Come Fly With Me
Invertary Too, Book 1
Janet Elizabeth Henderson
Contents
About Come Fly With Me
A note from Janet
More Books by Janet
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
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Lingerie Wars Excerpt
Also by Janet Elizabeth Henderson
About Janet
About Come Fly With Me
They married in their teens.
They haven’t seen each other in ten years.
And now they have to fake a relationship to keep their land.
* * *
At seventeen, Katya Savage eloped with her lifelong best friend, Brodie MacGregor. Everything was perfect for two glorious years—until Katya became obsessed with her great-grandmother’s legacy. To be fair, who wouldn’t get excited about having a female bomber pilot in the family tree? Brodie, that's who. Because when Katya asked him to help her find a plane exactly like the one her great-gran flew during World War Two, he had a hissy fit and gave her an ultimatum—him or the plane. Yeah, that was a dumb move…
* * *
Anyway, now Katya’s back. With her plane. And all she wants to do is set up a scenic flight business on the land gifted to them both. Unfortunately, there are a few teeny tiny problems with her plan: 1. Brodie has his own ideas for the land that don’t involve her or her plane. 2. The family who gifted the land to them wants it back. 3. The only way to keep the land is to convince their families, the town, and a bunch of lawyers that they’re back together again.
* * *
Now, if they could just stop fighting long enough to act like they’re in love…
A note from Janet
Welcome to Invertary Too - the second season of my Scottish romantic comedies. Thank you so much for buying Come Fly With Me. I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it. Invertary Too is set in the same small Highland town as the first series, but with a whole new set of characters. Although, the old ones do pop up now and then too, so keep an eye out for them!
* * *
I’d also like to give a shout out to, April McBride, who won the competition to have a character named after her. Your name fits in perfectly, April!
* * *
In the meantime, I look forward to hearing what you think of Come Fly With me. Happy reading!
* * *
Janet x
More Books by Janet
First Invertary Series
Romantic Comedies
Lingerie Wars
Goody Two Shoes
Magenta Mine
Calamity Jena
Bad Boy
Here Comes The Rainne Again
Caught
* * *
Invertary Too
Come Fly With Me
Here Comes Trouble
* * *
Sinclair Sisters Romantic Comedy Books
Can’t Tie Me Down
Can’t Stop The Feeling
Can’t Buy Me Love
* * *
Romantic Suspense Books
Reckless
Relentless
Rage
Ransom
Rich
Run
* * *
And more on my website
Janet Elizabeth Henderson
1
It wasn’t every day you watched a World War Two Soviet fighter plane make its way up the main street of a small Highland town. To be fair, it was wingless and secured to a flatbed lorry at the time, not flying over the cobblestone road. Still, the sight was definitely out of place in among the crooked old white houses that made up the high street. Nor did it blend in with the green hills and blue loch that gave the town of Invertary its picturesque setting. In fact, the aircraft was such an oddity—in a town where oddities were commonplace—that it’d brought everyone out to watch the spectacle.
“So, she’s really come home then?”
At his younger brother Darach’s words, Brodie MacGregor grimaced. “It would appear so.”
“And she has the plane she went off to find.”
“Aye.” The self-same plane that was responsible for ending his marriage.
“I hear tell she’s a rocket in the sky. Can fly pretty much anything you put in front of her.”
Brodie cocked an eyebrow at his brother. “Where exactly did you hear that?”
“A wee bird told me.” The dickhead grinned. “Must make you feel like a complete arse, seeing as you told her she’d never make it as a pilot or find one of the planes her granny used to fly. In fact, some might say you had egg on your face from being so bloody arrogant in the first place.”
“If some were to say that within my hearing, it would be the last words they uttered.”
From the mocking smile on Darach’s face, it was clear he wasn’t intimidated by his brother’s threat. Idiot. Even though Darach had a couple of inches on Brodie, and some army training under his belt, the numpty still thought he could take him in a fight. Brodie knew better. Unlike Darach, he never pulled his punches with his brothers. It was the only way he’d managed to survive growing up as the middle child of seven boys.
“Did she give you a heads-up she was coming back?” Darach asked, lifting his chin toward the cab of the truck, where Brodie’s ex-wife sat behind the wheel.
“A letter from her lawyer.”
“So, she’s still pissed at you, then.”
“You could say that. I was charged for the postage.”
Darach burst out laughing. “I always liked that girl.”
Aye, and so had Brodie. Liking Katya was never the problem—living with her was.
When the truck sped past, he caught sight of Katya’s face as she stared straight ahead. And just like that, his jeans became uncomfortably tight while his stomach did a backward somersault. Almost ten years since they’d parted ways, and all it took was one glimpse to make him want to bed her. It came as a brutal blow to his ego to discover his Katya addiction hadn’t waned. And he’d just bet she would laugh her head off if she ever found out.
Darach elbowed Brodie to get his attention. “Does it bother you that she’s still calling herself MacGregor?”
“No.”
Sure, it’d been a slap in the face when she’d kept the name and dumped the man, but he could hardly blame her. MacGregor was preferable to Savage any day of the week. In fact, he’d often wondered if one of the reasons she’d been so eager to marry, despite them both being barely legal, was just to get rid of her family name.
But then, there were easier ways to achieve that than taking on a MacGregor.
“Do you think she heard about your plans?” Darach mused as they watched the plane disappear over the crest of the hill at the top of town.
<
br /> “I’d be surprised. Her family doesn’t exactly live on this planet most of the time. Even if they heard the gossip, it probably didn’t register.”
Darach grinned widely. “Have to say, I kinda miss the family dinners we had when you two were together.”
Yeah, it was hard not to smile at those memories. Brodie caught his brother’s eye, and they both said, “Delia Savage’s dramatic monologues!” And burst into fits of laughter.
“But seriously.” Darach wiped at his eyes as he sobered. “What are you going to do if she has plans for your land?”
And just like that, all the humor in the situation was sucked right out. “I’ll do what I have to.” Both their names might be on the title, but he’d been the one tending the land for the past decade. Katya hadn’t set foot on it since she’d walked out on him.
“Eh, I hate to point this out, big brother, but you don’t exactly have a lot of options. Unless you split the land down the middle.”
Aye, that wasn’t going to work. Their plot of land was a long, narrow rectangle, with the best views lying on one of the shorter sides. Even if they halved it, neither of them would take the back section with the crappy views. And you couldn’t split it lengthwise, because they’d both end up with a strip that was too narrow to be of any decent use.
“She’ll just have to see reason.” Brodie folded his arms over his faded blue plaid shirt.
Darach nodded. “Because Katya’s well known for her ability to see reason. Like when you told her to do exactly that, right before she left you.”
“This is different.” It had to be. “We’ve both grown up since then. Surely now, we can act with civility toward each other?”
“The letter from her lawyer seemed really civil.”
Brodie glared at Darach as he wondered for the millionth time why he’d been cursed with six smart-arsed morons for brothers. “Are you trying to help here?”
“Mainly, I’m trying to ensure I get a ringside seat for whatever happens next. I know it’s going tae be helluva entertaining.” He mimed an explosion, with sound effects.
“Dickhead.”
“Entertained dickhead. One whose sister-in-law has returned to town and is about to drive my brother insane.”
“Ex-sister-in-law,” Brodie corrected.
Darach slapped a hand down on his shoulder. “If you’d wanted her to be my ex-sister-in-law, you should have divorced her. Calling her your ex-wife doesn’t make it so in the eyes of the law. Although, I’ll admit, saying she’s your estranged wife is kind of a mouthful.”
“I couldn’t divorce her. You know that.” As did Katya.
If he wanted his dream house, he needed the land Ben Baxter gifted them on their wedding day. And the only way to keep it was to stay married. The gift came with the stipulation that if they divorced, the land reverted to the Baxter Family Trust. Out of his grasp forever.
Along with all the dreams attached to it. Because there was no way in hell he could afford to buy a piece of land like the one they’d been given and build his dream house on it too.
So, no, he couldn’t divorce Katya. Not without giving up on all of his dreams. And seeing as one of those dreams had walked out on him a decade earlier, all he had left was his house.
“I’d better get going,” he said as he straightened away from the wall he’d been leaning on. “I want to be there when she gets to the property.”
“I might as well come along.” Darach tried not to look eager but failed miserably. “Once Katya sees what you’ve done, she’ll kill you, and someone will have to cart your body back to Ma and Da.”
“Your support brings a tear to my eye.”
“Always happy to help,” Darach said with a grin.
“The place has changed,” Katya told her best friend as they drove slowly through her hometown.
“Really?” Denise Abebe looked skeptical. “I feel like I’ve fallen into some sort of time warp. There’s an old milk van back there delivering glass bottles to doorsteps. I didn’t realize people still did that. And what’s with the fashion? That’s the third woman I’ve seen in a shapeless polyester coat and nylon headscarf.”
Katya grinned at her fashion-obsessed friend. “You could have stayed in London, you know.”
“And miss the fireworks? I think not.” Denise angled the rearview mirror to check her hair, then patted her glorious Afro until it met her satisfaction. “I need a trim. Is there anyone in this backwoods town who can style black hair?”
“How would I know? It’s been ten years since I’ve been home.”
Ten years filled with travel, adventure, hard work, and sometimes hardship. But in the end, she’d done what she’d set out to do. She’d found and bought a plane exactly like her great-grandmother used to fly in the Second World War, and she’d learned to fly so she could pilot it.
This was the last leg of her journey to restore Natasha Klimova’s forgotten history and establish her legacy in the country that’d become her home. Katya intended to use the classic plane to give something back to the community that had given her great-grandmother a second chance at life. She wanted everyone to be as proud of Natasha as she was. Unfortunately, she had to get past her ex-husband to make it happen.
“Is it only me,” Denise said, “or is there an unusual number of good-looking men wandering around this town? Dear Lord! Is that Josh McInnes?” She twisted in her seat to stare out the back window.
“Who?” Katya kept her eyes on the road.
“Who? I despair of you sometimes. Josh McInnes. American singer. Does stuff like Sinatra. He’s gorgeous and sings like sex on a stick.”
“I wasn’t aware sex on a stick could sing.”
“Once you hear him, you’ll understand what I’m talking about.” Denise flopped back into her seat. “What’s he doing in the Highlands?”
“Again, I wouldn’t know because I’ve been gone ten years,” Katya said, enunciating each word slowly.
“Being back makes you bitchy,” Denise grumbled.
But it didn’t. It made her soul sing. Katya felt able to breathe for the first time in years. The tension in her shoulders eased, and she found herself sinking into her seat with a smile on her face.
Of all the places she’d seen on her travels, nothing compared to Scotland. To home. The glow of the afternoon sun warmed the emerald and violet of the hills around the town. The loch’s surface danced with sparkles, and the crooked white houses that made up the shops lining the high street were awash with golden light.
She opened her window wide and took a deep breath. It was the scent that really made it home. Warmed heather and peaty soil, cut grass and pine, and the bite of crisp air after it skimmed across the surface of the loch. Nowhere on the planet had the same scent.
Nowhere but home.
Denise’s voice stirred her from her thoughts. “I’ve seen a bakery, a sweet shop, an ice cream café, and a fish and chip shop advertising deep-fried curry. Apart from the fact I don’t even know how you’d deep fry a curry, I’m wondering if there’s anywhere in town that sells vegetables.”
Katya couldn’t help but laugh. “Don’t worry, I’m sure we can dig up a carrot or two for you.”
“Yay,” Denise said drolly. “So, will you point out your ex if you spot him?”
“I won’t have to. I’m sure Brodie will crawl out of the woodwork soon enough.”
Katya wasn’t about to admit she’d already spotted him in the crowd lining the cobblestone road. A split-second glimpse out of the corner of her eye had been enough to make her palms sweat and her heart race.
Conditioning. At least, that’s what she was telling herself. It made sense her body would react to the sight of him. It’d been doing exactly that since she’d turned fourteen.
Denise smacked Katya’s arm to regain her attention. “You’ve already seen him, haven’t you? Where is he?” She craned to see out of all the windows. “Which one is he?”
“We’ve passed him.”
&nb
sp; “Why didn’t you say something?”
Uh, because she’d been physically unable to speak? Katya cleared her throat and shrugged. “It wasn’t important.”
“You are such a liar. And a bad one at that. Now tell me, how did he look?”
“Like Brodie.” Only more so. Katya’s cheeks burned.
He’d filled out—broader shoulders, leaner face, more compact muscle. The boy stripped away to reveal the honed man. Part of her, the part that wanted to feel justified in what she did, had hoped he’d gone to seed. She’d imagined him with a beer belly and receding hairline, but it wasn’t to be. The boy she’d married had been beautiful, but the man he’d become was sex personified.
And he could have been hers.
If she’d stayed.
“You can’t fool me,” Denise said. “I know you too well. It’s normal for your ex to affect you, especially physically. Call it muscle memory. The body’s used to doing what the body does around them.” She waggled her eyebrows, making Katya laugh.
“Don’t worry, any residual muscle memory connected to Brodie will evaporate as soon as he starts talking.” Katya remembered well how his negativity dampened her libido.
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