by Judi Lynn
KISSING THE CHEF
Daphne didn’t think she could concentrate with Tyne so near, but soon she was absorbed in the novel she was reading, and every time she shuffled a little impatiently, he brought her another glass of wine or a cup of tea. After a couple of hours, he carried a chocolate pavlova to the coffee table. He topped it with a layer of whipped cream and sliced strawberries.
It tasted like she was eating something too airy to contain calories. She used a finger to swipe up the last bit on her plate and looked at him. “You know how to treat a woman.”
“I try.” He reached for her teacup to refill it at the same time she did. Their fingers touched, and electricity shot through Daphne’s body. Their gazes locked, and all she could think about was how much she wanted him.
She slid onto the sofa next to him and slowly bent to kiss him. Sleeping Beauty in reverse. She hoped she woke up something inside him. His kiss started slow, friendly, but when she ran her tongue over his lips, he grew more passionate. Finally, he leaned forward to be more thorough. She scooted closer, pressing her body against his. He pulled back and stared.
“Are you sure you want this? It will change things . . .”
“I want it.”
“We’re friends. This could make things awkward.”
“I’m tired of lukewarm. I want to try spicy.”
Books by Judi Lynn
COOKING UP TROUBLE
OPPOSITES DISTRACT
LOVE ON TAP
SPICING THINGS UP
Published by Kensington Publishing Corporation
Spicing Things Up
A Mill Pond Romance
Judi Lynn
LYRICAL SHINE
Kensington Publishing Corp.
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
KISSING THE CHEF
Also by
Title Page
Copyright Page
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.
LYRICAL SHINE BOOKS are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2017 by Judith Post
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
Lyrical Shine and Lyrical Shine logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.
First Electronic Edition: March 2017
ISBN: 978-1-5161-0135-1
eISBN-10: 1-5161-0135-9
ISBN-13: 978-1-5161-0136-8
ISBN-10: 1-5161-0136-7
Chapter 1
The alarm buzzed. Tyne Newsome rolled over and ignored it. Five minutes later, it buzzed again. He pulled the pillow over his head and then thought better of it. Might as well get up. He usually beat the alarm, but he’d stayed up later than usual last night. Silly, since he worked early shifts on Mondays, but he and Harley went for a long motorcycle ride after Tyne got off work yesterday. Tyne glanced out the window of his upstairs apartment. A blaze of leaves glowed in the streetlights. Those leaves were what got him in trouble.
He and Harley hadn’t meant to stay out as long as they did, but Harley’s wife, Kathy, had told them to do whatever felt good. She was going to work on the winery’s bookkeeping all day to catch up. The crisp air and glory of autumn had pulled them deeper and deeper into the national forest south of Mill Pond. They hadn’t returned to the vineyard until close to sunset, and then Kathy had insisted Tyne stay for supper. By the time he got back to his apartment over Daphne’s stained-glass shop it was late, and then he’d stayed up reading an hour more to relax.
Oh, well, the lack of sleep had been worth it. He hustled into the bathroom, took a quick shower, and tugged on his chef’s pants and coat. Ian’s resort was too swanky for line cooks. He had to look the part, even though he usually wore his worn jeans into work for supper shifts and changed before guests hit the dining room.
He zipped down the inside staircase and stopped to glance at Daphne’s shop in the dim light. Most people didn’t move at four thirty in the morning, for good reason. When he returned later this afternoon, would the shop be decorated with dangling crepe paper and balloons? The professor she’d been seeing was supposed to be a free man today. All he had to do was sign his divorce papers. Patrick could finally ask Daphne to marry him. Nothing Tyne would celebrate. The man was as exciting as porridge, but Daphne thought she’d be happy with him.
On his way out the door to his Jeep, he inhaled the crisp, clean fall air. It perked him up, cleared his head. Driving down Main Street with its brick buildings, striped awnings, and old-fashioned street lamps, he saw Maxwell step out of his bakery to snag the morning paper by his door. Another early riser. When Maxwell saw Tyne’s orange Jeep, he raised a middle finger and grinned. Tyne laughed and returned the gesture. As usual, Maxwell’s Chihuahua, Chester, was close to his heels. Tyne had never met a man so attached to his dog.
Tyne passed Ralph’s diner and saw lights on in the kitchen. Garth’s gas station was still dark with only a security light shining on its four pumps. Once outside town, Tyne passed the farms that lined both sides of the street until he came to the drive for Lakeview Stables, Ian’s resort. He glanced past the tennis courts to the lake at the back of the property. The water lay still as a mirror.
He drove around to the back of the building—a three-story, limestone center with a wing off each side—and entered the kitchen through the back door. Monday breakfasts weren’t as rushed to prepare. He’d made the potato and sausage strata ahead of time and left them in the refrigerator to soak up the custard filling. All he had to do was put them in the oven. Steph, the morning sous chef, walked through the back door while Tyne was sliding the sausages and bacon into the second oven. She started putting ramekins in a stainless steel pan for them to start the eggs en cocotte with smoked salmon.
“Have a good weekend?” Tyne asked as they lined each ramekin with the salmon.
“We spent the weekend at Ben’s parents’ place on the lake. Had a great time, played lots of cards, and ate too much food.”
Tyne grinned. “The scenery’s gorgeous right now. Bet the lake was beautiful.�
�
Steph started breaking an egg into each ramekin. “It’s hard to beat Mill Pond when the leaves change.”
“It’s hard to beat Mill Pond in lots of things.” He slid her a sideways glance. “You happy you stayed on as the early shift sous chef?”
Paula, his fellow chef, had trained Steph and expected her to go to culinary school, but Steph had decided to stay in Mill Pond, near her high-school sweetheart. She slid the eggs into the oven and filled the steel pans with hot water to create a water bath. “What’s not to like?”
Tyne couldn’t think of anything. The area farmers had worked together to up their standards so that specialty goods were easy to find. The area had become a foodie’s delight, one of the reasons the inn was so popular. That, and all the things Ian had to offer—a golf course, tennis courts, horseback riding, and lake activities. Things always slowed down once kids had to return to school, but the inn still did all right. Couples used it as a romantic getaway. This week, enough couples had doubled up to rent the cabins by the lake that sixty people came for meals each day. And Ian had decided to add special weekend offerings for holidays. Every room was booked for Halloween in a couple of weeks.
Steph began slicing oranges for a fresh fruit salad. “Have you and Paula decided what to serve for the long Halloween weekend yet?”
“We just talked about it. Ian wants us to go for fun instead of fancy. We’re leaning toward a barbecue of some kind with gory desserts.”
“Gory?” Steph raised an eyebrow.
“Dirt cakes with jelly worms and gravestones, eyeball popcorn balls . . .”
“Good idea.” She glanced out the windows at the long shoreline. “It’s not like kids can trick or treat here, though. How’s Ian going to keep them busy?”
The owner himself walked through the kitchen door before she finished the question. “I’m doing a movie night—fun stuff earlier in the evenings for kids, like Hocus Pocus, and horror movies later for the adults. I have hay rides and scavenger hunts planned, pumpkin carving and bobbing for apples. The Kruses are building a corn maze.” Their boss still held his five-week-old baby boy, Drew. The baby had lots of black hair like his dad and hazel eyes like his mom. Steph loved babies and would have hurried to grab him, but everyone knew you had to use a crowbar to pry the baby away from Ian.
“Hey, Big Daddy!” Tyne called, teasing him. “You gonna wear a pouch and teach the kid how to work the dishwasher later this morning?” Ian would stall as long as he could before he handed Drew over to Paula’s mom, who lived in an apartment in the inn’s east wing and babysat for the employees here.
“Tessa would hurt me. My wife has the temperament that goes with coppery, wild hair.”
Tyne glanced at the clock—close to nine—and he and Steph carried food out to the long buffet tables, then watched over things for the next hour until the last guest left. Betty flew in at ten to help with cleanup.
She looked Tyne up and down. “Lookin’ good, Hot Stuff. Heard you had a full weekend.”
Ian, who’d settled into work mode, turned to hear his answer.
“Harley and I spent Sunday riding through the national park, enjoying the fall colors.”
Ian nodded. “Another reason we have so many guests now. The park’s good for business.”
They had the kitchen and dining room clean in no time, and Tyne and Steph got busy on lunch. Tyne settled on two international soups—classic posole from Mexico and lemon chicken soup from Greece. He didn’t want to push his luck, though, so went for traditional sandwiches—BLTs and chicken salad. Lunch went smoothly, and before long, he and Steph even finished his contribution for the supper menu. He provided the international dish each night, and Paula did the traditional.
Their jobs done, Steph took off her apron. “I’m out of here. See you tomorrow.”
“Not for long.” Tyne worked the supper shifts for the rest of the week. Paula did the early hours with Steph. On Mondays, she dropped Aiden and Bailey at her mom’s apartment before she zipped into the kitchen.
Paula rushed in, glanced at the menu, and then frowned at his scruffy chin. She tsk-tsked. “What? You didn’t have time to trim your whiskers this morning?”
She always gave him grief about his chin strap. He returned the favor. “What? You didn’t have time to do your hair?” Her thick, black tresses were pulled up in their usual clip, spiking at the back of her head.
She laughed. “What have you got for me tonight?”
“Thai curry with pork and eggplant over rice.” Tyne had lived and cooked in Thailand for a year before he returned to the United States. He loved its food and flavors. That, and Vietnamese cuisine were two of his favorites.
Since he loved it spicy, she asked, “You toned it down a little, right?”
He grinned. “For you, Miss Wimpy? Of course. I wouldn’t want to send you home too hot for Chase to handle.”
She smirked. “Like that could happen.”
She had him there. Chase could handle most anything. He’d been tamed by his little Goth mama, though, and Tyne had never seen him happier.
Paula came over to taste a spoonful of his dish. “Oh, this is good.”
Tyne untied his apron and hung it on the peg by the door. “You should talk Aiden and Bailey into trying it.”
Paula snorted. “It has too many vegetables. They might accidentally get healthy.”
Kids. They resisted what was good for them. Come to think of it, though, so had he. Tyne gave her a quick wave and headed to his Jeep. He was going to take it easy tonight, make himself something simple for supper, and chill out.
He drove past Daphne’s shop to turn at the corner and pull into the alley that ran behind the buildings. He glanced at the stained-glass pieces displayed in her front window. Was the shop dark? He frowned at the CLOSED sign hanging in the door. What was up? Tourists crowded the sidewalks. They’d come to see the leaves and stopped at Mill Pond to shop and eat. Had she closed up early to run off with Patrick?
Nope, Daphne’s SUV was parked in the back lot next to his spot. No matter. They probably took Patrick’s car, but when he stepped through the back door to head upstairs, Daphne sat behind the cash register, her head in her hands, her shoulders shaking. Oh no. He’d never trusted the professor. Tyne went to her. “Hey, you okay?” Dumb question. Who sits there and sobs when life’s good?
She turned away from him. He bent to wrap his arms around her. “He dumped you?” Did the asshole have another girl on the stringer in some other town?
No one but Daphne’s parents had been impressed with Patrick. The professor was so self-absorbed, Tyne wondered how he could relate to his students. He probably didn’t. Chase had been interested in Daphne before he met Paula. Chase didn’t think much of Patrick either. He’d made Tyne promise to be there for Daphne if the misery came. Not a hard promise to keep. Tyne liked her. He’d never make a move on her—she was a for-keeps type of girl—but Tyne didn’t just rent his apartment from her; they were friends. Or at least friendly to each other, good neighbors.
She turned and pressed her face against his chest. Tears and snot soaked his T-shirt. Gross, but what were friends for? He patted her head. Love sucked. Sometimes, it worked—like it did for Ian and Tessa, Chase and Paula. But usually? It wasn’t worth the bother, the pain. That’s why Tyne had promised himself he’d never fall for someone until he reached forty. Maybe not even then, but he might be ready for the crush of romance once he was older and his friends were more tied down. Maybe then he’d be bored enough that a relationship would look good.
Chapter 2
Daphne clutched Tyne’s T-shirt and buried her face against his hard chest. So different from Patrick’s that it made her cry more. Not that Patrick would appreciate it if she sobbed into one of his expensive tailored shirts. He took pride in his looks, how thin he stayed for his early forties. He cultivated his professor look with baggy trousers and button-down shirts and cashmere sweaters. He took pride in wearing wire-rimmed glasses. He
loved the status of academia.
“I should have seen this coming.” Had seen it coming, but she didn’t want to believe Patrick would leave her to return to his wife. The wife he swore was cold and bitter, the wife he couldn’t please no matter what he did. The wife that was too much like him. He swore she drained him of any creative energy, that he’d only stayed with her to raise their two kids. “I’d have never, ever dated a married man except that he and his wife had separated, and his wife lived in their house in Bloomington, and he moved to an apartment in Mill Pond. They’d been separated for five months and the papers had been filed.” She swallowed hard. The divorce took an ugly turn, and Patrick’s wife would receive much more money than Patrick had anticipated. His income would be severely limited. She choked on a sob. “Patrick likes money. So does his wife. Neither of them enjoys pinching pennies, so they reunited. I got cast aside as a budget cut.”
Tyne shrugged. “Doesn’t surprise me. The man’s priorities didn’t add up.”
“I met his wife once. I could see why Patrick had been attracted to her. She carries herself regally, gives off the essence of money.” Patrick, deep down, believed he should be treated like aristocracy, believed he should have more attention and privilege than he did as a professor. He wrote poetry and he’d published it in journals and chapbooks, but once his kids left the nest, he’d decided it was time for him to write a book, his ode to a man who’d bedded many women before he turned to more cerebral pursuits.
Daphne knotted her hands into fists. “Patrick was full of himself.” Shame on her. She’d fallen for his drivel because she’d turned thirty-six and decided it was now or never. “We had a lot of common interests—books, music, plays. I hoped that would be enough.”