Burn for You (Slow Burn Book 1)

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Burn for You (Slow Burn Book 1) Page 11

by J. T. Geissinger


  “So we’re all set with the canapés and cocktails,” said Claudia, briskly ticking off a box on the list on the clipboard she held in her perfectly manicured hands. “The musicians are warming up on the lawn. In thirty minutes I’ll light all the candles, and fifteen minutes after that the guests are scheduled to start arriving.”

  She looked up at me and adjusted her stylish black eyeglasses. “Do you need anything from me at this point?”

  I shook my head. “No, thanks. I’m all set here.”

  “Good.” Claudia looked at her watch. “I’ll check in with you again in fifty minutes. If you need me, I’m on my headset. The number’s—”

  “On the schedule,” I finished. “I know.”

  The coordinator Jackson had hired to oversee the event was a sleek-haired brunette, lanky as a giraffe and the most efficient person I’d ever met. She had everyone running around like chickens with their heads cut off, trying to keep to her exacting schedule, which counted time in precise five-minute increments. Though she was perfectly pleasant, I got the impression she’d turn into a screaming meemie if her schedule wasn’t followed.

  As of now we were two minutes behind, and her left eyelid had already begun to twitch.

  “Ladies. How’re we doing?”

  Jackson stood in the doorway of the kitchen, looking at Claudia and me. It was the first time I’d seen him since I’d arrived at his house early this morning to start the setup.

  “Everything’s under control,” I said. “Claudia’s doing a great job.”

  She smiled tightly and adjusted her glasses again. I felt her gratitude for my small show of support. It was obvious how intimidated she was by Jackson. She could barely look him in the eye, probably because he was wearing a scowl as black as his outfit.

  But I was used to that by now. I didn’t let it alarm me.

  I asked him, “Is that what you’re going to wear?”

  Jackson looked down at himself, then looked up at me with his brows drawn down over his eyes.

  Seeing his murderous expression, Claudia ran out of the kitchen like her pants were on fire. “Fifty minutes, Bianca!” she called over her shoulder, then disappeared through the French doors.

  Jackson didn’t seem to notice she’d left. He demanded, “What’s wrong with what I’m wearing?”

  I shrugged. “Nothing, if you want people to think you’ve been living under a bridge.”

  He crossed his arms over his chest. I tried to ignore how that made the muscles in his biceps bulge.

  He said, “You must be mistaking me for someone who cares what people think.”

  Propping my hands on my hips, I examined his untucked T-shirt, wrinkled jeans, and scuffed boots, his unshaven jaw, and his hair that appeared to have last seen a comb when he walked by one that had fallen out of someone’s pocket into the street.

  I said, “Lord knows I’m no style maven, and I dress for comfort more than anything else, but your guests deserve the best version of you, Mr. Boudreaux. I’m sorry to say this isn’t it.”

  His glower was so searing it could have melted a weaker woman. But after the past few days I’d had, I was in an ornery mood. An ornery truth-telling mood, because I’d recently decided life was too short to beat around the bush.

  Plus, his check had already cleared the bank.

  “Oh, really?” said Jackson, his voice acidic.

  “Yes, really.” We stared at each other. It must have been my imagination, but it felt like the temperature in the room jumped several degrees.

  He snapped, “So what would you recommend I wear, then?”

  “Do you own a suit?”

  His expression turned even darker. “I hate suits.”

  “But do you have one?”

  When he didn’t answer and just stood there glaring at me like he hoped a stray asteroid would smash through the ceiling and land on my head, I said, “That’s what you should wear. With a tie.” I looked at his boots. “And dress shoes.”

  He ran a hand over his face—probably deciding whether he was going to pick up the toaster from the counter and throw it at me—and I added, “Also, a shave wouldn’t kill you.”

  His looked at me with a strange new expression. “You don’t like beards.”

  He said it flatly. It wasn’t a question.

  “Beards are fine. But that thing carpeting your jaw? Honestly, I’ve seen tidier jungles.”

  For a moment I thought he would let loose a string of expletives so loud it would deafen me. But then his lips twitched, and I realized he was trying not to smile.

  He said, “You’re in fine form today, Bianca.”

  It was the first time he’d used my given name. I nearly fainted in surprise but managed to control myself. “I’m sorry,” I said, looking down at the schedule I still held in my hands. “You’re right. It’s just . . .” I cleared my throat. “It’s just been a rough few weeks.”

  There was silence for a moment, then he walked closer. “What’s wrong?” he demanded, gruff and growly as a bear.

  I glanced up at him and was surprised again. I could’ve sworn he was looking at me with concern in his eyes.

  Concern and something else a little hotter.

  My heart decided it was time to run a sprint. It took off like a jackrabbit chased by a pack of hounds. I said, “Just some personal stuff. My mother . . .”

  I trailed off, dazed for a moment by his eyes. I hadn’t noticed before, but they weren’t only blue. He had tiny flecks of green and gold around his irises, warming those steely-blue depths.

  And by God, the man smelled delicious. If that was his natural scent, he could make a few more billion by bottling it and selling it to men with less scrumptious—

  Wait. What am I doing? Why am I mooning at him? Am I out of my ever-loving mind?

  “Your mother?” he prompted, but I quickly stepped away, smoothing a hand over my hair.

  “It’s nothing. I’m so sorry, I’m being unprofessional. If you don’t mind, Mr. Boudreaux, I’ll just get back to work now—”

  “Jackson,” he said. He gazed down at me, eyes burning. His voice dropped an octave. “I want you to call me Jackson, Bianca.”

  My sprinting heart tripped all over itself and fell flat on its face inside my chest. Heat rose into my cheeks. I said haltingly, “Um . . . okay.”

  His gaze dropped to my lips.

  Every muscle in my body tensed.

  When he abruptly turned around and left, my knees shook so badly I had to lean against the counter for support.

  What on earth just happened?

  The next few hours passed in a blur. In between directing a setup and serving staff of almost one hundred people and ensuring the food was kept at the right temperature until ready to be served, was plated properly before it left the staging area, and that there was enough of it, I didn’t have a moment to catch my breath, let alone reflect on what had happened between me and Jackson in the kitchen. It was nothing, really . . .

  But it sure felt like something. I had all sorts of tingling girly bits telling me so.

  “Bianca!”

  At the sound of my name being shouted, I jumped. I whirled around to see Claudia headed toward me across the lawn at a pace just short of a run, gripping her clipboard against her chest, her face pale as a bedsheet.

  I said, “What? What’s happening?”

  She hustled up next to me and blurted, “Mr. Boudreaux asked for you. He’s in the tent. You’d better hurry.”

  I frowned, handing off two plates of cheesecake to a waiting server, who turned around and sprinted away with them. We’d gone through almost three hundred pieces of my ginger-orange cheesecake already, and though typically not every guest would have dessert, this crowd seemed especially ravenous.

  Thank Jesus I’d made plenty extra, because the last thing I wanted was Jackson hearing complaints that there hadn’t been enough.

  I said, “In the tent? Why would he want me in the tent? Isn’t the auction supposed to be st
arting now?”

  Claudia—whose hair gel had failed so her coiffure was now frizzed out into a cloudy brown halo around her face—said, “Six minutes ago! Which is why you need to hurry! Go! Now!” She gave me a little shove toward the direction of the tent.

  I was perplexed. “Well hold your horses, I’m going!”

  “Quickly!” she said, flapping her hands and panting.

  Figuring it must be some kind of culinary disaster, I went as fast as I could, my heart in my throat. I trotted over the lush green grass toward the enormous tent set up on the back lawn. It was all white and looked like something from a Cirque du Soleil show. Three tall, flagged peaks reached like ghostly fingers toward the twilight sky. Servers streamed in and out from open flaps around the perimeter, clearing plates and bringing drinks. At one flap near the front stood a young female server, waving madly.

  At me.

  Fried chicken, this doesn’t look good.

  I stopped beside her and peered inside the tent. I didn’t see anyone puking, didn’t hear any shouts of distress, could detect nothing out of sorts in the murmuring, well-dressed crowd of hundreds seated at candlelit rounds.

  I asked, “What’s going on?”

  “Get up to the stage.”

  She pointed to the raised dais at the rear of the tent, where a wooden podium and microphone stood, illuminated by a spotlight. Behind the stage were three large white screens with a backdrop of a shirred black-fabric cloth hung to hide wires and audiovisual equipment.

  “The stage?” I repeated. “Why?”

  The server threw her hands in the air. “Like anybody tells me anything! All I know is you’re supposed to get up there right now.”

  I protested, “But the schedule—”

  She turned and walked off before I could get anything more out of her. Then it didn’t matter if she’d left because at that moment Jackson walked out onto the stage and into the spotlight, and I was rendered speechless.

  It wasn’t him. It couldn’t be.

  Then he strolled up to the microphone and started to speak, and that smooth, rich-like-molasses voice proved that it was.

  “Good evening, ladies and gentlemen,” he said. “I’m Jackson Boudreaux.”

  The place went wild. Three hundred people jumped from their chairs and clapped and hollered and whistled, making such a racket it could probably be heard for miles.

  I stared around at all the clamoring people, wondering if someone had spiked their drinks with cocaine. All this excitement for the Beast?

  “Thank you so much for coming,” Jackson said over the noise. “I’m honored to welcome you to my home.”

  Who is this person? I thought, stunned. This polite, charming person?

  Standing there onstage, in a tuxedo that fit his large, muscular frame so perfectly it had to be custom-made, with his dark hair slicked back and his face freshly shaved, was a stranger. A smiling stranger who sounded like Jackson and called himself Jackson, but looked nothing like the man I knew.

  The Jackson Boudreaux I knew made Chewbacca look well groomed.

  The Jackson Boudreaux I knew made King Kong seem civilized.

  The Jackson Boudreaux I knew didn’t look like Superman and dress like James Bond and have a crowd of three hundred people on their feet, showering him in adoration.

  Maybe I was hallucinating. I put the back of my hand to my forehead, testing for fever, but it was cool and dry.

  New and Improved Jackson said, “As you may know, I first became involved with the Wounded Warrior Project after my best friend, Christian LeFevre, was wounded while serving in the Marines in Afghanistan.”

  So this is why Jackson’s involved with the charity. How tragic. I listened with my hand over my mouth as he went on.

  “A roadside bomb took Christian’s legs but not his love of his country, his joy for life, or his dedication to serving others. Though complications from his amputations ultimately claimed his life, the Wounded Warrior Project was there for him in his final months the way no other organization could have been.”

  Jackson’s voice broke. He stopped speaking abruptly, ran a hand through his hair, and drew a slow breath.

  I watched, enthralled. He had feelings. The Beast had feelings.

  I’d seen his irritation before, of course, and had also seen firsthand his devotion for Cody. But this was something else altogether. This was raw. This was powerful.

  This was vulnerable.

  If someone pointed a gun at my head and demanded I describe what I was feeling in this moment or get a bullet in my brain, they would’ve had to shoot me.

  In a more subdued tone, Jackson continued. “In the four years since Christian’s death, I’ve witnessed firsthand how many lives this organization has touched. How many lives it has changed for the better. How many lives it has saved. This nation and all its citizens owe a great debt to the brave men and women who serve in our military. But the greatest debt of all is to those who are wounded or have fallen in combat. Those who so valiantly and selflessly volunteer to defend us and our allies around the world, and are willing to make the ultimate sacrifice for our freedom, must never be forgotten.”

  Jackson’s voice broke again, but this time he kept talking.

  “It’s through the efforts of organizations like the Wounded Warrior Project that we ensure they never are.”

  The crowd went ballistic. It sounded like a rock concert. I stared at Jackson on the stage, not realizing there were tears on my cheeks until I brushed my fingers across my face and they came away wet.

  Jackson said, “Coming up next we’re going to start the auction. I’m sure you’ll all be very generous to help our wounded vets, right?”

  More cheering.

  Then he looked out across the heads of everyone in the room and spotted me standing in the doorway. Even through the distance that separated us, I saw how his eyes burned.

  He said, “But before we get to that, I want to introduce you to the woman who made you all the delicious food you’ve been eating this evening. Chef, join me onstage.”

  Jackson extended his hand. Three hundred heads turned to look at me.

  Inconveniently, the ground didn’t open up and swallow me whole.

  GINGER-ORANGE CHEESECAKE

  Makes 8 servings

  1½ cups graham cracker crumbs

  ⅓ cup butter, melted

  ⅓ cup white sugar

  32 ounces cream cheese, softened

  ⅔ cup white sugar, plus 2 tablespoons

  1 cup sour cream, divided

  1 tablespoon grated orange peel

  4 eggs

  2 cups clementine wedges

  ½ cup finely chopped crystallized ginger

  Preparation

  Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Mix graham cracker crumbs, butter, and ⅓ cup sugar together. Press on bottom of 9² x 3² springform pan and just enough up sides to seal bottom.

  Place cream cheese, ⅔ cup sugar, ½ cup sour cream, and orange peel in food processor. Cover and process about 3 minutes or until smooth. Add eggs. Cover and process until well blended. Spread over crust.

  Bake 1 hour 20 minutes, or until center is set. Cool on wire rack for 15 minutes. Using spatula around edges to loosen, remove side of pan.

  Refrigerate uncovered 3 hours or until chilled, then cover and continue refrigerating at least 4 hours, but not longer than 48 hours.

  Mix ½ cup sour cream and 2 tablespoons sugar and spread over top of cheesecake. Top with fresh fruit and crystallized ginger. Store uneaten portion covered with foil in fridge.

  TWELVE

  BIANCA

  Though I wanted to turn and bolt, I didn’t. The man had paid me an obscene amount of money for this job, after all. And I was a professional. I wouldn’t embarrass him in front of all his guests by refusing his request.

  Also, I was intrigued by this new Jackson, this well-dressed stranger who spoke so eloquently about honor and selflessness and used words like please.

  I didn’t th
ink that word was in his vocabulary.

  So it was with curiosity—and a healthy dose of embarrassment—that I walked around the perimeter of the tables and climbed the few stairs to the stage.

  Then shock took over as Jackson wound his arm around my shoulders, pulled me against his side, and smiled down at me. I was too busy trying not to keel over in surprise to pay much attention to how perfectly I fit under his arm, how snugly I nestled against the solid bulk of his body.

  How hard he was, all over.

  I’m definitely hallucinating. Or Jackson Boudreaux has a twin no one knows about.

  A twin that had three long, thin, mysterious scars on the right side of his face that his beard had been hiding.

  “Pretend like you don’t hate me, and smile,” he said, his jaw barely moving, his lips stretched tight over his teeth. “Please.”

  There’s that word again. I’m as lost as last year’s Easter egg. Am I on camera?

  Expecting to see myself on a prank video sometime in the near future, I smiled.

  Satisfied, Jackson turned back to the audience. “I discovered the magic of Bianca Hardwick’s cuisine when I visited her restaurant in the French Quarter. The food was so good I stayed all night and tried everything on the menu—”

  “Maybe it wasn’t the food you stayed for!” shouted someone from the audience, then whistled, one of those catcalls boys lean out of car windows to deliver as you walk down the street.

  Three hundred people laughed. My face went molten hot.

  Jackson chuckled. His arm squeezed tighter around my shoulders. He said, “Well. Maybe for the first hour it was for the food.”

  Who is this chuckler? I thought wildly, my heart galloping but the rest of me frozen stiff. This crowd pleaser? This . . . flirt?

 

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