âThat was fabulous,â Derek, my producer, says as I exit the small recording studio at the Chugaloo. âPeople are going to flip for this weekâs podcast. Absolutely flip. Do you think you can prep six more by next week?â
Next week! Has he lost his mind? No. The answer is no, Derek. I canât do that and fix the inn, and run the Chug, and keep Pops out of trouble, make sure the football team is on track with their grades, get the donations at the church sorted for Betty, and produce Clover and Savvyâs podcasts all by next week.
âSure thingâ is what I actually say.
âThis is what I wanted. I wanted people to rely on me, and I wanted to be needed,â I mutter to myself as we walk down the hall.
When I was in high school, I started a podcast called The Matchmaker Manual, and it took off faster than I could keep up. Itâs always been my little slice of happiness. I learned early on what love shouldnât look like from my parents, and living with my grandparents showed me everything Iâd been missing out on.
I became obsessed with finding true love for everyone in my orbit at a very early age. By the time I was in college, I had syndication offers.
Well, until it all came crashing down and I scrambled to modify every plan I had ever created for myself because what kind of matchmaker could I be if I canât even find love myself?
But for the last couple of years, with encouragement from my friends, Iâve been building it back up. Somewhere along the way, Iâd lost who I was, but matchmaking is in my soulâitâs in my blood.
Thankfully, my loyal listeners came back in droves. Last month I was offered a new syndication deal, but Iâve been dragging my feet on accepting it. After The Ones We Donât Name left a bad taste in my mouth, I find it hard to trust anyone in a suit with an offer that sounds too good to be true.
Derek stops my stroll through memory lane with a hand on my forearm when we reach the main room.
âThanks, Derek. Sorry Iâm a little behind. Weâve got an unexpected guest at the Hideaway, so Iâm shifting some stuff around this week.â
âOh, donât you worry. Iâve heard all about Mr. Braxton Mitchell. Theyâre calling him the hometown hottie.â
My mind freezes as though Iâm stuck in the Matrix.
âTheyâre what? Heâs not even from here. Heâs just passing through.â Can Derek hear the fear in my tone?
âWell, Jasper was in the hardware store earlier,â Blissy says smugly. âHe told Jesse who told Mrs. Cromley who told me that he saw Braxton with Pops, buying up all the things. That doesnât sound like someone just passing through.â
Panic flares in my chest. What the heck did Pops buy? We canât afford a hardware store run right now. We can barely even afford groceries for our guest.
âWhat do you mean? Pops isnât supposed to leave the house until we get his depth perception figured out.â
Blissy shrugs but doesnât bother hiding her grin.
âOh my God. This is a disaster. Blissy, can you close up tonight? The high school kids will be done by seven. If notâ ââ
âGo, Madi. Iâve got you.â
I give the older woman a quick hug, causing the navy handkerchief she wears covering her hair to shift.
She quickly reties it while I give Derek a hug too.
âThanks, you guys. I appreciate you.â As soon as the door shuts behind me, I scowl and nearly stomp my foot in frustration.
What the heck is Braxton thinking, taking Pops out? And why is Pops spending money he knows we donât have?
Once Iâm in my little VW Jetta, I blast the AC and take a deep breath. Iâm sure thereâs a reasonable explanation. I just have to go home to see what it is.
I pull my car into the driveway, and Iâm pretty sure Iâm hallucinating. Why is Popsâ old truck here?
He agreed to sell it. He knows driving isnât safe with his condition.
âAgainst the hallway,â Pops yells, spurring me into motion.
Stepping out of the car, I come face-to-face with Braxton.
âWhat the heck is going on?â I ask.
Braxtonâs gaze darts from me to Pops, and when he faces me again, he scratches the center of his chest and flashes the best puppy dog eyes the world has ever seen.
âDonât puppy dog face me, Braxton Mitchell,â I say, poking him in the chest and immediately regretting the contact. Sparks shoot up my arm, and his gaze flames with amber fire that has me jumping back a step. âTaking Pops out is dangerous. He could have been seriously injured.â
âBull hickey,â Pops mutters from his porch swing.
Spinning on my grandfather, I point my finger at him. âDonât you start, old man. You and I had a deal, and I know you. Somehow you tricked Braxton into being your sidekick. And what the heck is your old truck doing here?â My voice loses some of its fire. âWe talked about this, Pops.â
âAh,â Braxton interrupts.
I suck in a deep breath and count to three before I turn to face him again.
âItâs actually my truck. I bought it today from Terdâ ââ
I lurch forward, reach up on my tiptoes, and close my palm over his mouth, startling us both. My chest presses into his rib cage, and adrenaline rushes through my veins. Itâs unnatural, to have these types of reactions to a strangerâit must be.
âDo. Not. Say. That. Name. Ever. Understand?â
He nods beneath my hand, and I release him. With some space between us, the unnerving sensation rattling through my bloodstream falls away.
âSo, I bought it from the Turd. I didnât know it was Poââ He stops mid-sentence and stares at me.
âWhat?â I may have just growled at him.
âHarry Turd said⦠Oh my God.â He turns to Pops. âYouâre the grandfather who owned the truck. And that makes youââ His gaze drops to mine, and so many emotions swirl in his irises as he stares. âThat makes you the one who got away,â he says so quietly I practically lean in to hear him.
âThe one who got away?â I snarl. âIs that what he said?â
âHarry Turd is a pissant,â Pops grumbles.
âHarryâ¦Harry Turd?â I donât want to laugh, but hearing Pops call my lying, manipulative ex a Harry Turd cracks me wide open. Itâs so childish, immature to the nth degree, but it also takes some of the vitriol I carry for my ex and turns it into something I can laugh about.
That hasnât happened, ever. Not until Braxton Mitchell.
Iâve completely lost my mind. Iâm doubled over with my hands on my knees, laughing so hard my stomach cramps. But then Braxtonâs hand lands on my back, rubbing small, soothing circles.
It sobers me quickly enough that I stand upright to face him again, this time with tears of laughter spilling down my cheeks. I quickly brush them away.
âI donât mean to pryâ ââ
âThen donât,â I interrupt.
âI just meanâ¦the Turd-o-nator is kind ofâ¦â
âSleazy,â Pops fills in.
Braxton scratches at a spot on his chest. âAh, yeah. Thatâs it.â He chuckles. âAnd heâs not veryâ ââ
âAttractive. Guys lost his damn mind right along with his hair. Madi dodged a real bullet there.â Pops whistles to the sky as the swing carries him back and forth.
âOkay, Pops. Thatâs enough.â When I turn back to Braxton, heâs studying meâit twists me up like a Rubikâs cube. âMy exâ¦he wasnât always this way. He used to beâ ââ
âSober,â Pops blurts.
I purse my lips and drop my gaze to the ground. âAlcohol has changed him.â
Braxton slides both hands into his front pockets just as Savvyâs car pulls up in front of the house. Good Lord, save me from this night.
âYou bought Popsâ truck?â Iâm desperate to change the subject.
âYeah,â he says, pulling on his neck with one hand.
Closing my eyes, I nod three times.
âIâm going to make dinner now.â Lifting my lashes a fraction of an inch, I still get lost in the pull of him. âAh, and Iâll apologize in advance for my friends. Theyâre more than friends, actually, theyâre our family, and they feel the need to join us for dinner tonight to make sure youâre not a body-snatching murderer looking to make a skinsuit.â
âA skinsuit, huh?â He rubs his jaw with his thumb, and why is that the sexiest move ever? âI promise you, Iâm not a skinsuit murderer.â
I shrug. âIsnât that exactly what youâd say if you were?â
His dang crooked smile makes my limbs tingle. âI suppose it is.â
âListen, itâs not me you have to convince. Itâs them.â I hook a thumb in the direction of Savvyâs car just as she, Clover, and a very pregnant Elle step out.
âIâm going to need some wine,â I mutter, then make my escape to the house. âPops, you and I are going to have a little chat about your shopping trip today, and then weâre going to go over, again, why itâs not safe for you to be out without someone helping you.â
He waves me off with a shooing motion while watching the girls as they march past Braxton. Clover makes an âIâm watching youâ motion with her fingers to her eyes, and Pops hoots with laughter.
Iâm never going to survive this night.
âAnything I can do to help?â Braxton asks, poking his head into the kitchen.
âWhere are you from?â Savvy asks before I can open my mouth.
âWest Coast,â he replies vaguely.
âWhat do you do?â Clover continues their line of questions.
âLadies.â I attempt to interrupt, but Savvy speaks over me.
âHow long are you staying?â she asks.
Braxton enters the kitchen, and the door swings shut behind him. I watch out of the corner of my eye as he sticks both hands in his pockets and rocks back on his heels.
âIâm not sure yet. Iâm kind of on aâ¦sabbatical.â
âHow can you âkind of be on a sabbaticalâ?â Clover asks, but sheâs more curious than anything. She canât keep the edge to her voice in the same way Savvy canâshe wasnât built for it.
âYou can do what you want when you own the company.â I can feel Braxton watching me. Itâs not a completely unwelcome sensation, justâ¦different. âMadison, can I help with anything?â
Instead of raising my head, I pretend to be focused on my pie crust and just shake my head.
âGood luck getting her to agree to help,â Savvy mutters.
I love the girl, but seriously, sometimes she is a giant pain. âNo,â I say gently. âBut thank you. Everything will be done in about ten minutes. If you want to tell Pops to get ready, that would be fine.â
âSo, if you own the company, you can afford to take time off and stay hereâ¦indefinitely?â Savvy is so damn persistent.
âIt wouldnât be prudent of me to take off if I didnât have my company and my finances under control, now would it?â He doesnât seem the least bit bothered by my friends.
âHmm,â Savvy hums.
âSo, you could pay for a monthâs stay in advance and still be comfortable?â Elle asks shyly, then stuffs a giant piece of chocolate into her mouth with an apologetic shrug.
âElle,â I snap. I know where sheâs going with this, and I donât like it one bit.
Braxton seems to be taking us all in, as well as the kitchen and now the big boards of sheetrock laying against the back door.
âIâm happy to do that,â he finally says. âIâll go settle up with Pops now.â The way his eyes crinkle at the corners makes me think heâs kindâa gentle soul maybe, but thereâs an edge to him too that I havenât figured out.
No one can give a command that makes my body melt the way he did and not have extra layers to him.
âYou really donât have to do that,â I blurt, but heâs already halfway out the door.
âNo problem at all, Madison,â he says, waving over his shoulder.
âItâs Madiâ ââ
The door squeaks shut, cutting me off.
âElle,â I say, spinning on my friend.
âDonât âElleâ her,â Savvy says, bumping me out of the way. âIf you roll out this crust any more itâs going to be too thin to use. And you know if he pays up front, that would help a hell of a lot around here, and since you arenât sure how long heâll be staying, this gives you a little security that he wonât up and leave while stiffing you on the bill.â
âI donât think heâs someone who would skip out on a bill, Sav.â
âYou never know,â Elle says.
The doorbell rings, and we all stare at the closed door.
âDid you invite someone over?â Clover asks.
âNo,â I say, then groan when I hear Pops welcoming someone in. âBut I bet Pops did during his little escape into town this afternoon.â
Savvy laughs. âHe must be so happy to have his social butterfly wings back now that heâs got Brax carting him all over town.â
Wiping my hands on my apron, I bite my tongue because itâs the situation Iâm frustrated with, not my friends. It wouldnât be fair of me to take it all out on them.
âLetâs go see what kind of mess Pops has made now.â
Clover is sitting closest to the door, so she pushes it open slowlyâjust enough for us to peer out into the hallway that opens up at the foyer.
âPops wanted a party,â Clover whispers.
âOr an inquisition,â Savvy snickers.
Popsâ oldest friends, Moose and Chief, stand in the entryway, while Pops is behind the desk with Braxton.
Moose opens the front door, and Cian walks in with Shep and Beau Collins.
âWhat are they doing here?â I whisper above Elleâs head.
âNo idea, but Cianâs going to be pissed I didnât invite him myself.â Elle snickers.
Braxton must hear us because he turns just in time to see all our heads stacked in a rowâmy head on top of Elleâs, Cloverâs on mine, and Savvy on top of Clover. Elle jumps back when she sees him smirking at us, and we tumble to the floor in a heap of tangled limbs that twist and turn, trying to keep our weight off Elle.
The four of us lie there in shock and only move when Braxton pokes his head inside again. When he sees us, I swear the light reflects off his bright white teeth.
âYou spend a lot of time on the kitchen floor, Madison?â He enters and offers Elle a hand, since sheâs the first one he reaches, and sheâs super pregnant.
âOnly since you arrived,â I grumble.
âGood to know.â He chuckles, then offers me and Clover a hand. He pulls us to standing with zero effort as Savvy stands on her own. âI just wanted you to know I was only around for the invite to Chiefâis it true that heâs retired but refuses to give up his badge?â My friends laugh, and someone must say yes while Iâm here trying to get my words to work. âAnyway, the other five, Iâm not sure when they happened, but Iâm happy to help if you havenât made enough for dinner. I can order something orâ ââ
âMadi cooks for an army of fifty every time. She canât help herself,â Savvy says, then waggles her brows at me.
âMads?â Pops finally enters the kitchen, looking far too pleased with himself. âOh, good. Girls, ya mind setting the table for me?â
âWeâve got it, Pops,â Clover says, patting his arm. âYouâre in a lot of trouble.â She whispers, but it sounds as though it echoes in the open space.
Pops laughs, but otherwise ignores her. âWe got any beer, Mads?â
âI wasnât expecting a full house, Pops. We donât really have theâ¦â I cut myself off when I remember that Braxtonâs hovering nearby.
âI can run to the store. What kind do you want, Pops?â Heâs always so stinking accommodating.
There must be something wrong with him.
âNoââ
âAnything from Briar Patch Brewing is good. Itâs local, ya know,â Pops says so proudly youâd think he owned the dang brewery.
âYou need anything else, Madison?â The way Braxtonâs voice dips when he says my name makes my stomach turn over. He genuinely wants to help, and Iâm not sure how I feel about that. It would be easier if all he wanted was to get in my panties.
My chest thumps wildly at the thought, but my shoulders slump as I give in to another mess created by my grandfather. âNo. I appreciate you asking though.â
âSauvignon Blanc is her favorite, you know, if youâre feeling generous.â Savvyâs not so helpful.
I love how Braxtonâs lips twitch at the corners. âThanks for the tip. Iâll be back.â Instead of leaving, he walks over to the refrigerator where I have a notepad and pen hanging, and my jaw falls slack as he scribbles something down. When he looks up, his gaze pins me to my spot. âMy number,â he says. Why is he so smiley all the time? âIn case you think of anything while Iâm out.â
âSmooth, real smooth.â Pops chuckles.
âPops, please,â I plead. âJust stop. Braxton, if you give me a minute, Iâll give you some cash for the beer.â
If I can find some.
âMy treat,â he says as he walks out the door, and I immediately spin on my grandfather.
âPops. What are you thinking? You know we canât afford all this stuff.â I point to the sheetrock. âAnd I need a warning before you invite the town over. We canât afford to be the local pub right now either. Why did you invite the Collins brothers, your poker pals, and Cian over for dinner?â
Instead of answering, he pulls me in for a hug. We stand there for a long moment, enough that my racing heart slows, and the anger or anxiety that was tightening my muscles relaxes. Then he kisses the side of my head before releasing me.
As heâs walking back out to his friends, he drops the next bomb on me. âWeâre all right, Mads. That boy just paid for a six-month stay. In full.â
The girls and I all spin to face each other. I can see Savvy working the numbers in her head, while Clover is most likely evaluating the emotional toll it will take on me having him in my space forâfor six months. Elle has found a bag of cookies and sits at the island, downing two at a time while crumbs land on her belly.
âThatâsâ¦thirty-one thousand dollars, Madi. Thirty-one thousand.â Savvyâs voice rises along with my blood pressure.
âThirty-six even,â Pops corrects. âHe insisted on two hundred a night because weâre including meals.â When the kitchen door snaps shut behind him, I return my shocked and bewildered gaze to my girls.
âSomething is definitely wrong with him,â Savvy mutters.
âYou could put a down payment on a condo or something for that amount. Well, almost.â Clover sounds as confused as I am.
âWho pays thirty-six thousand dollars to stay in a run-down inn in the middle of nowhere, Georgia?â I ask.
âSomeone with a lot of secrets, thatâs who.â I can almost see Cloverâs mind twisting this into a new thriller novel in her mind.
âWell, if heâs got them, weâll find them,â Elle vows through a mouthful of chocolate chips. Where the hell did those come from?
âLetâs Google him.â Savvyâs already pulling out her phone.
âSav, you know how I feel about that.â I groan. When youâve been the victim of cyberbullying, you try your hardest not to engage in any kind of snooping or clickbait.
But when my friends hover around Elle, staring at Savvyâs phone, I watch their expressions go from suspicious and curious to confused and back to suspicious.
âThereâs not much about him online,â Savvy says with her face turned down into a frown. âHe doesnât even really have a current social media presence. Itâs all from high school and college. Who doesnât have social media these days?â she mutters. Her frown deepens the more she scrolls.
âIâm sure thereâs an explanation,â Elle says cheerily. âThereâs no such thing as secrets in Happiness. Heâll find that out one way or another. Come on, Mads. Letâs finish this up. The sooner we serve it, the sooner the night will end.â
âMaybe.â Clover is wearing her thinking expression, with her brows furrowed and her bottom lip pinched between her thumb and forefinger. âWhat?â she asks when she finds us staring at her. âBrax is getting beer and wine, and Pops hasnât had a guyâs night in months. This could be a long night.â
I groan because sheâs one hundred percent correct. âPlease pour me a glass of Sunnyâs.â Itâs the cheapest wine in town, and I donât even care about the headache itâll bring me tomorrow. Anything to get me through the next couple of hours.
But even as I place the pies in the oven, my mind is screaming thirty-six thousand dollars.
Who can afford to do that?
And why is he spending it here?