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Summer Spice

Page 1

by Kris Pearson




  SUMMER SPICE

  Scarlet Bay Book 3

  Kris Pearson

  ISBN 978-0-9951021-6-3

  Scarlet Bay – where passions run deep and surely everyone deserves a summertime treat?

  Oliver Wynn was fascinated by Meifeng Chan from the moment he was old enough to know what girls were for. Mei was too realistic to ever accept a date with him; Ollie from the billionaire Wynn family and the Chinese girl from the takeaway shop? Not going to happen!

  Fifteen years later they have three days to get to know each other again – or will an old family scandal blow their chances sky-high?

  *

  For more information about me and my books, visit http://www.krispearson.com

  Sign up here for my newsletter and receive my FREE bear shifter novella ‘Sniffing Her Out’.

  Love and thanks to Philip for the unfailing encouragement and computer un-snarling… and to the members of the Wellington/Kapiti Chapter of Romance Writers of New Zealand. I adore our monthly meetings and it’s your enthusiasm and help that keep the books happening.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is co-incidental. There are many beaches which could be Scarlet Bay, but it’s created from a combination of several where I’ve had happy holidays.

  Copyright © 2019 by Kris Pearson

  Cover design by Robin Ludwig Design Inc.

  www.gobookcoverdesign.com

  *

  All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the US Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without prior permission of the author.

  If you’d like to read the first two Scarlet Bay novels, SUMMER SPARKS and SUMMER SECRETS, or any of my other books, there’s a list of them all at the end.

  TABLE OF CONTENTS

  Chapter 1 - Touchdown

  Chapter 2 – Takeoff

  Chapter 3 – Coffee and Chai

  Chapter Four – Bedrooms

  Chapter 5 – A Visit to Wildwood

  Chapter 6 – Cut Free

  Chapter 7 – Taken for a Ride

  Chapter 8 – Posy of grass

  Chapter 8 – No Escape

  Chapter 9 – And then…

  Chapter 10 - Dinner, Bed and Breakfast

  Chapter 11 - Bunks and hunks

  Chapter 12 – Knives and Lives

  Chapter 13 – A Visit to Yu Yan

  Chapter 14 – Overnight at Anna’s

  Chapter 15 – 100 Chairs

  Chapter 16 – Full of Surprises

  Epilogue

  Chapter 1 - Touchdown

  Maybe she was down there, a few hundred feet below him. Or maybe pigs might fly.

  Ollie could never resist one low-level pass along the beachfront in his Piper. He flew out over the tumbling waves so no-one complained he was buzzing the houses, but his gaze slid sideways, soaking up the view he’d known and loved for thirty years.

  His blood raced and his heart thudded. Everything was great.

  Almost everything was great.

  Seeing Mei so unexpectedly at Anna’s wedding had thrown his carefully ordered world into disarray, and Scarlet Bay was where he might find her again. He hoped.

  No other cautiously investigated avenue had yet borne fruit.

  He rolled his shoulders, looking forward to the ridiculous task he’d volunteered for; unpacking and sorting furniture in the family’s new holiday house before Christmas. A few days of freedom. No people, no reports, some heavy lifting that would do his body good. And barreling down the waves when the surf co-operated and he’d had enough of heaving beds and tables around. It was the perfect excuse to use his eyes and ears, ask a few questions, and see where they led.

  Just for the hell of it he tilted the plane’s nose down in a slight dive, then soared upward again, restless and unsettled. Full of anticipation and dread in equal measure. Speed was his drug – his escape from long years of study and the daily stress of his job in aviation engineering. One slip, one moment of inattention, and people could die. He had no intention of that happening on his watch, but it came at the cost of fierce concentration and total vigilance.

  He passed Scarlet Bay Takeaways (always a hitch in his heart when he thought of her), Denton’s Campground, now sold and renamed Bluewater Holiday Park… the older beach houses like Nanny Kawhia’s, and Bill and Thelma Hughes’ rambling place. Lean-to extensions off lean-to extensions which probably had no building permits. Then the new ones, including those built on the hill behind his family’s former holiday cottage, and the replacement for that, down at ocean level – his accommodation for tonight.

  Coasting a further couple of miles he reached Jason and Anna’s home, its roof tucked snugly between the outcrop of sheltering rock and the deep green remnant of original forest, and his marker to turn for the airstrip and ready the Piper for landing.

  Inbuilt superstition made him give the instrument panel its customary pat for a job well done as he taxied to a halt, and he smirked to himself at his stupidity. It was only a machine. It made more sense to pat his own shoulder for his meticulous maintenance of it, but, old habits...

  His cousin’s black pickup truck sat in the sunlit parking lot, and she raised her hand in a lazy greeting. His eyes widened as he saw how she’d grown. Okay, Anna was leaning back against the tray, no doubt enjoying the early summer warmth so the curve of her belly was probably exaggerated, but she looked about ready to pop.

  Ollie grinned and waved back, grabbing his overnight bag before vaulting out.

  As he walked toward her, one of the passenger side doors of the truck swung open and a pair of stiletto-heeled red ankle boots headed for the ground. Slim legs in narrow jeans slid into view above them. He slowed his long stride, riveted by the unexpected sight. Finally the rest of the woman appeared as the door slammed shut.

  She was slightly built, but hardly dressed as a child. And then it hit him. How? Why? Surely it couldn’t be that easy?

  A surge of triumph and trepidation washed through him. He cleared his throat and tried not to inspect her too obviously, pleased he hadn’t yet removed his aviator Ray-Bans.

  Above her low-riding skinny jeans a taut midriff sported a belly button jewel with a sparkly green stone. It twinkled as it caught the sunlight, dancing to and fro. Higher, a baby-blue crop-top stretched up over firm, round breasts. Long black hair cascaded far enough down to conceal some of their perfect plumpness. His heart told him it was her again, even though she looked so different from the demure girl at the wedding.

  He ran his tongue over his teeth, and swallowed.

  Damn – still drooling like a dog.

  Dragging his attention back to Anna, he said, “Pretty impressive, cuz.” He waved a hand at her pregnant belly, being careful not to bump her with his bag as he attempted a one-armed hug.

  “Had enough of it now,” she grouched. But her words were at odds with her dazzling smile. She glanced sideways. “Ollie – you remember Meifeng Chan? We need your help.”

  Yes, Meifeng was burned into his brain. His oriental mystery. His total fascination. The girl his jeering schoolmates had so scathingly called ‘Chinky’ when they found a bad photo of her taped inside his locker door, and whose reputation he’d defended until he was bruised and bleeding. He’d asked her out when he was a short and less than confident fifteen and been rebuffed very sharply when her father overheard. He’d gathered his courage together several more times as he grew taller, but was never accepted. Then she’d disappeared from the shop and the district.

  He’d dared m
ake only the vaguest enquiries around his family for the following few holidays, because no-one in the wealthy Wynn family would be expected to show interest in a Chinese girl from a takeaway shop.

  But then, a thunderbolt; there she sat in an exotic scarlet and black cheongsam playing her strange, long-necked instrument as Anna sang to Jason at their wedding reception. He’d been shocked into silence – throat dry, heart pounding, gaze never leaving her until she’d finished. Best man Cam had taken over with his affable speech, and when Ollie escaped to find her only minutes later, she was nowhere. It was as though she’d evaporated. He enquired as casually as he could sometime after Anna returned from her honeymoon. She’d told him Mei worked for one of the international airlines, had a partner, then turned away to answer something Jason was asking about.

  Ollie had stayed silent. A partner, but not a husband. It was enough to keep him hoping, but he certainly wasn’t alerting bloodhound Anna to his interest. Cautious questions to other people led him nowhere closer to Mei.

  Now he removed his Ray-Bans and nodded to her across the scorching tarmac, praying she wasn’t a mirage.

  She raised long-nailed fingers and slid her sunglasses part way down her nose to reveal slanted eyes, exotically shadowed.

  There was something hesitant about her slow semi-reveal. Ollie’s instincts didn’t often let him down, and the prickle of hairs rising on the back of his neck caused him to give her even sharper attention.

  Meifeng drew a jerky breath. “Haven’t seen you properly for many years, Oliver. Only in the distance at Anna and Jason’s wedding reception. Mei from the takeaway shop.”

  “But an international flight attendant for ages now,” Anna added. “So you have flying in common.

  He gave a slow nod. Uttered some kind of greeting that was probably a hoarse ‘Hi’. Cleared his throat and still found no proper words.

  No wonder she’d disappeared from the beach so effectively. She’d probably spent most of her time above thirty thousand feet, heading away from him.

  Anna straightened from her relaxed slump against the truck tray. “Mei needs to get away from someone who won’t accept they’re finished,” she said. “Away from him, and out of Scarlet Bay without being seen so he can’t track her. I hoped you could take her back with you when you leave.”

  She was being delivered into his hands?

  But then Meifeng drew the sunglasses lower and Oliver saw the shadows of bruises on one side of her face, just visible under meticulous makeup. “Jesus!” he exclaimed as horror and concern warred with the triumph of finding she might now be available.

  His fists itched to retaliate, and old memories swam all too easily to the surface. “He did that? Of course I’ll take you. Right away, if you like.”

  “No,” Anna said with a sharp shake of her head. “She needs to collect some stuff first. Kieran works until midday on Saturdays, so if we go now, we should be fine. Are you on?”

  Kieran. The name burned like acid in his throat. He nearly spewed at the mental picture of fragile Mei being hit. “Totally,” he snapped.

  “I’ll bob down in the back,” she said, pulling the rear door open. “Just in case.”

  Anna heaved herself less than elegantly into the driver’s seat of the double cab truck while Ollie jogged out to secure his plane.

  Mei was so small she’d never stand a chance against a full-grown man. Small like he’d been in his early teens, which had made him a target for the school bullies. His lack of size plus his well-known family and his good brain had been a bad combination. Their hard fists and well-placed punches and the occasional sly kick so he’d trip and fall were years in the past now, but still the memories lingered in the darkest recesses of his brain. The six-foot-three version of him wouldn’t mind meeting some of them again.

  He clenched his jaw as he collected his box of supplies and loped back to dump it in the truck’s tray. “Sure you don’t want me to drive?” he asked, surveying Anna’s big bump and still accustoming himself to the strange turn his solitary break had taken.

  Mei again, after all these years. As easily as that. And as impossible.

  Anna raised an eyebrow. “How do you think we got here? No – I’ll be fine. You okay back there?” She twisted her head and Ollie did the same. Mei had indeed positioned herself low on the seat so she wouldn’t be visible to anyone they passed.

  “So when’s he expected home?” Ollie demanded, thinking of the silent girl in the unflattering overall who’d deftly put together burgers and wrapped up parcels of fish and chips during his teenage holidays. She’d totally intrigued him with her air of touch-me-not and the occasional glance from her otherworldly eyes, even though her father had snarled like a rabid dog every time he caught sight of them together, spittle exploding from his lips, and eyes bugging out like a furious frog. His accent was so strong and his speech so rapid Ollie had never understood what was wrong.

  Mei hadn’t grown much, but the snug clothing and carefully applied cosmetics now made her look like a tiny badass rock star. “Soon after midday.” She pushed her luxuriant hair aside, and for a moment he saw rings on her fingers and a row of twinkling piercings up the edge of her ear. They sparkled pale lime and aqua and bright as diamonds before the dark curtain hid them again. The takeaway uniform receded even further into the past.

  He glanced at his watch as Anna started the engine and picked up speed toward the airfield gates, wondering how much ‘stuff’ was involved and why they hadn’t already collected it. “So that’s less than an hour. How far away?”

  “Not far past the campground,” Mei said. “We should be good.”

  Ollie narrowed his eyes at Anna. “Forgive me, cuz, but something’s screwy here. Why isn’t Mei’s family helping?” He flicked his gaze over to the back seat again. “You’ve got brothers – I remember them from holidays. John and Yang? Or have they moved away?”

  “Jiang, and Yanlin.” She said it in a flat, resigned tone. “And that’s the trouble. I don’t want my family involved. It’s been hard enough escaping as far as I have. Everyone wants to smother me.”

  “Mei’s parents have very traditional values,” Anna added. “And her mum hasn’t been well for ages. Mei doesn’t want to worry them any further.”

  “Okay,” Ollie said, shrugging. None of his business then, even though he was now intensely curious.

  But perhaps Mei thought it was, because she sighed and said, “They were born in China. Came here – maybe I should say ‘escaped to here’ because of their beliefs. They were past thirty, so had us kids late. And they never quite fitted in, so it kind of followed with us.”

  Anna uttered a soft noise of distress. “You really felt that? You always seemed like part of the community to me.”

  Mei gave a mirthless laugh. “First and only takeaway shop here. That makes it automatic you’re needed, but it doesn’t really mean you fit.” She made a little humming noise. “No, we fitted, but they never did. And you don’t like to disrespect your parents.”

  “I disrespected mine constantly,” Ollie said. “Tested them all the time to see what I could get away with.”

  “Which wasn’t much,” Anna said with a wry sideways grin in his direction. “We used to think we were so brave every holiday, running wild here at Scarlet Bay – but there wasn’t far we could run, and everyone kept an eye on each other. Essie next door always knew what was going on.”

  “Nosy old Essie,” Ollie agreed.

  “But it’s different for boys,” Mei said. “And different again when your parents aren’t the same as everyone else’s. I know from friends it’s a big battle to marry outside.”

  “Outside your culture?” Anna slowed for a couple of seagulls who were fighting over something edible on the road. They flapped up to safety at the last possible second, unwilling to leave their prize. “You mean arranged marriages?”

  “Not ‘arranged’,” Mei said, and Ollie heard the caution in her tone. “Advantageous marriages, perhaps. There
are always suggestions of suitable boys, and they are always sons of Chinese friends. And always shocked eyes if anyone suggests anything different.”

  “So… you and Kieran…?” Anna suggested.

  “Mmm, exactly. Me and Irish Kieran. No good to them. Comments so he could just hear them. Shocked eyes, so he knew it would be no good.”

  Ollie couldn’t help saying, “It looks like they were right if he’s been bashing you.”

  Mei shook her head, and all that beautiful hair swung from side to side. “Not bashing. We could say ‘pushed’ and I tripped against things. I like high heels.”

  He snorted at that and looked over his shoulder, pinning her with a furious glare. “More than once?”

  “Maybe.”

  “So that means yes.” He turned more fully on the seat, pleased with the excuse to inspect her closely. “There’s nothing of you. What are you? Five one? Five two?”

  “Five three – have to be that tall to reach the overhead lockers.”

  “And light as a feather. There’s no way he should be pushing you around.”

  She shrugged. “Or pulling me. He reached out for my arm a while ago and my shoulder dislocated. Not even a hard pull.”

  Anna made a distressed noise. “God, Mei. I didn’t know about that.”

  Another shrug. “Arm in a sling for the start of my last holiday. Good thing we were going away, but that time it wasn’t him being rough. It was just a wrong angle.” Her eyes sought Ollie’s, dark and intense, as though beseeching him to believe her.

  “If you say so.” He swiveled in his seat, trying to judge what Anna thought, but her gaze was fixed on the road ahead as it skirted the empty beach with its occasional spreading ngaio bushes and big clumps of feathery toi toi grass. Gulls soared up as they approached, and settled again behind them. Ahead of them, the red-flowered pohutukawa trees that gave Scarlet Bay its name were already dusted with bloom. Any other day he’d have thought it a peaceful scene but now he couldn’t get the picture of Mei being hurt out of his mind.

  Anna didn’t look across at him. Maybe she was purposely avoiding his gaze, distressed at the thought of her friend being mistreated. He wondered how long she’d known. Not long, he’d bet. Anna was always first to volunteer to put things right. Ollie was sure she’d be the one sorting the furniture if she hadn’t been so far along with the baby.

 

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