TURN ON THE CHARM
Eternal good girl Casey Tanner moved to White Pine for a fresh start. Her mission: to finally have fun. And a fling with a reckless bad boy is the very first item on the to-do list she pretended not to make. After one long, lingering look at a sexy firefighter, Casey has found her man.. . . AND TURN UP THE HEATGetting women into his bed has never been a problem for Abe Cameron. Letting one into his heart is an entirely different matter. But just one kiss, just one touch, just one smile from beautiful Casey has this lifelong bachelor flirting with the idea of forever. And Casey's refusal to settle down only makes Abe more determined than ever to win her heart. Now the one woman who can't be caught is the only one Abe can't live without . . .
Eternal good girl Casey Tanner moved to White Pine for a fresh start. Her mission: to finally have fun. And a fling with a reckless bad boy is the very first item on the to-do list she pretended not to make. After one long, lingering look at a sexy firefighter, Casey has found her man.. . . AND TURN UP THE HEATGetting women into his bed has never been a problem for Abe Cameron. Letting one into his heart is an entirely different matter. But just one kiss, just one touch, just one smile from beautiful Casey has this lifelong bachelor flirting with the idea of forever. And Casey's refusal to settle down only makes Abe more determined than ever to win her heart. Now the one woman who can't be caught is the only one Abe can't live without . . .
“Heard you had some excitement
yesterday at your job,” Betty said to her, ladling her plate with food as the
dishes were passed around. Betty’s curly blond hair was aglow in the soft
light.
“False alarm, as it turned out. Just low
batteries in Robot Lit’s CO2 detector.”
Casey
silently gave herself props for following through earlier in the day on
replacing the CO2 detector’s batteries, also buying two smoke alarms and a fire
extinguisher.
“I
meant the part where you got stuck in an elevator with a fireman,” Betty said.
The other women
around the table stilled.
“You
didn’t tell me that!” Audrey said, her brown eyes wide. “And you hate small
spaces. Are you all right?”
“I’m fine. It was just an old elevator that
stalled out.” She eyed Betty. “How did you even know about that?”
“Sometimes
I tune into the scanner. Sounded like you and the lieutenant were in there for
a good long while.”
“I—”
Casey stalled, unsure what to say next. They’d been in there for what seemed
like hours, even though it had probably only been twenty minutes or so. She
could still feel the warmth of his hand around hers, the steady beat of his
heart against her fingertips.
“The
lieutenant is Abe Cameron, right? Stewart’s older brother?” Audrey asked.
“The
serious one,” Willa said. “Stu was so easy-going and fun. I was on student
council with him in high school. Abe would pick him up from school sometimes,
and I remember Abe being like—one of the faces on Mount Rushmore or something.
So stony and serious.”
“The
opposite of his parents,” Betty said.
“What
do you mean?” Casey asked.
“Julia
and Pete Cameron were such free spirits. They both painted, and I always loved
their work. Now, they live up in the White Pine Retirement Village. I hear
Pete’s memory is going.”
Casey
blinked with surprise. She couldn’t imagine Abe’s parents being artists.
Military sergeants, maybe. But not painters.
Until
she remembered how warm and gentle Abe had been in the elevator. He’d been
perfect, really, as she’d panicked in the cramped space. Until the light of day
had shone on him again, and Casey figured she must have imagined the compassion
he’d shown her.
Or had she? It was maddening to wonder
what her addled brain had cooked up and what had been reality.
“What’s
that look?” Audrey asked, reading Casey all too well. “Did something happen in
that elevator?”
Leave
it to her sibling to cut to the chase.
“If
it did, you’re in the clear,” Betty said. “Abe is single. At least that’s what
I hear.”
“Abe
is always single,” Willa said.
“The
parade of ladies through his life is impressive,” Anna agreed. “Sam knows some
of the guys down at the station and I guess he’s got quite a reputation.”
“Is
that good or bad?” Casey asked.
“Very
good while it lasts,” Betty said with a wink, “since apparently he’s quite… gifted in certain ways. But then bad
when it’s over.”
“Didn’t he go out
with Maddie Fronting?” Audrey asked. “I was in a book club with her once, and I
feel like she was always talking about this guy who turned her into a gymnast
in bed. Twisted her up in all the best ways.” She giggled. “That was Abe,
right?”
“Probably,”
Stephanie said, nodding. “He might put all that stony seriousness to good work
in the bedroom, but at the end of the day, he’s an unreformed serial
monogamist.”
“A what?” Casey
asked.
“Someone
who dates one person seriously for a while. Then breaks up with them and dates
someone else—wash, rinse, repeat.”
“Did
he ask you out?” Audrey asked Casey.
She
shook her head. “No, nothing like that. In fact, just the reverse. Abe got me
thinking that I should pursue the opposite
of him. Someone lighter, more fun-loving.”
“Like
his brother?”
“Stu’s
a charmer,” Betty said. “Works at that winter gear store, I think.”
“I
didn’t mean Stu necessarily,” Casey said. “Just someone with similar attributes.
Someone playful. Lively.” She bit her lip, unwilling to admit to her rule-bound
past, which is why she was thinking about all of this to begin with.
Betty
arched a brow. “You sound like you wrote out a whole list.”
Casey
stared at her untouched casserole. The truth was, she had made some mental notes. Okay, more than a few. She had come to
White Pine determined to open her heart to others, and there was a tiny ember
inside her that was ready to kindle romance, too. Though, romance was too nice
a word for what she really wanted, which was a tumble in the sack. She’d
already begun thinking in earnest about a few ways she wanted to jettison
her…inhibitions.
“Oh,
you didn’t!” Audrey laughed, staring at her. “You actually made a
bullet-pointed list, didn’t you!” Once again, leave it to Audrey to bare her
secrets.
“Not
exactly,” she said, “I haven’t put pen to paper, it’s more like I’m thinking
about what could be on it.”
Willa
chuckled. “A serious list to achieve a not-so serious goal.”
“It’s
not a list, I haven’t written it down,” Casey protested.
“It’s
in your head though,” Audrey said, grinning.
“We
don’t mean to poke fun,” Stephanie said, perhaps catching the frown pulling at
the corner of Casey’s mouth. “We’ve just been around each other so long, we’ve
lost some of our verbal filters.”
Another
reminder Casey was the outsider. She set down her fork, no longer hungry.
Audrey
bumped her shoulder playfully. “Come on. You have to admit, it is kind of
ironic. An serious list so you can have some fun?”
It
wasn’t serious, though. It wasn’t even a
list. More like it was a mortifying set of thoughts about wanting to get
some. Casey knew she should probably be talking about finding Mr. Right, just
like all these other women had. But the truth was, she didn’t want that. After
a lifetime of rule-following not to mention a serious relationship with even
unhappier ending, she wanted something she’d never had before, and it sounded
an awful lot like hot sex, no strings attached. Forget a ring. She wanted a fling.
Kim Amos is a romance writer whose Midwestern roots run deep. You can usually find her hanging out in a state that borders the Great Lakes. She is married to an artisan ice cream maker, which is a dangerous complement to her enduring love for cheese.
Learn more at www.kimamoswrites.com
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