade, whoever they were, had created a spooky ensemble of homemade monsters—each one unique and colorful. Vampire bats wearing rainbow shirts, teddy bears with fangs, mummies wrapped with tie-dyed bandages, and black cats of all sizes and shapes. Various “price tags” of suggested donations were pasted below each item, and an antique steel milk canister where people could put their cash or checks stood near the exit.
She appeared to be the only person inside the barn, but the corners were dark, and someone dangerous could lurk behind the crates. She’d better grab something quick and leave her donation, except everything was so damn cute!
Honey wandered deeper into the small barn. If she was going to brave the dark, haunted petting zoo, she had to get something special for Mattie and Sara. Those kids deserved this vacation almost as much as she did. All their father did was shower money on them, but no amount of money could substitute for his presence or buy the kind of love that went into making these monsters.
As for her? She’d been relegated to nursemaid, servant, housekeeper, gardener, cook, and chauffeur soon after Mattie was born. She’d thought divorcing Max would mean more time—well, she did regain the time she used to spend on ironing his shirts and running to the dry cleaners, and she had stopped wasting her voice nagging him about paying attention to her and the kids, but … living in separate apartments had meant another set of bills to pay, accounts to square away, separate insurance policy, health care benefits coordination and still, no time for herself, much less for dating.
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