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The Sweet Talker

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by Cathryn Fox




  The Sweet Talker

  Cathryn Fox

  Contents

  Copyright

  1. Brody

  2. Josie

  3. Brody

  4. Josie

  5. Brody

  6. Josie

  7. Brody

  8. Josie

  9. Brody

  10. Josie

  11. Brody

  12. Josie

  13. Brody

  14. Josie

  15. Brody

  16. Josie

  Also by Cathryn Fox

  About Cathryn

  Copyright

  The Sweet Talker

  The Sweet Talker

  Copyright 2021 by Cathryn Fox

  Published by Cathryn Fox

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

  * * *

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of various products referenced in this work of fiction, which have been used without permission. The publication/use of these trademarks is not authorized, associated with, or sponsored by the trademark owners.

  * * *

  This e-book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This e-book may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your favorite e-book retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  ISBN Ebook: 978-1-989374-39-9

  ISBN Print: 978-1-989374-38-2

  1

  Brody

  Six days until Christmas Eve:

  * * *

  “Why do I feel like I just drove straight onto the set of a Hallmark movie?” I ask my buddy Declan as I look through my dirty windshield and take in the decked-out shops lining Main Street. Thank God I don’t have epilepsy. All the flashing lights in the store windows, not to mention the sparkling spruce wreaths hanging from every lamppost, are liable to trigger a damn seizure.

  I slow my sports car on the slushy streets of Holiday Peak, Massachusetts, the sugary sweet town Declan calls home. Talk about a community taking Christmas to the extreme, and no, I’m not secretly enjoying the festive energy bubbling up around me. Not much, anyway.

  “Watch a lot of Hallmark movies, do you?” Declan asks, busting my balls, and why wouldn’t he? Do you know any guys that blurt shit out about Hallmark movies, like they’re totally into them? Didn’t think so.

  I glance at my buddy as he stares out the window, nostalgia all over his face. Declan and I became close when I joined the Seattle Shooters defensive line up a couple of years ago. He took me under his wing, and we’ve been tight ever since. While he knows a lot about me, more than most, he doesn’t need to know I’m a sucker for a good Christmas movie, which undoubtedly stems from far too many craptastic Christmases over the years.

  He tears his gaze from the festive streets, and his brow arches in challenge as he waits for me to answer. “So that’s a yes? You watch a lot of Hallmark movies?”

  “Sometimes I’m too lazy to stretch for the remote,” I say, rubbing my eyes. The drive from my place in Boston to Declan’s hometown isn’t a long one. I’m just tired from kicking ass during our winning game against Detroit two nights ago and I’m damn well looking forward to this break.

  “Which means you were already watching the Women’s Network, correct?” He grins. “Look I don’t care, just stop denying it.”

  I shake my head. Leave it to Declan to call me on my shit. Every. Single. Time. I lift my chin. “You don’t know my life,” I shoot back. I hide a grin and add, “Sometimes those movies are on the Lifetime channel, you know.” We both laugh at that. Yeah, I get it. Hours spent watching chick flicks hardly fits my image, and it’s best that information doesn’t leave this car. While I might be known as the Sweet Talker—and I’m not being cocky when I say this, but I’m pretty good at scoring with the ladies—on the ice, I’m a pit bull with one job: keep the opponents from scoring. But enough of that. I need a change of subject before Declan makes me cash in my man card.

  “Do I really have to bring a date to Christmas Eve dinner?” I ask with a groan as I sink deeper into the driver’s seat. To be honest, I’m a little played out, and agreed to join Declan for Christmas because he grew up in a sleepy town with a nearby ski hill, and I need downtime. That, and my father, an NHL hall of famer, couldn’t care less about seeing his kid over the holidays. He’s too busy with wife number five, or maybe it’s six, and don’t even get me started on my biological mother. But sometimes I think I worked so hard at hockey just to get his attention, his approval. You’d think he’d be proud of his son following in his footsteps. I guess he’s too self-centered and interested in his own pleasures to care.

  Declan shrugs. “Up to you, but like I said, no one sits alone at Mom’s table. If the chair next to you is empty, she’ll fill it with my cousin Eugenie, and that woman…” He gives a low slow whistle. “Let’s just say she’s a huge Brody Tucker fan, and I’m pretty sure she wants you to be her baby daddy.”

  I laugh out loud, holding one hand up. “I draw the line there, bro.”

  “I know you do, so you better put a plan together and find someone to fill that chair, before Mom does and you find out you’re Houdini Eugenie’s baby daddy before you even realize you’ve been unzipped.”

  “Note to self, steer clear of Houdini Eugenie.” Snow starts falling again, and I turn on my wipers, spreading a streak of dirty slush across my window. Way to mess up my visibility. I scrunch to look through a clean streak. “Where am I going to find a date this late, anyway?”

  “You have six days.”

  I consider that for a moment. “I guess that’s plenty of time to sweet talk a girl into a fancy dinner at your parents’ place.” Declan snorts, shaking his head. “What?” I ask.

  “Maybe the women in Holiday Peak won’t fall for your charm.” He taps his head. “They’re kind of smart like that around these parts.”

  I tap the steering wheel and grin. “Guess I won’t know if I don’t try.”

  “Just don’t try it with Nikki,” he says, a warning in his voice. “I don’t want her getting mixed up with the likes of you.”

  “You’re the one they call Heartbreaker, not me, and it’s not like you have any claim on her. All you do is hang out when you’re home and then return to the team in a shit mood. If you like her, do something about it.”

  “It’s not like that.” He exhales, averting my gaze, but not before I catch the frown on his forehead. I’m not exactly sure what the deal is with him and Nikki. I guess I’ll never know because he shuts down whenever her name comes up.

  “Who should I ask, then?” I scan the sidewalk, looking for possible candidates. A pretty brunette walks by and I perk up, until I notice the little boy by her side. Nope. Not her. Moving along. It’s not that I have anything against kids. Simply put, relationships never work out for me, and no way do I want to drag a kid into my world only to screw him up when I eventually screw up. I don’t want to be the cause of anyone’s therapy. He’s better off never having known me on a personal level.

  Declan pulls his phone from his pocket and sends a text.
He seems a bit distracted when he says, “Are you suggesting I pick someone for you?”

  “This is your town, isn’t it? You know the women better than I do, and maybe Nikki has a friend. Just point the way.” I offer him my best smile. “I’ll take care of the rest.”

  “Let me get this straight. You’re saying whoever I pick, you can charm to the table?”

  “Is that a challenge?”

  He stares at his phone for a second, shoves it into his pocket and looks at me. “Maybe.”

  I toss him a cocky grin. Being a star in the NHL comes with its perks—Declan knows that firsthand. You know what being a star in the NHL doesn’t come with? Long term relationships. At least not for me. Lots of my buddies have fallen in love and are now married with kids. But the only thing I know about love is how to mess it up, which is why I no longer try.

  “Try me, bro. Pick a girl and I’ll get her to the table.” I flick on the windshield washer, but no fluid comes out. “I can’t see a thing.”

  “Wait, pull over.”

  “What?”

  “Right here,” he practically shouts. “Stop the car.”

  I jerk the car to the right, and my suspension squeals as my front right tire plunges into a slush covered pothole near the curb. The god-awful screeching sound is followed by a gasp so loud it drowns out the song on the radio. My heart jumps into my throat. “What the hell?”

  “Oh, shit.” Declan jerks his thumb to the right. “You just soaked someone.”

  Worry races through me as I kill the ignition and jump from the car. Circling the front, my eyes go wide when my gaze lands on a girl around my age—late twenties. It’s a bit hard to tell exactly how old she is as she stands there gasping for air, cold, wet slushy snow dripping from her—compliments of my erratic driving.

  “I’m so sorry,” I blurt out, thankful that I hadn’t done more damage, like actually hit her. “Declan, grab me something.” As Declan goes to the trunk, I take in the woman trying to catch her breath as she swipes wet, dirty snow from her face. I scan the length of her. Christ, I don’t think there’s an inch of her that I missed. “I’m so sorry,” I say again. “Let me help you.”

  “No thanks. I think you’ve done enough already,” she shoots back, a cold shiver wracking her body. Okay, she’s upset because I soaked her. I can understand that, and maybe she was headed somewhere important, and needed to be, well…dry. Despite her protest, I take my coat off and hold it out to her as Declan comes back with one of our team towels. He spreads it open, and she takes the towel and wipes her face. “Thank you,” she says quietly to Declan.

  “Here, take my coat,” I say.

  She hands the towel back to Declan, shaking her head at me. “I’m fine.”

  Clearly, she’s not fine, but I’m not about to call her on that as she averts my gaze and scans the snowbank. “Let me make it up to you.” I reach for my wallet. “I’ll pay for the dry cleaning.”

  She holds her hand out, palm facing me. “I don’t want your money.”

  “Please, let me do something to make this up to you. Dinner? New clothes?” She toys with the zipper on her winter jacket. “Axe throwing?” I glance up and down the streets. Maybe they don’t have that here.

  Her head lifts and she glares at me like I might have just escaped an institution. Maybe under the circumstances, with her soaked and freezing, I can understand how axe throwing was a little bit out there.

  “Keep the money.” She wrings out her ponytail, and that’s when I notice the pretty green flecks in her dark brown eyes. “Maybe you could use it for driving lessons.”

  I bite back a wince as Declan stifles a chuckle. She looks down again, searches the snowbank. A thunderous noise rumbles down the street and I jump back, pulling my new friend—or rather enemy—with me, before the snowplow soaks us both. The plow drops its blade at the front of my car and scrapes up the snow.

  “Great,” she says under her breath, and I examine the layer of packed snow with her, even though I have no idea what it is I’m looking for.

  “Did you lose something?”

  She briefly closes her eyes, like she’s trying to convince herself murder is wrong, and then says, “No, I just like to search snowbanks for fun. It’s a pasttime here in Holiday Peak, something you out of towners wouldn’t know anything about.”

  “How do you know I’m from out of town?”

  She arches a brow glancing at my sports car, which isn’t ideal for this mountainous town. Alrighty then. People on the street slow as they see us, a few pointing at Declan and me with recognition. “Can I drop you somewhere?” I gesture toward my car.

  “No.”

  “Maybe you could call someone to pick you up. Do you have a boyfriend or husband I could call?”

  I’m not hitting on her—I don’t think. It’s just that she looks a bit traumatized, and might need someone other than me coming to her rescue.

  “No.”

  I really don’t know why my chest loosened at that answer. We’re different people from different worlds, and yeah, I can’t forget her instant dislike of me, and maybe even my car.

  “You should probably get inside before you freeze to death,” I suggest.

  Her head lifts. Speaking of death… As her murderous eyes turn on me, I’m pretty sure she’s thinking about ways to bury me in the slushy snow, or maybe she’s reconsidering the axe throwing, with me as her target. “You think?” she shoots back.

  Clearly, we’re off to a good start.

  “I’m sorry. Look. Can we start again?”

  “You can keep the towel,” Declan says, holding it out for her. She looks at the Seattle Shooters emblem, and her eyes lift. She smiles for the first time, and my heart stills a little in my chest. Jesus, she’s gorgeous—when she’s not contemplating killing me, that is. “Declan Bradbury. I’ve heard a lot about you. You’re famous in this town, and it’s nice to meet you in person.”

  “Nice to meet you too, and you are…?”

  “Freezing to death. Thanks to your friend.” She searches the snow again, and her teeth clatter a little louder.

  I step closer, crowd her, wanting to offer her my warmth but afraid of getting a knee to the nuts. As I crowd her, I breathe in her delicious scent. Cookies and cream and…chocolate. Not just any chocolate. No, she smells like the expensive kind my third stepmother used to put out at Christmas—before she disappeared from my life, taking a little bit of my heart with her.

  “I can help you find whatever it is you’re looking for,” I offer.

  She stares at the plow as it takes a turn, and for a second I think she might cry. But the anger is back in her eyes when she turns to me. “I don’t…need your help…you’ve…” Choppy words through clattering teeth fall off as a shop door opens behind her, a little bell ringing to alert the staff to a customer.

  “Done enough, I know.” Feeling like total crap, I adjust my ballcap as she turns, disappearing into the shop. The delectable scent of warm gooey chocolate fills the street, as the door falls shut behind her.

  I stand there for a moment, a little confused at her sudden departure. Then again, it’s possible she was on the brink of hypothermia. I put my jacket back on, reading the sign above the door: The Chocolate Lab. I guess she must work there.

  “You been here five whole minutes, and look at you, making friends,” Declan says.

  I turn to my buddy, and shrug. “Who the hell was that, anyway?

  He looks past my shoulders up and down the street. “I don’t know.”

  “Don’t you know everyone in this town?”

  “She must be new around here. That shop wasn’t here last time I was home.”

  His mouth turns up at the corner, presenting me with those double dimples that drive women wild. “Axe throwing?”

  “Cut me some slack, I panicked, and what the hell is the matter with you? Why are you smiling like the village idiot?”

  “Because I pick her.” He points to the chocolate shop. “She’s the
girl you have to charm to the dinner table.”

  I scoff. “Oh, hell no. She’s a man-hater.”

  “I don’t know if I’d say that. I thought she was rather sweet.” My jaw drops and he continues with, “She knew who I was and smiled at me.”

  “Then you date her.”

  He shoves his hands into his pockets, and rolls one shoulder. “No, I think I’ll leave that to you.”

  I cover my crotch. “I’m kind of fond of these guys, Declan, and wouldn’t mind them intact when I leave here after Christmas.”

  He laughs. “Then I guess you have your work cut out for you.”

  “My work cut out for me? No, my friend, getting her to the table isn’t going to take work, it’s going to take a Christmas miracle.”

  “Are you saying you can’t do it? That the infamous Sweet Talker can’t sweet talk his way into any woman’s life?” He turns and heads down the street, stopping outside a coffee shop.

  I make a move to go when my foot knocks something loose in the snow. I glanced down and spot something shiny lodged between the bank and a lamppost. I snatch the object up, and the second I realize what I’m holding, a wide smile crosses my face.

  “Not saying that at all,” I shoot back.

  He pulls open the coffee shop door, pausing to look back at me. “Then it’s on?”

  I grin, as I shove my ticket to winning this challenge into my pocket. “It’s already done.”

  2

  Josie

  I step into the warmth of my shop, the delicious scent of chocolate doing little to soothe the deep-seated pain that lives inside of me as my assistant Kayley takes one look at me and gasps.

 

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