by Maggie Wells
Monica gaped at him. “Wow. I really do have a lot to learn.”
He let one shoulder rise and fall. “Parenting is mostly basic self-preservation.”
“And the rest?”
He lowered his head until she could feel his breath against her lips. “The rest is winging your way through.”
“I could learn to wing,” she whispered.
Colm nodded. “Good. Now, kiss me quick, while no one is looking.”
Rising onto her toes, she pressed her mouth to his. The kiss was more enthusiasm than finesse, but Colm didn’t seem to care. He wrapped her up tighter and took the kiss deeper. They broke apart, breathless and flushed. He brushed her hair from her face with his knuckles.
She cocked her head. “Can I get six of you?”
“Do you need more than one?”
“What if I lose you?”
He looked surprised. “I’m a lot harder to misplace than a doll.”
Monica took a deep breath and plunged in. “I’m not very good at this falling in love stuff.”
He stared at her, his lips moving slightly but no sound coming out at first. “Is that what we’re doing?”
Her heart lodged in her throat, she gave a hesitant nod. “I think I am. At least, Melody tells me I am.”
Colm wet his lips and darted a glance at the playground. “So, Melody is really the smart one?”
She conceded a smile. “When it comes to some things.”
“Don’t lie to me, Monica. I can take a lot of bad, but I can’t take lies.”
“I won’t,” she promised.
Colm took her at her word. “I’m falling for you, too, even if you are a big liar.”
She wanted to refute his claim, but he took her mouth again, kissing her long, slow, and deep. Her fingers curled into the lapels of his jacket. She pulled him closer, and was fighting the urge to shimmy right up the trunk of him when the first shriek pierced their bubble.
Colm’s head jerked up, his eyes open wide, his muscles tensed to spring into action.
She heard a familiar giggle and whirled. Emma and Aiden peeked out at them from behind a tree. The very tree Colm had leaned against the first day she saw him.
“Ewwww,” someone added with exaggerated revulsion. Seconds later, Melody and Jeremy stepped into view. “They were kissing!” Mel exclaimed, her hands covering both eyes.
“Gross,” Jeremy added with gleeful relish. “I hope they brushed and flossed first.”
Monica rolled her eyes at her brother-in-law’s dentist humor, but gently disentangled herself from Colm. “Ha. Ha.”
“Monnie never thinks jokes about her are funny,” Melody said archly. Offering her hand and a warm smile, she said, “You must be Colm.”
He returned her grin. “And you must be Emma’s mommy.”
Her sister nodded gravely. “An unwieldy first name, but I seem to be stuck with it.”
“Melody,” Monica interjected. “Mel.” Recovering her manners, she turned to Jeremy. “And her husband, Jeremy.”
“We’ve met,” Jeremy reminded her. “Good to see you again.”
Colm nodded. “You, too.”
Monica cringed, remembering the day she’d been caught out in her lies. Melody must have seen the look because she jumped in. “So, we’re heading to La Maison for crêpes, and I’m sure you two have a lot to talk about. Can Aiden come with us?”
Colm sensed an ambush. “Oh. Uh, we just ate pancakes.”
“But I’m sooooooo hungry,” Aiden cried, clutching his stomach for added emphasis. “I ran ’em all off, and I’m starving.”
Rolling his eyes, Colm turned to look at Monica. She answered him with a shrug. After the fiasco of the fake flu, she determined she didn’t have the skill set for arranging play dates.
Yet.
“Sure. Okay,” he said at last. “Should I pick him up at your house, or—”
“We’ll come by Monica’s. Say, in about an hour?” Mel raised an inquiring eyebrow. “Give you two kids some time to hash things out.”
Monica and Colm nodded in unison.
“Great. Come on, gang,” Jeremy called to the kids. “Let’s get crêpey.”
They stood in silence, watching all their buffers walk away. Pulling in a bracing breath, Monica cocked her head and peered at him. “So, a whole hour…What should we do?”
To her surprise, Colm took her hand and started to pull her along. In the opposite direction of her house. When she spotted the weathered wooden bench, understanding dawned. She sat next to him, a wry smile twisting her lips. “No sex, huh?”
He hooked an arm over the bench. “Not until the sixth date.”
Her jaw dropped and her brows shot up. “Sixth? Isn’t the third date the charm?”
“You have to pay some price for lying to me.”
“Wow. Talk about being penalized.”
He snorted. “Another joke like that, and I’ll hold out for seven.”
“Three,” she retorted.
“Eight.”
Monica grinned. “Four, final offer.”
“Five it is,” he said with a nod.
She relaxed into him and his arm curled around her. Blinking up at the vibrant blue sky, she sighed. “I am sorry, Colm. I never meant for things to go so far.”
“I know,” he said quietly. “Truthfully, neither did I.”
Twisting, she met and held his gaze. “But they did. For me, at least. And by the time I knew what was happening, I didn’t know how to get out of it without, well, losing you.”
“I understand.” A moment passed. He nodded once. “I do.”
Settling into his embrace, Monica let the breath she’d been holding seep out. “So…this dating thing. I think we might need a chaperone for the first four. Make sure we don’t lapse into…shenanigans.”
Colm pressed a kiss to the top of her head. “Lucky for us, I know the right guy for the job.”
The End
Enjoy this preview of the first book in the Coastal Heat series by Maggie Wells!
Going Deep
MAKING HEADLINES
Brooke Hastings almost won a Pulitzer Prize for her hard-hitting reportage. Now she’s sitting on the story of a lifetime and wants to prove she’s not a one-hit-wonder. But in order to get the world to take notice, she’ll need the help of the one person she loves to hate—Brian Dalton.
Brian Dalton stumbled into celebrity when he landed a show on the Earth Channel. But the hunky marine biologist never forgot the serious, studious boy who left Mobile a decade before. Now back in Alabama, he’s looking for the quiet life he always wanted and hoping for a chance with the girl he always loved. When Brooke asks him to help expose some of the lingering effects of the Gulf oil disaster, Brian jumps at the chance to help preserve the place both call home . . .
Chapter 1
“If I didn’t have Harley Cade and his ten million ways of making a girl happy on the hook, I’d cling to that man’s hull like a barnacle.”
Brooke Hastings drowned a smirk in her martini glass. Twenty years of friendship did little to lessen the shock value of Laney’s declarations. Brooke took a cautious sip. The cocktail was pinker than a My Little Pony, but the triple sec and vodka packed a punch that more than made up for the girly color.
Dragging her gaze from the former classmate-turned-television-hunk she was here to stalk, Brooke turned to face her best friend. “That man told Mrs. Wise you had your Spanish conjugation written on your thigh.”
Laney refused to be put off by something as fickle as fact. “If I’d known he’d grow up to be rich, famous, and hot as Hades, I would have let him conjugate whatever he wanted on my thigh.”
“You told your mother you’d drown yourself in the ocean if she made you invite him to your birthday party in third grade.”
The feisty redhead at her side pursed her lips and made a great show of scanning the room. “She invited him anyway.”
Revisionist history or no, Laney wasn’t one who took being thwarted lightly. Nearly twenty years had passed since that birthday party, but the sour expression on her face said the sting of her mother’s betrayal hadn’t yet faded.
“Do you have Harley Cade on the hook?”
“I could,” her friend said, eying the crowded room. “I’d only have to give that line a little old tug.”
Brooke smiled. She admired Laney’s confidence, but she wished they could be having this conversation anywhere but in the middle of one of Mobile’s most popular social gatherings.
Glittering jewels and porcelain veneers shone in the light of the ancient chandeliers, adding sparkle to the mansion’s faded glory. The first floor of Putnam House, one of the ruthlessly preserved mansions that graced Mobile’s historic district, was crowded—every square inch packed with potential donors. Saints Preserve Us was the premier fundraising event for their alma mater, St. Patrick’s Academy, and one of Brooke’s mother’s pet projects. Her mother and her merry band of fundraising fiends plied their victims with Guinness, Jameson’s, and heaping helpings of flattery in hopes of getting them to write big, fat checks.
Thursday night television programming may not be what it used to be, but Brooke had a reason for being here. She wasn’t in a position to donate the scraps of cash left over after she stretched her paycheck to the max. Frankly, she wasn’t interested in whether the football team could afford new jock straps or if the Drama Club had to—insert shudder here—rent costumes for their spring production. She wasn’t here because her mother insisted she come. No, she was trussed up in her Spanx for a reason. A motive she shared with 99.9 percent of the women in that room. She was there for Brian Dalton.
“Any Tucker sightings yet?”
The question jerked Brooke from her mini-sulk. The possibility of running into Jack Tucker was exactly what kept her miles away from the Gulf Shore’s social whirl in the last few weeks. News of Jack’s return to Mobile after his divorce had lit a spark of hope inside her. The possibility of rekindling their romance seemed to lighten the miasma of loneliness that covered her like a heavy blanket. Alone in her bed, she allowed herself to spin a fantasy of marriage and family that was not only attractive but convenient, as well. Then she ran into him at her parents’ club and her thinking shifted from possibly-maybe to never-gonna-happen.
Unfortunately, her mother had hopped onto the Jack Tucker bandwagon the minute the man crossed the city limits. Emmaline Hastings wasn’t a woman whose mind was easily changed. That meant Brooke’s best course of action had been to avoid Jack altogether. Eventually her mother would find a project more promising than the daunting task of marrying off her almost-thirty-year-old daughter.
“No. Thank goodness.”
“You used to get all twitterpated at the thought of seeing old Jack Tucker,” Laney drawled.
“And you used to spend your entire study hall plotting ways to torment Brian Dalton.”
Laney remained as impervious to criticism as she’d been in high school. It was one of her greatest charms. “He brought it on himself.”
Hard to argue that logic. Back in those days, Brian did earn a good bit of his torment. His fall from social grace started the day he displayed a clock powered by a potato for second grade show and tell. His position as class pariah was written in the stars before Brooke scored the blue ribbon at the eighth grade science fair, but he cemented it in high school. Brian Dalton was worse than a nerd. He was a nerd who thought it was cool to be arrogant and condescending to anyone he considered his intellectual inferior. This meant practically everyone.
He might have redeemed himself if he’d stuck to delivering the world’s shortest valedictory address. But then he planted a kiss on the salutatorian that shook the entire auditorium.
Brooke never forgot the way her kiss-swollen lips tingled as he whispered the Alabama fan’s mantra of “Roll, Tide, roll” into her Auburn-bound ear. Nor would she forgive him for the scalding rush of humiliation he left in his wake as he walked away.
The hell of it was, nearly a decade later, she could still taste him. Salty and sweet. The brainy boy seemed to have ocean water in his veins and coconut-scented sunscreen embedded in his pores. She pressed her glass to her bottom lip, sternly reminding herself that a kiss could not linger for ten years. No matter how much pent up passion a guy put into it.
Laney broke into her thoughts. “I always thought your mama might be convinced to give up on her dream of you marrying Jack Tucker if a bigger fish came swimming along.”
“If Brian’s the fish you’re referring to, I’ll remind you that you used to want to see him flopping on the floor gasping for breath.”
“We’ve grown up. Matured. Besides, nerds are hot these days. Didn’t anyone tell you?”
That was where Laney’s assessment went wrong. Brian’s hotness wasn’t simply a trend. It was a matter of perspective. As a teenager, he might have been quiet, bookish, but he’d always been good looking. If one could get past the annoying arrogance.
He stood in the center of the room like he’d ruled the school all along, and the sight of all the other Laney-come-latelys flocking the boy they once snubbed irked Brooke to the bone. The fact that she was the only one who saw it used to make her feel superior to the rest of the world. Now, she wondered if she’d missed out on something when she watched him walk away.
Miffed by the train of thought, Brooke turned and gave her friend the hairy eyeball. “I can’t believe you’re lusting after Brian Dalton. What’s the world coming to?”
Her friend’s chuckle was genuine. “I was talking about you, not me.”
“Me?”
“The world we once knew came to a screeching halt the day that boy kissed you.”
“It did not.”
“You might sell that to someone else, sugar, but not me. You lost all interest in Jack Tucker the minute you locked lips with the delectable Mr. Limpet.”
“Incredible,” Brooke murmured into her glass. She took a quick sip, her eyes locked on her quarry. “The movie was The Incredible Mr. Limpet.”
Laney huffed. “It could have been The Incredible Hulk for all I care.”
“How about The Incredibles?”
“As long as you’re not trying to deny he kissed you senseless and it was incredible.”
“He kissed me, it was incredible, then he left,” Brooke said flatly. “He left. Period. The end.”
“And you still think he’s incredible.” Brooke started to shake her head but Laney raised a hand to ward off further protest. “Shelbrooke Hastings, are you trying to tell me that you have absolutely no interest in spawning with Aquaman?”
“I prefer Batman. Maybe Superman. Hell, I’d even take Captain America, though I suspect he’s a prig in bed.”
Her friend barked a short laugh. “I’m betting Superman has a stick up his ass, too.”
“Yes, but he has that ice castle thingy. I always thought that looked awesome.”
Laney nodded, the corners of her mouth pulling down as she gave the argument due consideration. “Beats the hell out of a damp, musty cave.”
“Yes, but Batman has the black cape. And all the cool toys.”
“Can you imagine the vibrator Wayne Enterprises could manufacture?” Laney clutched imaginary pearls. “A Bat-brator. Exactly what every single girl needs.”
Brooke frowned and shook her head. Listening to her friend verbally fondle Brian was more than vaguely disturbing. Sure, Brian had the looks, the money, and his picture printed in People, US Magazine, and on the cover of the tabloids, but that shouldn’t make him fair game for everyone. Especially not here. This was supposed to be his home. But a star was a star, even if he was a little burned out, and everyone in the room seemed to be
caught in the man’s gravitational pull.
Not many women would pass on a chance to de-pants Brian Dalton these days. If she felt like being scrupulously honest, Brooke would number herself among them. But she didn’t want to hear it from Laney. Or anyone else, for that matter. Her relationship with Brian, whatever it might have been, was always separate from everyone else in her life. Their odd friendship had been as fascinating as exploring an uncharted island—intellectually stimulating, undeniably appealing, but treacherous as high tide.
Judging by the sardonic smirk on his face, this new and improved Brian would be equally challenging. And intriguing. He was undoubtedly mouthwatering.
The cut of his jacket showcased the broad-shouldered, narrow-hipped perfection of a body that spent hours in the water. Days working in the sun threaded his brown hair with hints of gold. A minimalist flash of white teeth evoked a visceral reaction in females from eighteen to eighty. The suit screamed matinee idol rather than marine biologist. It was no wonder a bevy of elegantly dressed women flocked to him like seagulls after a saltine. Grown-up Brian might still spend his days talking about plankton and marsh grass and amoebas, but the idea that he could spend his nights with his pick of women seemed more a given than a hypothesis.
Brooke held her breath when he scanned the room, torn between wanting to step forward and the urge to shrink away from his probing gaze. Oxygen seeped from her lungs when she spotted the familiar flash of arrogance in his eyes. Curious, she dragged her attention from the knot of back-slappers that closed around him and surveyed the room, trying to see it all through his eyes.
Brian turned and bestowed a dazzling smile on the woman next to him. The kind that made normally sane women flibbertigibbety. That weapon wasn’t even turned on her, and Brooke went weak in the knees. Darting a glance at Laney to see if she’d witnessed the same phenomenon, she found her friend’s dreamy-eyed gaze turned in the opposite direction.
Pitching her voice low, she jabbed an elbow into Laney’s ribs. “Don’t you dare ditch me.”