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Authors: Jamie McGuire

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Happenstance (9 page)

BOOK: Happenstance
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He smiled, a deep dimple appearing in the center of his left
cheek. “I knew we’ve met before.”

“We haven’t.” I turned to watch the women on the dance floor,
laughing and smiling and watching Travis and Megan vertically dry fucking. But
the second the song was over, he left and walked straight over to the blonde
who claimed ownership over my table. Even though she’d seen Travis running his
hands all over Megan’s sweaty skin two seconds earlier, she was grinning like
an idiot, hoping she was next.

Trenton laughed once. “That’s my baby brother.”

“I wouldn’t admit it,” I said, shaking my head.

“Did we go to school together?” he asked.

“I don’t remember.”

“Do you remember if you went to Eakins at any time between
kindergarten through twelfth grade?”

“I did.”

Trenton’s left dimple sunk in when he grinned. “Then we know each
other.”

“Not necessarily.”

Trenton laughed again. “You want a drink?”

“I have one coming.”

“You wanna dance?”

“Nope.”

A group of girls passed by, and Trenton’s eyes focused on one.
“Is that Shannon from home ec? Damn,” he said, turning a one-eighty in his
seat.

“Indeed it is. You should go reminisce.”

Trenton shook his head. “We reminisced in high school.”

“I remember. Pretty sure she still hates you.”

Trenton shook his head, smiled, and then, before taking another
swig, said, “They always do.”

“It’s a small town. You shouldn’t have burned all of your
bridges.”

He lowered his chin, his famous charm turning up a notch.
“There’s a few I haven’t lit a fire under. Yet.”

I rolled my eyes, and he chuckled.

Raegan returned, curving her long fingers around four standard
rocks glasses and two shot glasses. “My whiskey sours, your whiskey straights,
and a buttery nipple each.”

“What is with all the sweet stuff tonight, Ray?” I said, wrinkling
my nose.

Trenton picked up one of the shot glasses and touched it to his
lips, tilting his head back. He slammed it on the table and winked. “Don’t
worry, babe. I’ll take care of it.” He stood up and walked away.

I didn’t realize my mouth was hanging open until my eyes met
Raegan’s and it snapped shut.

“Did he just drink your shot? Did that really just happen?”

“Who does that?” I said, turning to see where he went. He’d
already disappeared into the crowd.

“A Maddox boy.”

I shot the double whiskey and took another drag of my cigarette.
Everyone knew Trenton Maddox was bad news, but that never seemed to stop women
from trying to tame him. Watching him since grade school, I promised myself
that I would never be a notch on his headboard—if the rumors were true and he
had notches, but I didn’t plan to find out.

“You’re going to let him get away with that?” Raegan asked.

I blew out the smoke from the side of my mouth, annoyed. I wasn’t
in the frame of mind to have fun, or deal with obnoxious flirting, or complain
that Trenton Maddox had just drunk the shot glass of sugar that I didn’t want.
But before I could answer my friend, I had to choke back the whiskey I’d just
drunk.

“Oh, no.”

“What?” Raegan said, flipping around in her chair. She
immediately righted herself in the chair, cringing.

All three of my brothers and our cousin Colin were walking toward
our table.

Colin, the oldest and the only one with a legit ID, spoke first.
“What the hell, Camille? I thought you were out of town tonight.”

“My plans changed,” I snapped.

Chase spoke second, as I expected he would. He was the oldest of
my brothers, and liked to pretend he was older than me, too. “Why are you being
so pissy? Are you on the rag or something?”

“Really?” Raegan said, lowering her chin and raising her
eyebrows. “We’re in public. Grow up.”

“So he canceled on you?” Clark asked. Unlike the others, Clark
looked genuinely concerned.

Before I could answer, the youngest of the three spoke up. “Wait,
that worthless piece of shit cancelled on you?” Coby said. The boys were all
only eleven months apart, making Coby just eighteen. My coworkers knew my
brothers had all scored fake IDs and thought they were doing me a favor by
looking the other way, but most of the time I wished they wouldn’t. Coby in
particular still acted like a twelve-year-old boy not quite sure what to do
with his testosterone. He was bowing up behind the others, letting them hold
him back from a fight that didn’t exist.

“What are you doing, Coby?” I asked. “He’s not even here!”

“You’re damn right he’s not,” Coby said. He relaxed, cracking his
neck. “Canceling on my baby sister. I’ll bust his fuckin’ face.” I thought
about Coby and T.J. getting into a brawl, and it made my heart race. T.J. was
intimidating when he was younger, and lethal as an adult. No one fucked with
him, and Coby knew it.

A disgusted noise came from my throat, and I rolled my eyes.
“Just … find another table.”

All four boys pulled chairs around Raegan and me. Colin had light-brown
hair, but my brothers were all redheads. Colin and Chase had blue eyes. Clark
and Coby had green. Some redheaded men aren’t all that great-looking, but my
brothers were tall, chiseled, and outgoing. Clark was the only one with
freckles, and they still somehow looked good on him. I was the outcast, the only
child with mousy brown hair and big, round, light blue eyes. More than once the
boys tried to convince me that I’d been adopted. If I wasn’t the female version
of my father, I might have believed them.

I touched my forehead to the table and groaned. “I can’t believe
it, but this day just got worse.”

“Aw, c’mon, Camille. You know you love us,” Clark said, nudging
me with his shoulder. When I didn’t answer, he leaned in to whisper in my ear.
“You sure you’re all right?”

I kept my head down, but nodded. Clark patted my back a couple of
times, and then the table grew quiet.

I lifted my head. Everyone was staring behind me, so I turned
around. Trenton Maddox was standing there, holding two shot glasses and another
glass of something that looked decidedly less sweet.

“This table turned into a party fast,” Trenton said with a
surprised but charming smile.

Chase narrowed his eyes at Trenton. “Is that him?” he asked,
nodding.

“What?” Trenton asked.

Coby’s knee began to bounce, and he leaned forward in his chair.
“That’s him. He fuckin’ canceled on her, and then he showed up here.”

“Wait. Coby, no,” I said, holding up my hands.

Coby stood up. “You jackin’ with our sister?”

“Sister?” Trenton said, his eyes bouncing between me and the
volatile gingers sitting on each side of me.

“Oh, God,” I said, closing my eyes. “Colin, tell Coby to stop.
It’s not him.”

“Who’s not me?” Trenton said. “We got a problem here?”

Travis appeared at his brother’s side. He wore the same amused
expression as Trenton, both flashing their matching left-sided dimples. They
could have been their mother’s second set of twins. Only subtle differences set
them apart, including the fact that Travis was maybe an inch or two taller than
Trenton.

Travis crossed his arms across his chest, making his already
large biceps bulge. The only thing that kept me from exploding from my chair
was that his shoulders relaxed. He wasn’t ready to fight. Yet.

“Evening,” Travis said.

The Maddoxes could sense trouble. At least it seemed that way,
because whenever there was a fight, they had either started it, or finished it.
Usually both.

“Coby, sit down,” I commanded through my teeth.

“No, I’m not sittin’ down. This dickhead insulted my sister, I’m
not fuckin’ sittin’ down.”

Raegan leaned over to Chase. “That’s Trent and Travis Maddox.”

“Maddox?” Clark asked.

“Yeah. You still got something to say?” Travis said.

Coby shook his head slowly and smiled. “I can talk all night
long, motherfu—”

I stood. “Coby! Sit your ass down!” I said, pointing to his
chair. He sat. “I said it wasn’t him, and I meant it! Now everybody
calm
the
fuck
down! I’ve had a
bad
day, I’m here to drink, and relax,
and have a good
goddamn
time! Now if that’s a problem for you, back the
fuck off my table!” I closed my eyes and screamed the last part, looking
completely insane. People around us were staring.

Breathing hard, I glanced at Trenton, who handed me a drink.

One corner of his mouth turned up. “I think I’ll stay.”

 

 

 

 

Acknowledgments

As always, thank you to my darling, patient husband. Without
him, the many hours I put into my job would not be possible. We’ve molded our
lives around my new career, and we’ve become a well-oiled machine. Thank you,
love.

Thank you to my children for their patience, understanding, and
for not making me feel too guilty for the evenings, nights, and weekends I work
to meet a deadline.

Thank you to Patty for the use of the Blackwell Dairy Queen.

Thank you to Theresa Wegand, Amy Tannenbaum, and Linda Roberts
for their work on this novella, and to Kim Easton for beta reading.

Last but not least, thank you Danielle Lagasse and her MacPack
for the amazing cheerleading, encouragement and promotional work they’ve done
for my novels. I appreciate you all so very much!

 

Look for news, events, and upcoming works, including
the next installment of the
Happenstance
series at
www.jamiemcguire.com

 

 

 

 

About
the Author

Jamie McGuire was born in Tulsa, OK. She attended the Northern
Oklahoma College, the University of Central Oklahoma, and Autry Technology
Center where she graduated with a degree in Radiography.

Jamie paved the way for the New Adult genre with international
bestseller,
Beautiful Disaster
. Her follow-up novel,
Walking Disaster
,
debuted at #1 on the New York Times, USA Today, and Wall Street Journal
bestseller lists. She has also written apocalyptic thriller
Red Hill
, a
novella titled
A Beautiful Wedding
, and the
Providence
series, a
young adult paranormal romance trilogy.

Jamie now lives on a ranch just outside Enid, OK, with husband
Jeff and their three children. They share their thirty acres with cattle, six
horses, three dogs, and Rooster the cat.

Here’s where you can find Jamie:

Website:
www.jamiemcguire.com

Facebook

Twitter: @JamieMcGuire

Instagram: JamieMcGuire_

 

BOOK: Happenstance
8.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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