Reading Online Novel

About That Kiss:A Heartbreaker Bay Novel(33)







Chapter 21





YouCantHandleTheTruth



The rest of the day was a blur for Kylie because she was so swamped with  work. Whether due to guilt or otherwise, Gib had once again passed some  new jobs on to her, leaving her in the throes of no less than five  different projects. It was both wonderful and overwhelming but at least  things were status quo between them.

By lunchtime, her brain was flatlining, so she took off her apron,  dusted off as much as she could, and grabbed Vinnie, heading out to the  courtyard to clear her head.

At the fountain, she sat on a bench. Vinnie lifted his little leg on a bush and then came to sniff at the water.

"Careful," she warned him. Not too long ago he'd gotten brave and had  jumped in. Only problem was that because of his squat build and heavy  head, he couldn't swim. Panic had ensued until she'd rescued him.

But smart and bright as he was, he was also overconfident and believed  himself invincible-hence the reminder. "No swimming," she said.

He snorted and then ran in circles for a solid two minutes, doing his  best roadrunner impression until suddenly he ran out of gas and flopped  at Kylie's feet, panting in exhaustion.

Kylie shook her head and stared at the fountain. As she'd told Joe the  night before, the legend was clear. Wish for love with a true heart and  love would find you.

But legends were made up. Fantasies. Except . . . there really had been a  lot of love stories to happen right here in this building in the past  few years, several of them involving her good friends, and all could be  traced back to wishing on this very fountain.

Last night when she'd wished for her penguin, she'd actually been  tempted to wish for something else all together, and how scary was that?  She would've liked to wish for Joe to openly look at her the way he  sometimes did when he thought she wasn't watching, his warm gaze making  her hot and mushy at the same time, his expression telling her she was  more than just sex to him, that maybe there were real feelings, feelings  that could go deep, deeper than she'd ever allowed before.

Not that she'd wish away the sex though, especially since thoughts of  that alone could give her a hot flash. The images were implanted, his  just-for-her smile barely curving his lips, that hard, honed body taking  hers however he wanted-because let's face it, any way he wanted had  been pretty damn amazing so far, especially when he used his tongue to-

"Now see, you gotta actually toss in a coin," came a craggy voice and something hit the water. A coin.

Kylie's head whipped around to stare at Old Man Eddie. He grinned at  her. "Hope you wished for something good, darlin'," he said. "Would hate  to see that penny go to waste."

"I . . . I can't believe you did that."

He shrugged. "You were standing here in indecision for so long that  Vinnie fell asleep." He pointed to her dog, who was still curled up on  the sun-warmed cobblestones at her feet, snoring like a buzz saw. "What  did you wish for?" he asked.

Oh good God. She'd just wished for more wild sex with Joe. She stared at Eddie and he gave her a slow, sly grin.

"So it's like that, is it? Who's the lucky fellow?"

"No. No, no, no," she said. "It doesn't count since I didn't throw the coin. You did."

Old Man Eddie just smiled.

"Oh come on," she said. "Surely there are rules!"

"Don't know, darling." He shrugged. "I'm not much of a rule man myself."

"Well, I'm certain there are rules, lots of them." She told herself not  to panic. "And anyway, the legend is about true love and that's not what  I was thinking about, so it's not going to happen. Right? Tell me I'm  right."

He laughed. "I don't know that either, but I'd give more than a penny to  know what you wished for to put that look on your face."         

     



 

"Oh my God." She whirled back to the water, determined to climb in and  remove the penny. Only . . . there were a bunch of pennies in there and  she could no longer remember exactly which one she'd seen Eddie toss in.  And what if she removed the wrong one? What then? Would that mean she'd  erase someone else's wish? She couldn't do that. She couldn't live with  herself if she did that. "Which one was it?" she demanded, stepping  closer to the fountain. "I'm not sure . . ."

"What isn't she sure about?"

This was from Molly, who was walking by with Willa and Elle, all three carrying bags from O'Riley's Pub.

"Whelp," Eddie said, rocking back on his heels, flashing Kylie a  mischievous smile. "I believe our Kylie here just made a wish that she's  second-guessing right about now."

Kylie stared at him. "But you're the one who tossed the coin!"

"Details," he said on a shrug. "Fact is, a wish was made, and it had you  blushing big time too. I'm thinking it must've been about someone whose  name rhymes with-"

"No!" Kylie rushed to say, not wanting to go there.

Eddie grinned. "Exactly. His name rhymes with no."

Willa and Elle laughed. Molly looked speculative.

Kylie sighed. "I'm walking away now."

"Kylie."

She turned back to face Molly, who held out one of the brown bags. "I  was going to drive this out to Joe, who's stuck babysitting a witness  and is starving. But I've got a meeting. Maybe you wouldn't mind?"

Kylie looked at Elle and Willa, who were both suddenly very busy on their phones. "Um-"

"Great, thanks!" Molly said, and then before Kylie knew it, she was holding the bag and a hastily scribbled address on a napkin.

"What just happened?" Kylie asked Eddie when the women were gone.

Eddie laughed. "I think it'll be much more fun watching you figure it out."

The address on the napkin was a building only a few blocks away, so she  and Vinnie walked. Or rather, Kylie walked, carrying Joe's lunch and the  lazy Vinnie.

She ended up in front of a building in Pacific Heights that appeared to  be a large Victorian home divided into four residences. Just outside the  main entrance was Joe's truck.

With Joe in it.

He wore dark mirrored shades and a backward ball cap and-thanks to that  and the window tinting, it was hard to see his expression as she walked  up to the front of the vehicle. She hesitated, unsure whether to go to  the driver's side in the street or to the passenger side. She didn't  want to impose. She just wanted to drop off his lunch.

Oh, who was she kidding. He looked hot as hell and she wanted to climb into that truck and onto his lap and-

He leaned over and opened the passenger door for her. Shaking off her fantasy, she walked over to him.

He was in his usual work gear of cargos, a Hunt Investigations T-shirt  and a windbreaker, which she now knew was mostly to hide the guys'  weapons and make them seem less threatening.

In Joe's case, it only made him look all the more badass.

"You busy?" she asked.

"Babysitting a witness as a favor to an attorney we do a lot of work  for," he said. "The guy's not in any danger, except he's a flight risk.  Lucas is in the back alley watching the only other exit. No one ever  slips past Lucas. Get in."

She'd discovered she didn't much like him telling her what to do-unless  she was naked-but she got into the truck with Vinnie and handed Joe the  brown bag. "From Molly," she said.

He went brows up and ignored the bag, reaching for Vinnie instead,  holding the dog up so that they could look at each other nose-to-nose.  Vinnie panted in sheer joy and bicycled his little legs in the air,  trying to get closer to lick his new favorite person.

One hundred percent, Kylie understood the urge.

Joe set Vinnie in his lap, where Vinnie turned in three circles-making  Joe wince at the paw placement-and plopped down for a happy snooze.

Then and only then did Joe look inside the bag. "Chicken wings and fries. Nice."

"Molly said she was supposed to bring you lunch."         

     



 

Joe stared at her and then pulled out his phone. He didn't greet whoever  answered, just listened for a moment before saying, "You're going to  want to watch your back. Paybacks are a bitch."

"Paybacks are a bitch?" Kylie repeated when he disconnected. "Who was that?"

"My meddling sister."

"Your . . ." She stared at him. "Are you telling me that they set me up?"

"They?"

"Molly and Elle and Willa," she said. "And Eddie and the damn fountain!"

This was the second time he'd looked alarmed at the mention of the  fountain. "Come on," she said. "Stop kidding me about being afraid of  that thing."

"Who's kidding?" he asked, sounding genuine. "And you should be afraid  too. You know the stories. Finn and Pru. Willa and Keane. Max and Rory.  Spence and Colbie. Archer and Elle." He shook his head. "And Archer is  the badass of all the badasses. If he didn't stand a chance, no one  stands a chance. No one, Kylie."

Now that she knew he was serious, some of his concern began to seep into  her. Okay, all of his concern. "It was only a penny. A penny! You can't  even buy anything for a penny these days, so-"