Once Upon a Summer
Page 1
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright
Breaking Girl Code by Brooke Moss
Other Books by Brooke Moss
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Epilogue
About the Author- Brooke Moss
Wishing on Water by Liz Ashlee
Other Books by Liz Ashlee
Dedication
Wishing on Water
Sneak Peek at Step Toward You
About the Author- Liz Ashlee
Art with a Pulse by Clara Winter
Other Books by Clara Winter
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
About the Author- Amy Rugg w/a Clara Winter
A Natural Passion by Tammy Mannersly
Other Books by Tammy Mannersly
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Sneak Peek at Persuading Lucy
About the Author- Tammy Mannersly
You Had Me At Aloha by Sarah Vance-Tompkins
Other Books by Sarah Vance-Tompkins
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Sneak Peek at Valentine Kisses
About the Author- Sarah Vance-Tompkins
More Than Puppy Love by Kitsy Clare
Other Books by Kitsy Clare
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Epilogue
Sneak Peek at Private Internship
About the Author- Kitsy Clare
Stealing Haven by Mark Love
Other Books by Mark Love
Dedication
Stealing Haven
Acknowledgements
About the Author- Mark Love
Harmony in the Key of Murder by Melissa Kay Clarke
Other Books by Melissa Kay Clarke
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Acknowledgements
About the Author- Melissa Kay Clarke
Thank you!
Once Upon a Summer
Brooke Moss
Liz Ashlee
Clara Winter
Tammy Mannersly
Sarah Vance-Tompkins
Kitsy Clare
Mark Love
Melissa Kay Clarke
The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, places, or events is coincidental and not intended by the author.
If you purchase this book without a cover you should be aware that this book may have been stolen property and reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher. In such case the author has not received any payment for this “stripped book.”
Once Upon a Summer
Copyright © 2018 Brooke Moss, Liz Ashlee, Clara Winter, Tammy Mannersly, Sarah Vance-Tompkins, Kitsy Clare, Mark Love, Melissa Kay Clarke
Inkspell Publishing, LLC
5764 Woodbine
Pinckney, MI 48169
www.inkspellpublishing.com
All rights reserved.
Cover art By Eva Talia
This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission. The copying, scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic or print editions, and do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.
Breaking Girl Code
Brooke Moss
OTHER BOOKS BY BROOKE MOSS
The What If Guy
The Carny
Keeping Secrets in Seattle
Underwater
Baby & Bump
Apples & Oranges
Then & Now
Bittersweet
The Art of Being Indifferent
Here’s to Campfires and S’mores
Breaking Girl Code
Copyright © 2018 Brooke Moss
All rights reserved.
DEDICATION
For Alice.
Be you, unapologetically, because you’re freaking amazing.
CHAPTER ONE
He stood bouncing his keys in his pocket. “Do you think you could, I don’t know, spruce them up?”
My fingers shook so much as I tied the satin bow around the tissue wrapped stems that my fingernails made a faint shh sound against the paper. His feet shuffled while he waited on the other side of the counter. The aroma of his overpriced cologne drifted under my nose, temporarily masking the scent of the picture perfect white roses I’d just painstakingly arranged.
He smiled down at his phone, making my stomach twist. I felt weak and girlish, and silently scolded myself for it. The fact this guy’s presence put me on edge was incredibly aggravating, but it happened every time he stepped into the shop.
Every. Single. Time.
It wasn’t like it was my first time arranging flowers for the platinum card carrying, trust fund baby. He’d been coming into Petal Pushers every other day since the warm weather hit in late May, and not once had he ever done anything except wink at me over the top of his hundred-and-fifty-dollar Ray Bans and take calls flirting over the phone while I worked feverishly.
It was all I could do to give the guy his constant array of flowers—all for different women and never for anyone more than twice—without kneeing him in the balls. If it were my shop, I would have thrown him out on principle. I’d have told him to take his credit card and shove it right up his backside. But it wasn’t my shop. It was my job to smile, arrange the flowers, and take Rich Boy’s money.
Fluffing the petals of an open rose, I shifted the bouquet so he could examine it. “How’s that?”
He pulled the sunglasses off of his face and narrowed his eyes. They were brown. But not just brown-brown, but a sharp, sugary shade that looked like the warm inside of a cinnamon roll. Spectacular. “They’re sort of big.”
Blinking, I turned my focus back to the roses. “They’re Ecuadorian hybrids. That’s why the head is so big.” When one of his eyebrows ticked upward I quickly added, “The roses. The heads on the roses.”
A flash of amusement painted his face, and he nearl
y smiled. “Cool.” He plucked the bouquet up, then dropped his credit card on the counter. “It’ll do.”
It’ll do? Ugh. Scowling at the well-used card, I spoke through gritted teeth. “Want to know the total?”
He watched me as I moved to the register. “Nope. It’s fine.”
If I weren’t so desperate to keep this job, I’d have allowed all of the obscenity-laced insults on the tip of my tongue to come out. But with being responsible for half the rent, maintaining employment was key.
I took a deep breath. “Alright.” I punched the price into the computer, mentally high-fiving myself for putting our most expensive filler flowers into the arrangement. “Seventy-six fifty on your Visa.”
“Don’t forget this.” He tossed a message card onto the counter. “Stick it in there somewhere.”
I glanced at his credit card before swiping it. Preston Wallingford, Jr. A predictably pretentious name. I’ll bet there was a crest hanging above the family fireplace. Pretty boy had a sweet car and a limitless credit account to purchase dozens of arrangements for random girls around our lake town of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho.
I’d been working to support my mom and me since I was thirteen and could babysit the neighbor’s kids. Forced to forgo going to college this fall with my friends, so that I could help pay for grown up things like rent and electricity. My life was a far cry from filet mignon dinners with Mumsie and Pop at the country club all summer long.
Handing the card back to him, I bit the inside of my cheek. “Have a nice day.”
Preston Wallingford Junior slid the sunglasses back on, then stood facing me. Once the silence grew uncomfortable, I raised my eyebrows at him. “Geez, what?”
“You forgot the pick thing.” He sounded amused.
“Oh, right.” I went to grab one of the clear plastic fork-like things we used to put the messages into the arrangements, but knocked the jar over. Picks skidded across the counter and onto the floor at Preston’s feet, creating a lovely clattering sound that filled the shop.
He looked at the shiny watch on his wrist. “I’m late already.”
I seriously hated this guy. His kind was the bad thing about the summer crowds which flooded our northern Idaho lake town every year. Pompous cabin snowbirds crowded up our lake with jet skis and speedboats, and our streets with their BMW’s from June to September. Rich tourists who came to Idaho for its rustic charm and small town ambiance clogged the dance floors of every bar, and screwed around behind the boathouses of their rented luxury cabins with the locals. All so they could go back to their big cities bragging how they’d “slummed it” all summer.
I’d been born and raised in Coeur d’Alene, and after eighteen summers watching the economy-boosting crowds filter in, insuring my mom and I made enough money to survive another cold Idahoan winter, I could spot guys like Preston Wallingford from a mile away. He was here for some fun, before he had to focus on his classes at
I snatched the message card up and jammed it onto a pick. “You could have done it yourself,” I mumbled, sweat piquing underneath my bangs. It was pushing ninety-five degrees outside, and our air-conditioning unit had seen better days. Summer around these parts liked to remind us how fierce it could be, suffocating us in the process. “Wait, there’s nothing on it.”
Preston rested his palms on the counter, and his voice dropped an octave. “I was thinking you could write down your number. Then you can keep the flowers, and I’ll come back and pick you up after your shift is over.”
My mouth dropped. I’d been helping this guy every other day or so for two months, watching him address card after card to at least a dozen different girls. Never once had I considered myself a prospective date. I wasn’t his type. The girls he’d dated—the names I’d recognized—were tall, blonde, and predictably hot. I was pale, and had my dark hair styled in an asymmetrical bob, and lived for dark eyeliner and red lipstick. Too edgy for someone like Preston Wallingford, Jr.
I rolled my eyes. “Are you joking?”
Something flashed in his green eyes…surprise, maybe? But it was quickly quashed by the familiar cockiness. “Come on, write it down. I’ve got some friends having a party at a cabin in Bennet Bay. I’ll take you.”
“Pass.” I shoved the card back at him. “Why don’t you ask one of your other girlfriends?”
“Girlfriends?” he chuckled, taking the card back and tapping it on the counter. “Not likely.”
I narrowed my eyes at him when he finally scribbled something down. “You know I’ve been arranging flowers for you all summer, right?”
“Yup.” He raised an eyebrow at me. “You sure?”
“About tonight?” Folding my arms across my chest, I prayed there weren’t pit marks on my Petal Pushers polo shirt. Just because I was rejecting the guy, didn’t mean I didn’t want to look good while I did it. “Yeah. I’m sure.”
“You’re missing out.” Preston turned the card upside down on the counter and pushed it toward me. “You’re missing out on a killer party. Becker’s cabin has a slide on the dock, and a kegerator.”
I had no idea who Becker was, and his kegerator didn’t sweeten the deal. “Guess you’ll have to go without me.”
“I’ll figure it out.” His confidence didn’t falter. “Want to put my card in the flowers for me?”
I smashed the card onto a pick, then slid it into the arrangement with more force than I intended. “The only thing I want is for you to get your cocky butt out of this shop before I jam one of these card picks up your—”
“Aubrey!” My manager gave me the death stare from across the shop. “Be nice.”
Preston smirked, pushing himself away from the counter victoriously.
Refusing to look him in the eyes, I scanned the words scrawled on the small paper square. My heart lurched into my throat.
Liza,
To the prettiest girl in town.
Yours,
Pres
It wasn’t like those words were creative. He’d used the same line to every girl I’d arranged flowers for. In fact, I was pretty sure there were at least twelve others who’d been called the prettiest girl in town. It was his uninventive way of getting into their pants.
The only problem?
There was only one girl in Coeur d’Alene who was our age and named Liza. Sure enough, she was tall, blonde, and gorgeous. She also happened to be my best friend.
CHAPTER TWO
“Ohmigosh, you’re never gonna believe where I’m going tonight!”
I rolled my eyes and cut the engine in my car. Hot August air started to fill the cab of my beat up old Honda, as I balanced my phone on my shoulder.
Liza apparently had no recollection of our plan to have a girl’s night. Which was typical. She’d always been the flakier of the two of us, even when we were little. She would forget her show-and-tell, and I gave her my rock collection to share with the class. Forgetting we had plans because a hot guy had asked her out was not A-typical.
The real problem was Liza had no idea I already knew who she was going out with, and I couldn’t stand him. It’d never occurred to me to warn her about the cocky out-of-towner who bought flowers for a new girl every few days. According to her, she’d been asked out by the mad sexy guy she’d met at the beach the week prior.
“Hold up,” I said, waiting for Liza to fall silent. It took a few beats. She tended to talk fast and loud, especially when the subject was males. “Don’t you remember we were supposed to hang tonight? Thai food and sitting on my balcony to watch for shooting stars.”
“I…what? Oh.” Liza’s voice dropped. “Crap. I forgot.”
I opened my car door. “Yeah. I figured.”
She returned to talking fast
. “I’m so sorry. Really, I am. Can you forgive me, pretty please?”
I laughed tiredly. “Of course.”
It was no secret that Liza liked all the boys, and they liked her right back. Who could blame them? Long, sun-streaked hair; perfect bod; and a smile that made her orthodontist seem like a magician. Of course Preston had asked for her number. She’d been at the beach to work on her tan—she didn’t have to help pay the bills—and he’d been there playing volleyball with his other meathead friends. Like a scene from a Disney musical.
I wasn’t pissed at her. But I wasn’t about to confess he’d asked me out first. Liza was on a high, and her lows were notoriously miserable for everyone. I wasn’t going to burst her bubble. The only thing I cared about was talking her out of going out with Preston Wallingford Junior, King of Tools.