Wilde Magic (Wilde Women Book 3) (43 page)

Read Wilde Magic (Wilde Women Book 3) Online

Authors: Suzanne Halliday

Tags: #WIlde Women book 3

BOOK: Wilde Magic (Wilde Women Book 3)
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She tried not to growl when Amy mentioned Ty. There was no way she was asking him for anything. She’d die, frozen and hungry before going to him for help.

Although. A damsel in distress performance might prove fun. She could ask for help and repay the kindness with her body. Charlie shivered at the salacious thought. What would the big deal be if she turned the tables? He took what he wanted. How come she couldn’t do the same?

Because that’s not who you are.

Shut up. I’m horny.

Just horny? Or is there something else? Something you don’t want to admit.

Damn. She missed him. It was true. The time they spent together changed her life—and she didn’t just mean the surrendering her virginity thing.

Something about Caleb Merrill called to her. Trying to ignore it wasn’t working.

“Okay, well like I said. I’m outta’ here. Will you keep me informed, though? Let me know what’s going on so I don’t worry for no reason.”

Amy gave her a big hug and squeeze. “Don’t worry so much, Charlie. I’ve got this. You go and get ready and then enjoy the magic. And don’t forget, snow angels are a must! Your crazy sister does ‘em on the side of the house—then runs upstairs and hangs out a window to take pictures.”

“Y’know what?” she chuckled. “I’m glad to hear that. It’s fantastic seeing Brynn so happy. None of that stick-up-her-butt stuff anymore.”

She started for the door, smacked her forehead as she remembered and dashed to the case where the pastries and cupcakes were displayed. “Please, please, please,” she begged with her hands clasped. “May I have a box of sweets?”

Ten minutes later she waved good-bye to Amy and started the trudge back to Wilde House with a bakery boxed tied with string. If nothing else, she could indulge in a sugar coma.

A light dusting was falling from the sky. She looked up and a snowflake stuck to her eyelashes for a second before melting away. Charlie sang a playful childhood jingle as she trudged along.

“Snow is falling all around,

Dancing and swirling, down to the ground

I catch a snowflake on my tongue.

Building a snowman is so much fun.

Snow is falling all around

Dancing and swirling, down to the ground.”

“Hi,” she heard a deep voice call out. Charlie’s head whipped around. Oh, no. Now, what did she do?

“Hello.” She kept walking, hoping her snippy tone kept him at bay. No such luck. He moved directly into her path and waited.

Stepping around him wasn’t a possibility. Not with the snow berms along the edge of every path, sidewalk and driving surface.

“Can I help you with that?” he asked, nodding at the box.

“No.”

She saw his mouth snap shut. Good. Maybe he’d go away. Falling into step as she swept by, he walked along pacing his strides with hers. Her mindset wouldn’t allow Charlie to make it easy for him. Stopping suddenly, she turned and frowned.

“What do you want?”

He hadn’t anticipated the swift stop and ended up taking a few extra steps before stopping to turn around. His eyes bored into hers. She shifted on her feet. The impulse to look away was there, but she stood her ground.

“I want to talk to you.”

“Fuck off.”

Her satisfaction when he drew back was short-lived. He recovered quickly from the rude rebuke.

“Don’t act like a child, ‘tessa.”

Oh, no he didn’t! A child? A CHILD? She wanted to take one of the gooey cannolis out of the box and smash it in his face.

“Excuse me, but how I act is none of your business.”

He glared at her. She looked daggers at him. And then he backed down. She wasn’t born yesterday. He had something up his sleeve.

Charlie almost screamed and ran away like a frightened child when he reached out and tucked some hair behind her ear. His touch unnerved her. Unless she was in complete control, there was no way she could allow him the liberty. Too risky and worse, she knew damn well it wouldn’t take much to have her begging for more.

“Then how ‘bout you join me. For a martini.” He paused and let the weight of his words sink in. “I found half a bottle of Grey Goose chilling in the freezer and some Noilly on the bar cart. My favorite. Remember?”

Smashing the cannoli became a really, really good idea. He was taunting her. She’d been careless after Rhi left when moving her stuff from the loft into the main house and now he’d discovered one of her secrets. The dirty martini she had every night had more to do with him than a sudden love of vodka and vermouth.

He’d thrown her off but only for a second. A fast thinker, keeping up with the grown-ups would always be one of her strongest traits. Charlie regrouped and shut him down. And she didn’t need to be a bitch to do it.

“In case you haven’t noticed,” she slowly articulated as if speaking a strange language. “It’s snowing. And it doesn’t plan to stop anytime soon.”

She wanted to cry ‘foul’ when the snow she referenced left a sprinkling of delicate fairy flakes on his head. The white flecks stuck to his hair and dusted his shoulders. His massively wide shoulders. Her heart rate calmed. Everything around them slowed, even the falling flakes. She watched, mesmerized when a tumble of the snowy crystals landed on his eyelashes and clung briefly to the stubble of his thickening beard. There was magic in the air, no doubt about it.

The shameless romantic inside her sighed. Although it pained her to admit the secret in her heart, Charlie didn’t stop the burst of longing she felt for this man. The pulse of connection from the second they met was strong. Stronger than the physical attraction. She thought he was the one. Wanted him to be her charming prince. When he tumbled off his white horse, scratched his armor and landed in the mud, she’d been heartbroken.

Throwing him into the middle of her life now, after he’d crushed her romantic dreams, was just plain mean.

With a matter-of-fact huff, she pinned him with a blasé look. “Reports say we’re going to be snowed in so I have to head into town and get some supplies.” She wanted to kick herself in the butt after adding, “You might want to consider doing the same. I don’t think there’s much in the cupboards.” Why the hell did she have to be so damn helpful?

Easy answer. Because right that moment she was concerned for him. Worried about how he’d get along all by himself in the tiny studio while the snow buried them. She dropped her eyes. Shoot. Nana was right. She was too damn worried about everyone else for her own good.

He looked like he was considering what she said. Once or twice he nodded—the snowflakes continued to powder his hair and shoulders—as he glanced around. She swallowed hard.

“How did you plan on getting to the store?”

She was so damn tempted to snipe at him that she was going to push her belly button and fly. But then she heard his scolding accusation that she was being a child. Which shut her up before the juvenile expression left her mouth.

Remember who you are. Uh huh. Just one thing. Why’s it gotta be so difficult? Charlie fiddled with an earring and thought about his question. He hadn’t asked for no reason, but she couldn’t see where he was going so she answered without too much concern.

“I’m going to drive of course. The snow doesn’t scare me.”

Ty snickered and shook his head at her. What? What was so funny?

“And what will you be driving?”

She automatically twisted to point at the vehicles parked near the house. Brynn and Jax’s cars. But she wobbled her response because, in a flash, she realized how boxed in she was. Dammit to hell. “Oh,” was all she muttered.

Jax had a big work truck. She could drive it with one hand tied behind her back but her brother-in-law didn’t know that about her and hadn’t left a key. Brynn’s car, on the other hand, was a hybrid sedan with a bumper sticker that read, Smug Alert. Practical, sedate it all but screamed Mom Car. But it would handle like a sled going downhill without a rudder on the slippery snow-covered back roads.

Shit. Shit. Shit.

Just like that, with a little snow and one word, she lost control of the entire situation. Nancy Kerrigan wailed ‘
Whyyy
?’ in her head.

He took the box from her and put his hand on her elbow. She wasn’t lame and didn’t need help walking, but he didn’t seem to notice or care.

“Come on, let’s take my Explorer. Safer. It’ll get us back and forth from town, no problem.” He was guiding her away from the house toward the studio and his vehicle. “And in case you’ve forgotten, driving is sorta’ my thing.”

Those poor cannolis in the box weren’t going to survive her imagination smashing them into his face every five minutes.
Driving was sorta his thing
. Good grief. Playing Mr. Macho Race Car Stud in Europe was one thing. She let him have it at the time. But here? Back on American soil? No fucking way. Daisy Duking him in an off-road mud run seemed like a better and better idea. Anyone can drive fast around a track—but four wheeling in the woods? He- he- he. She held dominion over that little challenge.

“Do you need your purse or anything before we leave?”

She stumbled to a halt and pulled out of his grasp. “Well, yeah,” she barked. “I need my wallet. They don’t pass out groceries for free.”

“Is that it? Just your wallet?”

She just looked at him. Not rolling her eyes wasn’t easy.

Before she knew it he had her bundled into his car, the bakery box stowed on the back seat. How the hell did he do that so easily? First thing he did after starting it up was adjust the temperature and turn on her seat warmer.

“Heated seats,” he sniggered. “Fucking awesome for these cold temps.”

She ignored his attempt at banter. “I still need my wallet.”

“Nope. No you don’t. I’ll take care of it.” The Explorer started moving down the driveway, skirting the side of the bakery and stopping at the main road. With one finger, he flipped on the turn signal then turned and looked at her. “Don’t be mad, ‘tessa. You were right. It’s snowing. We need to prepare.”

His shoulder rolled. She wanted to reach over and smooth the damp waves of his hair.

“Your grandmother put me in charge and …”

Her reaction was instantaneous. Ooooh, she was so damn mad at Nana for setting her up like this. “I don’t need a babysitter.”

“No one said you did, baby girl.”

She glowered at him. He had no idea how close he was to having his face ripped off. This was why she had to keep her distance. Why they couldn’t talk it out. He kept using those words. The endearments that made her tummy tingle.

“What I was trying to say before you cut me off was that she left me in charge of making sure things run smoothly. That’s all. I know you can take care of yourself.”

He reached over and gently squeezed her knee. With one quiet touch, her primordial desires were unleashed. He was a devil who owned her—body and soul.

They pulled onto the road and headed for the market.

“Jax told me where to go for ice-melt. So I’ll handle that stuff and you can take care of the food run. Okay?”

Charlie stayed quiet. He might have the upper hand, courtesy of her meddling grandmother and the weather but she had a voice in how this unfortunate encounter played out. And right now, she chose to keep her thoughts and reactions to herself.

A few minutes later, he started to chat about the wedding and she cut him off with brutal efficiency.

“No. I’m not talking to you so just shut up. It’ll be easier.”

He growled, “‘tessa, come on. We need to talk. Even if it’s just about current events.”

She nearly smacked him. That was her line—the one about current events. It was one of her go-to methods when helping a client learn to slow down and connect. Shithead.

Stopping her anger wasn’t possible. “Where exactly does it say that, huh?”

He glanced her way, his brows bumped.

“Just because you want to talk doesn’t mean I’m obligated to engage. I said no. No means no.”

She saw his jaw clench and his hands tighten on the steering wheel.

“I hate that shit,” she mumbled. “It’s like being asked a rude and insensitive question for the sake of a reaction. I’m not playing along so give it up.”

H
E KEPT SILENT THROUGH THE
entire run through town. The only time he tried to engage ‘tessa was to ask a direct question. Coke or Pepsi. Butter or Margarine. Mayo or Miracle Whip. Stuff like that.

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