Authors: Heather Hiestand
Tags: #A Charisma Series Novel, #The Connollys, #Book One
His boot grazed the brass bird on the pavement next to her door and knocked it over. As he righted it, he saw the house key underneath. Not a safe place to keep a spare key. Anyone might overbalance the statue just like he had. He pocketed the key and went back to his vehicle.
Ten minutes later he’d parked behind her commercial kitchen. He walked around to the front and saw that lights were on. Hopefully Haldana wasn’t there. He couldn’t have a confrontation in front of his cousin. Of all his relatives here, she seemed to like him the best and he needed her support. The thought gave him pause. Was he planning to be so ugly to Yakima that anyone who witnessed their discussion would dislike him?
He rang the bell instead of banging on the door.
Keep it together.
The memory of the catchphrase from an old Steve Martin movie made him smile. He’d caught it on Netflix a few months ago and the childhood memory of watching
Bowfinger
with his bros, shortly before their mother died, was one of the anchors that had returned him home. The smile was still on his lips when the door opened.
Chapter Seven
Yakima
. Seeing her beautiful, lying face made Bax’s mood dark again.
When she opened the door, her eyes were red-rimmed, like she’d been crying. She looked at him dully. He felt a sudden urge to comfort her, when he was the wronged party. Quin must have called to give her the 411.
“Hurts to have the truth revealed, huh?” His tone had been taunting, and she looked at him, confused. Now he was confused too.
“That you’re a liar? I’m so glad I didn’t make love with you.” Her voice caught. “What a jerk. I should have known you’d never be serious about a small town girl.”
“What are you talking about?” Did she have a mental health condition no one had shared with him?
“Why are you even here? Shouldn’t you be at home with your L.A. girlfriend?”
He frowned. How had she met Remy? “Remy and I broke up two months ago. It was in
People
magazine and everything.”
“I’m much too busy to read,” she snapped. “At least I was in October. My aunt was dying. Besides, Remy is here now.”
“Why were you at my house?”
“I came to consult with you about Saturday. I texted you about it. And I thought I would cook you dinner.”
He saw the light. “Ah, that’s what Remy was eating. I wondered. She doesn’t usually, but your cooking would tempt her.”
Yakima swiped at her eyes. “Don’t try to compliment me when I’m mad at you. It’s annoying.”
“You’re annoyed? I’m raging!” His voice had risen and he saw the alarm in her eyes. But not all the way there, he saw a hint of what looked like guilt in her expression.
“You aren’t raging. I’ve seen raging.”
He put his hand on the doorframe and leaned in. “From who?” he demanded.
She turned. “You’d better come in.”
He stepped in behind her and closed the door. She was right. He hadn’t slammed the door like he would of if he was truly angry. Who was he kidding anyway? She thought he was lying now, and he’d been told she lied about something twelve years ago. “Now what?”
She sat on the bench in the tiny entryway while he held up the door. “Obviously you aren’t getting a hug or anything else.”
“Remy misled you. She’s lonely. I texted her back and I think she took it as a sign.”
“Were you flirting?”
“I didn’t think so, but you know how it is with on again-off again relationships. The signals get mixed, and you do stuff out of convenience and then you’re together again until someone needs to get on a plane.” He shrugged.
“Lifestyles of the rich and famous.” She echoed his shrug.
“No it isn’t, just being single. No one in a relationship like that ends up being the one. You’re just killing time.”
“That’s your opinion?”
He nodded.
“So Remy isn’t the one, but you’ll still probably sleep with her for a couple of weeks until she gets on a plane?”
“No, not this time. I’ve got you.” He frowned. Wait a minute. He was mad at her. Cocking his hip, he said, “Look. I talked to your brother Quin today, and he threw some serious shade my way.”
“About what?”
“You? Being my baby mama back when I left town.”
She spread her hands and cocked an eyebrow. “Do you see a baby?”
“Well, not now. The kid would be about eleven. That is, if there was one, which there wasn’t. We never even kissed. You were sixteen.”
“Plenty of sixteen year-olds getting kissed in those days,” she said blandly.
He pointed to her, then to himself. “Not you and me.”
“True.”
“So what’s the deal? Did you tell lies about me?”
Her eyes went to one side as she considered. He wished he remembered which direction was supposed to be indicative of a lie.
She huffed out a breath and spread her hands. “I had a breakup right about the time you left. He insisted I’d only broken up with him because there was someone else.”
“So you told him I’d knocked you up?”
“No, of course not. He kept firing out guy’s names. Blasted out yours eventually.”
“So?”
“I guess I got shifty.” She licked her lips. “I mean, you were hot and way too mature. That tat, your guitar chops. We mooned over you. You remember my girls, Jess and Amanda? We were like your fan club even before you were famous.”
“So he decided you were pregnant? That’s quite a leap?”
“I said something stupid.” He saw her swallow. “I don’t even know what, exactly. But yeah, my brothers overheard the fight.”
“So you might have said it, but behind closed doors at your house.”
“Exactly. Just a silly fight. Why Quin would tell you that now I can’t say.”
“I don’t think he likes me much,” Bax said.
“He’s a jerk. Ignore him. It’s jealousy. Remember? He played the sax in high school? Thought he was going to be David Bowie or something.”
“Did he try to play?”
“Yeah, he had a band in college. I think they played like three gigs. Don’t you remember that?”
“I vaguely remember him rehearsing,” Bax recalled. Quin was four years older than him. “That would have been the first year we moved there. So he had the band right around when my mother died.”
“Right. So none of the Connollys would have gone to the gigs. Anyway, he’s jealous. Don’t worry about it, and I’m sorry if I lied about you. I mean, really. Me and you? Never would have happened.”
He closed the distance between them. “Not then, but what about now?” His hands went to her hips, squeezed gently.
“Remy?” she said, her voice squeaking. “You have an old girlfriend in your house, that’s why.”
He dropped his voice into his patented seductive register. “You have a house.” He reached into his pocket for her key and handed it to her. “I knocked over your hiding place. You should keep this in a safer spot. Someone you couldn’t trust might have found it.”
She took the key from him. “Thanks. I forgot about that. My aunt was forgetful.”
“Why can’t I just stay with you tonight?”
“We were just fighting, remember?” She squirmed.
“Make up sex is the best,” he growled.
“Oh. My. God.” She removed his hands from her hips and dropped them like they were fresh-from-the-oven hot. “Any relationship that starts with make-up sex is doomed, don’t you think? Go home, Bax. Make an appointment with me to go over your party.”
“You want to go back to just being professional with me?” He felt a tug of pain in his heart.
“Until you get rid of your pretty pop princess. I don’t want her eating my leftovers.”
He chuckled. “No leftovers. Got it.”
My leftovers
. Sounded like a country song. One he just might write and shop around. He hummed a few bars.
“What?”
“Sorry. You got my writing mojo started.”
She waved her fingertips at him. Unlike Remy’s blue talons, Yakima had practical hands. Short, neat nails with clear varnish. “Go.”
He glanced into the kitchen, saw the counter was full of ingredients: flour, sugar, butter, eggs, cut-up dried fruit. “Baking?”
“Yes, working on the new dinner party. A holiday fruitcake-inspired donut and Baked Alaska for dessert.”
“Sounds delicious. Any overlap between their guest list and mine?”
“I don’t know your guest list. Shall I stop by tomorrow so we can confer?”
“Absolutely.” He shoved his hands in his pockets. “Good night kiss?”
“Send Remy on her way first,” she said. “I look forward to hearing the new song.”
“Me too,” he muttered, staring hard at her. She was serious about not kissing him goodnight? If she was the jealous type, she wasn’t exactly girlfriend material. He needed trust. Girls paid a lot of attention to guys like him and she needed to know it didn’t mean anything.
He sketched a wave and took off, the lyrics for “My Leftovers” already starting to form in his head.
When you left me
Decided you were leftover
We-ll, left over from my deadly broken heart
Need to break it, need to break it
Cast it aside
The latest in a long, long line
She was pretty,
She was easy, she wasn’t you
We-ll needed to finish off an older break
Need to free her, need to free her
Cast her aside
The latest in a long, long line
When he had arrived in his own bedroom again, he sent Yakima a text from his recharged phone asking her to come by the next afternoon. He didn’t know what he was going to do about Remy, but the party on Saturday night was important too. He was reintroducing himself to Battlefield.
~
The next morning Yakima felt drained, her eyes gritty and her hands sore from chopping. She’d stayed up half the night doing prep work and four hours of sleep put her on the war path with her brother. He wasn’t solely to blame for her problems—Remy Rose hadn’t helped—but Quin had some explaining to do.
She banged on rear door of his head shop, which opened into the parking lot where the dumpsters also were. He had about ten minutes before it opened so she knew he’d be there.
Eventually, she heard slow footsteps, then the door opened. Quin peered out, his hair sliding over his shoulder. He hadn’t put it back yet.
“You don’t look awake. What’s going on?” she asked.
He twisted his thick black strands into a rope and pulled a band out of his jeans pockets before he said anything. “I guess you want to have words about yesterday.”
Her lips trembled. “I want a boyfriend almost as much as I want my business to succeed, Quin. Why would you sabotage me? You’re my big brother.”
“I don’t know,” he said, when he finished with his hair. “I saw red. Bax Connolly has always rubbed me the wrong way.”
“You’re jealous. I get that. But he and I, we’ve been flirting, and I thought it was going somewhere. Now he thinks I’m a creep.” She didn’t mention Remy. Why give Quin more ammo?
Quin stared at her. When had the skin under his eyes grown so puffy? He looked older than thirty-four, which wasn’t normal. Something was wrong.
“Are you sick?”
“Just a little food poisoning.”
“Sorry,” she muttered. “You do realize that I never told anyone a story about being pregnant with Bax’s child, right?”
“I heard you.” He smirked.
“It was an argument as I was breaking up with someone. Just silly, in the house. It never left the house.”
“Right.”
“Should I have said it?” She answered her own question. “Obviously not. But it wasn’t your business and now I can’t trust you, which sucks.”
“What do you want with him, or any of the Connollys, anyway? Remember right when they moved in and they had that dog that bit you? Dad went and talked to Mr. and Mrs. Connolly and they refused to do anything about it.”
Yakima winced. She still had the scar on her calf and to this day, had never rewarmed to dogs. But she had to take the adult perspective. “Mrs. Connolly had mental health problems. Maybe the dog was her emotional support or something.”
“You had to get stitches,” Quin said flatly. “That dog was a menace. We weren’t even allowed on their property until it was hit by a car the next spring.”
Light dawned. “Now I remember. It didn’t really matter because I wasn’t asked to babysit over there until Mrs. Connolly died.”
“Regardless, Harry Connolly is an ass and I don’t hear great stuff about his sons.”
“That’s ancient history. Bax has been great to me, with party bookings. And everyone has been really polite to me. Haldana even works for me now.”
“The Norwegians are fine,” he allowed.
“Then let the dog drama go. Don’t live in ancient history.”