Wrong then Right (A Love Happens Novel Book 2) (11 page)

Read Wrong then Right (A Love Happens Novel Book 2) Online

Authors: Jodi Watters

Tags: #A LOVE HAPPENS NOVEL

BOOK: Wrong then Right (A Love Happens Novel Book 2)
12.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“That’s what Bubba calls us. It’s a word play on cocktail waitress.” When his face remained straight, she slowly added, “Because it’s a strip club. Get it?”

“Yeah, I get it. And you make ten dollars an hour?” He glanced back up. “As a cocktease?”

Now who was trying to be funny? “A cocktease
waitress
,” she corrected, snobbishly. “And yes, for ten bucks an hour. Plus tips.”

“Is there good money in that? Being a cocktease... waitress?” He was having a little too much fun with this. The slight lift at the corners of his mouth gave him away.

“I do okay depending on the day of the week. If there’s a theme party scheduled then it’s a slam dunk. Horny House Husband Night really brings ‘em in. And it turns out, I’m actually good at serving drinks. Unlike the rest of my life, I don’t completely suck at it.”

“Really? Is sucking beyond the scope of duties for a cocktease waitress?”

“Funny.” She rolled her eyes. “Yes, it’s beyond the scope and illegal, too. Considering how familiar you are with the California Penal Code, you should know that. And for the record, I resent your inference that I’m a prostitute. You weren’t hugged very much as a child were you?”

“Do you know the statistics of women who work in strip clubs?”

“No, but let me guess. You do? You seem like a numbers kind of guy to me. I bet you’re an accountant, right? Or maybe an investment banker.” She smirked as she said it. “Those stuffy suit types aren’t my favorite people these days.”

He wasn’t easily distracted. “Do you know that over eighty percent were raised in dominantly religious homes? And that more than half of the girls working in the sex industry come from fatherless homes?”

It was a direct hit and one Hope felt squarely in the center of her chest.

“I don’t work in the sex industry, you lunkhead, I work in the hospitality field. I deliver drinks to judgmental douche bags like yourself, while they get their rocks off watching desperate women dance naked so they can buy food for their family.” She stopped her tirade and took a breath. “Look, I’ll find somewhere else to go, okay? I never asked to stay and you never said how much rent you want, anyway. I probably can’t afford it.”

Resorting to name calling wasn’t her style and she cringed, knowing she might have gone too far, but he glanced back down at the paper, looking properly chastised as he tilted the mug to his lips.

Scanning the form, his face suddenly paled and he choked on his coffee, going green around the gills. “Your last name is Coleson?” he wheezed, staring at her accusingly.

“Are you gonna be all right?” She resisted the urge to pound on his back. “Breathe, okay? Because I don’t know CPR. And after your lecture on the legalities of lying, it’s not a typo.”

He gave something close to a nod, normal color returning to his face. Standing, he tossed what was left of his coffee out onto the pristine grass, a perfect arc of liquid flying through the air. “As in the wine?”

Apparently he’d had no idea she was Ash’s sister. His lung hacking, mortified reaction couldn’t be faked. She didn’t bother asking about his connection to her brother. Ash had no business in this and Hope didn’t care who Beck’s acquaintances were.

“Yeah, but I don’t have much contact with my family. I live my own life.” Meaning,
don’t worry if you want to show me what your naked body looks like in a bed again, because what they don’t know won’t hurt them
.

The problem was, Beck looked plenty worried. Grumbling, he ran a hand over his stubbled cheek repeatedly, and her thighs clenched at the scratchy, masculine sound. Her nipples might have gotten hard, too. Of all the men in the world, her body had it bad for this one. It was her mind that wasn’t quite on board.

She pointed to the piece of paper in his clenched fist. “What else do you need? You want my blood type? My immunization record? The details about how I lost my virginity? Oh, wait. You already know that romantic story, don’t you? It had a real fairy tale ending.”

It was a cheap shot, and if the chagrin on his face was any indication, a direct hit of her own.

A hand gripping the back of his neck, his words were impersonal. “I’ll be in touch.”

The front door clicked shut a second later, leaving Hope alone on the porch.

Well, that was it, then. Staying was out of the question. She needed to find a new parking spot or get real comfortable with the stage. The pole, specifically.

Hurrying back to her car, she told herself it was for the best. She didn’t even know him. He could be a serial killer. Or someone who left toothpaste spit in the sink. That was one quality she simply couldn’t live with.

The squealing of tires distracted her and she watched in amazement as a black Mustang whipped out of the driveway and bolted down Lark Street, the rush of wind in his wake blowing her hair against her cheek. He didn’t wave or so much as even glance at her.

Hope tried not to take it personally, watching as he hightailed it out of her life for the second time.

CHAPTER EIGHT

Beck had fucked up plenty in his life when it came to women.

The first was Rachel Wells, a quiet, geeky girl who played clarinet in their high school marching band. As a starting safety on the varsity football team, the ribbing he’d taken from his jock friends had been hardcore, but her black-rimmed glasses and conservative clothes hid a seriously rocking body and an aggressive sexual nature that fueled his raging teenage hormones. He’d had Rachel in the backseat of his mother’s Cadillac, with one leg out of her pants and the front of his jeans open, when a county Sheriff’s car pulled up behind them, flashing his red and blue’s through the steamed up windows. At seventeen, Beck thought he knew it all, but the fact that Rachel’s daddy was not only a local Deputy, but also an expert marksman with a compound crossbow, had been an unpleasant surprise.

And now this. His latest mistake in the form of a girl named Hope fucking Coleson.

But he was a grown man, so blaming this one on his inability to think with anything other than his dick just wasn’t going to cut it.

Hope
. The dark knot of deprivation taking up permanent residence in his gut had unraveled slightly and something dangerously close to happiness filled him when he’d found her sitting in that obnoxious orange car, her hair a dark, tangled mess around her face. It almost outweighed the shock of her sudden appearance. And now that he knew where his mystery girl was, maybe he could get her out of his head for good. Maybe what sporadic sleep he managed to get these days wouldn’t be filled with brilliant visions of a blue-eyed vixen who’d somehow snared him with her quick grin and lushly compact body. The erotic dreams were always the same. Her above him, smiling as she straddled his hips and rode him smoothly, a look of complete trust and blatant desire on her beautiful face. Inevitably, he would push her away, turning his back on her hurt expression and naked body as he slipped out of the room. And then he’d wake up to his bleak, lonely reality, sweating bullets as his heart raced, sporting a hard-on that no cold shower could cure.

Beck had never run from anything in his life. Years of constant deployments had only made him tougher, and some would say meaner, enduring physical and mental punishment during both real world missions and the demanding training that went with them. He’d stared down the world’s most evil people while on their turf, willingly walking into situations where the likelihood of his death was on the far side of probable. If he or his teammates lost focus for even a split second, more than just the bad guys were going to die. Sure, he’d ridden the razors edge of fear at times. He was human, after all, even though some of his friends and a few female acquaintances from his past might dispute that fact.

But no way in hell had he ever run from anything.

Until the night he met her. Hope with no last name.

Man enough to admit it, Beck knew he’d never faced a threat to his well being quite as lethal as this girl. She could grab hold of his balls and drop him to his knees without even trying, then have him thanking her for doing so. Christ, maybe she already had. Defying all reason, he’d crashed three weddings and a drunken, geezer-filled retirement party at the Vistancia since that life jarring night a month ago, regretting the chicken shit way he’d hauled ass out of the hotel like she’d been nothing more than some quick and dirty strange. He’d never been accused of being a boy scout, but that was definitely not his finest moment. Walking into the Vistancia thinking he’d easily spot her working the event, he’d scoured the catering crew and then the crowd with methodical precision. Regrettably, there hadn’t been an energetic brunette running circles around her colleagues and when he questioned the barracuda with the clipboard, all he got was a satisfied, “Gone.” The skunk haired dude who’d been rubbing elbows with Hope during Sam’s wedding had no answers either, his skittish gaze roving over Beck like he was a prime cut of beef who might go bat shit crazy momentarily.

With precious little information about the girl who’d quickly become a pain in his ass, he’d had no way to search for her and only himself to blame.

It was a damn good thing he and guilt were already on a first name basis.

Beck wasn’t weirded out by her virginity, although he did wonder what was wrong with the entire male population of Southern California. Were they blind or just plain stupid? Because a girl like Hope didn’t go unnoticed by the young, dumb, and full of come, and the pressure to put out must have been intense and sustained. Yes, he could classify himself in the stupid category, as evidenced by the door not hitting him on the ass as he made his exit, but it wasn’t because he was intentionally callous. It was because a woman who was twenty-five, beautiful, and still a virgin, was also a woman who came with expectations. Ones that, based on the proper rule of gift giving, were automatically expected from the guy taking her virginity. You give something, you receive something in return. It was a law of the fucking universe or some such shit. Martha Stewart etiquette, maybe. And Beck was a man who knew his limitations. There was no potential for a relationship or promise of a future. One nighter’s were his specialty, although since Hope, there certainly hadn’t been any. The desire for mindless release with any willing woman had been lost the second she’d taken him into her body. Once he’d had some quality skin on skin time with Hope, it was hard to get hard for anybody else.

But this girl didn’t just come with strings, she came with a shitload of goddamn rope. The thick, heavy-gauged kind that you could use to rappel down the sheer face of a jagged cliff. Or hang yourself with.

Sure, it was irresponsible for him to run out on her. Downright reprehensible, if you asked most morally-driven people. But not even he could have predicted how badly this would blow up in his face. Because Hope with no last name—the one that had screwed both his body and his mind far better than anyone else ever had—was actually Hope fucking Coleson.

And there was a large man standing not far from him, holding up a mahogany paneled wall with his massive shoulder, that wasn’t going to be too keen on what Beck had done to his sister.

His ribs tightened at the thought and he drained a bottle of water in three swallows.

“You’re not looking too good there, bro.” Nolan barely leaned toward him, the comment said under his breath so the others wouldn’t hear. “You okay? Gettin’ any sleep lately?” His loaded question could be loosely translated to a disappointed sounding, “You’re not on the sauce again, are you?”

Leaning too far back in the oversized, black leather office chair, Beck pushed the spring mechanism to its limit and nodded once in response to Nolan’s fishing expedition, tapping his fingers against the padded arm rest. It took every ounce of his strength not to squirm under the watchful gaze of Asher Coleson. His boss. His mentor. His friend.

And his smokin’ hot hook up’s goddamn brother.

They were all sitting at a large, rectangular table in the conference room of the posh Scorpio Securities office. Everyone was in attendance at the mandatory Friday morning meeting, with the exception of Sam, who was late. Beck glanced at his watch, trying to look normal as he avoided eye contact with Ash. Eleven minutes late, to be exact. And Sam was never late. It just plain didn’t happen and speculation as to why was running rampant, with Grady leading the chorus.

“I can’t believe Sam is late. That’s an unprecedented event,” Grady said, speaking to the group from his spot at the foot of the table, cracking open another can of the energy drink he mainlined. “What’s next, a zombie apocalypse?”

Mike sat across from Beck and Nolan, scanning his phone for the latest photo of his middle child learning how to use the potty, oversharing as usual. “Here’s one of him trying to hit a cheerio. Carrie drops a handful in the water and makes it a game. The kid has amazing aim.”

Aside from the newly hitched Sam, Mendoza was the only married one in the bunch, and his wife Caroline was currently holding court at her perch behind the front desk in the lobby. As Scorpio’s office manager, she kept the place running smoothly, and Sam and Ash organized and in line. She could crack a whip like nobody’s business and wasn’t above making it known, either. The fact that she did it while making you think it was your idea helped to take the emasculating sting away. Beck figured her strategy wasn’t much different when it came to peeing in the potty instead of your pants.

“Nobody cares, Mike.” Grady replied good-naturedly, pulling his camouflage skull cap down low over his ears. A rainy day in Southern California was the equivalent of a snow day in Minnesota. “Now let me translate for all of you how this is going to go down. Sam will walk in here and say, ‘Okay, kids. Daddy’s going away for awhile. Now, it’s not because you’ve been bad or because I don’t love you anymore. It’s because I have a new family now, and I’d rather spend time with them.’ ” He stopped to chug his liquid caffeine, grinning at his own joke. “Of course the ‘I love them more than I love you’ goes without saying. He’ll call each of us slugger or champ, then quickly wrap it up by promising to visit every other weekend and on Wednesday’s. Unless he has more fun things planned with his new family. Which we all know he will.”

Other books

Murder as a Fine Art by John Ballem
My Favorite Countess by Vanessa Kelly
Doctors by Erich Segal
Space in His Heart by Roxanne St. Claire
You're Invited by Jen Malone