Tex Appeal

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Tex Appeal Page 3

by Kimberly Raye, Alison Kent


  Dayne watched Cheryl Anne load the enormous box of penises—or penii—into the back of her beat-up Mustang.

  A Mustang, of all things, instead of the economical, conservative Kia she’d always driven around town. She’d traded in the latter, just like she’d ditched her old clothes and cut her hair and exchanged her glasses for contact lenses.

  His gaze swept the clean line of her bare legs, from a pair of high-heeled red shoes to the hem of her ultra-short mini-skirt. The denim molded to her ass in the same way the cherry-red tank top clung to her breasts and he felt a stirring in his groin.

  When she’d first told him she wanted to call it quits because their relationship was “stale,” he’d figured she was just mad because he’d been putting in a lot of extra hours on a recent construction project. They hadn’t been having dinner as often, or going to the movies, or playing bingo.

  Truth be known, he wasn’t really a bingo kind of guy. Never had been, but he’d taken it up because of Cheryl Anne. Because he’d been eager for an activity that didn’t involve kissing and touching and losing himself in her hot, lush body.

  He’d been desperate not to screw things up with Cheryl the way his dad had screwed things up with his mom.

  Bingo was nice. Safe. Boring. The perfect activity for a guy determined to keep his mind off sex.

  He watched her shove the box into the backseat, toss in her suitcase and climb into the front seat. She gunned the engine and the V8 purred. A few years back, the sound would have been enough to give him a woody.

  Not anymore. Dayne was older now. Mature. Controlled.

  Stale.

  Christ, he hadn’t thought for five seconds that she’d been talking about sex.

  Aw, hell. Maybe five seconds. But then he’d let go of the crazy-ass notion. Doing the nasty ranked last on the list when it came to long-term relationship success. Real longevity depended on the little things—spending time together and talking and sharing and caring. He’d always thought Cheryl Anne knew that.

  Obviously not.

  She was now officially sex-crazed and Dayne was ancient history.

  Good riddance.

  That’s what he told himself as he turned and followed the decorator from room to room, jotting down notes while some of the newspaper people packed up Cheryl’s belongings to transfer to storage during the renovation.

  “This wall will have to go. And these cabinets. And all the appliances…”

  No sirree. Dayne sure as hell didn’t need a woman with her priorities so screwed up. Sex was not the be all and end all of the universe.

  “…I’m thinking we’ll do a waterbed in the bedroom. She’ll be rocking and rolling in no time.”

  An image pushed into his head and he saw the two of them “rocking and rolling,” the bed moving beneath them, enhancing the pleasure as she rode him harder and he pushed deeper and…

  Priorities, he reminded himself. It was better that they split now than later.

  Before they got married and had a couple of kids.

  While Dayne and his two younger brothers had turned out okay—the twins were now twenty-two and about to graduate from Texas A & M—they’d endured a hell of a lot of hurt in the process. Dayne wouldn’t do that to his own kids.

  Not no, but hell no.

  3

  A HALF HOUR later, Cheryl Anne found herself standing in the middle of room 24, the Skull Creek Inn equivalent of the presidential suite. Meaning, it had a king-size bed rather than a full and cable television. And—and this was the most important thing—a complete bathroom. While most of the rooms had a toilet and sink, none had an actual shower and tub.

  The Star was obviously sparing no expense.

  “If you want a wake-up call,” said the elderly woman who’d shown her to the room, “just call Eldin at the front desk and he’ll fix you up.”

  Winona Atkins was seventy-plus with pursed lips and thick bifocals. She wore beige orthopedic shoes, knee-high panty hose, a red-and-orange flower-print dress and a head full of pink sponge rollers. A ring of keys dangled from one hand, while her other clutched a TV Guide.

  “There’s maid service every day around noon time,” the old woman added, “but not after two on account of I never miss Dr. Phil or Oprah.”

  Cheryl glanced at her watch and instantly she knew why Winona looked so cranky.

  “The ice machine is in the lobby,” Winona snapped, “and there’s a vending machine right next to it. We also offer one of them there free cont’nental breakfasts at 7:00 a.m. But you have to get there right when the hour strikes if you want blueberry muffins. Those are Eldin’s favorite and he likes ’em pipin’ hot from the bakery. But if you like bran, then you’re good to go until 9:00 a.m., on account of Eldin don’t need no bran since he takes his daily dose of Metamucil.”

  Ugh. Way too much information. Cheryl forced a smile. “I’ll remember that.”

  “There’s no pool,” Winona went on. “No mini-bar. No room service. And the TVs are on a timer that automatically turns off at midnight. Eldin needs his sleep and the slightest bit of noise keeps him up at night.” The old woman peered over her bifocals and nailed Cheryl Anne with a stare. “And no funny business. This is a respectable place and we don’t cotton to you celebrity types waltzing in at all hours, shaking things up with your wild parties and crazy antics.”

  Cheryl Anne glanced over her shoulder. “Wait a second,” she eyed Winona. “Are you talking to me?”

  “I don’t see that there San Antonio Star making a fuss over anyone else. Smacks of celebrity to me.”

  But it wasn’t the celebrity comment that had sent a burst of happy through Cheryl. “You really think I’m going to throw a wild party or do something crazy?”

  “Never know with you people. I read the Texas Tattler like ever’body else. I know what sort of debauchery goes on and I can tell you—” she wagged a crooked finger “—I ain’t puttin’ up with it here.” Winona gave the SEXTOYS.COM box a pointed stare. “I saw the flyers you were passing out earlier.” She shook her head and made a tsk, tsk sound. “It’s always the quiet ones you got to worry about. I can only imagine what your poor mother must be going through.”

  “Actually, she’s not the least bit upset.” Only because she was so fixated on Dillon who was sending her to an early grave with his outrageous antics—a motorcycle!—that she had only a few Lord, help me’s left over for Cheryl Anne.

  Of course, she hadn’t heard the round of gossip sure to result from her daughter’s first official sex class.

  Cheryl Anne ignored a niggle of anxiety and focused on the fact that Winona aka the CEO of blabbermouths thought she was right up there with Britney Spears and Paris Hilton. A smile curved her lips.

  Winona’s disapproving frown deepened. “A girl like you ought to be living at home with her parents. That’s the way things were in my day. You lived at home until Mr. Right came along and then you lived with him.”

  “But I’m twenty-eight years old. It’s time I started living my own life.”

  “Why, my Eldin still lives at home, smack dab in the same room he grew up in, and he’s a good fourteen years older than you, and he’s living his own life just fine.”

  “Refresh my memory, Ms. Atkins, but Eldin’s never been married, has he?”

  Winona bristled. “He’s picky is all.”

  “And he doesn’t have any children, does he?”

  “He’s only forty-two. There’s plenty of time for that.”

  “And he doesn’t have a girlfriend either?”

  “Not at the moment.”

  “A boyfriend?”

  Winona seemed to think before her mouth drew into a tight line. “Not that it’s any of your business, but he’s busy with the Inn. My daughter left him in charge of this place—with my supervision, of course—and he takes his responsibilities very seriously.”

  Translation: Eldin’s parents had retired to Port Aransas and left him saddled with Winona and the family business.


  “Eldin doesn’t have time to date,” Winona went on. “It’s a choice. It certainly has nothing to do with the fact that he can’t date on account of he’s still living at home and no self-respecting woman would waste her time on a man who lives with his grammy.” She pointed a bony finger at Cheryl Anne. “You just remember what I said and make sure you behave yourself. No loud music. No dancing around naked. And no men.”

  “What about women?”

  Her eyes narrowed behind the bifocals. “Don’t even think it—”

  “It’s not what you think.” She turned and retrieved a pamphlet from her laptop bag. “It’s my new job. I had my first class scheduled tonight at my place, but since that’s off limits, I was hoping I might could do it here.” It wasn’t ideal, but it would be much better than cancelling. Particularly since she’d already spent the deposits to buy her supplies. She handed the colored flyer to Winona. “It’s very educational.”

  “Humph,” the old woman snorted. She pursed her lips as her gaze scanned the advertisement. “Looks awful scandalous to me.”

  “It’s actually very educational and healthy. It’s all about women taking the initiative and reviving their love lives.”

  “Looks like a bunch of hanky-panky stuff to me.”

  “Hanky-panky is a vital part of any relationship. But there’s also a class that deals with how to reconnect emotionally with your spouse. I talk about finding common hobbies and taking walks in the park—that sort of thing.”

  Winona studied the information a few more seconds. “You’re not going to play loud music, are you?”

  “No, ma’am.”

  “Or dance around naked?”

  “Actually, that is part of the course curriculum—the lesson entitled ‘Pole Dancing to Passion’—but it’s not on tonight’s agenda.”

  “What about men?”

  “It’s female only.”

  “Humph.” The old woman studied the information and color fused her cheeks. A light suddenly glimmered in her watery blue gaze. “I guess there’d be nothing wrong with it so long as you have everybody out of here by nine o’clock,” she finally said. She folded the brochure and stuffed it into her pocket. “I’ll have to sit in myself just to make sure there’s no funny business going on. Not that I want to, mind you. I’m a good Christian woman and I certainly don’t approve of the way you youngsters treat the sacred union between a man and woman like it’s some new card game that that you gotta learn. Why, in my day there were only two things a woman needed to know before she did the deed. One, count to fifty and that’ll pass the time quick. And two, act like you like it, which was hard to do when you barely made it past ten on the counting part.”

  She did not want to hear this. “Um, aren’t you missing Dr. Phil?”

  “It’s a rerun.” Winona waved a hand. “Not that my Harold, God rest his soul, was quick on the trigger. He was just anxious, was all. I was a handful back in the day.” She snorted and glanced at the brochure again. “I’ll be sitting in free of charge, of course. On account of I’m serving as a chaperone. It’s not like I need to learn anything.”

  “Definitely.”

  “I guess I’d better light a fire under Eldin and send him to fetch the card table and some chairs. What about snacks? You got snacks? Because all that talk about hanky-panky is sure to make everyone hungry.”

  “I had snacks, but I got booted out of my place so fast that I barely had time to pack a bag, much less grab anything.” She glanced around for a clock. “Maybe I can still make it to the Piggly Wiggly.”

  “They closed ages ago.” Winona seemed to think. “It makes no nevermind. I’ve got Cheez Whiz and crackers in the office. I think I’ve even got a summer sausage left over from the Christmas party. It ain’t Emeril, but it’ll do in a pinch.” She winked and disappeared, her TV Guide all but forgotten.

  Cheryl Anne walked over to the small table with her computer bag and pulled out her laptop. She spent the next half hour calling students—all of whom already knew about the sensual home makeover—and giving them the new location.

  “…at the Skull Creek Inn at seven o’clock.”

  “Will do,” Geneva Peterson said. “Room 24, right?”

  “How did you—” The words stumbled to a halt. Winona. Blabbermouths. Duh.

  “Skull Creek Inn,” Tara Gilbert said the moment Cheryl dialed the next number. “Tonight. Seven o’clock. And congratulations on the makeover.” Winona strikes again.

  And again.

  And again.

  By the time she finished the list, Eldin had delivered a card table and three stacks of folding chairs. Cheryl spent the next half hour setting up the room and unpacking her Pleasure Chest.

  Her hands stalled when she turned to the SEXTOYS.COM box and her thoughts went to Dayne. Her nipples pebbled and she felt the sudden wetness between her legs.

  Over, she reminded herself.

  No more blah. It was all about revving things up.

  The notion stirred a very vivid memory of a hormone-driven teen desperate to do something wild and crazy for once in her life. She’d peeled off her clothes, gone skinny-dipping for the first time and lost her virginity, all in the same night. With Dayne. And it had been phenomenal.

  Then.

  But things had changed.

  He’d changed.

  Back then, Dayne Branson had been everything she hadn’t been—popular, attractive, sexy. He’d been the baddest, sexiest, most sought-after boy in town. She’d fallen for him the first time she’d seen him climb into the rodeo arena. Not that she’d actually seen him rope a calf that night. Her mother and father had been annoyed with all the dust and so they’d left early. But she’d imagined his strong hands wrestling with the calf, his powerful arms bulging as he slipped the rope around the animal’s legs. His smile of triumph as he raised a hand in the air and took first place.

  And on the night of her eighteenth birthday, she’d snuck out of her room and breathed life into her fantasy.

  She’d watched him take first place in the county rodeo finals, and then she’d invited him out to the creek, where she peeled off her clothes. They’d gone skinny-dipping—she’d waded out into the water while he’d done a running leap off the dock with an overhanging rope. She’d meant to use the rope, too, but at the last minute she’d chickened out. Old habits were hard to break, after all, and she’d been playing it safe far too long to test fate that much. But then he’d swam over and she’d taken a chance and kissed him.

  He’d taken the lead then, and what had followed had been even better than any fantasy. She could still feel the wild pump of her heart, her pulse racing and her lungs sucking for oxygen. A first that still lived and breathed in her mind. A feeling that had haunted her every night since.

  While the sex in the years that had followed had been pretty fantastic, it had never come close to that one night. All night.

  They’d grown up and while her life hadn’t changed—she’d continued on as boring Cheryl Anne—his had. His mother had left and his father had been devastated, and so Dayne had stopped calf-roping altogether to help with the family’s construction business. Over the years, he’d become the driving force behind Branson Construction, which meant he worked practically 24/7. No more hanging out with his friends. Or kicking up dust at the local honky-tonk. He’d taken on a world of responsibility and so he’d stopped skinny-dipping and swinging from ropes and started playing it safe.

  He was now a member of the Chamber of Commerce, a sponsor for the local Little League team, and he’d been voted Craftsman of the Year by the Skull Creek High School woodshop class. He made it a point to be in bed by ten and he’d even switched to decaf.

  Not that she had anything against decaf. It’s just that she’d spent her entire life following the rules and worrying about any-and everything. She wanted to cut loose. To drink the occasional cup of coffee without angst or guilt. To swing from the proverbial rope without worrying about breaking her neck.

  She
wanted to feel alive. To live.

  She forced aside Dayne’s image and the box, drew a deep breath and called the local kennel to check on Taz.

  4

  “SO WHAT do you think?”

  Dayne stared at the two DVDs that his father sat on his desk later that afternoon.

  “I think you’ve been sniffing too much floor sealer. I asked for hardwood floor samples, not porn movies.”

  “It’s not porn.” Hal Branson grinned. “It’s erotica. I’m meeting Abigail Gilmore at the Shade Tree for drinks and I can’t decide which one to bring. Captive Nights or Miss Pem-burton and the Outlaw?”

  “What about the floor samples?”

  “I seriously doubt she’ll want to jump me over a piece of cedar.”

  “No, but she might want to whack you over the head. Whatever happened to flowers and candy for a first date?”

  “I’ve got chocolate body paint out in the truck.” Hal wiggled his eyebrows. “Margene likes Captive Nights. She said she’s always had this fantasy about being abducted and held against her will.”

  Dayne’s gaze pushed through the open doorway to glimpse the sixty-something redhead who stood in front of the file cabinet. She wore cat’s-eye glasses that dangled from a chain around her neck, hot-pink lipstick and a pink camouflage jumpsuit and high heels. “That’s more information than I need. What about the floors?”

  “We’re going with a natural cedar. At least that’s what Randy told me when I took them by the job site. I’ve already ordered enough to do the required rooms. It’ll be here first thing tomorrow. So which DVD do you think she’ll like? I can’t show up empty-handed. I’m a man on a mission.”

  A man hellbent on sex.

  Dayne’s memory stirred and he remembered the last time he’d seen his mother. He’d been nineteen and still living at home. He’d come home late, as usual, to find his parents having another one of their fights. He hadn’t thought much about it. They’d been fighting for years since Hal Branson had never been particularly good at keeping a job and providing for his family. He’d tried, but he’d simply never been the workhorse that Lorene Branson had wanted him to be. He’d been content with barely squeaking by and she’d wanted more for her three sons. And so they’d argued constantly. And then they’d made up. Both were noisy as hell—from the initial yelling to the make-up moaning—and Dayne usually bunked out in the barn until it was all over.

 

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