Love, Laughter, and Happily Ever Afters Collection (135 page)

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Authors: Violet Duke

Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary, #General, #Collections & Anthologies, #Romance

BOOK: Love, Laughter, and Happily Ever Afters Collection
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The next hand, after laying down new coasters at each man’s elbow, whether they needed a new one or not, she signaled for Mason to take two cards. He did, discarding the obvious two from his hand.

She’d only checked Roy and Brad Peterson’s hands when Drew asked, “Hey Mason, have you tried Adrianne’s candy?”

Adrianne froze and she slowly turned to face Mason. Since everything sounded sexual tonight, that certainly did.

Mason pressed his lips together as he met her eyes, clearly trying to smother a smile.

“Yeah, I’ve had a taste,” Mason answered.

So she wasn’t the only one taking that the wrong way.

She turned away, trying to look busy with the cracker box. And not pant.

“I think I’d definitely like more though,” he said.

“It’s the best,” Tim said, tossing a couple of cards into the middle of the table. “Everyone says so.”

She rolled her eyes and dropped a plastic cup on the floor. Mason should definitely fold.

“Lots of people have had a taste then?” Mason asked.

She blushed. Only she and Mason knew what they were talking about. Drew and Tim were talking about actual candy. But it didn’t matter. She couldn’t help her reaction to the combination of Mason, her and tasting in the same thought process.

It also didn’t matter that not many people had been involved with her or her candy—real or analogous—since she’d come to Sapphire Falls.

“Oh, sure a few. Not as many as will once she gets her shop at Sapphire Hills.”

Mason paused in the midst of folding the cards together in his hand. “Her shop?”

Oh, yeah. Mason didn’t know one of the proposed shops was hers. It wasn’t like she’d not told him on purpose but…okay, it was.

Had he not seen her naked breasts she would have felt more comfortable asking him for money. Had she not climbed all over him, nearly orgasmed on his car hood that first night, she might have felt better about trying to sell him on something personal to her. She wasn’t all that comfortable selling him on anything at this point. Her role, as she saw it, was to give him general information about Sapphire Hills and keep him company in Hailey’s absence. She wasn’t going to be the one specifically asking him for anything that had even a little bit to do with her shop since sticking her tongue down his throat within two hours of meeting him.

She didn’t want him to think the two things were connected.

One glance at his face confirmed that was exactly what he was thinking anyway.

“She’s been cooking and feeding us since she moved to town, but her candy is by far the best thing she’s got.” Drew took a swig of beer and must have thought about how that sounded. “Well, not the best thing she’s got in general. She’s also got great legs and…well, anyway, she’s got a lot to offer,” he said with a wink at her.

“Hey, Adrianne, remember the candy you made for Karen’s graduation party?” Tim asked. “You should totally have those in the shop. Those rock.”

“Thanks, guys,” she murmured, her eyes on Mason.

Why did the pit of her stomach suddenly feel heavy? Like something bad had happened?

“I’m all in.”

She stared at him. He was all in? He was betting on that sorry hand? He should have folded long ago. He was going to lose everything.

And obviously he knew it and didn’t care. He was staring right back at her as he pushed his chips across the table. All of his chips. Then he lay his cards down. His sucky, couldn’t-win-at-Old-Maid cards.

Tim hooted and chuckled as he pulled the huge pile of chips toward him. Mason pushed back from the table. “I’m heading out.”

“You’re leaving?” Adrianne asked, starting toward him without thinking about it.

“I have some other things I should do tonight,” he said.

She wished that sounded sexual. Because it didn’t. At all. It sounded kind of ominous in fact. She wondered if fighting with and dumping her were on his to-do list for tonight. Then she wondered if it was technically dumping when they’d known each other twenty-four hours.

“I’ll drive you,” she said.

“He’s been drinking soda all night,” Drew pointed out as he shuffled.

“You don’t know what I’ve been putting in his soda,” she returned.

No one argued, including Mason. She hoped that meant that he wanted to talk. Or kiss. Kissing would be even better. And easier.

But as she followed him to the front door, she doubted kissing was on the agenda.

 

 

 

THE CANDY SHOP was hers.

Of course it was.

Fuck.

The candy shop that couldn’t be built without his money and land. The money and land that he definitely didn’t want to give.

One of the shops was hers.

He hadn’t seen that coming.

He really hated when things didn’t go predictably.

“I didn’t make out with you to get your money.” She was slightly out of breath since she had to jog to keep up with him as he stormed down Drew’s front steps and long driveway to his car.

“But you definitely knew who I was when you made out with me.” He didn’t look at her. When she’d offered to drive him home, his traitorous body and heart had been in full agreement—his imagination jumping to all the candy he still needed to sample.

But now he realized that of course she’d offered to go home with him.

“Why was I invited tonight?” he asked, whirling on her. They were right beside his car and it was so similar to the position they’d been in the night before that he had to make himself draw a deep breath.

“The guys wanted you to play poker,” she said.

“I never played poker with them in high school. It doesn’t make any sense that they’d invite me tonight unless the purpose was very specific.”

“We want you to feel included, yes. We want all the alumni, particularly the investors, to feel welcome and have a good time.” She met his eyes directly. “It’s not a secret that treating you well is partly about our hopes that you’ll invest.”

“And you know better than anyone, including Hailey, how much I have to offer,” he said, his gut churning.

“I wrote your profile. I know what you’re worth, roughly,” she admitted.

“So makes sense that you would put so much effort toward treating me well and making sure I have a good time.” God, that did make sense. He should have known. He should have questioned her motives from the beginning. He knew what was motivating everyone else in Sapphire Falls, but even after finding out she was on the committee and knew a lot about the project, he’d stupidly gotten caught up in the crazy chemistry, the draw that had him still wanting her even if she didn’t really want him.

“Mason, I know how this looks but…” She seemed to be struggling for words. “Look, I don’t know what this is between us. I’ve never felt this so quick for someone before. But it’s real. It had nothing to do with Sapphire Hills.”

“I’m not supporting the building project.”

She didn’t even blink. “Because you can’t trust me?”

“Because it’s really important to me that when I give you the best orgasm of your life you know it’s all about me, not about a damned check.”

She sucked in a sharp breath and he saw her eyes widen. He wanted to think it was desire.

“If I just wanted your frickin’ money, I could have been nice and polite. This is far beyond nice and polite.” She grabbed the front of his shirt, jerked him forward and proceeded to kiss him hot and long and wet.

When she pushed him back, they were both breathing hard.

“I intend to keep kissing you,” she informed him. “And I still want Sapphire Hills to happen. And I want you to have a good time here. So those things might all seem to collide at times. But I intend to keep kissing you, and when I do, you’re going to know that it’s just because I want to kiss you.” Then she turned on her heel and headed back for the house.

He stared after her. Yeah, well, he intended to keep kissing her too.

Regardless of any frustration or irritation, he couldn’t leave her alone now, and the next time his mouth was on her body, they were both going to know that what she was feeling was about him and what he could do to her. No matter what his bank account said.

She wasn’t going to use their chemistry to get anything out of him or as some kind of payback for what he could give.

As he drove the dark, winding country road back to town from Drew’s, he was reminded of another night eleven years ago.

God, women and Sapphire Falls just didn’t work out well for him.

It had been spring, only a week before graduation, and he’d been driving home from Milt’s farm. It had been dark, almost too dark to see the figure walking alongside the highway leading back into town. But she’d been wearing a white top that had shone in his headlights and it had taken him no time to recognize the way she walked.

Hailey had been walking home. She and her then boyfriend, Mark Andrews, had gotten into a fight, she’d told him to pull over so she could get out, and he’d done it.

She’d been walking for about a mile when Mason pulled over.

She’d been crying.

He could still remember the way that had tightened his chest. That and the way she looked at him. Like he was her hero.

He’d taken her home and she’d asked him to come in. Her parents were still out for the evening and she was shook up from the fight with Mark and walking alone in the dark. So he’d stayed.

And she’d kissed him. She’d also taken off her shirt. He’d seen Hailey Conner’s naked breasts. They’d made out heavily until they heard her parents’ car. He was sure, even years later, that if her parents hadn’t interrupted, he would have had sex with Hailey Conner—the most popular girl in school.

Her parents had been grateful to him for bringing her home and staying with her so she wasn’t alone. Hailey had walked him to his car and thanked him for being such a great guy. And she’d kissed him again.

It stood to reason then, that he’d assumed he would be greeted warmly the next time she saw him.

Not so.

Mason’s hands tightened on the steering wheel and he scowled at the road in front of him.

He should have let her walk.

He never should have kissed her.

He should have hiked up her skirt and done her on her mother’s dining room table.

That sounded good, but he’d known better. What he never should have done was trust her. He should have questioned her motives. Should have wondered why she was all over him after years of ignoring him.

It had been about what he could do for her—take her home, get her away from the scary dark highway, and make her feel wanted when her boyfriend was being an ass.

Now Adrianne thought he could do something for her too.

Mason sighed and tried to relax his shoulders. What he should have done was avoid Hailey like the plague after that night.

Instead, he’d optimistically approached her at school the next day. With her friends around. And kissed her on the cheek.

And she’d humiliated him.

So what he should do tomorrow was avoid Adrianne like the plague.

Of course, the chances of that were somewhere around a billion to one.

And he’d very likely regret it as much as he had eleven years ago.

 

 

Adrianne stirred the pot on the stove, mixing butter, corn syrup and sugar—the beginnings of her homemade caramels. She had to keep checking the recipe though. Which was unprecedented for her. She’d made these caramels a hundred times. But she was thinking about Mason, his kisses, how angry he’d been last night and how much she wanted him to know that she wasn’t doing any of this because of his money.

Except that she kind of was.

Not really. Not the kissing and stuff. But she’d been hanging out with him to preserve the chances of him donating.

Dammit.

This was getting complicated. And stressful. Completely opposite of what she wanted.

Her phone rang and she grabbed it, hoping it was Mason.

“Hello?”

“The guys are taking him golfing.”

“Hi, Hailey,” Adrianne said dryly. No greeting returned, not that she’d expected it.

“They’re picking him up in half an hour.”

She frowned. So what? Why did she need to be aware of every move Mason made? It was bad enough she couldn’t stop thinking of him on her own. Having everyone constantly alerting her of every detail of his schedule wasn’t helping.

“And?” she asked.

“And I think you should prep them.”

“Prep them?” she repeated. “What’s that mean?”

“You’ve spent some time with him now.”

Yeah, because Hailey had messed with him in high school and Phoebe and Matt had talked her into being the buffer. Which had led to her spending time with him, which had led to her liking and wanting him, which was complicated because she had originally spent time with him for reasons other than wanting to and…

Frankly, it was exhausting.

“Yeah, I’ve spent time with him, so?”

“So you need to tell the guys what to talk to him about.”

“They should…” She thought of Drew and Tim and Steve. “Probably not talk to him at all.”

“I know. But this was Drew’s idea, and I appreciate him trying to help out, and apparently Mason said yes so they can’t cancel now.”

Adrianne thought back to the night before. It was possible that Drew had asked Mason because he wanted to. It didn’t necessarily have to be about the donation and the project. She thought maybe Drew, and maybe the other guys, liked Mason and wanted to get to know him better. And maybe Mason thought so too.

Which meant she couldn’t let him golf with them.

Not because they might screw up the donation, but because he was enjoying being one of the guys for a change. And if those guys screwed that up she’d have to kill them.

She wasn’t meddling now because of the money.

She wanted to protect Mason from having any more bad experiences in Sapphire Falls. Part of her even wanted him to like Sapphire Falls.

“What do they have in common? What do they know that he would also know?” Adrianne asked.

“You.”

Before she could answer, her smoke alarm erupted and she whirled to find her pan of butter and sugar smoking.

“Shit!” She pulled the pan from the burner, dumped it in the sink and started fanning the air under the smoke alarm with a towel. Finally, the beeping stopped.

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