Pranked (9 page)

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Authors: Sienna Valentine

BOOK: Pranked
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15
Ava

I
could feel
the drums beating under my skin.

Or maybe that was my heart.

Or maybe it was whatever noxious excuse for kombucha had been in that bottle.

It hardly mattered. Even with Bennett’s arms curled around me almost possessively, I felt freer than I had in years. I wasn’t sure I’d ever felt this light, like I could float away on a cloud. Only the faint scratch of his evening stubble against my temple kept me grounded in reality.

With his arms so solidly surrounding me, I finally felt like myself again. Like the Ava Cassidy I’d been before
Wild Rovers
, before Ken, before any of it. As I pulled back slightly to look at Bennett, I remembered. I remembered why I’d started talking to him in that bar when he’d first approached me. He didn’t know who I was. I was just a girl in a bar.

I was just a girl in a drum circle.

The idea hit me with such an absurd pleasure that I had to kiss him. The surge of the music seemed to push me up and I pressed my lips to his, feeling them yield to my touch, tasting the saltiness of his skin and the sweetness of the drink we’d both had. Another memory hit me, Bennett’s lips meeting mine in a fierce passion that seemed to set every one of my nerves on fire, each synapse firing in a delicious crackle of passion. My body reacted to the memory, and I felt an echo of that passion rolling through me. Building.

For a moment, we both allowed the delusion that we were still dancing, that we were still part of this circle, but it didn’t last. We soon stumbled away from the group, grinning like idiots. We didn’t go far—close enough that we could still see the fire, but far enough that the night air was beginning to cool. Bennett took my hand and led me to the base of a wide pine tree. We settled down between two enormous roots, and when I shivered, he wrapped his arms around me, holding me like something precious.

I curled closer to him, my head resting on his chest, just under his chin.

“I remember,” I said quietly. “I remember kissing you.”

“Oh?” he said quietly, fingers stroking lightly down my bare arm.

“Yes,” I said, snuggling closer. I had remembered quite a few things from that night by now. “I remember I liked it.” I laughed, nervous even now. “I remember liking it a lot. But I... I still don’t remember the Elvis impersonator.”

I felt Bennett stiffen a little, and I worried he was still hurt that I didn’t remember our ceremony at all. I could hardly blame him. I’d be furious if my husband had forgotten our wedding.

Even in his stiff silence, his arms stayed curled around me, holding me close. I snuggled further into his warm, the faint sound of the nearby drums soothing me into relaxation. “I wish I could,” I murmured, the warmth and the alcohol conspiring to pull me into sleep. “It sounds like we had fun.”

I
don’t know
how I got back to the ranch that night. Bennett wouldn’t admit to carrying me, but I couldn’t imagine him letting anyone else do it, not with the possessive way he’d held me when we danced.

By the next morning, Layla seemed perfectly content to stay as long as I needed. Over buttermilk pancakes and fresh blackberries, she confessed that she thought we could both use a vacation.

“I mean, sooner or later we’re gonna have to go back to the real world, but until then?” Her gaze wandered over toward River. “There are worse places to hole up.”

I still didn’t know what my husband did for a living. He said he was “independently wealthy”, and it certainly seemed like he had endless amounts of cash, given the way he lavished me with random, exceedingly expensive, gifts as if he were simply treating me to a Snickers bar. One night he had an expensive new dress waiting for me in our room, telling me he thought we could dress up for dinner that night. Then waiting for us in a small, private dining room was a diamond necklace to match.

The man was full of surprises. On our first full day there, he took me on a quick tour of the grounds, and when we got back, River told him there was a short in the breaker for the cabins and offered to call an electrician. But Bennett waved him off.

“I’ll take a look. I’m sure I can handle it.”

“You’re the boss, boss,” River said with a lazy salute and a bright smile.

I followed Bennett to the breaker, mostly because I didn’t know where else to go. Layla had said she’d be sunning by the lake all day, but I wanted to do something more active. And I wanted to get to know my husband.

He took a path that led around behind the main house, to a room full of more electronics than I could ever identify. Lots of boxes with blinking lights and switches. “What is this, WarGames?” I asked, laughing.

“This,” he said with a smirk, “is the beating heart of the ranch. It’s where all the magic happens.”

He moved to one of the boxes and started fiddling about in it. I watched him, but I couldn’t even guess what he was doing. It seemed complicated.

“I don’t get it,” I said after a moment. “Do you ever even use the cabins?”

“Not really,” Bennett said with a shrug.

“So why do you need to fix the breaker now?”

He was quiet for a moment while he worked, and several emotions I couldn’t identify flitted across his face.

“I like to keep things going,” he said after a while, his voice so quiet I had to strain to hear it over the whirring of fans in the room.

As I watched him work, I mused out loud, “I had no idea you could do all that.”

He winked at me. “Your husband has a few surprises up his sleeve, you know.”

A
pparently
, another one of those surprises was his ability to share a bed with his wife for four nights of their honeymoon and not manage to touch her once.

I didn’t know why Bennett was holding back. We’d already had sex. I remembered enough from that night to know that. Was he trying to be gentlemanly? Was he waiting for me to make the first move? Maybe he was waiting for me to actually remember our wedding?

Whatever it was, even if I made an attempt to initiate something, he pulled away—albeit seemingly with great reluctance. Yet, I was still getting to know him so well in so many other ways as we spent day after day together. We’d practically created a commune here, and there was a part of me that wanted to stay here with Layla forever. Forget about Hollywood, forget about acting.

It was easy enough to put my past life out of my mind. The ranch didn’t get any TV reception, and Bennett didn’t have cable, so I hadn’t seen anything in the news about me. Not after my phone’s battery died the first day and I decided not to bother recharging it. I didn’t want to have to face anything outside this beautiful bubble we’d created. Eventually I would have to face the real world again, but for at least a little while I was content to ignore it.

Besides, even if we weren’t having sex, there were other distractions. Bennett was romantic. He’d surprise me with wildflowers or have River fill our meals with anything I even mentioned liking or having a craving for. We spent most evenings cuddling by the fire pit on the patio, until Layla and River disappeared, and then we’d tumble (platonically) into our own bed. Still, I was a little bitter that my assistant was having more sex on my honeymoon than I was.

He woke me one morning with a thermos of coffee and two enormous blueberry muffins, fresh from the oven, if the steam rising from them was any indication.

“Come on,” he said. “Can’t come to a ranch without riding horses.”

I’d been past the stables several times since I arrived, but I hadn’t ventured inside. I wasn’t sure if these were the kind of horses you could ride or if you needed a special jockey license for them.

It turned out that all of Bennett’s horses were former thoroughbred racers, now retired to a life of Western riding and lazily grazing in the sweet mountain grass.

“Domino,” Bennett said, as he led me to one of the stalls. Inside was an impressive specimen, white with black spots that did look a bit like a domino. “I mean, the guy who sold him to me had some long ass name for him, but Domino seems to like his new nickname well enough, don’t you, boy?”

Domino whinnied softly, shaking his mane.

“He’s big, but he’s sweet,” Bennett assured me. “He’ll be an easy ride for you.”

“Now here’s….”

Bennett trailed off as he started explaining the tack to me, watching as I reached for Domino’s lead rope and tied it to the post.

“Brush?” I said, holding out my hand once the rope was secure. Bennett wordlessly handed me the brush, and I started grooming the big horse, speaking softly to him as I worked. I’d learned to ride for the second season of
Wild Rovers,
for a small set of episodes where the family had visited a dude ranch. For realism, the handlers had taught us how to groom and tack our own horses.

Once I’d gotten the saddle and bridle into place and was stroking the bridge of Domino’s nose, Bennett let out a low whistle. “How come you didn’t tell me you could ride?” he asked, and I shrugged, smiling.

“Your wife has a few surprises up her sleeve too,” I said, swinging into the saddle.

W
e rode
up a trail behind the main house that led into the mountains. Bennett told me more about his family, about their summers here. I talked about the few family vacations we’d gone on before my career had started to take up too much of our time.

At about lunchtime, we reached a wide clearing with a small stream trickling through it, ending in a wide pool, and tied up the horses. Bennett unpacked a picnic, and I stretched out in the sun. It was peaceful up here. Serene. Quiet. All the things my life was not.

And that was before everything had gone to hell.

After lunch, we lay on the blanket on our sides, arms tucked under our heads, swapping stories and laughing. He’d taken off his shirt, and both of us had shed our shoes.

“You should have seen his face!” Bennett said, shaking his head. “He just couldn’t fathom how his car had made it into the bell tower.”

“You’re the worst sort of prankster!” I said, but I couldn’t stop the laugh bubbling up in my chest.

Bennett got suddenly serious, his smile sliding from his face. I wondered if I’d hit a nerve somehow. After a moment he looked like he was about to say something; something serious that would shatter the illusion of this perfect day, and I didn’t want that. I wasn’t ready for it.

Smiling, I jumped to my feet instead.

“Come on!” I said, starting to pack up our lunch. “I want to go for a swim before dinner.”

He rose as well, customary grin sliding back into place, and waggled his eyebrows. “Why wait?” he asked, and before I could respond, he’d swept me from my feet and tossed me over his shoulder, making a beeline for the stream.

“Bennett Dallas Campbell, don’t you dare!” I shrieked between peals of laughter, and a moment later we were both soaked, standing in the middle of a stream that proved deceptively deep.

“You were saying?” Bennett asked, managing to still look sexy, even with his hair half wet and falling in his face. His feet touched the bottom of the pool, but mine didn’t, and I was treading water in front of him.

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