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A Scandal So Sweet

Page 3

by Ann Major


  “Hollow words…since you could have stepped up and cleared my name at any point. You didn’t. Like a fool, I waited for you to do just that. I was young. I believed in you back then.” His mouth tightened into a hard, forbidding line. “But, no, you ran off to New Orleans where you probably seduced somebody else.”

  “There was never anyone but you… .” She swallowed tightly. “I—I tried to apologize…and explain. You refused to take my calls. I even went to Houston looking for you after your uncle took you away, but you wouldn’t see me.”

  “By then I knew what a talented manipulator you were.”

  At his dark, unforgiving scowl, she sucked in a tortured breath. “If you hate me so much, why won’t you just go?”

  “I don’t hate you. Frankly, I don’t consider you worth the waste of any more emotion. What I’m doing here isn’t about you. I’ve made a name for myself in other places. When Nick called me a few months ago, I realized I’d never let go of what happened here and neither have the people of this town or the media. Maybe I’ve decided it’s time I changed a few people’s minds.

  “Your stepfather used to be the biggest man in these parts. Not anymore. I intend to be bigger than he ever was. I intend to make him pay for what he did—to kill him with kindness, bestowed upon his town.”

  “I want you to leave Gram and Tuck alone. I’m buying this property from her because I won’t have you cheating her to get back at me.”

  “You’d better not make accusations like that in public.”

  “And you’d better stop trying to make me look bad to my grandmother, who’s started nagging me about not coming home often enough!”

  “Haven’t you been neglecting her?”

  “Well, if I don’t come home, it’s because of you. I—I can’t forget…when I’m home,” she finished raggedly.

  Dark hurt flashed in his eyes but was gone so fast she was sure she’d only imagined it.

  When he stomped toward the front door, she blocked his way. At her nearness, his hard body tensed. When their gazes locked, a muscle in his jawline jerked savagely. His breathing had roughened.

  He wasn’t nearly as indifferent as he’d said.

  Nor was she.

  “Move aside,” he muttered.

  Hurt, she lashed out. “No—this is my grandmother’s house. I won’t allow you to use her to get at me. So—leave.”

  “Like hell!”

  When she stood her ground, his hands closed over her forearms. But as he tried to edge her aside, she stomped down on his foot with her heel.

  Cursing, he tightened his grip and crushed her against his muscular length.

  Despite the unwanted shiver of excitement his touch caused, her tone was mild. “Would you please let me go?”

  A dozen warring emotions played across his dark face as she struggled to free herself.

  “I don’t think I will.”

  Locking her slim, wriggling body to his made their embrace even more alarmingly intimate.

  “You’re trembling,” he said. “Why? Are you acting now? Or do you feel what I… .” He broke off with a look of self-contempt.

  “Damn you for this,” he muttered. “You’re not the only one who can’t forget.”

  Even if she hadn’t felt his powerful arousal against her pelvis, his blazing eyes betrayed his potent male need. Then his gaze hardened with determination, and she watched breathlessly as he lowered his mouth to hers.

  “I shouldn’t do this,” he whispered fiercely, bending her backward, molding her even more tightly to the hard contours of his body. “God help me, I know what you are, what you did.”

  “You did things, too… .” He’d hurt her terribly. Yet she wanted him, ached for him.

  “I can’t stop myself,” he muttered. “But then I never could where you were concerned.”

  No sooner did his warm mouth close over hers than she turned to flame. If he’d flung her onto the chaise longue and followed her down, she would have forgotten the hurt that had turned her heart to stone for fifteen years. She would have ripped his jeans apart at the waist, sliding her hands inside.

  She wanted to touch him, kiss him everywhere, wind her legs and arms around him and surrender completely—even though she knew his need was based on the desire to punish while hers was due to temporary insanity.

  On a sigh, her arms circled his tanned neck, and she clung, welding herself to his lean frame in a way that told him all that she felt. She was a woman now, a woman whose needs had been too long denied. When he shuddered violently, she gasped his name.

  “Zach… I’m sorry,” she murmured as warm tears leaked from her eyes and trickled down her cheek. She feathered gentle fingertips through his thick, inky hair. “I wronged you, and I’m so sorry. For years I’ve wanted to make it up to you.” She hesitated. “But… You hurt me, too.”

  For fifteen years, she’d been dead in the arms of every other man who’d held her.

  She hadn’t felt this alive since she’d last been in Zach’s embrace.

  His hand closed over her breast, stroking a nipple until it hardened. The other hand had moved down to cup her hip.

  Next he undid the buttons of her blouse so that it parted for his exploration. For one glorious moment she was her younger self and wildly in love with him again. Back then she had trusted him completely. She’d given him everything of herself. With a sigh, she leaned into him as he stroked her, and her response sent him over some edge.

  He rasped in a breath. Then, in the next shuddering instant, he ended their kiss, tearing his lips free, leaving her desolate, abandoned.

  Loosening his grip, he let her go and staggered free of her as if he’d been burned. He raked a large, shaking hand through his hair and swore violently, staring anywhere but at her.

  “Damn you,” he muttered, inhaling deeply. “I see why you do so well on Broadway. You’re like a tigress in heat. Is that why Hugh Jones took up with you so fast?”

  Summer was about to confess she felt nothing when Hugh kissed her—nothing—but Zach spoke first.

  “Brilliant performance,” he said. “You deserve an Oscar.”

  “So do you,” she whispered in breathless agony as she dried her cheeks with the back of her hand. She couldn’t let him know that for a few magical seconds she’d actually cared.

  “I’d better go before I do something incredibly stupid,” he said.

  “Like what?” she murmured, feeling dazed from his mesmerizing kiss and savage embrace.

  “Like take you back to my house to do whatever the hell I want to do with you…for as long as I want.”

  “Oh?”

  “Don’t look at me like that! I know what you are. Damn you for making me want the impossible,” he muttered.

  She clenched her fists, not any happier than he was to realize that she wanted the impossible, too.

  He didn’t like her. With good reason. Their past was too painful to revisit. What burned inside her, and in him, was lust—visceral and destructive.

  Gram opened the front door. Her violet, silver-lashed eyes wide, she peered out at them with excessive interest, causing Summer, whose blouse was still unbuttoned, to blush with shame even as she quickly pulled the edges back together. The last thing she wanted to do was get Gram’s hopes up about a romantic reunion with Zach.

  “Oh, my go-o-o-d-ness.” Gram worked hard to hide her pleasure at the sight of Zach’s blazing eyes and her granddaughter’s scarlet face and state of dishabille. “I’m so sorry.” In a softer voice directed toward Summer, she said, “And I thought you told me you wanted nothing more to do with him.” There was that sly note of satisfaction in her tone again.

  “I don’t,” Summer cried, but the door had already closed behind her triumphant grandmother. “Why didn’t you tell me he was coming over?” she called after Gram. Then Summer turned and said to Zach, “Why did I even ask, when I specifically ordered her not to mention you?”

  Zach’s eyes went flat and cold. “As far as I’
m concerned, this never happened. But—if you see me again—you’d better run. You and I have more unfinished business than I realized. Don’t give me any more reasons to come after you and finish what you started.”

  Suspecting he must want revenge, she swallowed. “Don’t threaten me.”

  “It’s not a threat. It’s a promise, a warning. If you’re smart, you’ll stay away from me.”

  As if to emphasize his words, he strode over to her. Reaching up his hand, he ran a calloused fingertip along her damp cheek, causing her to shiver involuntarily.

  “I want you in my bed. I want you to pay for what you did. In every way that I demand.”

  Startled, because the image he painted—of lying under him on a soft bed—aroused her to such a shocking degree, she jumped back. Out of his sensually lethal reach, her voice was firm. “I won’t be seeing you again.”

  “Good. Tell your grandmother I’ll call her after you leave town.”

  His gorgeous mouth curled. Looking every bit as furious and ashamed as Summer was beginning to feel, Zach turned on his heel and strode down the gravel drive, leaving her to wonder how she could have stood there like a besotted idiot and let him touch her again after sharing such an embarrassing kiss.

  “None of this happened,” Summer whispered consolingly to herself when she finally heard the roar of his car. Too aware of gravel spinning viciously, she sank down onto the steps and hugged her knees tightly.

  She felt cold and hot at the same time.

  It was all a horrible mistake. Zach didn’t like that it had happened any more than she did.

  She was glad he felt that way.

  She was glad!

  Somehow she had to make Gram and Tuck understand that Zach was dangerous, that he’d threatened her.

  Tuck, who’d gotten in trouble too many times to count, could not continue to work for Zach, who would use whatever her brother did to his own advantage.

  Squaring her shoulders, Summer got to her feet and picked up the remaining pages of her script. Then she ran into the house and up the stairs where she took a long, cold shower and brushed her teeth.

  Not that she could wash away his taste or the memory of his touch or the answering excitement in her system.

  That night, when she awoke, breathing hard from a vivid dream about Zach kissing her even more boldly, it was impossible to ignore the hunger that was both ancient and familiar lighting every nerve ending in her being.

  Wild for him, she sat up in the darkness and pushed her damp hair back from her hot face. “It was just a stupid kiss. It doesn’t matter! Zach can’t stand me any more than I can stand him.”

  So, why are you dreaming about him, aching for him, even when you know he despises you?

  Two

  One month later

  Once back in New York, Zach’s kiss lingered on the edges of Summer’s consciousness almost all the time, despite the fact that she’d willed herself to forget him. Despite the fact that she’d decided it was best not to obsess over things she couldn’t control, like Tuck’s refusal to quit his job and Gram’s support of his decision.

  And because the memory of Zach’s kiss lingered, she drove herself to work harder than ever.

  Summer read every script her agent gave her. She auditioned tirelessly for any part that was halfway right for her. When she was home alone she compulsively cleaned and dusted every item in her already immaculate apartment in a vain attempt to shove Zach Torr and his stupid kiss and his ridiculous threats back into the past where they belonged.

  Not that she could stop herself from calling certain gossips in Bonne Terre to get a picture of what he was up to back home or stop herself from reading her hometown’s newspaper online to get the latest news about his riverboat gambling project. Everything she read was annoyingly favorable. People were more impressed by him every day. He was the town’s favorite son. Rumors abounded about the lavishness of the riverboat he was building and the luxurious amenities and hotels he was constructing onshore.

  On impulse, maybe to prove to those blockheads back home how little she cared for Zach, she let Hugh Jones join one of her interviews.

  Naturally, the young, bright-eyed journalist went gaga over beautiful, golden Hugh, whose immense ego was hugely gratified at being fawned over.

  At first, the young woman’s eager questions had been standard fare. Summer tossed off her ritual answers.

  Her favorite role was the one she was creating. She was always nervous opening nights. And, yes, the play she was workshopping today was ever-so exciting.

  Naturally, when the journalist wasn’t entirely focused on Hugh, he grew bored.

  Hugh shuffled from one foot to the other and yawned, and the reporter laughed and leaned into him so her breast brushed his elbow.

  “Okay, let’s talk about this hot new man in your life. Every woman in America is dying to be you, Summer.” The woman was staring into Hugh’s baby-blues as if she’d been hypnotized.

  Idiotically, the phrase hot new man put Summer back on Gram’s screened porch, in the arms of that certain individual she would give anything to forget.

  Again she tasted the sweet, blistering warmth of Zach’s mouth and felt his muscular length pressing her close. At the memory of his big hands closing over her breast and butt, the dark, musty corner she shared with Hugh and the reporter felt airless.

  “So, what’s the latest with you and Hugh?” the reporter asked. “If you don’t mind my saying so, you two are the most exciting couple these days.”

  “I’m a pretty lucky guy.” Hugh squeezed Summer closer before launching into a monologue about himself.

  Summer was wondering if she and Hugh had ever once had a real conversation about anything else.

  “I don’t think Summer’s got any complaints,” the reporter said when Hugh finally ended the everybody-loves-me monologue.

  Hugh laughed, pulled Summer closer and planted his mouth on hers just as a flash blinded her.

  Infuriated at his brashness, Summer thumped her fists on his chest. Luckily, her cell phone vibrated and blasted rap music from her pocket.

  “Excuse me,” she whispered, desperate for an excuse to be done with the reporter and Hugh.

  Sliding her phone open, she read the name, Viola Guidry. “Sorry, guys, it’s my grandmother. I have to take this.”

  “So—that kiss makes me wonder how serious you and Hugh are?” the reporter asked.

  “We’re just good friends,” Summer snapped in a flat, cool tone.

  “That’s all you’re going to give me—”

  Nodding, Summer smiled brightly as she shook the woman’s hand. “Thanks so much.” Cupping the phone to her ear, Summer walked away.

  “Hey, girls, much as I loved doing this interview, I’ve got a meeting before I catch my plane to L.A.,” Hugh said carelessly, blowing Summer an air kiss. “See you, angel.”

  Summer waved absently and fought to concentrate on her grandmother’s frantic words.

  “You have to come home! Tuck’s in the hospital. He’s going to be okay, but Sheriff Arcenaux says he may have to arrest him!”

  “For what?”

  “Tuck invited some friends over to Zach’s and they got into his liquor. When Zach came home, Tuck was so drunk he’d passed out. Two of Zach’s cars were missing, and Tuck’s friends were busily looting the place.”

  “Oh, my God! Did I warn you or not?”

  “Zach’s threatening to press charges. So—you’ve got to come home.”

  Fear was a cold fist squeezing Summer’s heart so tightly she could barely breathe. Practically speaking, she didn’t have time for this. Her calendar was jam-packed with work commitments. Emotionally, she knew her family needed her.

  “Zach wants to meet with you. He gave me his attorney’s number and told me to have you call him. He said maybe he’d be willing to work something out with you, instead of pressing charges, if you meet with him. But he’ll only meet with you.”

  Summer felt so frustrat
ed and panic-stricken it was all she could do not to throw the phone.

  Zach had her right where he wanted her—cornered.

  In a soft voice, she said, “I’m on my way, Gram.”

  * * *

  She was late.

  Zach hated wasting time, and that was exactly what he was doing as he waited for Summer, a woman he’d spent years trying to forget. His empire should be his focus, not some woman from his past.

  Hell, he’d wasted too much time worrying about her ever since he’d seen her on Viola’s porch. She’d looked so sad and fragile before they’d spoken. He was almost sure she’d been crying. The pain in her eyes had been so profound he still wanted to know what she’d been thinking.

  Then, like a fool, he’d kissed her.

  Her mouth had been hot and yielding, almost desperate with pent-up passion. But tender, too. Ever since that kiss, it was as if her lips and her taste and her softness and her sweet vulnerability had relit the passion he’d once felt for her. It seemed nothing, not all the ugliness or news coverage or even reason, had been able to destroy his desire for her.

  The woman’s kiss had made him remember the girl he’d loved and trusted.

  She didn’t matter; she couldn’t ever matter again.

  Summer had been a virgin when she’d given herself to him. His one and only. Never would he forget how lush, lovely and shyly innocent she’d been, nor how her shy blue eyes had shone. He’d been deeply touched that such a beautiful girl with such a radiant soul had chosen him.

  For the first two years they’d known each other, his focus had been their friendship and protecting her from her controlling stepfather. Then they’d fallen in love during her senior year, so he’d stayed in Bonne Terre to wait for her to graduate. He hadn’t pushed for sex, but somehow, after they’d run away together, she’d gotten through his defenses.

  One night when they’d been alone in that remote cabin, she’d cried, asking him what she should do about her stepfather. What would happen if they didn’t go back, if she didn’t finish school? Would he come to New York with her?

 

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