Nantucket Romance 3-in-1 Bundle (73 page)

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Authors: Denise Hunter

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Seaside Letters

OTHER NOVELS BY DENISE HUNTER

Surrender Bay

The Convenient Groom

Sweetwater Gap

Seaside Letters

DENIS HUNTER

© 2009 by Denise Hunter

All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other—except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson. Thomas Nelson is a registered trademark of Thomas Nelson, Inc.

Thomas Nelson, Inc., titles may be purchased in bulk for educational, business, fund-raising, or sales promotional use. For information, please e-mail [email protected].

Publisher’s Note: This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. All characters are fictional, and any similarity to people living or dead is purely coincidental.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Hunter, Denise, 1968–
Seaside letters / Denise Hunter.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-1-59554-260-1 (pbk.)
I. Title.
PS3608.U5925S44 2009
813'.6—dc22

2009027368

Printed in the United States of America

09 10 11 12 13 RRD 5 4 3 2 1

Table of Contents

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-one

Chapter Twenty-two

Chapter Twenty-three

Chapter Twenty-four

Chapter Twenty-five

Chapter Twenty-six

Chapter Twenty-seven

Chapter Twenty-eight

Chapter Twenty-nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-one

Chapter Thirty-two

Chapter Thirty-three

Chapter Thirty-four

Chapter Thirty-five

Chapter Thirty-six

Chapter Thirty-seven

Chapter Thirty-eight

Chapter Thirty-nine

Reading Group Guide

Acknowledgments

An Excerpt from Sweetwater Gap

Sweetpea: Betrayal flips a switch you didn’t know existed. Suddenly you’re on guard. No one is above suspicion, no one is as honest as they seem, and it’s all because of this basic truth: You’re too afraid to risk it all again.

Chapter One

Sabrina Kincaid heard the jingle of the café’s glass door opening and glanced at the clock above the workstation: 7:12 on the dot.

She grabbed the fresh pot, turned toward the tables crowding the Cobblestone Café, then headed straight to his table—might as well get it over with—table seven, a two-topper near the front.

He would be seated against the beadboard wall, facing the kitchen, unfortunately. He would be wearing a blue “Cap’n Tucker’s Water Taxi” cap, a light-colored T-shirt, and a crooked grin. She would offer him coffee, he would accept, then he would spread open
The Inquirer and Mirror
and take thirty minutes on all twelve articles while she waited on other customers, her bony knees knocking together like bamboo wind chimes.

“Evan,” Gordon called from the kitchen. “Table twelve needs to be bussed.”

Evan’s blond ponytail flipped over his shoulder as he turned and wiped his hands on his stained brown apron. “Right, dude.”

Sabrina stopped a foot from the scarred maple table, avoiding eye contact, looking only at the fat rim of the ivory mug as he slid it toward her.

How many words had they exchanged in the year he’d been coming to the café? One hundred? Two hundred? Couldn’t be much more than that.

As always her expression was free of emotion, though a powerful hurricane brewed inside. It was a skill she’d learned early, perfected well, and if that had earned her the title of Ice Princess, so be it.

“Morning, Sabrina.” Tucker’s deep voice was raspy. And, as usual, he cleared his throat after the greeting.

Was she the first person he spoke to each morning? The thought made her hand tremble. A stream of hot coffee flowed over the cup’s rim and onto Tucker’s thumb. He jerked his hand back.

Idiot!
Her first spill in months and it had to be Tucker. And with hot coffee.

“I’m sorry. Let me fetch a towel.” She turned toward the kitchen, heat flooding her face.

He stopped her with his other hand. “I’m fine.” He wiped his thumb on a napkin and held it out. “See?”

Sabrina made the mistake of meeting his eyes. Oh, yes. She saw, all right. Under the brim of his cap, his blue eyes contrasted with his summer-brown skin. One strand of dark hair curled like a backward
C
, nearly tangling with his eyelashes. He disliked his curly hair, but hated going to the barber so much that he procrastinated until it was an unruly mop. He wore contacts because he was nearsighted and because glasses would blur under the sprays of water as he guided his boat.

He was still looking at her.

She was still looking at him.

Look away. Say something.
“Anything else?”

“A smile?” Tucker’s own grin lifted the tiny scar near the corner of his mouth—a souvenir from the time his twin sister dared him to jump from his second-story bedroom window when he was nine.

But Sabrina wasn’t supposed to know about that. She pulled at the tip of her ponytail with her empty hand.

“Give it up, McCabe.” Behind her, Oliver Franklin’s voice was a lifeline. “Top me off, Sabrina?”

She turned, grateful for the distraction, and filled his cup. The sand-colored coffee darkened to caramel as she poured, the rich smell of the brew drifting upward on wings of steam.

“Not feeling particularly
efficacious
this morning?” Oliver tilted his round head, his hairline receding another inch as he hiked his bushy gray brows. He gripped the mug with fat hands calloused from garden tools.

“I’m as efficient as always, just a bit clumsy today.” Sabrina took his egg-streaked plate and stacked a smaller plate on top.

“Dagnabit, Sabrina,” he said as she walked away. “Is there a word you don’t know?”

She deposited the plates into Evan’s tub, set the pot on the warmer, and loaded a tray with table five’s food. Was Tucker watching her? She always felt like he was, which was ludicrous. Still, it made her stand a little straighter, smile a little more—at other customers. He was good for her tips.

You’re just some server he toys with. Nothing else.

When she turned with the loaded tray, her eyes pulled toward him.
Don’t look. Just walk.
Look at the sun streaming through the glass front. Look at the family at table four, the toddler, crouched in the wooden high chair, letting loose a wail that could be heard clear down at the wharf. Sabrina pulled a packet of crackers from her apron pocket and slipped it to the mom as she passed.

When she reached table five, she served the food, then tucked the tray under her arm. “Anything else?”

“Tabasco sauce?” the mother asked. “Oh, and he needs a refill of juice.” She handed Sabrina her son’s cup. The overhead lights sparkled off a huge diamond.

“Be right back.” She had to pass Tucker’s table on the way.

He turned as she passed, his sandaled foot sliding into her path as he shifted into the aisle. “Sabrina. I know you’re busy, but I was wondering if we could chat a minute.”

The request stopped her cold. Sabrina didn’t chat with customers. Char chatted with customers, even the rich ones. Evan chatted with customers too. But not Sabrina, and certainly not with Tucker. It broke her unspoken line between customer and server, and that line was the only thing separating her from disaster. “I—I have too many tables.”

“Miss, some decaf, please?” An elderly tourist, seated at the table behind Oliver’s, corroborated her excuse.

“Of course.” Sabrina went to fill the cup with juice, grabbed a bottle of Tabasco and the decaf pot. What could Tucker want? As far as he knew, she was only a server at the café.

Maybe he knows.

But he couldn’t. She’d been so careful.

Yeah, so careful she’d lost her heart to the man.

I have not lost my heart. He’s just a friend. A dear friend who would be
lost forever with one little slip of the tongue.
The relationship was hanging by a thread and she knew it.

Sabrina dropped off the two items for the family, then poured the decaf. She’d no sooner turned the carafe upright when Tucker stopped her again. His cup was empty. “I’ll be right back with the regular,” she said, even though she knew it wasn’t coffee he wanted. It was a feeble stall that would buy her thirty seconds.

She stopped on the way to the coffee station and took the orders of a middle-aged couple, buying herself a few more minutes. Maybe if she took too long, Tucker would leave.

Sabrina put the order on the wheel and reviewed the lunch special with Gordon. She filled glasses with orange juice and ice water, set them on a tray, and delivered them to the table. In her peripheral vision, she saw Tucker waiting, his arms folded across the newspaper, rooted like a hundred-year-old oak tree. He wasn’t going anywhere.

Reluctantly, she retrieved the coffeepot and returned to his table, filling his cup carefully.

“How about after work?” he asked, picking up the conversation as if it were only seconds later.

What did he want? Maybe he wanted to ask her out. The thought filled her, expanding her lungs like an inflated balloon. Then she felt the prick of jealousy.
Pop
.

She nearly rolled her eyes at the irony. “I have to be somewhere.”

Behind her, Oliver chuckled, and Tucker shot him a look. He gave the brim of his hat a sharp tug.

Sabrina walked away. Her second job had flexible hours, but he didn’t know that. Besides, Renny was expecting her. She had to find the perfect poison, and that would take a while.

The bell at the kitchen window dinged.

She was at the coffee station before she realized Tucker had followed her. His large frame made her feel small and cornered. He’d never gone farther than his table, and the fact that he did so today confirmed her suspicion that he wanted something more than idle conversation. And he wasn’t giving up.

The rubber heels of her shoes brushed the wall behind her, and she straightened, meeting his gaze.

“Just a few minutes, all I’m asking.”

His nearness sucked the moisture from her mouth and the thoughts from her head. She smoothed her thick hair toward her low ponytail.
Say something. Anything.

“All right,” she blurted.
Anything but that
.

His mouth relaxed, and the relief in his blue eyes made something twist in the pit of her stomach. “Thank you. I won’t take much of your time. I’ll meet you out front if it’s all right with you? There’s a bench down the way . . .”

She nodded, all at once relieved and disappointed they were meeting someplace so public.
What is wrong with you?

His lips quivered at the corners, and the faint lines around his eyes relaxed. He touched his fingers to the brim of his hat and retreated.

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