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Kitabı oku: «Groom On The Loose»

Christine Scott
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Table of Contents

Cover Page

Excerpt

Dear Reader

Title Page

Dedication

About the Author

Prologue

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Epilogue

Copyright

“I know what you’re going to say. I’m late.”

Cassie stepped inside, brushing past Greg. “I’m sorry. I have a doozy of an excuse.”

The skirt of her yellow sundress swirled around her long legs; her silky blond hair swung from side to side. She looked perfect, ready to play the role of his hostess. Ready, that is, except for the baby in her arms.

“Did the caterers arrive on time?” she called over her shoulder.

“Cassie—”

“What about the decorations?”

“Cassie,” he said, more loudly this time. “You have a baby.”

“That’s right,” she said. “But don’t worry. Nothing is going to interfere with my hostessing duties—”

“Cassie,” he said, interrupting her again. “Whose baby is it?”

She bit her lip, looking uncertain. “Well, I suppose…she’s mine.”

Cassie? A mother? The thought sent a shiver down Greg’s spine. “Cassie…what have you gotten yourself into this time?”

Dear Reader,

This month Silhouette Romance has six irresistible novels for you, starting with our FABULOUS FATHERS selection, Mad for the Dad by Terry Essig. When a sexy single man becomes an instant dad to a toddler, the independent divorcée next door offers parenthood lessons—only to. dream of marriage and motherhood all over again!

In Having Gabriel’s Baby by Kristin Morgan, our BUNDLES OF JOY book, a fleeting night of passion with a handsome, brooding rancher leaves Joelle in the family way—and the dad-to-be insisting on a marriage of convenience for the sake of the baby….

Years ago Julie had been too young for the dashing man of her dreams. Now he’s back in town, and Julie’s still hoping he’ll make her his bride in New Year’s Wife by Linda Varner, part of her miniseries HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS.

What’s a man to do when he has no interest in marriage but is having trouble resisting the lovely, warm and wonderful woman in his life? Get those cold feet to the nearest wedding chapel in Family Addition by Rebecca Daniels.

In About That Kiss by Jayne Addison, Joy Mackey, sister of the bride, is sure her sis’s ex-fiancé has returned to sabotage the wedding. But his intention is to walk down the aisle with Joy!

And finally, when a woman shows up on a bachelor doctor’s doorstep with a baby that looks just like him, everyone in town mistakenly thinks the tiny tot is his in Christine Scott’s Groom on the Loose.

Enjoy!

Melissa Senate, Senior Editor

Please address questions and book requests to: Silhouette Reader Service

U.S.: 3010 Walden Ave., P.O. Box 1325, Buffalo, NY 14269

Canadian: P.O. Box 609, Fort Erie, Ont. L2A 5X3

Groom on the Loose
Christine Scott


www.millsandboon.co.uk

To Ginger Goodell, a good friend and fellow writer.

CHRISTINE SCOTT

grew up in Illinois but currently lives in St. Louis, Missouri. A former teacher, she now writes full-time. When she isn’t writing romances, she spends her time caring for her husband and three children. In between car pools, baseball games and dance lessons, Christine always finds time to pick up a good book and read about…love. She loves to hear from readers. Write to her at Box 283, Grover, MO 63040-0283.

Prologue

“Dr. Lawton. How may I help you?”

The deep baritone sent a chill traveling down Cassie Andrews’s spine—a chill as sharp as the frosty November wind whipping against her apartment window. Her grip tightened reflexively around the telephone receiver.

“Uh, Greg. This is Cassie.” Her chest tightened, the words catching in her throat. She swallowed hard, giving herself a moment to calm her frazzled nerves. A hopeless feat, she realized. In all her life, she’d never been faced with a more daunting task.

“Cassie?” He sounded surprised and, she had to admit, none too pleased.

She didn’t blame him. She and Greg Lawton weren’t exactly friends. Sparring partners would be a more apt description of their relationship. They weren’t in the habit of making social calls.

“Do you have a minute, Greg? There’s something I need to discuss with you.”

A slight pause. She could almost hear him grimacing across the phone line. “I’m late for rounds at the hospital. Make it quick.”

Greg was a pediatrician. A very noble profession, indeed. But that hardly gave him license for rudeness. Cassie narrowed her blue eyes. A scathing retort lay on the tip of her tongue. Until she remembered the reason for her call.

“This won’t take long,” she said, forcing an even tone. “It’s about Niki.”

“Niki? What about Niki?” His tone shifted, becoming suddenly alert. “Is something wrong? Is she all right?”

Cassie closed her eyes against the concern shadowing his voice. Niki Adams was Cassie’s best friend. She was also Greg’s former fiancée. Obviously, she was a woman he still cared about a great deal. Telling him the news was going to be like yanking his heart out and stepping on it.

“Niki’s fine. Just fine,” she said, struggling to find the right words. There were none, she decided. Cassie gave a silent moan of frustration. How do you tell a man that the woman he intended to marry has just eloped with someone else?

“Look, Greg. The thing is…Niki’s married.”

Dead silence greeted her announcement. Then, finally, “What did you say?”

The hollow, empty sound of his voice sent an arrow of regret to her heart. For hours she had debated the wisdom of calling Greg with the news of Niki’s elopement, knowing it would be a shock. Especially coming from her, someone he disliked with a vengeance. In the end she’d decided it best that Greg find out from someone he knew, rather than from the gossips on the street of their hometown of Webster Groves, Missouri. Now she wasn’t so sure.

She drew in a breath of courage. “Niki married Jack Sinclair yesterday in Chicago.”

The silence was palpable.

“Greg, I’m sorry.”

“Are you really?”

She blinked at his angry tone. “Of course I am. I know how painful this must be. I feel terrible—”

“So terrible that you couldn’t wait to call me with the news.” His bitter laugh sent warning signals tripping through her mind. “Admit it, Cassie, you called just to rub it in.”

“Rub it in?” Her spine stiffened as anger kicked in. “Now look, Lawton. I called out of the goodness of my heart as a favor—”

“A favor?” His voice thundered over the phone line. “If this is your idea of a favor, Cassie, I’d hate to be around when you’re feeling vindictive.”

“Vindictive?” She gasped, outraged. “I don’t have a vindictive bone in my body.”

“Right. And I suppose you want me to believe you weren’t turning handsprings when Niki decided to break off our engagement.”

Her fingers ached from the death grip she had on the phone. “Niki’s my friend,” she said primly. “I support any decision she makes.”

“Just like you supported her during our engagement.”

Heat flushed her face, a reaction she attributed to anger, not guilt. Back off, the little voice of reason warned her. Now wasn’t the time for an argument with Greg. He was in a highly emotional state. And, to be truthful, the state of her own emotions wasn’t very predictable, either. It wouldn’t take much to set off a shouting match.

She’d accomplished what she’d set out to do. She’d told Greg of Niki’s elopement. It was time to say her goodbyes and hang up the phone with her pride and her tempter intact.

The words sounded good. The advice logical. Only, emotion overrode her common sense. Greg Lawton was so annoying she just couldn’t allow him the last word.

“I encouraged Niki to follow her heart. I can’t help it if Niki’s heart wanted Jack Sinclair and not you.”

Cassie bit her lip, wishing she could take back the hurtful words as soon as she spoke them. She didn’t know what it was about Greg Lawton, but for some reason he’d always had a knack for bringing out the worst in her.

“Look, Cassie. The next time you get the urge to do me any more favors…don’t.”

A sharp click sounded, followed closely by the buzz of a disconnected phone line.

Cassie yanked the receiver from her ear. She stared at the hissing mouthpiece, unable to believe what had just happened. The nerve of the man! In an undeserved show of friendship, she had called Greg to break the news of his ex-fiancée’s elopement. And the ungrateful cad had the gall to hang up on her.

“That does it,” she announced to the empty living room, slamming the phone back onto its cradle. She narrowed her eyes. “That’s the last time I’ll ever do another favor for Greg Lawton.”

* * *

Greg hung up the phone, clinging to the remnants of anger as though it were a lifeline. Better to feel anger, he told himself, than to let any other emotion inside…like pain.

Niki was married? To Jack Sinclair?

Jack Sinclair of all people, a man Greg had always considered a lifetime rival. And so soon after Niki had ended their own engagement. Greg tightened his fingers into white-knuckled fists of frustration. How would he ever live down the humiliation?

But then again, he’d spent most of his growing years trying to live down one of life’s humiliations or another.

Bitterness threatened to usurp his anger. Greg surged to his feet, his desk chair spinning out behind him. He strode to the window, lifted the slats of the miniblinds and stared out of his office at the view overlooking the tree-lined streets of Webster Groves.

Denuded of their leaves, the trees looked stark, barren, like his heart. He’d lived in Webster Groves all his life. A stone’s throw from the city limits of St. Louis, it had the feel of a small town, yet all the conveniences of urban living. He couldn’t imagine living anywhere else. With its large yards and big, old houses, Webster Groves was the perfect place to raise a family.

A family, he mused bitterly, that elusive but persistent dream. He thought he’d found a chance at achieving that dream with Niki.

He’d been wrong.

Greg set his jaw against the rising tide of self-pity. He reached a hand and snapped the blinds closed. Striding to his desk, he busied himself with stacking patient files into neat piles. He’d chased after enough dreams for one lifetime. He wasn’t going to waste his time wishing for the impossible.

He had to face the facts.

Niki would have made the perfect doctor’s wife. She was beautiful, sweet natured and socially adept. Only now she was married to Jack Sinclair. A lawyer, for God’s sake.

Anger dug its icy fingers into his chest, nearly forcing the breath from his lungs. Greg slammed a file onto the desktop. Get over it, Lawton, he chided himself. Brooding over what could have been was pointless.

He welcomed a new surge of anger as his thoughts returned to Cassie Andrews.

What was the saying—don’t shoot the messenger? Well, at the moment, that was exactly what he wanted to do.

“A favor,” he harrumphed disdainfully. That’s what she’d called her little phone call.

Greg knew better. Cassie had never kept her dislike for him a secret. He frowned. For that matter, he hadn’t exactly been discreet when it came to his true feelings for her, either. So it didn’t surprise him that she’d seized an opportunity to serve yet another blow to his already wounded pride.

The woman had no conscience.

Cassie and Niki were best friends. During his brief engagement to Niki, he’d had to endure Cassie’s constant presence. If there was any good to come of his broken engagement to Niki, it was the fact that he’d never have to see Cassie Andrews again.

For the first time that day, Greg almost smiled.

Chapter One

Eight months later

The front doorbell chimed, announcing a new arrival at the offices of The Talk of the Town, a party planning service owned and operated by Cassie Andrews.

Cassie glanced at her wristwatch and frowned. Her one o’clock appointment was early. She heard voices coming from the front office. Her receptionist/secretary/all-around girl Friday’s voice she recognized. The other, a deep baritone, sounded vaguely familiar.

Definitely not her one o’clock appointment, she decided. Naomi Jacobs, her scheduled client, wished to discuss plans for her niece’s bridal shower. This visitor was undoubtedly all male.

“Cassie?” Her receptionist, dark-haired and petite, with pixielike features, stood in the doorway of her office, looking anxious.

“Yes, Mitsi?”

“There’s someone outside insisting on seeing you. He doesn’t have an appointment, but he says you know him. Dr. Lawton? A Dr. Greg Lawton?”

Cassie’s breath caught. Greg Lawton? He was the last person she’d ever expected to darken her door. She remembered their last encounter, the time she’d called him to tell him about Niki and Jack Sinclair’s elopement. She hadn’t seen Greg since he’d had the nerve to hang up on her.

“Cassie?”

Cassie blinked, glancing up at her friend. “Hmm?”

“What do you want me to do with Dr. Lawton?”

A number of vile things came to mind. All of which Cassie quickly squelched. Contrary to what Greg Lawton believed, she wasn’t a vindictive woman. She wasn’t one to hold grudges.

“Give me a moment. Then send him in.”

Mitsi left and Cassie scrambled to clear her desk. Not that she cared what Greg thought of her office, she told herself, as she shoved a handful of papers into her desk drawer. His opinion didn’t matter to her one way or another.

In the past eight months since she and Greg had gratefully parted ways, she’d concentrated her time and effort on starting her own business. Thanks to a lot of hard work and diligence, The Talk of the Town was a growing success, which didn’t leave her a lot of time to organize her desk.

Most times, the clutter didn’t bother her or her clients. Her customers hired her for her creativity, not her neatness. But today, with someone as intimidating as Greg Lawton looming outside her door, she wanted to put her best foot forward.

Her elbow caught the edge of the desk blotter, sending the stapler bouncing off her desk. Cassie scooted her chair back and bent to retrieve the recalcitrant object. She stopped midstretch as she came nose to toe with a pair of shiny black loafers.

A prickling of awareness skittered up her spine. Slowly she lifted her gaze, catching a glimpse of long, muscular legs, clad in a pair of perfectly creased, charcoal gray slacks. She took in the trim waist, the flat stomach and the broad shoulders and felt her mouth go dry. His pale blue, buttoned-down shirt brought out the highlights of his baby blue eyes. The office’s fluorescent light glinted off his thick sandy hair. And his lips were pressed into a firm line of disapproval.

Heartbreak had been kind to Greg Lawton, she decided grudgingly. Hard as it was to believe, he’d grown even more handsome over the past few months. Once she’d likened him to a modern day Dr. Kildare; so cool, so collected—so perfect—that whenever she saw him she wanted to run up to him and muss up his hair.

Perfection was just one of Greg’s many faults. His condescending attitude was another. Whenever he was near, Cassie felt as though she should apologize for all her shortcomings—whatever they may be. He had an uncanny knack for making her feel lacking in some way.

“Greg,” she said, rising to greet him. “This is a surprise.”

“I’m sure it is,” he returned evenly. His mouth tightened around a polite smile. “Do you have a moment? There’s something I’d like to discuss with you.”

The words held a familiar ring, striking Cassie with an unexpected feeling of déjà vu. They’d had this conversation before. Only, the last time, she’d been the one asking for a moment of his time. A request that had been met with rudeness.

Giving the good doctor a taste of his own bitter medicine, she glanced at her wristwatch. “I’ve got an appointment in fifteen minutes. Make it quick.”

His smile faded. “That’s what I like about you, Cassie. Your directness.”

She raised her chin. “Funny, I didn’t think there was anything you liked about me.”

“You’re right.”

Cassie put a loose rein on her growing anger. “Obviously this isn’t a social call. So why don’t you cut the chitchat and get to the point of your visit?”

A scowl creased his perfect brow. He shifted uncomfortably, one foot to the other. “The reason I’m here…” He stopped, swearing softly beneath his breath.

Cassie eyed him warily. For the first time in all the years she’d known him, Greg actually looked nervous. The thought brought a smile to her lips.

“Yes, Greg?” she prompted.

At her amused tone, his gaze hardened. Without further delay he said, “The reason I’m here is to ask a favor. I need your help, dammit.”

Greg watched with growing irritation as slowly, ever so slowly, an amused expression stole across Cassie’s face. Amusement at his expense, he realized. It took all his willpower not to turn around and walk out of her office.

“I don’t think I quite understood,” she said, her smile sweet and sassy. “Would you mind repeating that, please?”

Greg scowled. “You heard me. I need your help.”

“That’s what I thought you said.” Her smile deepened. “I just wanted to be certain. Because asking for my help is the last thing I’d ever expect to hear coming from your lips.”

Her impudent tone proved to be the last straw. “Obviously this was a mistake.” Salvaging what little pride he had left, Greg turned to leave.

She reached a staying hand. Her palm felt smooth, warm against his forearm. The contact sent an electrical current of awareness traveling up his arm, shocking him.

“Don’t go,” she said, seeming oblivious to his reaction. “You have no idea how much I want to hear the rest of what you have to say.”

He searched her face for the truth and, unfortunately, found nothing but sincerity hidden in the depths of her dark blue eyes. She was loving every moment of his discomfort. He shifted his stance, forcing her to drop her hand.

Cassie motioned to a nearby chair. “Have a seat.”

Reluctantly he sat down in the proffered chair, unable to stop himself from watching as Cassie took her own seat. With a fluid, catlike grace, she crossed her legs and smoothed a hand against the pleats of her white skirt. Greg gave himself a firm mental shake. What the hell was wrong with him? He’d been without a woman in his life too long if Cassie Andrews could cause his libido to trip out of control.

She raised a golden brow. “Exactly what kind of help do you need, Greg?”

“A party,” he said, wincing as his voice cracked. He cleared his throat. “I’ve been given the job of hosting the clinic’s annual office party in three weeks.”

She smiled at him. “See, that wasn’t so hard now, was it?”

Her placating tone grated against his nerves. “Look, do you think you can handle the job or not?”

“My being able to handle the job isn’t the question. Whether or not I should is a whole other matter.”

“I don’t understand.”

She tucked a strand of long blond hair behind her ear and looked him directly in the eye. “Let’s be honest, Greg. We don’t like each other. I find it difficult to believe that you’d trust me enough to plan your party.”

“Not plan, exactly,” he muttered.

She frowned. “Excuse me?”

“I need more than a party planner,” he said, running a finger beneath his collar. “I need a hostess.”

“I see.”

From the confused look in her eyes, Greg knew she didn’t see. Hell, he didn’t even understand why he’d sought out her services. But instinct told him she was the only one who could help him. He might not trust Cassie, but he always trusted his instincts.

He took a deep breath. “Look, the thing is, I want you to host the party. Only I’d rather not have anyone know I hired you for the job.”

Cassie didn’t say a word. She simply stared at him, as an uncomfortable silence stretched between them. With each passing second, Greg felt the tension build inside him.

“Let me get this straight,” she said finally, leaning back in her chair. “You want me to plan your party, organize it and host it, but not tell anyone I’m being paid for my services.”

Second thoughts gripped him. It had sounded good in the planning stage. But now, spelled out in Cassie’s disbelieving tone, it sounded like an insane idea. His throat tightened, closing up on him. Not trusting himself to speak, he nodded his reply.

She looked puzzled. “Why?”

“Why not?”

She shook her head. “Word of mouth has been one of my best sources of advertisement. Do you realize how much business I could be missing out on with this one party? We’re talking about doctors and their wives, Greg. They’d make great clients.”

Irritation flared in his chest. He didn’t appreciate his profession being lumped into a category solely on the basis of its spending potential. “I don’t care if you tell my guests what you do for a living. I just don’t want you to tell them you’re doing it for me.”

Her frown deepened. “It doesn’t make sense, Greg. Nobody’s going to believe that a mere acquaintance would host your party.”

“I don’t want you to be an acquaintance,” he mumbled, averting his gaze. “I want you to be my date.”

Silence greeted his announcement. One second, two seconds, three, then—the worst happened. She burst out laughing. Great big, tummy-shaking guffaws of amusement, all directed at him.

Greg’s temper simmered beneath the abuse.

“I’m sorry, Greg,” she said, wiping a tear of mirth from her eye. Her voice trembled with lingering amusement. “For a minute there, I thought you were serious.”

“I am serious,” he said through clenched teeth.

“Look, Greg,” she said, sobering slightly. “Obviously you need help. A great deal of help. But to be honest, there isn’t enough money in the world to make me pretend to be your girlfriend.”

“You owe me, Cassie,” he said quietly, his tone dark and forbidding.

The bemused expression faded. Emotion glinted in her eyes. This time her voice shook with outrage. “That’s the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever heard. I don’t owe you a dime.”

Greg surged to his feet. “I’m not talking about money. I’m talking about my life.”

The words boomed across the tiny office.

Cassie stared at him, her eyes wide, her mouth agape.

In the room next door, her secretary stopped typing.

Heat suffused his face. Common sense told him to walk away, to let go of his anger and the past. But pride wouldn’t allow him to forget. He leaned closer, lowering his voice. “If it weren’t for you, I wouldn’t be in this mess. If you hadn’t interfered, Niki and I would be married and planning this party together.”

“You still blame me for Niki’s breaking off your engagement?”

“Damn right, I do. You’re Niki’s best friend. Your opinions have always had a strong influence on her.”

“Not that strong,” she snapped. “When are you going to get it through that thick head of yours, Lawton? Niki’s a grown woman who’s more than capable of making her own decisions. She never was the breakable china doll you always assumed her to be.”

The words cut him to the quick, wounding his male pride. He lashed out at her in kind. “Are you telling me you didn’t try to discourage Niki from marrying me?”

She didn’t respond. Her wordless answer spoke volumes.

He gave a bitter smile. “That’s what I thought.”

She folded her hands primly on top of her desk and met his gaze head-on. “This whole conversation is pointless. Your engagement to Niki is over. Why do you insist on dwelling on the past?”

“Because the past has a way of grabbing you by the throat and not letting go,” he hollered. “Do you have any idea what my life’s been like these past few months?”

She frowned, opening her mouth to answer.

Only he didn’t give her the chance. “It’s been a living hell. Speculation over my broken heart has been the grist that’s kept this town’s gossip mills churning. I’ve endured the pitying looks, the sympathetic words. I’ve even tolerated the old ladies from the neighborhood who want to mother me. They ply me with cookies and cakes one minute, and try to fix me up with their granddaughters the next.”

The anger level of his voice rose with each word he spoke. But, once vented, nothing could stop the flow of frustration. “And now my colleagues at the clinic are encouraging me to get on with my life. They have some insane notion that my patients and their parents would feel more comfortable with a pediatrician who’s happily married with a family of his own.”

He paused to draw in a ragged breath. He felt winded, without having exerted himself. The strength seemed to have gone out of his legs. His exhaustion was an emotional state, he realized, not a physical one. He’d just revealed his innermost feelings to Cassie Andrews, a woman he barely trusted, let alone cared enough about to confide in.

Greg sat down hard in the chair he’d recently abandoned. Oddly enough, despite the weariness that seemed to have crept over his extremities, he felt as though a weight had been lifted from his heart. Purging himself of months of pent-up anger had had an emancipating effect.

“Is that what you want?” she asked, breaking into his troubled thoughts. “To be happily married?”

“Hell, no,” he bit out. “I want to be left alone. I want to get all these helpful people off my back.”

“And you think you’ll accomplish that by hiring me to be your ’girlfriend’?”

He averted his gaze, refusing to look at her. “It would be a start.”

Silence strained between them. Cassie’s tone was quieter, gentler when she spoke again. “Greg, I know you don’t want to believe me, but I truly am sorry for what happened between you and Niki.”

He’d heard the same words said a hundred times in the past eight months. Somehow, hearing them from Cassie only made him feel worse. “I don’t need your pity.”

“No, but you need my help. That is, if you still want it.”

In one way or another, women had caused him nothing but trouble these past few months. He’d just as soon give up on the entire gender. Unfortunately, at the moment, he didn’t have much of a choice but to accept Cassie’s offer.

He sighed. “I still want your help.”

“Fine, then it’s settled,” she said, her tone clipped and businesslike. “I warn you, my service doesn’t come cheap. It’ll cost you.”

It already has, he admitted silently. “Coming from you, I wouldn’t expect anything less.”

He stood to leave.

This time she didn’t protest.

She rose to her feet. For a moment neither of them moved or spoke. In the small office, they stood within inches of touching. Up close he couldn’t help but notice the delicate beauty of her face, the silky texture of her blond hair and the slender curves of her body. Though she stood at chin level to his six feet three inches, she seemed smaller somehow, more vulnerable.

The thought surprised him. Vulnerability was not a trait he would normally associate with Cassie Andrews. A pampered beauty, yes. But never a shrinking violet.

“I’ll be in touch,” he said, anxious to leave.

She forced a smile. “I’ll be looking forward to it.”

A lie if he’d ever heard one. He almost smiled.

He turned to leave.

“Greg…”

He stopped, glancing over his shoulder at her.

“About Niki…” For once she seemed hesitant, uncertain. “There are a lot of other women out there. Did you ever stop to consider, maybe she just wasn’t the right one?”

“Not for a minute,” he said, with a confidence he didn’t really feel. With that, he left her office and didn’t look back.

* * *

Three weeks later Cassie stood in her office’s storage room, knee-deep in preparations for Greg Lawton’s party. Why she’d ever agreed to host his party as his “girlfriend” was beyond her. Guilt, she supposed, had played a major factor in her decision. Somehow he’d gotten to her. Those eyes, she decided, those vulnerable blue eyes. She’d always been a sucker for a man with a pair of baby blues.

It didn’t seem fair that someone as irritating as Greg Lawton should have been blessed with such soulful eyes. They were windows to every emotion he tried so hard to hide. Three weeks ago she’d been on the brink of telling Greg exactly what he could do with the guilt trip he’d been trying to force upon her. But then she’d looked into his eyes and seen the pain hidden beneath the anger. Cassie sighed. And that was why she was stuck hosting a party for a man who gave new meaning to the word perfectionism.

Since their initial meeting, Greg had called her daily with helpful suggestions. From the practical to the mundane, he had an opinion on everything. She’d begun dreading the sound of a ringing telephone. Only one thought sustained her. After tomorrow, she’d never have to see Greg Lawton again. Any wrong she might have done him—real or imagined—would be wiped away with this “favor” she’d agreed to do. The slate between them would be clean.

“I can’t find the napkins,” Mitsi announced, demanding Cassie’s attention.

“They’ve got to be here,” Cassie said, wading through boxes of supplies. “I know we ordered them.”

Mitsi pulled open a lid. “Wait, here they are. Ten blue-and-white-checked tablecloths with fifty matching napkins.”

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