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Lucas Thorn wasn’t born a cheater.
All it took was a single moment—say, a certain disastrous incident
on the night before his wedding—and boom. Reputation destroyed
forever and always. So now he owns it. He has a lady friend for every
night of the week (except Sundays—God’s day and all), and his
rules are simple: No commitments. No exceptions.
But a certain smart-mouthed, strawberry
blonde vixen is about to blow that all to hell.
Avery Black has never forgiven Lucas
for cheating on her sister. And suddenly being forced to work with
him is pretty much a nightmare on steroids. Of course, it does afford
her the opportunity to make his life as difficult as possible. But no
good revenge scheme comes without payback. Because he didn’t become
the Lucas Thorn without learning a few things about women.
Now Avery’s lust for vengeance has
turned into, well, lust. And if Lucas stops cheating, it’s
definitely not because he’s falling in love…
The office building loomed ahead of me.
I squinted up at it, covering my face with part of my hand as the sun
cast its glare against the glass.
“What are we looking at?” Lucas
whispered in my ear.
I let out a little yelp and jumped away
from him, and I would have run into a passing biker if Lucas hadn’t
pulled me out of the way with his coffee-free hand.
“Must you be such a pain in the ass?”
“Must you try to kill me?” I fired
back.
He rolled his eyes. “Let’s go.”
He started walking, hauling me with him.
We weren’t walking in the direction
of the office.
“Um, Thorn—”
“I will seriously shove this
Starbucks up that skinny ass if you don’t stop talking and just
listen for once in your life.”
I shut up and followed, but only
because he’d said “Starbucks” and was very purposefully moving
in the nearest outpost’s general direction. If I looked pathetic
enough, would he buy me coffee?
That was what my life was coming to.
Pity coffee.
My shoulders slumped at the thought
when we walked into the building. The smell of fresh baked goods hit
me with full force, and my stomach growled loudly, saying to
everyone, I’m a hungry bear and may eat my young. Out of the way,
please!
I followed Lucas to the line, still
tempted to speak, but I figured if he wanted noise from me, he’d
say something like, “You may grace me with your voice now, Avery.”
Even though I wasn’t talking, every
time I heard someone order pumpkin bread I sighed, loudly, so loudly
that the barista eyed me cautiously. Chill, Starbucks, I’m not
going to steal a piece of pumpkin bread.
My mouth watered.
I mean, I wasn’t that desperate.
But if I took two, maybe three, steps
toward her, yelled “Fire!” and then screamed nonsense about a bee
attacking me, the pumpkin bread she had in hand would probably fall
to the ground, and it would be wasteful if I didn’t rescue it from
the ants.
All creatures deserve food—but
pumpkin bread was too good for ants, too rich, and they’d explode
all over the floor from the richness and it would be my fault—for
saving the barista’s life, right? From the bee?
I think I just confused myself.
“Why are you breathing so heavy?”
Lucas asked from my right.
I snapped out of my pumpkin-bread
daydream and shrugged. “Sorry, low on sleep.”
He gave a noncommittal nod and then it
was his turn, greedy little bastard already had one coffee now he was
getting two! “A venti macchiato and a large coffee with room for
cream, two slices—”
I elbowed him hard in the ribs.
“Sorry, um, three slices of pumpkin
bread, thanks.”
He handed the barista his card, while
my greedy eyes locked on the pumpkin bread as the barista placed it
into a bag and gave it to him.
With an exasperated sigh, he shoved the
bag into my hands. “Just leave me one bite.”
“No promises.” I was already
digging into the bag, my mouth watering as I followed him around the
counter with a little pep in my step.
Lucas grabbed our drinks and motioned
toward one of the tables. I sat, stuffed more pumpkin goodness into
my mouth, and managed to chug some coffee almost all at once.
Lucas shook his head. “I always
forget how seriously you take your pumpkin bread.”
I moaned and took another huge bite.
“My theory is this.”
He leaned forward, a smile curving
around his gorgeous mouth. “Alright, out with it.”
More pumpkin bread found its way into
my mouth as I talked—I didn’t even care if I looked like a
starved animal. “Pumpkin bread has the same addictive properties as
cocaine.”
“That’s your theory? That it’s a
drug?”
“Right.” I sighed and leaned back.
“Except it doesn’t make you skinny, unfortunately.”
His smile widened, and he grabbed a
small hunk of bread. “Want to know my theory?”
“Yes, that’s exactly what I was
thinking—I hope Lucas tells me his theory so I can eat his portion
of bread.”
Lucas scooted the bag toward me and
whispered, “Merry Christmas.”
“Oh, pumpkin gods.” I moaned again.
His eyes darted to my mouth.
“What?” I wiped my lips. “Is
something on my face?”
“No.” He looked away. “So my
theory is this . . . pumpkin flavoring is a conspiracy by the
government to see how many ways we can market a flavor and make money
off it.”
“Boo.” I gave him a thumbs-down.
“Thanks, grinch. Oh, and stop ruining holidays.”
He smirked. “You’ve known forever
that Santa isn’t real. Still doesn’t stop you from leaving him
cookies every Christmas Eve, then sneaking downstairs and eating them
all by yourself.”
“One”—I held up a finger—“it’s
genius because nobody will touch them for fear that I’ll get mad.
Two”—I held up a second finger—“when everyone else is sad
about the Christmas cookies being gone, I know I’ll have them all
to myself. It’s like . . .” I sighed, “. . . a Christmas
present. To myself.”
“Except for that one time.” He
smirked.
“Cruel man.” I glared at him. “How
dare you eat my cookies?”
He shrugged. “They were sweet.”
Was it hot? In this little Starbucks?
By the window where the sun was searing me alive like I was under a
magnifying glass?
I tugged at my sleeveless blouse.
“About Saturday . . .”
Uncomfortable conversation, here we
come! I strapped in and waited for the inevitable. And then realized,
to my dismay, that he’d just bought me coffee and food without
letting me go to the office.
My eyes filling with tears, I shook my
head a few times. “Lucas, I may give you crap, but I really need
this job.”
He frowned, like he was confused.
“Don’t say another word.” I held
out my hands. “I’ll do anything, Lucas—and I mean anything—to
keep this job. I wasn’t kidding when I said my parents were
chomping at the bit to get me to move home, and I don’t want to.
It’s not just about me being defiant; they want me to take over the
family business.”
Lucas burst out laughing and then
sobered. “Oh, you’re serious.”
“I can’t sell chicken, Thorn.”
“I mean, to be fair, Avery, your
parents own a very lucrative organic meats company. I’m sure they
could offer you at least five figures.” His smile was way too smug,
but I still had to be nice to him rather than throw him off a cliff,
because he could fire me.
Rachel Van Dyken is the New York Times,
Wall Street Journal, and USA Today Bestselling author of regency and
contemporary romances. When she's not writing you can find her
drinking coffee at Starbucks and plotting her next book while
watching The Bachelor.
She keeps her home in Idaho with her
Husband, adorable son, and two snoring boxers! She loves to hear from
readers!
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