“That we could try this?”
“Try what?” I wasn’t going to help her. If she wanted this, she’d need to tell me exactly what she wanted. I needed her to spell it out because if I misinterpreted what happened between us, I’d be crushed.
She shifted so she was resting on her elbow to see me better. “That we could be together? We could continue to see each other off this island.” When I remained quiet she looked down at my chest.“We could date. Like you said, Naples isn’t too far. And if it worked out, we could move closer to each other.” She pulled her bottom lip into her teeth.
I gently pulled her lip from under her teeth with my thumb. “Nothing ever sounded better.”
She threw herself into my arms, straddling me, as her towel fell away. Her hands were everywhere, tugging the hair on the back of my neck and then roaming my chest, before trailing down my stomach and tugging off the towel I’d tied around my waist.
I pulled back, needing to make sure we were on the same page. “We’re in this together. When I go home tomorrow you’re not going to change your mind or suddenly decide you don’t trust me because of your ex.”
She stared at me a smile tugging at her lips. “No, I want you. I want to explore whatever this is, because it feels bigger than anything I’ve ever experienced. It feels like the beginning of something.”
“It sure as fuck does,” I growled, pulling her roughly to me as I sealed her words with a kiss. She was mine. Not just for tonight, but hopefully forever.
About the Author
Lea Coll is an author, attorney, and stay at home mom. After years of legal writing, she enjoys the freedom that comes with writing fiction. She plots stories while fetching snacks and running back and forth to her kids’ activities.
She currently resides in Maryland with her family.
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Crash Into You
Crash Into You
By J.H. Croix
Crash Into You
Copyright © 2020 by JH Croix
All Rights Reserved. This book may not be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission from the author. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. All characters and storylines are the property of the author and your support and respect is appreciated. The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.
Chapter One
Daphne
A moose lumbered across the road in front of me, and I came to an abrupt stop, the car jerking when I slammed my foot on the brakes. “Holy shit!”
No one was in the car with me to hear my irreverent reaction. Although I’d done some research and knew wildlife was abundant in Alaska, it was still rather startling.
While the moose appeared to be moving slowly, its long stride covered the ground deceptively quickly. Inside of a few seconds, the animal had crossed the road into a field abloom in fuchsia flowers. Its rump disappeared into a cluster of evergreen trees. I gave my head a small shake and realized I was stopped in the middle of a highway. It wasn’t exactly busy, but nonetheless, it was a highway.
Laughing to myself, I eased off the brake and put my foot on the gas pedal again. Alaska’s roads weren’t crowded. As I glanced to the side while picking up speed, my breath caught at the ocean glinting under the sunshine splashing across its surface.
To one side of this highway was mountains and trees, and to the other was Cook Inlet, an inlet from the Pacific Ocean that stretched inland into Alaska. I’d already counted two glaciers and marveled at the way the ocean lapped at the base of the mountains on the other side as I drove along.
My GPS wasn’t being too helpful. Cell reception wasn’t great here either, as I’d quickly discovered. It was spotty at best and seemed only decent when I passed through the small towns scattered along this highway, which would take me to the farthest western point in the United States.
“Dammit,” I said as I glanced at the GPS on my dashboard screen.
The marker on the map still showed me sitting in a parking lot in Anchorage. “Please don’t tell me you’re broken.”
I wished the friendly computerized voice would assure me she was not, in fact, broken. But she—the GPS voice in this SUV I’d rented, that is—remained stubbornly silent at my plea.
“Thanks for nothing,” I muttered.
Anxiety, a close friend, tightened in my chest. Anxiety was the worst friend of all. For the past year and a half of my life, I felt as if I’d been flung off a cliff into the air with nothing in sight. I still felt as if I was spinning helplessly, trying to find a sense of equilibrium and trying to find somewhere to land. The last thing I needed was to get geographically lost, rather than metaphorically lost in my mind and heart.
“It’s okay,” I assured myself. “You know where you’re going.”
Side note: emotional trauma could lead to lots of self-talk. Out loud. Thank God, I was alone more often than not, or I was certain people might consider me crazy.
Roughly an hour later, I was cursing my silly decision not to be so uptight about my planning. Cell reception was total shit. My GPS seemed to truly be useless. To add to the mess, my SUV apparently had some kind of electrical problem because the speedometer kept blinking in and out. I presumed said electrical problem was the reason my GPS had abandoned me in my time of need.
“You’re just looking for the name of the lodge. You can find it. There will be a sign.”
Yup, conversations with myself were the thing these days.
In most places, highways had signs—lots of signs—but Alaska kept it simple. There were mileage signs marking the distance for various towns, but I hadn’t seen a single billboard. I recalled reading that Alaska had banned billboards upon its inception as a state. I supposed that was nice in theory, although I really, really wouldn’t have minded one announcing my upcoming destination right about now.
The view was spectacular, and I’d seen several more moose as I’d traveled south. The small problem, though, was that I was flying blind. The sun was starting its bow, and I was praying to beat it before it disappeared behind the mountains. Although it was August, the mountain peaks still had snow. Climate change was coming, but Alaska was hanging in there, at least at some elevations.
Walker Adventures was roughly twenty miles outside of one of Alaska’s gems, Diamond Creek. Diamond Creek was the adjacent town near the lodge, where I intended to spend three weeks. That’s right, three whole weeks in the wilderness. Me, Daphne Bell, doing something so wildly out of the ordinary basically everyone I knew thought I was crazy.
I needed this almost as much as I needed air. My actual life, the one I left behind, was an epic mess and littered with regret, recrimination, and almost unbearable pain. Maybe, just maybe, I could piece myself together if I was far enough away.
“Oh! A sign! All you have to say is lodge,” I muttered to the green highway sign in question. “A little specificity never hurt anyone.”
Fuck it. I took that left turn. The pavement stretched for a few miles and then transitioned. “Oh hell,” I murmured as the little blue SUV rumbled confidently over the gravel road. At least I made sure to rent a trusty vehicle with 4-wheel drive.
I kept on going, telling myself the same thing over and over again. You’ll find it, you’re meant to be here, and it’s all going to be okay.
Considering that I was thoroughly acquainted with just how not okay life could be, my faith in the universe was shaky at best.
r /> Roughly forty-five minutes later, with one wheel mired deep in a mud puddle, I was staring at a bear. “Are you a brown bear or grizzly bear?” I asked from the safety of my SUV as said bear ambled along the opposite side of the road, giving me nothing more than a cursory glance.
“Since when do roads not have shoulders?” I looked at my cell phone and glared at the No Signal warning. “Fuck you.”
I tapped my GPS button on the dashboard screen but got nothing. I didn’t even know if I’d been speeding on the gravel road for the past half an hour or so. My SUV seemed to be working, but the bells and whistles definitely weren’t.
I heard a plane above and looked up in the sky through my windshield. Mind you, I didn’t dare open my window in case the bear came over and ate my face.
“Oh, the plane’s landing!”
The small plane was lowering in the sky and appeared to be landing not too awfully far away. But as the crow flew, or in this case literally as the plane flew, it could be as far as a few miles away. I didn’t dare climb out and walk. Because: bears and God only knew what else.
My stomach growled, and I slapped my hand over it. I hadn’t brought enough snacks. The lodge promised a dinner tonight, and I thought for sure I would get there with hours to spare. I’d eaten my last granola bar a few hours ago.
Leaning my head back against the seat, I took a deep breath and willed myself not to cry. I was going to be fine. If I had to walk, I would walk.
I heard a rustling sound, lifted my head, and screamed.
The bear was now right outside my car! Eating blueberries. I might not be a wildlife expert, but I knew blueberries when I saw them, and I’d run my car off the side of the road into a small patch of them.
The bear lifted his head and eyed me dispassionately. I thought the bear was a he, although I had no idea why. While I was truly scared of the bear, he was a magnificent creature. His brown fur was gilded with gold. He stared at me curiously after my scream. After a moment, he lowered his head and continued eating. Somehow, it seemed ridiculous this giant creature was nibbling—yes, nibbling—on blueberries.
I watched quietly, forgetting my predicament and forgetting the other disaster of my life as this massive bear that could probably kill me with nothing more than a gentle swat of its paw meandered along eating blueberries. A few moments later, the bear disappeared into the trees, and I was alone again. A shaft of loneliness struck me so hard it took my breath away.
“Daphne, you need a plan,” I told myself sternly once I managed to take a breath.
I didn’t know where to even begin with a plan, except hiking down this road and hoping it took me to the lodge.
That spinning anxiety, a fucking whirling dervish, picked up in my chest again. I really didn’t know what to do other than walk, and I could only pray I didn’t have to walk too far.
Just when I was about to lose the battle with my tears, a truck appeared around the corner of the road ahead.
“Yay!” I literally lifted my fist in a cheer. I had no idea who this was, but I prayed whoever it was would stop.
Not thinking, I clambered out of the SUV and ran to the middle of the road, waving my arms like a crazy woman.
The black truck rolled to a stop. When I saw the man behind the steering wheel, I got slightly scared. Friendly wasn’t exactly the word that came to mind at his appearance.
The truck door opened, and he stepped out. My knees suddenly felt like liquid. Oh. My. God. His eyes flicked to my SUV where it sat hanging off the side of the road with one wheel buried in the mud before his gaze landed on me. I supposed it was lucky I had a few seconds to prepare myself.
When his glacial blue eyes locked with mine, it felt as if an electric jolt sizzled through my body, setting every nerve ending alight with sparks. The man was tall and just plain built. His broad shoulders filled out his T-shirt. My eyes traveled down his arms, lean and muscled with a dusting of gold hair. He wore battered and faded jeans, which dipped at the waist when he hooked his thumb in a belt loop.
My eyes didn’t mess the strip of gold skin just below his T-shirt when the waistband tugged down and revealed one side of a muscled V. I swallowed and dragged my eyes up. He had a jaw cut from granite and starkly angled cheekbones with an aristocratic nose. His lips were perfect. As if to torture me, he had a dimple in the center of his chin.
I had clearly lost my mind because I felt my cheeks heat as my skin prickled all over.
“You must be Daphne,” he said, his tone crisp.
All that came out of me in return was a gurgle. This man not only stole my breath, but he also snatched away my ability to speak. This was new for me.
Chapter Two
Flynn
The woman in front of me made some sort of gurgling sound and just stared at me. All things considered, I needed a moment, so I was grateful she gave me that.
Jesus fucking Christ. If this woman was trying to be more out of place, I didn’t think she could swing it. Her auburn hair was in a braid, twisted neatly on top of her head with loose tendrils framing her face. She wore a skirt, a fucking skirt, on a gravel road in the middle of almost nowhere in Alaska. A pair of fitted black boots hugged her calves, and I had to will myself not to linger too long on her shapely legs. A silky blue blouse topped off her outfit. It was a freaking button-down blouse, and I had to work not to stare at the way the top button strained a little.
She looked like she would be right at home at some sort of sexy business meeting. She gave off a princess vibe. There was no other way to describe it.
Her jade green eyes searched my face, and her cheeks flushed pink as we stared at each other.
“How do you know my name?” she finally asked, lifting her chin slightly and squaring her shoulders.
“Well, princess, I’m guessing you’re the Daphne who has a reservation at the lodge for a month.”
The woman eyed me, her gaze uncertain and distrustful. When a light gust of wind blew a lock of her hair across her forehead, she released a puff of air, which expertly got it out of her eyes. “Fine. I am that Daphne. Is it necessary to call me princess?”
Dear God. This woman was something else. If she cleared five feet tall, that would be remarkable. She was short, petite, tidy, and gave off an uptight vibe. I didn’t know what she was thinking when she signed up for a month at my family’s adventure and expedition lodge.
I was irritated. I was doubly irritated because my body seemed to think she was hot as all hell and then some. I couldn’t fucking believe it, but when she spoke in that haughty, sharp tone and lifted her chin just a little bit more, my entire body tightened, and a shot of blood arrowed to my cock. What in the ever-loving hell was going on?
Daphne looked to the side, and I took a moment to absorb a few more details about her. My eyes dropped down to that button at the top of her blouse. I wanted to undo it. With my teeth.
Forcing my gaze upward, I traced along the angle of her jaw and the way her pert nose tipped up at the end. Her skin was rosy, like her lips, which were perfectly shaped. Just like a goddamn bow. Even worse, she had this little dimple on one side. She hadn’t even smiled yet, but I could see the hint of it hiding there, waiting to peek out.
When she looked back toward me, her brow was knitted with worry. “I’m not sure why you’re passing by, but I don’t suppose you can help me with my, um, situation,” she said, gesturing toward her little SUV.
“You’re the reason I’m coming by. I saw your car from the air. That, and the bear.”
“You could see me from the air?”
“Oh, yeah. It’s a small plane, and I was coming down to land. Not too hard to see your bright blue SUV on the side of the road and a big brown bear grazing beside you.”
“I really appreciate this. You don’t happen to know who runs the lodge, do you?”
“That’s me.”
“You’re Flynn Walker?”
“At your service,” I replied.
Daphne’s eyes traveled up a
nd down before landing on my face again. If I didn’t know better, I’d think she was checking me out. But I knew better. No way was this uptight princess checking me out.
“Mind if I hop in your SUV?” I asked.
“I don’t think you can drive it out,” Daphne said as she stood planted in her boots and skirt in the middle of the road.
“Sure I can, princess. Give me those keys.” As I approached her, she stood her ground, the pink tinge on her cheeks deepening. “I can get it out, no problem.”
I kept on walking, and she spun quickly, hurrying to catch up with me. “Okay, the keys are in it. I’m sure you’ll have to move the seat back.”
Sliding my gaze sideways when I stopped to open the door, I said, “Oh, I’m sure about that. Mind if I try?”
“Be my guest,” she said, gesturing with her hand when she stepped back. “If you can get me out of the mud, that would be wonderful.”
The seat was practically kissing the steering wheel. I slid it back, climbed in, and started the SUV. After I closed the door, I rolled down the window. “You’re going to need to step back. Mud’s going to fly.”
She crossed her arms and arched a brow. “All right then.” She took several strides toward the other side of the road.
After starting the engine, I made sure the four-wheel drive was engaged. I tested it lightly to see if she had any traction on that one rear wheel. Not a damned bit. After a quick scan to get the lay of the vehicle’s controls, I shifted into differential gear. As soon as I felt it click into place, I gave the gas pedal a little pressure and felt the strong grind of the axle.
A Little Bit Cupid: A Collection of Short Stories Page 8