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After attending her baby sister’s destination wedding, Shelby Worthington decides she’s ready to do some husband hunting of her own. The only problem? She’s still insanely attracted to Declan Enright, her high school and college crush. He’s now a wildly successful painter who’s temporarily back in Magnolia Bay, but Declan should be Shelby’s last choice for possible husband material. He didn’t earn the reputation of runaway groom for nothing…
Declan has worked hard to make his mark on the New York art scene and has succeeded at everything he’s ever done…except love. But Declan has come back to the Bay to change that and care for his dying father, even if he’s still never forgiven Declan for leaving the family business. Shelby is determined to steer clear, but while her lips keep saying no, her heart is pounding out yes each time she and Declan are together. While she can’t deny her attraction, Shelby’s convinced that Declan’s track record means he will break her heart. Or has Declan changed for good, and made love worth the risk?
Chapter One
Shelby Worthington took the long way home from her sister’s
destination wedding in Bermuda. Instead of catching a flight back to
Charleston and then making the thirty-minute drive to Magnolia Bay, she
flew into Miami, splurged on a cute little red convertible rental and
drove up the coast. She took A1-A, the old snow bird route, stopping in
little beach towns along the way whenever she wanted. The trip was an
homage to her late parents, to her mom who loved to go exploring, and to
her retired military dad who hated stopping even for a potty break,
much less to explore Americana.
As much as she still missed her parents, she was surprised the
wedding hadn’t been as bad as she’d expected. Because it was so far from
South Carolina, there were only a handful of family and friends at the
resort to watch Shelby’s baby sister, Chelsea, marry her longtime
boyfriend, Matt Baker.
To be honest, there probably wouldn’t have ever been a wedding if
Matt’s mom wasn’t sick. Neither Chelsea nor Matt believed they needed a
piece of paper to prove their commitment to each other. They thought
getting married was silly after living together for six years, but
Matt’s mom, Carol, had stage four ovarian cancer, and it was important
to her to see the happy couple married. Carol had wanted them to have a
proper Catholic wedding, but she’d settled for seeing her son barefoot
and married on the pink sandy Bermuda beach.
With twenty-five guests in attendance, Shelby, being the odd woman
out, was only asked forty-seven times over the three day weekend—So,
when are you getting married?
Married? At thirty-three, Shelby had always been a bit of a serial
dater. There hadn’t been anyone special since college, and she was quite
happy, thank you very much. She loved men and preferred her life to
Chelsea’s. Her baby sister had met Matt her freshman year of college and
knew he was the one.
Shelby spotted a sign that claimed The Best Breakfast in the Sunshine
State and eased the car into the crowded parking lot. The place was
packed inside, with a handful of customers waiting on benches on the
front porch. She gave those folks her best hey y’all smile and put her
name on the waiting list. A thirty-minute wait would be enough time to
check in with her friends back home who were dying to hear about the
wedding.
She scrolled down her contacts until she found Hannah’s number and
hit the call button. Shelby owned a cute little shop on Main Street in
Magnolia Bay, called Slick Chicks, and her best friend since ninth
grade, Hannah Austin, owned Turquoise, an upscale boutique and friendly
competitor of Shelby’s store.
“Shelby!” The squeal was ear piercing.
“Hi, Hannah. I may never hear anything again, but it was good to hear
your voice. I’ve missed you and the rest of the Chicks something
fierce.”
Since she was fourteen, Shelby had been best friends with her gal
pals, the Six Chicks, which of course included Hannah. They loved each
other to bits and stuck together, even though they’d recently taken
Darcy into their pack and there were seven now. Somehow, Seven Chicks
just didn’t have the same ring to it.
“Tell me all about the wedding,” Hannah said.
“First things first. How’s my baby?”
“Bella’s fine. She’s chased off the last of the neighborhood cats and
is happy to be the only kitty slinking from house to house for
attention.”
“Okay, so my cat has territorial issues.”
“Your cat loves attention as much as you love shoes.”
“You’ve got me there. Thanks for taking care of her. The wedding was
beautiful. The ceremony took place on the beach under a billowy white
tent with giant white chiffon columns that moved in the breeze. There
were tropical flowers everywhere in big showy vases that looked gorgeous
against the pink sand. And Chelsea was breathtaking and totally buying
into the whole ‘Here Comes the Bride’ thing.”
“With all the malarkey she used to spout about how superficial and
useless weddings are, I really didn’t think she’d do it,” Hannah said.
“Guess that just goes to show there’s a princess bride in every girl
because my anti-marriage little sister who swore she never wanted a
wedding, played her part to the hilt. Matt’s mom was beyond thrilled.
And as much as I adore a Magnolia Bay wedding at the Wedding Cottage or
an all-out Charleston wedding at one of the plantations, Bermuda was the
perfect spot.”
“Did they take the plunge?”
Shelby had shown the Chicks the pictures of the resort that catered
to destination weddings. One of the traditions was the bride and the
groom decked out in their wedding clothes and jumping off a long pier
into the lagoon at the end of the ceremony. The before pictures in the
brochure with the happy couple sailing through the air were adorable,
not so much for the after pics.
“They were supposed to, but Chelsea chickened out at the last minute.
They did take some amazing underwater photos in the pool the day after
in her wedding dress. I can’t wait for you to see them.”
“Wow, your baby sister. Married.” Shelby knew Hannah didn’t mean it,
but the silence implied, and you’re not. Or maybe that was just Shelby’s
imagination because it wasn’t like Hannah was married either.
“Come on, Hannah, I got enough of that at the wedding.”
“Oh, you know I didn’t mean it that way. Darcy and Miranda are the only ones leaving the brood.”
“No way. Once a Chick, always a Chick. No man, not even one of the insanely sexy Mauldin brothers can change that.”
“So how much longer until you’re home? We miss you.”
“Probably tomorrow. My last stop is St. Augustine; I’ll poke around a bit, and then I’ll be home.”
“Poke around as in buy shoes?”
“I didn’t say that, but if something fabulous and strappy calls to me, yes.”
“Is there a cute guy there to buy those strappy sandals?”
Okay, not only was Shelby the Goldilocks of the dating world, it
seemed that men who dated her wanted to buy her things. The Chicks
lovingly called her a shoe whore; not that she put out for a pair of
Christian Louboutins or Jimmy Choos. But if the man she was seeing
insisted, she had a really hard time saying no. To the shoes.
“No cute guy. By the way, how’s Stacia doing with the store?”
Stacia was the youngest of their group and a recent college graduate.
She’d run Bay City Beans Coffee Shop for the last four years and, from
time to time, helped Shelby and Hannah out with their Main Street shops.
“Oh, you know Stacia, she’s tried everything in the store on by now,
and is probably starting on those cute maternity dresses you have on
sale.”
Yeah, Shelby wouldn’t be ordering any more maternity clothes. While
she had sold a lot lately to the young mothers-to-be who lived in the
ritzy new Magnolia Run section of the Bay, they were too much of a
reminder that Chelsea almost didn’t make it down the aisle.
She’d wanted to start a family right out of grad school; and Matt
never said no to her. Being the most impatient person on the planet,
when she didn’t get pregnant after a few months, Chelsea was positive
there was something horribly wrong. Shelby told Chelsea it was just her
hypochondria talking. Unfortunately, Chelsea was right and, six months
ago, she was diagnosed with premature ovarian failure.
Since the diagnosis, Chelsea had been obsessed over her condition and
had grieved the loss of being unable to have kids. Not good
pre-marriage juju. The last couple of months, she and Matt fought a lot,
and if Matt’s mom’s dying wish hadn’t been to see her son married,
Shelby had wondered if the couple would even still be together. But any
doubts Shelby had were dispelled the moment her sister walked down the
aisle.
There was an epidemic of I do’s that day, at least seven brides
flitting about the resort with their gorgeous grooms. It was like a
fairy tale wedding day on steroids, making it almost impossible for
Shelby not to wish she had a great guy. Maybe a couple of kids down the
road. She wasn’t ready to settle down and start a family today, but—.
“Shelby. Party of one,” the hostess announced to the far reaches of the universe. Maybe it was time for Shelby to change that.
love this story.
ReplyDeleteDenise