by Jaci Burton
She tugged on his hand to stop him midstride. “Wait. What are you talking about?”
“A house. A brand-new, not-yet-built house. For us. To buy.”
She blinked and stared at him. “You want us to buy a house.
Together.”
His lips curved. “Yeah.”
He pulled the brochure out of his back pocket and handed it to her.
Carmen stared down at the beautiful color picture of what the house would look like finished. Incredible colors, ample windows to let in light, an amazing island and plenty of space in the kitchen for entertaining, and so many bedrooms. And the lot size was huge.
She lifted her gaze to Rafe. “But how . . .?”
“I have a friend who builds homes. He’s giving me . . . us, a great deal on this one with all the land. I want to marry you, Carmen. Build this house with you. Or if you don’t like this one, we’ll choose another one. I want you to have your dream—a brand-new house that we can make memories in together. That we can have our forever in together.”
Forever. Together. She had thought she’d move into an apartment so her grandfather could sell his house. Not buy a house. She never thought she’d be able to—
Stop overanalyzing everything and just go for it, Carmen. This is the man you love.
“I want forever with you, Rafe. I want this house with you. I love you. Yes.”
She laughed, she cried and she threw herself into his arms to kiss him.
And then they walked toward the house that would someday become theirs, where they’d start their forever together.
TURN THE PAGE TO READ A SPECIAL EXCERPT
FROM THE FIRST BOOTS AND BOUQUETS NOVEL
BY JACI BURTON
THE BEST MAN PLAN
COMING SOON FROM HEADLINE ETERNAL!
ERIN BELLINI SHOUTED OUT FROM HER OFFICE AT RED Moss Vineyards.
“Mom. Have you talked to the caterers?”
Her mother didn’t respond right away. It was her most annoying quality. While she waited, Erin jotted down several notes about the bridesmaids. Her two sisters were on site so she had them covered, but she made a note in her planner to text Chrissy, her best friend and maid of honor, to make sure she had received the itinerary Erin had emailed to her.
Erin’s mother, Maureen, made an appearance in Erin’s office. “You don’t need to yell at me, Erin. You could have just sent me a text. And yes, caterers are confirmed. Which I already told you this morning.”
“Right. You did. For some reason I hadn’t checked it off the list.” She typed an X in the spreadsheet on her laptop as well as marking it off on the page in her planner. She looked up at her mother. “And my dress is back from alterations, right?”
“It’s in your closet.” Her mom made that face, the one where her lips went straight and her eyes narrowed and you knew you were being scrutinized. “You’re not getting nervous, are you?”
Erin smiled and took a deep breath to center herself. “I never get nervous. Because I have everything planned. In my planner. In my spreadsheet. In the notes in my phone.”
Her mother smiled. “Right. Yes, well, that’s you, honey. I’m going out to the vineyards to check on your dad. Call if you need me.”
“Okay.”
She should call Owen, her fiancé, to make sure he remembered he had to pick up the tuxes. Or maybe she should call Jason, Owen’s best friend and the best man. Owen was always scattered and busy and he’d likely forget. Thankfully he had her to organize everything for him.
She picked up her phone and found Jason, then pressed the call button.
“Busy here, Erin.”
She shook her head at Jason’s gruff brush-off. Since they were neighbors, they’d known each other forever. “I need you to pick up the tuxes.”
“What?”
“The tuxes, Jason.”
“I’m knee-deep in cow shit right now, Erin. You don’t mean now, do you?”
“No. I mean Thursday.” She heard mooing. “You delivering babies?”
“Pregnancy checks.”
“Oh. Cool.” Jason was a large animal vet, so he was always on the run. He had a practice in town, but he also worked the local ranches.
She was scrolling through her emails when she saw one from Owen. Owen never emailed her. He always texted. She frowned and clicked on it.
“I thought Owen was doing the tux thing,” Jason said.
“Well, Owen is likely up to his elbows in hops or wheat or whatever it is that brewers do. Or he’s likely making sure the brewery and the restaurant won’t go up in flames without him when we’re on our honeymoon. You know how he is.”
“Fine. I’ll handle it. Anything else?”
“Yeah.” She was trying to concentrate on Owen’s email and forgot she was on the phone with Jason.
“Erin. Anything else?”
Her blood went cold. Everything in her went cold, despite the warm May day.
She read the email again. It was a breakup email. Two days before the wedding, and Owen was breaking up with her.
“In a freaking email? He’s breaking up with me in an email?”
“Who’s breaking up with you?” Jason asked. “Owen is?”
She was getting married in two days. Correction. Apparently she was not getting married, because exactly two days before their wedding Owen had broken up with her. Via email.
She felt dizzy and sick to her stomach. She leaned over and put her head between her legs.
“Erin. Are you there?”
“Did you know about this?” she asked, trying not to faint or throw up.
“Hell no, I didn’t know. Did he call you?”
Erin straightened, the dizziness making her feel as if she’d just downed a bottle of Bellini’s best prosecco in one gulp.
Two days. They were getting married in two days. This had to be a mistake. But as she straightened and looked at the email again, the word “mistake” was written in the same sentence as the words, “us getting married.”
“Ahhhhhhhhh!” she screamed, long and loud, then yelled, “That son of a bitch. I will kill him. He broke up with me in an email, Jason.”
“He didn’t,” Jason said. “Are you sure?”
“Oh, he did. And I’m sure. I can read a damn email. I gotta go.” She hung up the phone and stared at her lists, tears pricking her eyes as the future she’d envisioned with Owen dissolved right in front of her.
All because of an email. An email! How could he be so cold?
“I will kill him. I. Will. Kill. Him.”
She was breathing too fast and she knew it. She was going to hyperventilate if she didn’t calm down. She pushed herself out of her chair and forced herself to pace the floor of her office, centering her breathing, forcing the tears back, resisting the urge to crumple on the floor and curl up in a ball and sob like a baby.
How could he do this to her? To them? They’d been perfect together.
Oh, no. She would not cry. Not over him.
“Who are you going to kill?” Honor asked, running in. “You screamed. What’s wrong?”
Torn between betrayal, hurt, and utter fury, she couldn’t even answer her younger sister. She finally managed to find her voice and pointed at her laptop.
“Owen dumped me. In an email!”
Honor gasped. “He did not.” She yelled out the door, “Brenna, get in here now.”
Brenna sauntered in. “What’s up?”
“Owen dumped Erin. In an email, apparently.”
Erin reread the email again, making sure it said what she thought it had said. Maybe she’d misinterpreted it.
But no. She hadn’t. There was no misinterpreting the “I’m sorry” and the “We’re not right for each other” and “We shouldn’t get married.” She felt her sisters’ hands on her shoulders as they leaned over her to read it.
“That son of a bitch,” Brenna said.
“I can’t believe he’d do that,” Honor said. “That doesn’t seem like Owen at all. Di
d he say anything to you to lead you to believe he wanted to back out?”
Erin finally swiveled around in the office chair to face her sisters. “No, he didn’t say anything to me because apparently he was too busy packing for Aruba. For our honeymoon. Where he is right now. Taking our honeymoon trip by himself.”
Brenna crossed her arms and narrowed her gaze. Erin felt a little vindicated by the fury in her older sister’s eyes. “I will personally destroy him.”
“You won’t get the chance,” Erin said. “Because I get the pleasure of doing that.”
“Dad might kill him first,” Honor said, looking worried. “Or, knowing Mom’s temper, you might have to hide the kitchen knives.”
Erin stood and started to storm out of the office, but then turned. “Nobody gets to kill him but me.”
Their mother walked in right then, a smile on her beautiful face.
“Who are we killing now?”
Their Mom was used to the three sisters always plotting someone’s demise. Oh, but she didn’t know how bad this was. This was bad. This was murder worthy.
“Owen dumped me, Mom. And he’s already left for Aruba without me.”
Their mother just stared at her, dumbfounded for a few minutes. “What? He did what?”
She took her mother’s hand and led her to the desk, showing her the email Owen had left her. She read it. Then read it again and lifted her head to stare in confusion at Erin.
“This makes no sense, Erin. He loves you.”
Erin snorted. “Apparently not. He said he tried to talk to me but I wouldn’t listen. I don’t even know what he’s talking about, because he most certainly never talked to me about ending our engagement. And the rest of it is all blah blah blah whatever where he didn’t want to hurt my feelings.” She pointed to her laptop, to the life-altering email. “Like that wouldn’t hurt my feelings? He couldn’t even face me, the coward.”
“Are you sure he didn’t try to talk to you about this?” Honor asked.
“Honor!” Erin said. “Whose side are you on?”
“Yours, of course. I just . . . it’s just that we all know Owen. He’d never hurt you like this.”
Erin waved her hands at her laptop. “He just did.”
Honor sighed and shook her head. “You’re right. I’m sorry, of course you’re right. He’s a terrible person. A coward for not facing you.”
“Bastard coward,” Brenna added. “So now what do we do? Everything’s ordered for the wedding. Flowers, cake, caterer, music. Nothing can be canceled at this late date except the venue here at the vineyard, of course. He couldn’t have gotten his cold feet six months ago?”
At Erin’s stricken look, Brenna added, “Or, never? I mean, who wouldn’t want to marry you? You’re beautiful and talented and smart and any guy would be lucky to have you.”
“Damn right he would,” her mother added.
Erin didn’t understand it. As her mother and sisters talked amongst themselves, she turned to face the window, looking out over the vineyards, rows and rows of grapes growing, promising a prosperous future.
She sighed and reviewed the past year in her head. Owen had proposed in his apartment. She hadn’t been too surprised because they’d talked about marriage for a year. They’d planned the wedding. Everything had seemed fine. It had been stressful, of course, but all weddings were stressful.
And sure, she’d been preoccupied with her work here at Red Moss Vineyards, plus all the wedding planning, but Owen had been equally engaged with his work. They were both successful in their jobs. Owen had started up a craft brewery and restaurant in Oklahoma City. Erin handled the business aspect of the family winery. Sure, they were super busy. But they made time for each other.
They’d known each other since they were kids. They’d been in love, dammit. She rubbed her stomach, aching inside at the loss of the future they’d planned together.
She couldn’t pinpoint one time where warning bells had clanged in her head, where she might have stopped and thought that maybe he was having second thoughts.
And now she had a wedding in two days and no groom. And no refunds at this late date, either.
Fury replaced the hurt, pure anger wrapping an icy wall around her shattered heart.
Well, screw that. And screw him, too. Only she wouldn’t be screwing him on her wedding night. Or ever again, for that matter. Which was fine with her.
But she’d have her revenge. And a party to remember.
She pivoted to face her mother and sisters, lifting her chin in defiance. “We’re going to have the reception without him.”
Her mother shot her head up and stared at Erin. “What?”
“You heard me. Everything has already been paid for. Since we own the winery and the wedding venue, we have the spot reserved. We’ll never get our money back for anything else. So let’s hold one hell of a party here on my non-wedding day.”
Honor came over and put her arm around her. “Oh, honey, don’t you think that’s the last thing you’ll want on that day? To remember it’s the day you were supposed to get married?”
“Probably. But it’s also going to be a party to end all parties. If he thinks I’m going to cancel, then spend that day crying over him, he’s wrong. Dead wrong.” Erin shrugged. “So, let’s party our butts off on my non-wedding day. We’ll call it the Bellini Party of the Summer, instead. What do you think?”
“I’m in,” Honor said. “Whatever you want, you get, as far as I’m concerned.”
Brenna nodded. “Agreed. It’s your day, Erin. So you get to do whatever you want to do. I’m in, too. Mom?”
Their mother sighed. “Wait till your dad hears about this. I’m not convinced he won’t fly to Aruba and personally drag Owen back here to marry you.”
Erin lifted her chin. “I don’t ever want to see him again, let alone marry him.”
It took a few beats for her mother to answer. “Okay, then. We’ll throw the best party this venue has ever seen.”
And Erin would drown her heartbreak in the finest wine the Red Moss Vineyards produced.
It would be one hell of a party.
JASON CALLUM DROVE THE DIRT ROAD LIKE THE FIRES OF hell were on his heels.
He’d tried calling Owen’s number three times. Each time, his phone went directly to voice mail. Owen often turned his phone off when he was working back in the brewing area, but he knew for a fact that his best friend was off work for the next two weeks.
Jason glared at his phone. “Because you’re supposed to be getting married in two days, asshole.”
He tossed his phone on the console of his truck.
He should have never backed off three years ago when Owen said he wanted to ask Erin out.
Then again it wasn’t like Jason was going to do it. He and Erin had been friends since they were kids. Just friends.
You like her, dumbass. You’ve always liked her. You just didn’t have the balls to do anything about it.
He gripped the steering wheel, trying to bite back the curse words that wanted to escape from his mouth.
This whole thing was his fault—indirectly, but still his fault.
Three years ago Jason could have told Owen to back off, that he was interested in Erin. Instead, he’d told Owen to go for it, and had swallowed the feelings he’d had for Erin.
He hadn’t realized how strong those feelings were until he’d had a front-row seat to watch Owen falling in love with Erin.
And who wouldn’t? She was strong willed and smart and capable and beautiful and the way she laughed could instantly make a guy fall crazy in love.
So what the hell was Owen doing?
He turned into the long drive of the Red Moss Vineyards.
He hoped like hell he’d heard Erin wrong, that this was some kind of colossal mistake. Because his best friend wouldn’t do this to Erin, wouldn’t up and cancel the wedding with only two days to go. That just wasn’t Owen, and he knew him probably better than anyone.
He pulled th
e truck along the side of the main house and got out, brushing off dust and animal hair that clung to his worn jeans. He’d changed out of the boots that he’d been working in and slid into another pair so he wouldn’t track cow shit into the Bellini’s house. He walked up the wide wood stairs and onto the oversized porch. He knew he didn’t have to knock. He’d known this family for as long as he’d been alive. He’d played out back with the Bellini girls since they were all kids.
He walked through the front door and followed the sound of Johnny Bellini’s booming voice, some of it in English and some in Italian.
“Dad, you’re not going to kill him,” Honor said.
“Bastardo. He disgraced my daughter. That is just not done.”
Erin rolled her eyes. “First, I am hardly disgraced. Pissed? Yes. Disgraced, no. And second? By the time I’m done talking to everyone about what he did to me, it’ll be his reputation that’s ruined. That’ll be enough.”
“Hey,” Jason said, stepping into the room. “I was on the phone with Erin and I heard. I came right over to make sure she was okay.”
His gaze shot to Erin, who looked as upset as he’d ever seen her. Erin was never flustered, never upset, never out of sorts. She was the one sister who always had her shit together.
Today she didn’t have it together. Her dark raven hair was piled high in a crown on top of her head. Erin never let a hair fall out of place, but right now the crown sat a little lopsided and tendrils had escaped, framing her flushed face. The pencil she’d stuck into the bun on her head threatened to topple the entire shebang. And her normally sharp green eyes were clouded, as if she was on the verge of tears.
Jason wasn’t sure he’d ever seen Erin Bellini cry. Not even when he’d pushed her off the slide when they were eight years old. She’d just gotten up, brushed herself off, then come over and punched him right in the jaw.
He figured that’s when he’d first fallen in love with her.
Now she just looked sad. But damn, she still looked beautiful, and he had no right to think that.