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Playing For Fun: Stewart Island Book 6

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by Alvarez, Tracey




  Playing For Fun

  Stewart Island Book 6

  Tracey Alvarez

  Icon Publishing

  Contents

  Also by Tracey Alvarez

  From The Author

  Newsletter

  Maori Glossary

  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

  Epilogue

  Connect

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  One Last Thing

  Also by Tracey Alvarez

  Stewart Island Series

  Book 1 In Too Deep (Piper & West) FREE

  Book 2 Melting Into You (Kezia & Ben)

  Book 3 Ready To Burn (Shaye & Del)

  Book 4 Christmas With You (Carly & Kip)

  Book 5 My Forever Valentine (Short Stories)

  Book 6 Playing For Fun (Holly & Ford)

  Book 7 Drawing Me In (Bree & Harley)

  Book 7.5 Kissing The Bride (Shaye & Del Wedding Story)

  Book 8 Saying I Do (MacKenna & Joe)

  Book 9 Home For Christmas

  Book 10 Bending The Rules (Tilly & Noah)

  Bounty Bay Series

  Book 1 Hide Your Heart (Lauren & Nate) FREE

  Book 2 Know Your Heart (Savannah & Glen)

  Book 3 Teach Your Heart (Gracie & Owen)

  Book 4 Mend Your Heart (Natalie & Isaac)

  Book 5 Break Your Heart (Vanessa & Sam)

  Single Titles

  Quake

  From The Author

  Welcome to New Zealand!

  Land of Lord of the Rings and the All Blacks rugby team, breathtaking landscapes, and laid-back friendly people who refer to ourselves as ‘kiwis.’ I hope you’ll enjoy your visit with me as we travel Due South to Stewart Island—which lies 30km south of New Zealand’s South Island. The unspoiled wildness of the place is a perfect backdrop to my characters’ struggles and triumphs. The Stewart Island series focuses on family, community, and of course, each book contains a scorching hot romance.

  Happy reading!

  Tracey A.

  Newsletter

  Want to keep up-to-date with new releases, special subscriber only promotions and other news/cool stuff?

  Click here to sign up to Tracey Alvarez’s newsletter.

  Maori Glossary

  These are simplified for the sake of brevity.

  whānau – family

  whānau pani – chief mourners, bereaved family

  kaumātua – elder or elders, senior people in a kin group

  hapū – tribe, sub-tribe

  whāngai - fostered or adopted child

  tipuna – ancestor

  whaea – mother

  whakapapa – ancestry

  tuahine – sister of a man

  kia ora – greeting

  marae – A marae is a fenced-in complex of carved buildings and grounds that belongs to a particular iwi (tribe), hapū (sub tribe) or whānau (family) kuia – elderly woman, grandmother, female elder

  tangi – rites for the dead, funeral

  karanga – to call, call out, summon

  hongi – to press noses in greeting

  irāmutu – niece or nephew

  waiata – song (or to sing)

  Pākehā – New Zealander of European descen

  aroha - love

  hangi – traditional New Zealand Māori method of cooking food using heated rocks buried in a pit oven

  kai – food

  manuka – a common native bush/small tree

  kēhua – spirit, ghost

  kōrero – to talk, speak or address

  makutu – black magic, witchcraft, curse

  hei matau – a highly stylised fish hook shape

  kaka – cheeky native New Zealand parrot

  rātā – native forest tree

  ruru (morepork) – small New Zealand owl

  manuka – a common native bush/small tree

  ponga – New Zealand tree fern

  koru – is a spiral shape based on the shape of a new unfurling fern frond

  Te Rerenga Wairua – Cape Reinga, New Zealand. In Maori belief, the leaping-place of the spirits

  matai – native tree often used as a flooring timber

  Playing For Fun (Bounty Bay Book 6)

  Copyright © 2015 by Tracey Alvarez.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed “Attention: Permissions Coordinator,” at the address below.

  Tracey Alvarez/Icon Publishing

  PO Box 45, Ahipara, New Zealand.

  www.traceyalvarez.com

  Publisher’s Note: This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are a product of the author’s imagination. Locales and public names are sometimes used for atmospheric purposes. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, or to businesses, companies, events, institutions, or locales is completely coincidental.

  Cover Art by Sunset Rose Books

  Playing For Fun - Tracey Alvarez -- 1st ed.

  ISBN 978-0-473-34005-6

  Created with Vellum

  Chapter 1

  Writteninthestars.com Daily Horoscope. Pisces.

  Today the Pisces woman has life-decisions to make. Consider carefully, pick wisely, but be bold.

  “We need to find Ford a woman,” Mrs. Taylor said.

  In the process of applying nail polish, Holly Parker jerked in response. The tiny brush slipped and Lavender Dreams smeared over the cuticle. Her eyes bugged out at the smirk on Mrs. Taylor’s face as she calmly released this bombshell into Dixie’s living room. Mrs. Dixon—or Dixie, as Holly had called her since forever—poked her head out of the tiny kitchen where she waited for the kettle to boil and rolled her eyes. Holly’s downstairs neighbor and honorary adopted grandma had no doubt heard more outlandish statements from Oban’s resident gossip and self-proclaimed “character”.

  Snickers erupted between the other women gathered for a mani-pedi-catch-up. The topics of discussion ranged from the book club’s monthly selection to who Noah-the-cop nearly arrested for drunk and disorderly—that, of course, led to an animated debate about the single men remaining on the Island. Holly had tuned out the chattery white noise. She had real world problems such as the text from her cousin MacKenna to fixate on.

  But when Ford’s name came up?

  All ears, sweet. All ears.

  Glenna reacted first. “Ford’s quite capable of finding his own woman.”

  Holly dipped a cotton bud in the polish remover, slanting a glance at the woman beside her. Shaye’s mum appeared more amused than scandalized at the suggestion Ford needed assistance to find a hook up. Shaye, if she hadn’t avoided helping out tonight because of work, couldn’t have kept a poker-face. And since Holly’s bestie was the only person out of the four hundred year-round residents of Stewar
t Island who suspected she had a crush on Ford Komeke…

  Not really a crush. More of a thing. Not even a thing, really. An awareness. She was aware of Ford in a guy way, while he was only aware of her in a mate-who-happened-to-be-a-girl-way. Awareness didn’t equal a crush.

  “After witnessing women swoon when Ford plays his guitar, I have to agree. He’s quite a catch,” Mrs. Randal said.

  Holly squinched her eyes and focused on reapplying polish, waiting for Mrs. Randal to bring up her latest favourite topic.

  In three…two…one…

  “Not in the same league as our dear Prince Harry, of course. Wouldn’t it’ve been wonderful if he’d fancied one of our girls while he was here?”

  Bingo. Holly turned from Mrs. Taylor’s nails to look at Mrs. Randal, who sat soaking her feet in the portable foot spa waiting her turn for Holly’s famous leg and foot massage. Like Mrs. Taylor, the local elderly women looked forward to the chance to gossip and be fussed over.

  “Why,” Mrs. Randal continued, “with your lovely figure and pretty brunette and, er…pink hair—I’m positive I caught him eyeing you up at the quiz night.”

  “I don’t think me and the fifth in line to the throne would’ve worked out. He’s a Virgo—fussy, over critical and conservative. Total mismatch, I’m afraid.” Holly recapped the polish with a smile.

  Mrs. Randal’s lip lower lip pooched out.

  “Back to Ford,” Mrs. Taylor said. “Underneath that rough and rugged exterior and all that hair”—she wriggled the fingers of her free hand at shoulder level to indicate Ford’s dreadlocks—“is a fine-looking man.”

  “Some women like that bad-boy vibe of dreads and ink.” Glenna, who’d just finished Dixie’s manicure, nudged Holly’s arm. “Right, Hol?”

  “The man’s no bad boy.” Holly adopted what she hoped was a neutral tone of voice and expression. “He’s a pussycat. As in, cat’s got his tongue.” She shrugged. “Talking to women he doesn’t know is not his strong suite.”

  “Maybe not. But if we hand-picked some nice girls for him…” Mrs. Taylor paused for extra drama.

  Holly glanced up, catching Dixie making a circular motion by her ear with an index finger. No argument from Holly. When Betsy Taylor latched on to an idea, no matter how crazy-outlandish—take last year’s bachelor auction as a prime example—she got things moving and shaking.

  “I can see it now,” Mrs. Taylor said. “It’ll be like that TV show where a handsome chap gets to date and snog twenty girls.”

  “Gawd. Ford’d hate that,” Holly blurted.

  Aw, hell to the no on so many levels.

  Apart from his introverted nature and monosyllabic small talk skills, in the three years she’d been back in Oban after completing her hairstylist training in Invercargill, she’d seen Ford date—and she used that term loosely—maybe five women.

  Mrs Taylor’s plucked eyebrows shot up then returned to normal as a sly smile appeared on her face. “Is this from experience? Did Ford try getting frisky on your dinner date last year?”

  The one Holly scored in the charity auction for three hundred and fifty dollars. She’d told Ford she’d been a mate and had saved him from a fate worse than death by bidding on a “date” with him. The truth? She’d planned to test the boundaries of their friendzone, to see if Ford would look at her in a different light once she’d donned heels and a dress. An utter fail in that department. She’d chickened out on sharing even a hint of her developing and not-at-all-platonic feelings while they’d shared an uncomfortable meal together at Due South’s restaurant with the locals heckling them good-naturedly.

  So, the only thing Ford tried was breaking the land speed record in dropping her home afterward.

  “Of course not. We’re just friends.” Heat crawled up Holly’s cheeks. “I just know he wouldn’t like being match-made.”

  “You want your friend to be happy, don’t you, honey?” Dixie called from the kitchen. “And having a bunch of old biddies pestering him to find a girl is no man’s definition of happy.”

  “Who’re you calling ‘old’, Sally Dixon?” Mrs. Taylor waved her off. “You know Ford’s mum would love to see her boys settle down with a couple of nice girls. I’m sure she’ll back me up. Plus, I’ll have a little chat with him. He’ll come around to having a spot of female company.”

  Glenna snorted then quickly transformed the sound into a cough. “Betsy, how on earth will you convince any women to come to the remotest town in New Zealand, anyway?”

  Mrs. Taylor cackled. “Have you seen the man without his shirt? They’ll come, mark my words.”

  “With us on his case, Ford’ll be married off in no time,” Mrs. Randal said from her armchair.

  Mrs. Taylor bestowed a queenly smile. “Sometimes, a man doesn’t know what he wants until someone else points it out. Ford needs a woman. We’ll find him one.”

  Holly picked up the bottle of clear topcoat. She didn’t dare meet anyone’s eyes in case they guessed the truth. She wasn’t on board with this plan. Not a bit. But Dixie was right. She wanted Ford to be happy—of course she did.

  So she’d stuff her thing for Ford in a box, wrap it up tight and heat-seal that sucker with her blow-dryer set on max. The same way she’d sealed up her thing for Ford’s twin brother, Harley, all those years ago.

  * * *

  Holly dried bone china cups and saucers and returned them to Dixie’s display cabinet. She emptied the foot spa, stacked all her equipment, and breathed a relieved sigh when Mrs. Taylor and the other women finally left.

  Dixie cornered Holly in the kitchen. “I can still do my own dishes once I’ve finished entertaining, you know.”

  Holly elected not to bring up the girls’ night Dixie hosted a few months ago, when she’d broken her favourite Royal Albert teacup because the china had slipped from her arthritic fingers. While Dixie was still fiercely independent, there were some things she could no longer do. But the one thing she did do undeniably well was to stand in as Holly’s rock. Never knowing her own grandparents, since her parents had been in their early forties when Holly had unexpectedly arrived, Holly considered Dixie “Nana” in every way that mattered.

  “I do know,” Holly said, “But it got me away from Mrs. Randal long enough for her to lose interest in setting me up with Prince Harry.”

  “Speaking of set-ups…you sure you don’t want to hook in with the Komeke boy before Mrs Taylor gets on his case?”

  Holly held up a palm, pursing her mouth so Dixie wouldn’t notice the grin trying to break through. “I’m not going to hook in with Ford; he’s my friend.”

  “Stuck in the friend space, then?”

  “Stuck solid. With concrete boots. So I hope they can find Ford a nice girl.”

  “Ford doesn’t need a nice girl,” Dixie muttered.

  Holly finished wiping down the countertop and stowed the dishcloth. “Don’t forget I’m taking you for your check-up after your rinse and set on Thursday.”

  “I’m old, not brain dead.” Dixie rolled her eyes so high they almost disappeared under the soft white hair curling over her forehead. “And seeing the doc will be the highlight of my week. Not much opportunity nowadays to have a chat with a handsome man, even if he is asking about my bowel movements.”

  “Oh, jeez.” Holly crossed over and kissed the shorter woman’s cheek. “Please don’t turn into a cougar at your age.”

  Dixie grabbed Holly’s shoulder with a surprisingly hard grip and reeled her in for a quick, fierce hug.

  Knots like sharpened barbed wire spiked Holly’s gut. How could she even consider MacKenna’s offer? Lasting friendships were filled with hazards and heart-break, easier to keep her distance. Except three people wouldn’t let her pull away so easily—Shaye, Dixie…and Ford.

  Dixie let out a spit-filled raspberry then chuckled. “Bad enough Oban has one octogenarian cougar. Just be grateful Betsy doesn’t want Ford for herself.”

  Holly mock shuddered and gently extricated herself from Dixie�
��s hug. “Now that you’ve effectively provided me with the best birth control method known to man, I’d better get this gear back upstairs and hit the sack.”

  Dixie’s pale-blue eyes narrowed under crinkly eyelids. “It’s only nine o’clock, girl. You’re nearly twenty-six, not ninety. Go on down to the pub with your friends.”

  Holly pasted on a smile. Granted, the thought of going upstairs in the large house that Dixie’s late husband had separated into a two-bedroom apartment above, and a single-bedroom unit below, was unappealing. Maybe Holly should head to Due South and pick over Mrs. Taylor’s crazy idea with her bestie.

  “Maybe I will. And I’ll see if Shaye and Del have saved you any of that meatball stroganoff they’re trying out this week.”

  “Foreign food—it’ll probably give me gas. Still, that’s something else to talk to the good doctor about.”

  Holly snickered and gathered up her equipment. “Goodnight, Dix.”

  Twenty minutes later, Holly strolled into Due South—hotel, restaurant and pub, aka the heart of the tiny Oban township. She glanced through the second set of glass doors leading into the crowded pub, her gaze drawn inextricably to the broad-shouldered man in a long-sleeved black tee shirt leaning on the bar, deep in conversation.

  Ford…

  His shoulder-length dreads swayed as he shook his head. Even through closed doors and the rumble of conversation, Ford’s bark of laughter reverberated through her. He stabbed a finger to emphasize a point, biceps bunching under the soft cotton.

 

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