Love, Laughter, and Happily Ever Afters Collection (Eight Fun, Romantic Novels by Eight Bestselling Authors)
Page 22
She blinked as if the question, and the reason, had never occurred to her. Her shoulder lifted and fell in a no-nonsense shrug as she said simply, âI didnât think anyone would come.â
When she smothered a pained wince as she bent down to get her keys from her now tattered bag on the ground, he reached for her again, not wanting her to go with an intensity that stunned him.
âTurn around.â He tried gentling his voice. âLet me check out your legs.â
Smooth, Sullivan. Real smooth.
At least that made her stop backing away from him though. Of course now she was just staring at him like he was nuts. âLet me check out your injuries,â he amended. âI have a first-aid kit in my car.â
âOh. Thatâs okay. So do I.â She was back to cutting quickly across the lawn. Three more stealthy steps back. âI have a whole survival kit in there, in fact,â she continued on a cute ramble, âcomplete with food for a week, extra changes of clothes, and a small generator. I even have a SAM splint and one of those foldable pocket walking canes in case I break a leg or something.â
Well that wasâ¦unexpected. Brian wasnât quite sure how to respond to that. âAre you some sort of apocalypse radical or just on the lam from the authorities?â
Yeahâ¦he shouldâve just kept his mouth shut. The woman rattled him, infected him with that talking-out-of-his-ass virus he hadnât had since he was a teen.
For some reason, however, that especially asinine comment succeeded in making her stop retreating. And laugh.
That laugh.
It was like hearing a Christmas carol on the hottest day of summer.
âI almost forgot how much I like you, Brian.â
Likewise.
âListen, thanks again for saving me, but I really do have to run. Iâll ask Connor for your number and take you out for coffee sometime. Or pie!â She grinned. âPie is better as a thank-you.â
Then she turned and ran off to the parking lot, leaving Brian to stand there and simply stare at her long ponytail windmilling around with every buoyant step she took.
The fact that she stopped suddenly and spun around at the edge of the lot to give him a final smiling wave had him completely off-kilter. She was freakinâ adorable as hell.
And absolutely, positively the last woman on earth he pictured himself being this drawn in by.
CHAPTER TWO
BRIAN GRABBED a bag of tortilla chips from the pantry and checked Connorâs fridge for some fresh guacamole. He knew Abby had a big presentation this past week with the intertribal education board members on her most recent research recommendations so he knew she had to have made a vat of guac to munch on while sheâd prepared.
Jackpot. He swiped the familiar glass tupperware off the top shelf and dug in.
âDonât you have food at your own house?â complained Connor as he entered the kitchen.
âNot since you went and married my best friend,â complained Brian right back. He sighed in mock melancholy. âAbbyâs guac used to be in my fridge every week. Not to mention the homemade cookies and all these great sandwiches sheâd make for me to take for lunch.â At the fond reminders, his next sigh was less feigned. And utterly silent. While he was thrilled to have Abby as a sister-in-law now, he missed how close they used to be.
Not that he ever mentioned that fact to Connor or Abby. Even though he really was truly over his non-platonic feelings for her, any and all conversations on the topic generally ended up being pretty awkward for all involved, so he avoided it altogether.
âNice of you to say hi before you raided my kitchen by the way.â Connor checked the time. âTell me you havenât been here since school let out.â
Brian saluted him with a loaded chip as a non-apologetic hello. âI just got here. Todayâs faculty meeting was short. And since itâs my turn to take Skylar and Becky out for Friday night dinner, Iâm just killing time until theyâre done with musical theatre club rehearsals.â He looked around for the remote. Connor had a way better satellite sports channel package than he did. âI didnât even know you were home. Whereâs your car?â
âAbby took the Lexus to work since her car is in the shop again. I came home to get my tux and Abbyâs dress for tonight. Weâve got another fundraising benefit to go to.â
âAnd youâre not concocting some excuse to get out of it?â Weird. Connor usually hated going to those functions.
âThis isnât for work. Itâs for one of the charities Tessa and I have been helping out.â
At the mere mention of Tessaâs name, Brianâs hunt for the remote was instantly forgotten. Carefully keeping his voice neutral, he launched a very casual interrogation. âTessaâ¦thatâs your caterer friend, right? The one with the pink-striped hair? Whatâs the deal with her? Whyâd you end up picking a cook to help you with all your pro bono grant write-ups?â
âBecause sheâs damn good at it. Besides, the catering thing is just a part-time gig for Tessa and Lana. Lana started the catering company and asked Tessa to partner in because of all her dessert-making experience. Once upon a time, Tessa worked at a bakery for maybe five years, I think. But just like Lana, Tessa also has a day job. Sheâs the chief editor of the two sister magazines, AZ Hotspots and AZ Potluck.â
Brian was impressed. He knew of both those local magazines; the seasonal travel magazine was his standard reading material of choice in every doctorâs waiting room heâs sat in for the past few years, and he knew for a fact that the online cooking magazine was a huge hit with his colleagues at school. This Tessa was just full of surprises.
Feeling Connor quietly studying him, Brian looked up. âWhat?â
âYouâre into her, arenât you?â
âWho? The odd, opinionated woman who thought it was a good idea to have my daughter hack away at some fruits with a gigantic cooking knife at your wedding reception as a means to get her over her fear of knives? Fully aware that Iâd bust a nut if I found out about it?â
Connor arched a knowing eyebrow.
Brian grunted and turned to grab a soda from the fridge. âYeah. A little bit.â
*
HE WAS STILL THINKING about that âlittle bitâ the next day on his Saturday morning run. With Beth having been his high school sweetheart, and Abby being the only other woman heâd ever had any feelings for, Brian had a sorely limited dating experience database to draw on to analyze the matter.
âMaybe Connor had the right idea all along,â he muttered to himself as he hit the two mile mark and turned around to head back. Heâd dogged Connor constantly about being a man whore with his one-month fling rule, but look how it had ended up. He got the girl, and heâd never lacked for female company all the way up until then.
Visions of Tessa began swimming around in his head thenâimages of that stubborn frown of hers that seemed to come as a combo pack with her dancing, dark-as-night eyes. It went hand in hand with the inexplicably cute way she seemed to just say exactly what she was thinking. And that killer smile.
No.
A girl like that wouldnât be into casual flings. For all he knew, she already had someone she went home to every night.
Hitting the last mile mark, he pounded down harder on the pavement at a near sprint back to his house. Mostly to stamp out the feelings of jealousy crawling up his spine.
He had to stop thinking about the woman.
Yanking the iPod velcro strap off his bicep as he toed his sneakers off, he called out to see if Skylar was awake yet.
Silence.
Not surprising. The kid had spent most of the night on the phone with her BFF-since-daycare. And this was after heâd taken the girls out for pizza and ice cream. Seriously, the two were inseparable all week in school as well as
every weekend at each otherâs homes on alternating sleepoversâhow on earth they still had things left to talk about on the phone was beyond him.
He grabbed a quick shower and set out with grand plans for cooking up a big breakfast instead of his usual cereal and sliced fruit specialty. He rocked that culinary masterpiece something fierce. Lately, however, Skylar seemed to be getting a little fancy in her taste palate. Probably from watching all those cooking shows she seemed to be into now.
As he passed Skylarâs still-closed door, he heard her talking quietly on the other side.
Geez, how much could two thirteen-year-olds possibly have to discuss?
But then he heard something that made him stop in his tracks.
That laugh.
Every single time he heard it, he was reminded of how long itâd been since heâd laughed like that. As if the universe wasnât at times cruel and unyielding. As if the heart didnât have limits to how much pain and disappointment it could take.
Then the next words he heard had him flipping his lid and grabbing for her door knob.
âHave you checked out those websites I told you about for the HD gene testingââ
âSkylar,â he thundered, using his break-only-in-case-of-emergency voice to breach her privacy without knocking first. âWhatâs going on in here?â His gaze sliced over to Skylarâs computer and the woman staring at him from the Skype screen. Tessa. When her face lit up just the tiniest bit for a split-second before quickly shifting to a calm, diplomatic smileâas if she hadnât just been advising his daughter on a life-changing gene test, while looking as distractingly soft and sweet as everâhe felt his blood pressure shoot through the roof in two different directions.
âHi dad,â hazarded Skylar carefully. âYou remember Tessa, right? Uncle Connorâs friend from the wedding?â
Jaw locked, he merely nodded, keeping his eyes trained on Tessa.
Who took that moment to wave at him.
Good lord, the woman knew how to push his buttons without even trying. âSkylar, since when do you skype your uncleâs friends about your private health matters?â
…Matters that theyâd already decided against.
âDad, she knows so much about this gene-testing stuff. I was just asking her some questions.â
âQuestions that should come straight to me or your doctor, or even your therapist.â He shot a pointed look at the screen. âNot to random adults you met once a few months ago.â
âActually, weâve talked a bunch of times since then over at Uncle Connorâs houseââ
âSkylar,â Tessa broke in, âI think it might be a good idea for me to log off now because frankly, Iâm a little worried my staying online is going to give your dad an ulcer.â She turned back to stare him straight in the eye then, locking horns with him as she added, âBut feel free to skype me again anytime. You can ask me anything you want about the HD testing.â
Brian bristled. Clearly, the woman wasnât that concerned about his stomach lining.
The screen blipped out to black and he swung his gaze back over to his daughter.
He didnât even know where to begin.
Thankfully, the faint chirping of Skylarâs cell phone gave him a brief moment to put a lid on his temper and gather his thoughts. After all, it wasnât Skylar he was pissed at.
âItâs Tessa.â
Exactly.
No wait, what? He looked up and saw Skylar waving her phone at him. âItâs a text from Tessa. She wrote, âTELL YOUR DAD IâD LIKE HIM TO MEET ME FOR LUNCH OR DINNER ONE OF THESE DAYS SO WE CAN DISCUSS THIS. ANYWHERE HE WANTS, ANYTIME. HIS CHOICE.ââ Skylar shrugged and gave him a wide take-it-up-with-management smile.
Another chirp.
âUmâ¦â
âWhat does it say?â he barked.
âShe texted, and Iâm totally quoting her here, âFIGURED THIS WAY HE CANâT SAY NO.â End quote.â Her teeth flashed again as she gave him an innocent look. âThat text was probably just for me.â
Great. Now Skylar was looking thoroughly entertained by the situation.
Another innocuous double blink. âWhy donât you meet Tessa tonight? Iâll be leaving for Beckyâs right after lunch and wonât be back until late tomorrow.â
He knew she offered the oh-so-helpful comment just to keep him from being a hermit all weekend, but his now unruly imagination was having a field day with the suggestion.
âFine,â he ground out. âShe and I may as well hash this out as soon as possible.â Uh-huh, whatever you need to tell yourself, buddy. âTell her dinner, 6:30 at the Italian restaurant the block over from her street.â
With a slow smile, Skylar tilted her head over to a do-tell angle. âHow do you know what street Tessa lives on?â
Dammit. Busted. âYour uncle mentioned it. Just text her back, will you?â
She bit her lip to hide her grin when the chirping reply came back moments later.
He waited, not at all patiently.
âErrrâ¦she wrote back, âI PROBABLY WONâT BE HUNGRY THAT EARLY BUT THEY HAVE A GREAT HAPPY HOUR SO TELL HIM TO GO FOR IT. IâLL BE THERE AT SEVEN. BYE!â Then a smiley face.â
Of all the aggravating⦠âWhyâd she even ask me to pick a time then? And does she honestly expect me to get there a half hour before she does?â
Actuallyâ¦he wouldnât put it past her.
So. Unbelievably. Weird.
He didnât want to even think about what his reluctantly growing fascination over her little quirks said about him.
âWow, she really gets your fish frying, doesnât she?â remarked Skylar, using one of Abbyâs trademark sayings with a touch of awe.
A harmless observation with a little too much female insight for his comfort level.
âCereal and fruits in five minutes,â he muttered and stalked out of her room.
When he heard another chirp followed by a smothered giggle, he just kept right on walking.
It was undoubtedly safer that way.
*
TESSA PACED around her living room as the ticking clock on her wall got closer and closer to her scheduled âdiscussion dinnerâ with Brian. She wasnât calling it a date; her nerves would never survive the night if she did.
She hadnât been able to stop replaying the way heâd called out her name down in the ravine. The man was just so distractingly brawny. Bearlike. But gentle. And caring. Sheâd counted three instances when his protective instincts had overruled all else that day, and his voice had dropped down to this rough, untamed rasp that had her wanting to jump on him and bury her face against his throat so she could drink in all that ruggedness.
A dizzying wave of heat washed over her at the memory.
Geez, she needed to get a grip.
Finally, she couldnât take it anymore. When her clock hit 5:30, she grabbed her car keys and headed out the door.
She pulled into the lumber yard a short while later, just as the sales office was closing.
âHey, Frank!â she called out, waving her goodbyes to the workers who were calling it a day.
Frankâs bushy white eyebrows hopped up with delight. âHey dollface, whatâs shakinâ?â
âNothing much. Just thought Iâd stop by and drop off your favorite.â
âHot damn, I was hoping youâd come visit this week. Jackieâs been on a steamed fish kick for days.â He rolled his eyes. âLucky thing she adores you because these hotdog runs are the only times she lets me cheat.â
Tessa covered up her grin. If only he knew that the âhotdogâ he loved so much was really a specialty dog from her favorite hotdog joint, made with extra-lean ground meat, fennel, an
d a mix of ground eggplant and mushrooms. The only other one in on the secret was Frankâs wife, who purposely never let him go to the hotdog restaurant in question so heâd never know that his one indulgence was actually not all that bad for him.
Frank quickly unwrapped the hotdog, loaded with all the fixings, and took a huge bite.
âLord, thatâs good.â
Smiling, she took her matching order and headed out to the back door.
âSweets, be sure to keep to the cedar stacks. Hank stacked those. We had the new kid working the forklift today.â He shook his head tiredly. âLord have mercy. Boy was as cockeyed as they come. Took him all day and the wood still wasnât lined up straight. Wouldnât trust any of those stacks to climb on.â
âGot it. Thanks, Frank!â The cedar planks were her favorites anyway, which she suspected was why he always had Hank stack those. âIâll be down before you leave.â
While cutting across the gigantic lumber yard to the tallest cedar stack, Tessa stuffed the hotdog bag into her new slouch bagâthe old one was still in the accessory ICU after her fall the other dayâso sheâd have her hands free to climb. Though she was still a little achy from her bumps and bruises, the climb was quick-going. And once up on top, she turned in a slow three-sixty to gaze at the landscape all around before settling down in the middle, facing west, to watch the sun start to set.
While most folks she knew loved their tropical paradises or snowy retreats, Tessa had always thought the rough beauty of Arizona at sunset trumped them all. The entire desert canvas painted with the rich, earthy colors that never failed to ground her, and clear skies blasted with vibrant colors spinning the entire color wheel. It was a feast for her eyes to see everything around her become so primitively alive, before drifting off to sleep for the night. The desert just had a rough sort of beauty that had always spoken to her, healed her just as it rejuvenated her in even her toughest times.
And sometimes, when she looked over to her right and the sunlight was hitting just so, she could still see her father and sister sitting right there with her.