Speaking of Love (Perfect Kisses) (2 page)

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Authors: Ophelia London

Tags: #opposites attract, #friends to lovers, #entangled publishing, #road trip, #sweet romance, #Romance, #perfect kisses series, #Bliss, #matchmaker, #ophelia london

BOOK: Speaking of Love (Perfect Kisses)
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“Did I thank you for bringing glamour into my dreary life?”

“Plus,” Rick added, stopping at a red light, “there’s an open bar. You never know what could happen.”

Mac had experienced firsthand a few minor “open-bar” scenes at Rick’s social events. They always made her wish she could beam herself somewhere else. Unlike Rick, who seemed completely at ease wherever he was. Mac just hoped she’d been putting on a convincing act when she accompanied him. It was part of their deal. A deal that was ending tonight.

That thought made a heavy feeling press against her chest, but she quickly forced it away. A real relationship with Rick was not meant to be. There was already too much baggage, and one amazing kiss six months ago that had gone nowhere did
not
a relationship make.

Still, she knew he meant well. She’d dragged him to a school open house and to her college roommate’s wedding. But the one time he’d accompanied her to one of
her
fund-raisers, she’d known at once that he was uncomfortable, and when he’d pulled out his checkbook, wrote out a huge donation then wanted to leave, Mac realized Rick was a typical rich guy with clean hands. All cash and no cares. Major disappointment.

And then there was his father…

“I think the city manager is speaking, too,” Rick added, pulling her back to the present. “That’s pretty unusual.”

“Yeah?”

“Something about converting that vacant factory on Elm Street into a parking garage. It’s been sitting there empty for over a decade.”

A lump caught in Mac’s throat.

“Oh.” She bit the inside of her cheek and looked out the window. “The Elm Street factory.”

It really did suck. Rick was funny and intelligent, and she so enjoyed the way it made her feel when he put his hand on the small of her back when they entered a room. But his last comment only reminded her that Richard Duffy was not the guy you bring home to meet your parents.

At least not
her
parents. Not with who Rick’s father was.

“We’re here,” Rick said.

When she looked up, he was handing his car keys to the valet attendant. She plastered on a smile, not wanting to get into the whole Elm Street factory thing. Not tonight. And if not tonight, probably not ever.

“Now entering Party Central,” Mac said in a singsong voice as they walked into the hotel lobby. “Seriously, this place looks like a funeral home,” she added, gesturing to a pair of carnation sprays flanking the double doors. “One from the eighties.”

“It’s apropos,” Rick said, taking her coat. “I’ve heard that tonight’s MC is only
slightly
livelier than a corpse. But that’s only a rumor.”

She turned to him and tilted her head. “Aww, look at you, you’re on a roll. That’s two jokes tonight.”

Rick made a slight, theatrical bow. “You can catch my show every Monday at nine p.m. Standing room only.”

“Okay.” She patted his arm. “I think you’re done now.”

“Two jokes is my limit?”

She rolled her eyes. “Apparently.”

When Rick took her elbow, Mac slapped on a bright smile. This was what she was here for. It was time to shine, and she was pretty good at it, even if she was wearing too much makeup. Rick called it her “war paint.” She wondered what he would think if he knew she’d had twice as much on earlier.

“Where should we sit?” Rick asked from behind as he steered her into the ballroom. His fingers swept across the bare skin of her back, making Mac shiver deliciously. Then she gave herself a mental slap. Why in the world had she let her best friend Tess talk her into wearing a backless dress tonight? If Rick kept touching her like this, she was liable to…

Another mental slap.
Look alive, Mackenzie!

“How about on the floor?” she suggested. “It’ll be our own little picnic.” She gripped his arm with both hands. “No, wait. Maybe
under
a table, like a tent. Yeah?” She couldn’t stop herself from laughing, picturing the scene. “Let’s get a little gossip going to liven things up. What do you say?”

“Are you finished?” Rick said, staring down at her.

“Party pooper.” Mac groaned. “These city-sponsored events are so pompous,” she added, softly enough that only Rick would hear. She thought she might have just spotted the mayor. Black suit, no miniskirt. Too bad. “Never any fun.”

“Oh, really? Never?” Rick chuckled quietly. “I seem to remember you having quite a bit of fun at Franklin’s tree lighting ceremony. The after-party, especially.”

Mac looked at him. “You were there?”

“I didn’t know you sang karaoke. Good evening, Congressman.” Rick shook hands with some darling old gentleman in a gray suit who passed by. “Will I be graced with an encore of ‘Sugar, Sugar’ later tonight?”

Mac was trying not to burst into giggles as Rick turned to greet another old dude in a dark suit. Despite herself, she liked watching the way he could schmooze the VIPs and then crack a joke to her under his breath. He could be so damn charming.

“Okay,” she admitted, “
sometimes
fun.” Temporarily satisfied, she gazed forlornly over Rick’s shoulder and toward the bar set up at the back of the ballroom. “But they never have Diet Cherry Vanilla Dr Pepper on tap.”

“There’s always champagne.”

“You know I can’t exactly handle liquor. Do you want me to up-chuck on your Armani?”

When Rick smiled down at her, it played with the rhythm of Mac’s heart. Or maybe it was the thought of caffeine. Yes, that made more sense. She shouldn’t be thinking about Rick’s potential effect on her heart. They’d gone down that road briefly, and it hadn’t worked out. Only once in a while did she regret that.

Like now, for example, when he stepped away from her to chat with someone and she got a good look at his butt inside that five thousand dollar suit. There went her heart again.

“You remember Doctor and Professor Upshaw? Mac?”

Mac blinked and lifted her gaze to Rick, who was standing next to a couple that looked about fifty. She’d met them before on their first non-date. Was he the heart surgeon or was she the law professor? Or vice versa?

“Lovely to see you again,” Mac said pleasantly. Ready to roll. She shook hands with the wife first, then the husband.

“How’s business?” Rick asked them.

Mac listened intently, hoping to gain a hint as to their vocations before she started in with the small talk. As a speech teacher, she prided herself on being able to carry on a conversation with anyone about anything. She just needed one little clue.

“As well as can be expected,” the husband replied.

Hmm. That was no help.

“Beastly,” the wife added.

Even worse.

Just the same, Mac nodded with an expression of interest as the couple continued. Rick was nodding, too, though his expression of interest was probably more believable than hers. After all, he’d been attending events like this his whole life.

In these sorts of situations, Mac knew that current events were usually safe. Ones that related to the other members of the conversational party were best. Let’s see…what had she read in the news this morning? She racked her brain until something popped.

When the conversation lulled, Mac jumped in. “I was reading an article in
USA Today
,” she began, “about the amount of defense attorneys disbarred last year.”

The husband was staring blankly at her, so Mac moved her eyes to the wife. She must be the lawyer.

“It’s interesting,” Mac went on, “how the number has nearly doubled in the last decade.”

Oh boy, where was she going with this?
Abort! Abort!
They were all watching her, and all she could think of now was last night’s Top Ten list on the
Late Show with David Letterman.
She was usually so much better than this.

“Anyway,” Mac continued, “they all belong at the bottom of the ocean, right?” She touched the wife’s arm. “Present company excluded, of course.”

She laughed then—snorted, actually. She hadn’t meant to, but it sometimes just happened.

“Yes, well,” the husband said, “it was nice to see you again.”

“Have a good evening,” Rick said. Once the couple was out of earshot, he turned to Mac. “What was that?”

“Chit-chat,” she explained.
And a snort.

Rick lifted an eyebrow. “The bottom of the ocean?”

“It’s a classic joke,” she said, waving a hand. “I thought he might find the article interesting. Or she might. Whichever is the law professor. Ethics is an important issue. That’s what the story was about.” She bit her lip. “If I remember correctly.”

Rick’s eyebrows knit together. “Mac, you’re thinking of the Uptons, not the Upshaws. The Upshaws are forensic scientists.”

“Oh.” She looked across the room at the couple, feeling like a complete idiot.

She didn’t belong here, making idle small talk with a bunch of rich people who didn’t get her. How much more proof did she need that she did not fit in Rick’s world?

“I’m making an effort, Rick,” she said. “You know I don’t like coming to these things. It’s excruciating—”

“Mac.” Rick cut her off, then turned from shaking hands with some other suit. He leaned his face down to her. Mac wasn’t entirely comfortable with their sudden closeness or the way the smell of Rick’s aftershave made her head swim. “Our arrangement was working,” he continued. “Until…”

He didn’t finish. He didn’t have to. Mac knew what he was about to say. Their arrangement had been working until their last date, when Councilman Whats-his-head had gotten all up in her grille about the fiscal benefits of building over the tiny park near the high school.

She might’ve made a tiny scene.

When she’d called Rick the next morning to apologize, before she knew it, instead she’d offered to set him up with her cousin Brandy to be his date du jour. Being a former beauty queen and all-around perfect trophy girlfriend for someone like Rick, Brandy would slide right into his world without a hitch. Rick had agreed to the set-up…rather quickly, Mac recalled.

“Sorry, again,” Mac whispered, pulling back a tiny smile. “About last time.”

“Don’t worry,” Rick replied.

“No, really.” She took his arm. “I didn’t mean to embarrass you. It’s just…sometimes I feel like these people—”

“Look,” Rick interrupted, pointing his chin to the left. “My parents are at the front table.”

Caught unprepared, Mac was suddenly being towed forward, her mouth still hanging open from her last word. When she got close enough to actually see Mr. and Mrs. Duffy, she felt every corpuscle of blood drain from her face.

This is so wrong. I should not be here.

“Mother, Dad,” Rick said. “This is Mackenzie Simms.” Rick shifted to the side like he was allowing them to see Mac unobstructed. “Mac,” he continued, “this is my father.”

Mac had taken the previous ten seconds to brace herself. She felt her eyes narrow. “I know exactly who you are.”

Chapter Two

After a deep breath, Mac changed gears, deciding it best to go the other way.

“Good evening, Mr. Duffy,” she said, while gritting her teeth and wondering if her smile looked as fake as it felt. “Mrs. Duffy.”

As Rick held out her chair and she slid into her seat next to Mrs. Duffy, Mac was determined not to make a scene; Rick didn’t deserve that. On the flip side, when nerves got the better of her, she often fell speechless, which was worse. Words were her life—if she couldn’t grab onto them, she didn’t know what to do.

“How are you tonight, dear?” Mrs. Duffy asked.

“Fine,” Mac said, trying not to look at the person seated on Mrs. Duffy’s other side. Instead, she found herself gaping at the humongous diamond ring on Mrs. Duffy’s finger. “Splendid,” she added.
Splendid? Idiot
. “And you?”

“I simply detest these things,” Mrs. Duffy said, leaning toward Mac an inch, though not quite looking at her.

“You do?” Mac had never felt so relieved in her life. “So do I.”

“It’s this food.”

“I know, right?” Mac agreed. Maybe tonight was salvageable, after all.

“There’s never enough caviar,” Mrs. Duffy said, pushing her plate back, her red-painted upper lip curling.

Mac blinked at her. “Caviar?”

“And the wine list is dreadful.”

Mac sat back, the wind out of her sails. Just when she thought she had one little thing in common with Rick’s mother. And weren’t there bigger problems in the world than caviar and wine? Like unemployment? Surely her
husband
should know a lot about that after shutting down the Elm Street factory.

“Oh, of
course
,” Mac couldn’t help saying. “There’s just
never
enough wine and caviar. I was just saying that.” She turned to her date. “Right, Rick?”

“Umm.” He blinked.

She knew she’d thrown him under the bus, but she couldn’t help it. Mac was about to reach over and squeeze his hand, just a friendly gesture to show she was only kidding around. After all, it was much too early to lose her cool. She had a very long evening ahead of her. But then Mrs. Duffy started up again.

“What do they expect us to do? Bring our own caviar?”

“Maybe we should organize a fund-raiser,” Mac said, “or stage a demonstration. I’m pretty good at those.” She lifted a fist. “More caviar for the masses! I mean, the sheer tragedy—”


That
is a marvelous idea,” Mrs. Duffy cut in.

Mac could only stare at her. Did the super-rich really not understand sarcasm? Unbelievable.

“You know what, Arthur,” Mrs. Duffy continued, turning to her husband. “I know a dozen couples at the club who would contribute…”

As Mrs. Duffy went on, Mac angled her chin toward Rick. “Is she serious?” She spoke behind her fingers. “It was a joke.”

“And a very good one,” Rick said with a crooked smile. “Have a drink.”

Mac automatically reached for the tall glass a waiter had just placed in front of her. Taking a sip, she was surprised to find that it was Diet Cherry Vanilla Dr Pepper.

“How did I get this?” she whispered, stirring the icy drink with a straw.

“I ordered it for you.” Rick twisted a cuff link. “I called ahead.”

“You called ahead to order me a soda?” She took another sip. “Is it spiked, I hope?”

Rick leaned forward an inch. “Oh, how I’ve been waiting to get you liquored up, Ms. Simms.”

“Taking advantaging of me at long last?” she joked back.

When Rick gave her a smoldering glance, Mac’s heart sped up. She was just about to say something more when Mrs. Duffy cut in.

“And who catered this?” She took a sip from her own glass. “The high school cafeteria?”

Mac lowered her drink.

“Mother,” Rick jumped in, probably knowing that if he didn’t, Mac would. “Mac is a teacher at the high school.”

Mrs. Duffy lifted her chin and blinked at her son. “Who, Richard?”

“Mac,” he repeated, draping his arm along the back of Mac’s chair.

“Oh?” She turned to Mac, finally looking her in the eyes. “You have a man’s name.”

“Um, yeah,” Mac said, torn between wanting to slide to the floor and thumping the lady on the forehead.

“And you teach at a public school?” This came from Mr. Duffy.

Mac froze, caught off guard again. She had foolishly thought she might get through the evening without having to speak to him again.

He was smiling and looking her in the eyes, the same way so many of the rich, successful businessmen did at places like this. But Mac noticed a slight hint of condescension in his expression. Well, maybe not so slight, come to think of it.

“She’s a speech teacher,” Rick answered for her. “And she coaches the debate team. I’ve told you that.”

“Oh.” Mrs. Duffy touched Mac on the arm. “What did you say your name was, dear?”

Just as Mac was about to unleash a very witty,
very
fitting retort, the glasses and silverware on the table jumped and rattled.

“Arthur! How ya doin’ you old son of a gun?” There was a man at Mr. Duffy’s side, leaning over his shoulder, one meaty hand on the table. From his slur and his smell, he was pretty far gone.

“Phillip, hello,” Mr. Duffy said with a big smile, standing up to shake the man’s hand. “Wonderful to see you. It’s been ages.”

The guy took a drink from the deep, round snifter in his hand. “Too long,” he said. “I haven’t seen you since that Bristol affair in Chicago. Ha ha ha. Remember?”

“Remember?” Duffy repeated jubilantly. The two men laughed—some private joke. Drunk Guy put his hand on Duffy’s shoulder. “I’ll never forget that,” Duffy added.

“Ya know,” Drunk Guy slurred, addressing the table now, “I first met this old duffer when we worked together to close the Elm factory on the other side of town.” He took another drink. “Remember that?” The guy had to pause to laugh at the hilarity of his statement. “It took months, but we finally got our way and shut ’er down.”

Duffy laughed and shook his head. “What a to-do that was,” he agreed.

“Cheaper to outsource,” Drunk Guy continued after another sloppy swig. “It was just a couple of hundred workers—could’ve been much worse.”

“So true.” Duffy chuckled, clapping the guy on the back. “
So
true.”

Unable to listen to another word, Mac stood up, her chair nearly toppling over backward.

The still-laughing Mr. Duffy looked at her. After a moment, his smile dropped and the two stared at each other.

Don’t do it
, one side of Mac’s mind pleaded.
He’s not worth it.
While the other side screamed,
Now’s your chance! Say it! You’re a speech teacher for crying out loud!

“Uh, Phillip,” Mr. Duffy said, just as Mac was unclenching her jaw, “I want to introduce you to some people. Over there.” He nodded a good-bye to the others at the table then the two walked away.

“Mac?” She heard Rick speak, but she only shook her head. Her blood seething under her skin.

“Mac?” Rick repeated, standing up. “Are you—”

“Get me out of here,” she managed to say through clenched teeth. “Now.”


Rick wasn’t sure what was going on. He never claimed to understand the happenings inside a woman’s mind, but with Mackenzie, most of the time, he had absolutely no clue.

“Hey,” he said, standing beside her. His fingers circled her slender wrist, not wanting her to leave. “Where are you going?”

“I’m”—she turned to look him directly in the eyes—
“thirsty.”
There was something obviously wrong. It didn’t take a genius to see that.

“Just…” He tugged at her hand. “Stay put.” He lifted a hand and made eye contact with one of the waiters. “There are people here who get paid to serve you.”

“Serve me?” she repeated, sounding a bit heated. “Is that what you think?”

He lowered his raised hand. “It’s their job.” Even though this was true, Rick knew he’d said the wrong thing. The way she was looking at him made him feel like he’d just failed some secret test.

He let go of her wrist when she turned away and started dabbing at the corner of her eye. Okay, was she angry or sad? He had no idea.

For a moment, he just watched her, wondering what was going on in that busy brain of hers. He couldn’t help glancing past her at his mother, who was eyeing Mac critically. What did Mac have against his parents? And what did his parents have against her? Whatever it was, he was sure her current behavior wasn’t helping. A few weeks ago, Mac had mentioned something about making sure his father never ran into her father, but then she’d changed the subject, cutting short personal information yet again.

Rick didn’t know much about Mac’s family, except that she came from a blue-collar background with divorced parents and two siblings. Anything further than that, Mac was never willing to share. Rick often found it difficult not to press the issue, to rein in his journalist desire for information.

“I need to go look at that…
thing
,” Mac said, stepping away from the table.

Rick caught the stress in her tone.

He needed to get her away from this table, maybe completely out of the ballroom.

“I’ll come with you,” Rick said, then offered a quick good-bye to his mother, who was now speaking with someone at the table behind them.

“Thank you,” Mac said in a whisper, looping her arm through his as they walked away. Out of habit, Rick put his hand over hers, which was resting against his bicep. He couldn’t help noticing that her fingers twitched away when he touched her.

“What’s wrong?” he asked out of the corner of his mouth.

She glanced at him. “Seriously?”

Rick shrugged, ignoring someone in the crowd who spoke his name as they passed.

She shook her head, turning her face away. “Do you know what your father and that—” She paused to huff. “That
man
were just talking about?”

Rick frowned, then spotted his father near the bar. “Not really,” he admitted.

Mac shook her head again. “Unreal.”

“Mac,” Rick said, “that guy was totally trashed. Whatever he said, don’t take it personally.”

“It doesn’t matter.”

“Wait.” Rick pulled them to a stop once they passed the last round table. “Are you angry?”

She opened her mouth but didn’t speak right away. “Not at
you
,” she finally said, obviously trying to control some unwanted emotion. “I just… I’m sorry, I shouldn’t be here.”

“So let’s go.”

Mac looked up at him and blinked. “Really? We can leave?”

His heart melted at her relieved expression, never stopping to wonder why concern for this woman came to him so naturally. “I’ve seen everyone I need to.”

She lowered her eyes and Rick heard her release a long exhale. “Thank you, Rick,” she said, lifting her chin to look at him. “I really appreciate it.”

The gratitude in her voice and expression made a whole new list of questions pop into his mind, but Rick’s instinct told him that now was not the time to ask. And besides, he was just as ready to be out of that ballroom as she was.

As they started walking again, Mac continued. “You have that community thing next Wednesday, right?” She was smiling now, playing her part, and nodding hello to people as they passed.

“No,” Rick replied, doing the same smiling/nodding thing. “I’ve got to cover a story out of town, so someone else is going. You can have the night off.” He’d added that last part as a joke, but Mac didn’t laugh.

“You mean
Brandy
can have the night off,” she corrected.

“Who?”

“Seriously, Rick? Should I save it in your BlackBerry? Brandy.”

Rick slowed their pace as they neared the ballroom’s exit. “Right. Sorry. Your cousin. Are you sure you don’t—”

“You know I don’t fit in here,” she said quietly. “Wasn’t that obvious tonight?”

“Not to me.”

“Rick…” She started playing with a strand of blond hair. “You need pedigreed arm candy to parade around at all these events, now that you’re becoming such a bigwig.”

He lifted an eyebrow. “Arm candy?” He felt her hand squeeze his arm. “Bigwig?”

“You know what I mean.”

“Yes, Mackenzie,” he conceded as they neared the coatroom. “I need arm candy. So do you. That was our arrangement. Simple and clean.”

“Well,” she said, dropping his arm, “I’m totally out of my element here, and I’m definitely
not
pedigreed.” Her tone was kind but decisive. “And I don’t like hanging out at these things.” She sighed and looked off. “Obviously.”

Rick stared at her, not knowing what to say to that. True, a stuffy chamber of commerce dinner wasn’t anyone’s idea of a swinging time, but he didn’t realize how miserable she’d been. Or that she just plain didn’t want to hang out with him anymore. It was difficult to admit to himself how much that stung.

“Brandy is the perfect woman for you, I know it.”

Rick was about to say he didn’t want a
perfect
woman, but decided to keep his mouth shut on that topic.

“Tell me more about her,” he asked instead, happy that Mac was at least communicating with him.

A genuine smile finally returned to Mac’s lips. Until it was there, Rick hadn’t realized how much he’d missed it. If he had his way, he would do anything to keep that smile in place.

“She lives on this side of Indianapolis, right?” he prompted, knowing this topic was making her happy.

“Right,” she said, her smile growing. “Not far from here. Get this: she’s a year younger than me, five inches taller, and a former beauty queen.”

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