Free Read Novels Online Home

The Roommate Arrangement by Vanessa Waltz (42)

Chapter One - The Mechanic

Olivia

Sun bakes the roof of my fifteen-year-old, blinding-white Toyota Scion. My eyes water at its brightness as heat beats down the back of my neck. The metal hull burns my fingertips as I give my faithful friend a gentle pat. Steam rolls from the closed hood.

Sighing, I readjust my sunglasses and stare at the auto shop sign emblazoned in red retro font: CARTER & SONS AUTO REPAIR. I study the peeling paint on the building, unimpressed. A bell tinkles, and a glass door smudged with oily prints flies open.

A man squints as he walks into the harsh sunlight. A wiry beard covers most of his face, and he wears a short-sleeve, button-up black shirt over a pair of baggy jeans. His bushy eyebrows lift in a show of surprise when he sees me standing next to my car. He promptly recovers, though, with a small smile and a nod of his head.

“Hello! I’m Olivia. I called twenty minutes ago.”

His smile widens, and he extends a tattooed arm. “Nice to meet you, Olivia. I’m Hank.”

I shake his callused hand. He lets go quickly.

“What seems to be the problem?”

“I’m not sure. She was doing fine the whole trip, and then suddenlyboom.”

“Boom? Like an explosion?”

Sort of.”

My heart hammers against my chest as he walks around the car, and I shadow him like an anxious parent. He digs his fingers under the hood and pops it open. It yawns, belching steam into Hank’s face. He waves it off, and I lean over his shoulder. The twisted metal and series of pipes are an incomprehensible maze. I don’t know shit about cars beyond basic maintenance, but the grim look Hank gives me after glancing into the bowels of my baby doesn’t bode well.

My baby got me through high school and college. It saw me through a handful of boyfriends, road trips, sightseeing, and endless trips to the Stop-And-Save for York Peppermint Patties. I’ve cried, fucked, screamed, and sang within these metal walls. Everyone has their own version of a security blanket, and Sharon was mine.

Blame my parents. They never let me have pets.

And now, a couple hundred miles into my drive from San Francisco, Sharon decides to break down. At least she decided to die a half hour from my destination. It strikes me as poetic that the car crapped out just as I crossed the Fair Oaks city limits sign.

Refusing to wince at the heat, I give the car another grateful pat. That’ll do, Pig. That’ll do.

“We’ll need to run some tests, but first glance? Your engine is done.”

My spine zips up as I face Hank, the throbbing pulse in my head, loud. “Done? What do you meandone?”

He raises his eyebrows. “It’s completely shot.”

How’s that possible? “She’s only fifteen! You can’t seriously be telling me that I need a new car. I took really good care of her.”

“That doesn’t change the facts. I don’t know what you want me to say. This engine is cooked.”

“Well, can’t you replace it?”

He lets out a sigh like he has better things to do than deal with me. “That’ll probably cost more than what this car is worth. You’re better off just buying a new one.”

“I’m not buying a new car.”

I don’t know what it is: Hank’s kindly gaze or the sad image of Sharon being towed to a junkyard or the general way my life seems to be falling apart lately. But a sharp pressure builds behind my eyes.

Your fiancé cheats on you, and you get misty over a fucking car.

Right. This is ridiculous.

“I’ll ask the owner if he’s up for the job.” Hank gives me a sidelong look as he walks away and disappears into the auto shop.

I watch his shadow rippling on the concrete. A man-shaped silhouette joins him, hands in his pockets. The Hank shadow gestures, and then both of them shrink as they walk forward. I picture a much older man slightly bent over with age, a stalk hanging out of his lips. The kind of guy who inappropriately flirts with female customers.

Instead, the most beautiful man I’ve ever seen walks toward me. Hank returns with a much younger, shirtless mechanic. The sunlight gleams over his muscled chest and abs, the shadows under his muscles rippling all the way down to his hips. Oil runs in streaks down his tattooed skin, which is slightly red with the heat. A flannel shirt hangs from the back pocket of his dark jeans.

He squints—or seems to scowl—as he listens to Hank talk. A short beard covers a strong jaw and his pouting lips, the bristles black. My God. He’s rugged and all man. And gorgeous. I must be dehydrated. Hallucinating. The ripples in the air from the heat somehow manifested into this mirage.

He pauses mid-stride when his eyes cut at me. Warmth builds in my chest as he takes in my appearance, a smirk lifting the side of his Han Solo grin.

What are you looking at?

Hell, I know I must look ridiculous. Totally out of place. I actually dressed up for my four-hour drive to this middle of nowhere small town, Fair Oaks. His gaze lingers on my black pumps, ill-suited for this foresty place, and then it travels up my skinny jeans to the sweetheart tank top. My heart jumps when his intense blues meet mine.

The two men walk to the car. Hank talks to the mechanic, who nods along and seems to be half-listening, half-staring at me. The mechanic walks with a sort of lithe grace that I’ve never seen on a big man.

I can’t take my eyes off him. I swallow hard as he ducks his head under the hood of my car and leans over. His pants ride low enough to show a sliver of black briefs. For a moment, I’m mesmerized by the sight of his jeans stretched tightly against his ass. With both men’s backs facing me, it’s safe to stare. And I do.

What the hell is wrong with me? I feel like some kind of perv, checking out the mechanic’s ass while his back is turned.

He’s here to fix your car, not for you to drool over.

Then he straightens, grabbing the red flannel shirt and wiping his hands. The owner dismisses Hank, who plods back into the garage. A sudden flush heats my neck as the mechanic gives me his full attention.

“I’m Olivia.”

He takes my proffered hand, his skin sliding like sandpaper in mine. “Name’s Gage. I’m the owner,” he says in a voice as rough as the calluses on his palm.

The air freezes in my lungs as his warmth seeps into my veins. He’s close enough for me to study the intricate details of his many tattoos. God, he’s totally not my type, especially with those grease marks on his chest and arms. He’s dirty and smells like a combination of metal and manly musk. There’s no way he’s the owner. A businessman wouldn’t show up to work half-naked, unless the auto shop doubles as a Chippendale’s.

“You’re the owner?”

“Who were you expecting?”

I’m still holding his hand. My cheeks burn. “Someone wearing more clothes.”

There’s laughter in his eyes as he lets go of me. “I’d say I was sorry, but you don’t look too upset by it.”

Usually arrogance doesn’t send a thrill down my spine. Is he flirting with me? Gage’s stare licks my skin as he stands way too close.

“Where are you from?” he demands. “You’re definitely not from around here.”

“Do the pumps give me away?”

“The tight jeans, shoes, everything about you screams, city girl.”

“I’m getting the feeling that you don’t care for city girls.”

“I like them just fine, sweetheart. Especially when they’re dressed like you.”

Sweetheart. My cheeks burn. If somebody back home called me that, I wouldn’t give him a minute more of my time. Except that I’m not outraged, right now. I’m interested.

His eyes burn with the intensity of two small suns, lingering at the silver zipper dangling in the middle of my fuck me tank top. It’s unzipped just half an inch; enough to give anyone who cared to look a nice view of my tits.

My whole face, I think, goes up in flames. The heat must be addling my brains.

Whoa, Olivia. What the hell are you doing with this guy?

The engagement ring in my pocket burns through my clothes. Mark cheated on me. It’s over. Isn’t it?

“I—I need my car fixed.” Wow. Way to completely wuss out. He’s hot and you’re single.

A feline smile spreads across his face, which seems to say, changing the subject already? “What happened?”

“I don’t know. Everything was fine until I reached a few miles out of town. I heard a noise and there was a lot of smoke.”

He gives the car a thoughtful look, his frown becoming more and more pronounced as he pokes around. Finally, he raises his head. Deep blue eyes narrow at me. “Well, looks like your engine is fucked. Did you skip oil changes or something?”

“Hell no. I took care of my baby.”

Gage points to the smoking engine. “Your baby wasn’t taken care of, sweetheart.”

The condescending tone paired with his intense stare sends a jolt through my chest. Okay, now I’m pissed. “Back up, buddy. I am not your

“See this?” he gestures toward a small box, brushing blue flakes off the lid. “That’s battery acid, and it’s leaking everywhere. Your battery should’ve been replaced years ago.”

Shame bubbles up my throat at his scorn. “That’s not my fault.”

“It is, though.”

No, it’s not.”

“I don’t mean to get your panties in a twist, but you should’ve known to replace the battery every four years.”

This guy is unbelievable. “Why are you giving me such a hard time?”

“‘Cause you’re calling your car your baby.” He points under the hood. “Look at this.”

I look at the incomprehensible maze, gritting my teeth. “I don’t know what I’m looking at.”

“Your car is filthy. There’s battery acid all over the place. If there’s one thing that grinds my gears, it’s people who don’t take care of their cars.”

I can’t believe I’m being chewed out by this asshole. Who the hell does he think he is? “I go to the dealership every year to get it checked out, and they never once told me to replace it.”

He laughs, crossing his huge biceps over his chest. “Every responsible owner knows to change the battery. That’s on you.”

Are you going to fix my car or not?”

He shrugs. “Maybe I won’t.”

“Why the hell not?”

Another dark look from him stills my breath. “At the very least, it would teach you a lesson.”

Tendrils of white-hot heat wrap around my neck. “Or I just go to some other shop and you lose business to a competitor.”

The catlike smile reappears. “You’re welcome to do that. The closest auto repair is thirty miles away.”

And he turns around, throwing his flannel shirt over his shoulder as he walks off. I watch his boots crunch the concrete, my head pounding with the blazing sun. Hope fizzes out like the tail end of a firework. Rage billowing up inside me, I march after him and grab his upper arm.

Wait!”

He moves with very little resistance into the circle of my arms, the smirk still tugging at his lips. There’s annoyance in his eyes, but heat as well. “What?”

“You’ve got to do this for me.”

Actually, I don’t have to do anything.”

“You’re being unreasonable! I’m a paying customer, for God’s sake!”

Don’t care.”

I ball my hands into fists. “How could you not care about your business?”

His gorgeous eyes roll into his head. “Do I look like I need much to get by? I don’t have to take on clients that piss me off.”

“How many times do I have to say it’s not my fault?”

It’s not my fault,” he mimics my voice in a high-pitched tone. “God, you city people annoy me.”

Take a good look at yourself, asshole. “I’m not some spoiled brat who regularly trashes cars. I’ve had her since I was seventeen. And what the hell is wrong with being from San Francisco?”

“Because you’re all entitled jerks,” he says in a louder voice. “I’m willing to help you, but you’re not getting off easy.”

Wow. “What the hell does that mean?”

“It means stop whining and take my punishment, or go somewhere else.”

Take your punishment.

A wild image of my naked body splayed over Gage’s lap, his rough palm striking my ass, burns in my mind.

Oh my God, how hot would that be?

No, another voice says. You’re a feminist. Jesus! This man is beyond inappropriate.

I release his arm as though burned. “Who the fuck do you think you are?”

Yes. Better.

“I think I’m the owner, and I do whatever the hell I want.”

“That doesn’t excuse sexual harassment!”

The anger radiating from Gage’s body cools as a look of extreme shock hits his face. Then it cracks with an evil grin. “I was thinking of giving you a shitty loaner car. What did you think I meant?”

Oh.

I can feel the seconds ticking into eons as my head fills with the sound of my heartbeat, resolutely drowning out my reply. “Nothing.”

The grin widens. “Now I’m curious. What sort of punishment were you imagining?”

“Don’t be an ass.”

“Did it involve one of us without clothes? Shit, I think I like your idea better.”

“You’re way out of line!”

“You’re the one with the dirty imagination.”

Heat blazing up my chest, I turn from his infuriating presence. “Go to Hell.”

Screw him. I’ll call a tow truck to drag me thirty miles away even though it’s a major inconvenience. Dealing with him isn’t worth it.

I stalk from him, diving my hand into my purse to grab my cell, only to find a black, lifeless screen. The parking lot echoes with my scream of frustration. The thought of asking him to borrow a phone to call another tow truck to take me thirty miles away from this jackass is too much to bear.

Soft laughter chimes behind my right ear, and I spin around. Gage is still there. Still shirtless and streaked with sweat and oil. And I want to slap him.

“I guess you’re stuck with me.”

Fucking great. “I need to borrow a phone.”

“No, you don’t. I’ve changed my mind,” he says. “I’ll help you out. I can get you a decent price for its spare parts.”

“I’m not gutting my car.”

“Look, I’d be more than happy to take your money, but you’re better off just buying a new one.”

No way. “I can’t do that.”

“It’s probably going to run you at least four grand, sweetheart. I’ve never replaced an engine that was less than six, and that’s not even including labor.”

I don’t care. I’ll pay it.”

He shrugs. “Suit yourself. It'll take a few weeks to fix.”

Weeks?”

“Yeah, what do you think this is? Toyota dealership? We need all the parts shipped, and that’ll take weeks.”

Fuck. I’m not staying here for weeks. “There has to be a way to get it done faster.”

“You can call every shop in a fifty-mile radius. I guarantee you they’ll tell you the same thing. It’ll take time.” He smiles apologetically, his sun-kissed shoulders lifting in a shrug that makes me want to throttle him.

This sucks. I have a life back in San Francisco: a stressful job at my ad agency, and an ex-fiancé I have to deal with. I can’t just leave for weeks.

But that’s exactly what I did, wasn’t it? I just left. There were no words spoken between Mark and me. I saw what I saw, and then I left. My head feels like it’s been in a vice for the last few hours with all the unscreamed insults and rants rebounding in my brain. Over and over.

“I’ll throw something in the pot to sweeten the deal. I’ll knock off a couple hundred dollars off the price.”

“So, first, you want to punish me, now you’re bargaining for my business?”

“I’m not finished,” he growls. “I’ll take a few hundred off the total if you stop by now and then. Just wear that.”

He points at my chest. I look down at myself, and then back at him, hardly able to believe what I heard. “Are you insane?”

“Nope. Just a red-blooded American.”

The nerve of this man. “How the hell are you still in business?”

“I’m the only mechanic in town.”

“One of these days, someone’s going to open a rival auto shop and you’ll lose all your clientele for being a jerk.”

“Who'll do that? You?”

“Maybe I will, smartass.”

I’m annoyed with myself for noticing that when he smiles, dimples carve deeply into his cheeks. “Do we have a deal?”

It’s not like I have a damn choice. “Fine,” I grind out, hating myself.

“Good. I’ll just print out an estimate, and you can sign it.” He gives me a sly look. “Then I can give you a lift to wherever you’re staying.”

“I’ll just walk.” It’s not far, but I want him to think I’d rather walk a mile in pumps than take a ride with him.

Gage lets out a little laugh at the disgust in my voice, and then he pops the trunk to take out my suitcases. “Looks like you’re already packed for a long trip.”

“Not that it’s any of your business, but I’m just here for a friend’s wedding.”

He heaves my suitcases out of my trunk without a grunt. “The McConnellys. Yeah, I heard.”

“You don’t really seem like the kind of guy people gossip to.”

“Fair Oaks is a small town. Nothing much gets by me, San Francisco.”

The way he says San Francisco makes my muscles stiffen. What is his problem?

Gage leaves for a few minutes to print out the invoice, and then has me sign it on the hood of my car, the metal singeing the bottom of my arm. As I shake his hand, I beat down the tendrils of attraction slowly curling around my limbs.

“You know how they say it’s been a pleasure? Well, it hasn’t.”

Laughter bursts from Gage’s chest as he releases me. “I guess it’s all mine, then.”

Then a little push to both bags sends them moving. I hoist my purse on my shoulder and take both suitcases, my legs screaming as I wheel them away. Narrowed eyes watch me as I roll my luggage down the parking lot and onto the sidewalk. I know I’ve got to look insane—a city slicker rolling two huge bags for a weekend visit. No self-awareness. High-maintenance.

But perhaps for the first time in my life, I really don’t give a shit.

* * *

The Airbnb I rented is only a ten-minute walk. Redwoods as tall as buildings form a thick wall on the edge of town. Ranch-style houses are tucked away in the thickets of trees, small driveways paved for their cars. Bright sunlight filters through, pouring out holes poked between leaves.

I pass by a tiny strip mall with an honest-to-God general store. It seems fairly busy for a Friday afternoon. Plenty of stares are thrown my way as I weave around the little town, my heels like gunshots cracking through the air. This is the antithesis of my place in San Francisco, where I almost always hear the constant rumble of traffic. Here, there’s nothing but the sound of the wind in the trees and the occasional voice.

I won’t last three days. I can almost hear the mechanic’s grating tone: Are your diamond slippers chafing, San Francisco?

I have no idea why Sophie would get married here. Like me, she grew up in the city. Maybe she saw a forest-themed wedding on Pinterest and decided she had to have one, too.

Fuck, I’ll have to tell her Mark isn’t coming, and she’ll want to know why.

Not now.

My arms ache with the effort of dragging both suitcases onto a road I recognize from the reservation. Walk down Main Street for about five minutes, and then turn right onto Montana Avenue. It’s the third house on the left.

My ankle wobbles as I walk onto the gravel driveway toward the sprawling ranch house with a screened-in porch. There’s a huge garage. The door’s open to reveal a workshop with a half-finished motorcycle. There're bits of chrome lying everywhere. I pass it and glance into the windows, wondering what the owner is like. He said he’d stop by to introduce himself later.

I’m a little worried, to be honest. The reviews weren’t great, most of them complaining about the rudeness of the owner.

If I could, I’d give this place ZERO stars. The owner is unbelievably rude. The water in the shower got cold, and when I brought it to the owner’s attention, he told me to ‘suck it up.’

The only hotel in town was fully booked. Apparently this is a popular spot for people visiting Yosemite, and June happens to be a busy month.

Hopefully he’s not as much of an ass as the town’s mechanic.

The Airbnb is a small in-law unit attached to the house. I find the keys in the lock hanging on the door, which I unlock. It swings open into a studio apartment, the queen bed immediately on my right. There’s a kitchenette with black granite—just a single burner and a sink. The floor is reclaimed hardwood. It groans as I shift my weight. There’s a bathroom with a shower down the tiny hall, along with a closet. And that’s it. It’s a small, shitty little place. And I love it.

I love it for simply being the kind of lodgings my ex-fiancé would loathe. If it doesn’t have room service, he won’t stay there. Mark would take one look at this place, and he’d demand we’d stay at the Ahwahnee Lodge that costs eight hundred a night. I can just imagine him walking around, whining about the place: What sort of ‘hotel’ makes its guests sleep on polyester sheets? There’s no mini-bar. How are we going to feed ourselves? Oh my God. Look. There are peppermints on the pillows. Only amateurs do that. Let’s get out now.

He’d be embarrassed just to see me sprawled on the queen-sized bed.

I kick off my pumps the moment I’m inside, dragging my suitcases through the narrow threshold. The door shuts, and I sit on the mattress. Dread claws at my stomach as I slide my phone out of my purse.

My worried face reflects off the dark screen. I almost wish there weren’t electrical outlets here. But I plug the charger into the wall and connect it to my smartphone. It blooms to life, the green icon indicating I have ten text messages from Mark and at least five voicemails. My hand shakes as I select every single message and wipe them out without looking or listening. I’m hundreds of miles away from San Francisco. The sky won’t fall if I ignore him for a few days.

My suitcase rocks the floor as I tip it over, and then I unzip the bag and wade through the mountain of unnecessary shit I brought. A swimsuit, for God’s sake. Finally, I yank out a pair of flip-flops. There’s a tiny fridge, and the owner said I could use the barbecue in his backyard. I’m all for a tall glass of wine and a good steak right now, with some charred potatoes and asparagus.

The fresh smell of the trees hits my nose the moment I step back outside. It’s so damn quiet. I can hear my chest pulsing with air. The reeeez reeeez sound of grasshoppers echo like a chorus as I walk down the porch and onto the crunch of gravel. The silence wraps around me like a blanket, and the air is warm and humid as I head toward the grocery store. It’s peaceful.

There’s a man sitting in a plastic lawn chair, a cigar hanging precariously from his mouth. He wears a stained white tank top and khaki shorts. His tanned skin hangs from his arms like parchment paper, and he looks at me as though I’m an alien. I try smiling, but he stares at me blankly. Then he rises from his seat and bangs on his screen door, shouting inside.

“They’re letting hookers in Fair Oaks!”

A voice inside yells back as my cheeks burn. “What?”

“A hooker just walked by our house. Comelook!”

What the hell? I do not look like a prostitute. Not even close. Okay, the zipper on the tank top might be a little much, but I’m wearing a jacket. My shoulders are covered, for God’s sake.

As I hear his wife’s bewildered response, I quicken my pace toward the grocery. Their shouts ring behind me as I walk across the street, looking down at my clothes again.

The strip mall is bigger than I thought, wrapping around another block to the side. It’s all very quaint. Some of the signs for the shops look hand painted. I pass by a boutique with one that reads: Chocolate Covered Gifts and Things. Peering inside, I see a narrow shoebox of a store. The walls and shelves are covered with chocolate bars, and there are vintage lunch boxes sitting at the top. I head toward the grocery store and sigh as the air-conditioning chills my hands.

Damn. I’ve never seen a grocery store so empty. There are only a few people milling around with shopping basket. I throw a box of strawberries in my basket and grab the most expensive bottle of Pinot. It doesn’t take me long to get the rest of my supplies: steak, coffee, potatoes, and carrots. Then I walk toward the front of the store, where there’s a small commotion.

A man wearing boat shoes, a white polo, and khakis holds a stack of newspapers. He hands a copy to every person in line for the cash register.

“Thank you so much, George!” An older woman clutches the paper to her chest.

Everyone seems to know him—and even weirder—they all seem like they’re best friends. I walk in line behind them, and the be-speckled man in khakis turns his attention to me, eyes widening. He has a beak-like mouth and milky skin that almost looks translucent. Black, curly hair sits on his head in a fluffy column. Two watery dark eyes blink at me, obscured by his glasses.

“You must be Gage’s new customer! The one who’s in town for the wedding?”

“Yeah—wow. How did you know?”

His thin face widens with a warm smile. “Word travels fast. Are you staying in town for long?”

“Um—just for the wedding, but I might stay longer.”

“I heard your car will take a few weeks to be repaired.”

Sighing, I adjust my basket to my side. “Yeah. There's a chance I'll be here for a while.”

“Perfect! Well, I’m George. It’s wonderful to meet you. Always nice to see someone new in town.”

“I’m Olivia,” I say after clearing my throat. “It’s nice to meet you.”

“Hopefully your car won’t take too long to fix. I know dealing with Gage can be—ah—challenging.”

“Well, he’s not the warmest person in the world.”

“Just don’t take his attitude personally. He doesn’t have a lot of friends because he treats everyone the same way.”

“Why is he such a jerk?”

A sad smile curves into his cheeks. “I can’t speak for him, but he’s had a rough go at life.”

So the rugged mechanic has an angsty past? I’m almost curious enough to ask, but it feels wrong to pry.

I’m saved the indecision of asking more about him when George slides a newspaper off his stack and hands it to me.

“This is my weekly newsletter. Feel free to flip through it!”

My eyes widen as I take in the bold headline: ILLUMINATI IN YOSEMITE: AN EXPOSÉ. Underneath is a black-and-white photo of a forest and a badly photoshopped Illuminati symbol, hovering in the sky. Similar insane headlines are littered throughout the paper, GOVERNMENT MIND CONTROL PESTICIDES and KGB AGENTS AMONG US.

“Uh, is this a joke?”

Given the fervor shining from George’s eyes, it’s definitely not. He laughs and seems to take it in stride. “It’s no joke. My newspaper has the most subscribers in Fair Oaks. The only one that comes close is Mary Weather’s birdwatching newsletter.” A shadow descends over his features as he twists his thumbs. Damn that Mary Weather and her pesky competition.

What the hell am I supposed to say to Illuminati in Yosemite? Biting back a grin, I look at him. “Wow. Well, thank you.”

“You’re very welcome, Olivia. Don’t forget my wife’s weekly crockpot recipe. It’s on the last page! It’s peach cobbler.”

A conspiracy theorist newsletter with a recipe section. I try not to laugh as George waves at me and approaches other customers. At the very least, it’ll be interesting reading.

An older woman in line leans toward me. “Don’t mind George. He’s eccentric but harmless. I’m Trudy, by the way.”

Her pruned hand feels like soft leather as I take it. “I’m Olivia. Oh, don’t worry. I didn’t think he was…” A complete psycho? Dangerous? I trail off, but she nods.

She lowers her voice to a stage whisper. “Everybody in town subscribes to his newsletter to get his wife’s crockpot recipes. She makes the best chili. Wins every year at the chili cook-off, and it’s been six years in a row, now. I’m hoping one of these days she’ll slip and reveal one of her secrets.”

Another voice down the line chimes in. “I read it because I like her recipes.”

“Everyone does.” Trudy glares at the man behind us who spoke up.

“Does he know everyone reads the newsletter for the recipes only?”

God, no! The poor dear. It would hurt his feelings.” She turns around when the line moves, and I tuck the newspaper in my purse.

What a quirky little town. They even have their own conspiracy theorist. I watch as the cashier greets every customer by their first name. It takes about ten minutes for me to get to the register with all the chitchat and how-are-yous. Fair Oaks couldn’t be more different from the hustle and bustle of San Francisco. I couldn’t even tell you my neighbors’ names. And I’ve been living in that building for over a year. With Mark. A chill spider-crawls down my spine as I think of my phone on the nightstand, blazing with a million text messages.

The moment I stepped inside our apartment and heard a soft giggle, I knew. And yet I climbed those steps anyway. They left a trail of clothing on their way to our bedroom. I saw tangled limbs. Smelled the stench of sex—another woman’s perfume all over my sheets. Then I turned on my heel, picked up the suitcases I’d already packed, and left. They didn’t even notice me.

And you know what I felt?

All I could think about was the social media project at work for a celebrity’s shoe line. I thought about the drive here. I thought about a stubborn spot that just wouldn’t wash out of my jeans. I screamed my head off in the car to Queen, but I didn’t shed a damn tear. And I knew I never would.

I don’t care.

The table at the Airbnb rattles as I slam the wine bottle down, glaring at the four walls of this place. Unanswered emails from work blink at me from the phone.

Fuck. It. All.

I pull out the conspiracy theory newsletter and burst out laughing at the headline again. Maybe after dinner I’d read this thing with a glass of wine. When was the last time I’d actually read something for fun? Too long. And while I’m here, there won’t be any distractions. No work. No Mark. Nothing but peace and

Someone knocks.

Damn it. Who is it?

It takes two seconds for me to cross the room and open the door to one of the most stunning men I’ve ever seen.

“Hello, welcome t—ah.” Recognition dawns on his handsome face.

Oh my God. It’s him.

“Well, well, well,” he chimes. “San Francisco.”

The mechanic is standing at my front door. Wearing clothes, thankfully. He wears a plaid flannel shirt, all the grease washed from his body, his black hair slightly damp from the shower. A clean pair of jeans covers what I imagine are toned, muscular legs. Damn. If he wasn’t hot half-naked with the oil running down his chiseled pecs as though I unwittingly strolled onto a porn set, he sure as hell is now. He runs a hand through his hair, his smile widening.

I am not happy to see him. “Did you come down here to lecture me about something else wrong with my car?”

No

“Then save it. I’m in no mood to talk to you.”

A deep sound rumbles from the back of his throat. “That’s no way to speak to your new landlord.”

Landlord? “What the hell are you talking about?”

“I own the place,” he says, eyes glittering. “And I came here, San Francisco, to invite you to the town. Give you a tour of the amenities. The wifi password. I know you definitely want that.”

Oh God. He’s the owner. I’ll see him every day. Heat runs up my back. The more I look at him, the more it smolders.

I’m trembling. I don’t get nervous around men. When I open my mouth, my words stumble over themselves. “My name is Olivia. I’d appreciate it if you called me by my name.”

“Look, sweetheart

Olivia.”

“I’m not some pushover, all right? If you wanted the five-star treatment, you should have booked another place.”

“There literally was no other place! You think I wanted to come here? You have more one-stars than that new Twilight book!”

His brows furrow. “What the fuck is twilight?”

“It’s a book about—oh God—why am I even talking to you about this?”

“I know for a fact you need a place to stay for a few weeks.”

Might need.”

The smile he gives me sends my heart flipping. “Whatever. You’re in no hurry to head home, for whatever reason. And like you said, I’m the only available option.”

“Why do I get the feeling this is leading up to something bad?”

The grin turns feral. “‘Cause you have a nasty mind. You help me, and I’ll let you stay here.”

With what?”

“I have a job for you, but if it blows…” he lifts his shoulder in a shrug.

My chest tightens at the word. “Blows?”

“Yeah, if you suck at the job.” A small smile plays on his lips.

Then it clicks into place. “You’re disgusting.”

The bastard leans on the side of the threshold, the picture of calm. “Careful, sweetheart. Your voice is carrying into the street.”

“You can blow yourself.”

I start closing the door, but Gage lets out a roar of laughter so loud that I take a step back in shock. The floor trembles with his voice, and he even drags a knuckle under his eyes to wipe away tears of mirth.

“That is not what I meant. Jesus.”

“It so is. Do not deny it!” My face starts to burn.

He shakes his head, still chuckling. “Damn, girl. When was the last time you got laid?”

The air freezes inside my chest as Gage takes one giant step inside. My heart hammers as his swaggering presence fills the small studio. Then my knees are knocked out from under me as I back into the bed, sitting down. The heat from humiliation smolders into a different sort of burn as Gage approaches, close enough for me to smell him. Irish Spring.

He touches my shoulders, fingers grinding into my skin to lift me up. Even though it’s a violation, a stunning bolt hits my brain, and I’m unable to think. I can’t look away from his eyes, as blue as the ocean at night. How long has it been?

“That’s none of your

“Has it been so long that you’re starting to see cocks everywhere? I say blow, and you think about oral.”

Shut up.”

I try shoving him, but he’s like solid rock. He retreats back a step, smiling. “I was saying that you could do a few things for me. Like de-weed the garden.”

I glance through one of the windows. There’s no garden. It’s a giant lawn. “Are you kidding me?”

He gazes at his fingernails, suddenly looking bored. “Or I could, you know, just throw you out. With everything booked, you’d have no place to stay.”

“You really are a jerk.”

“So I’ve been told,” he drawls.

“No wonder people in town warned me about you.”

Gage turns his back on me as he walks toward the door. “You’re going to have to get your hands dirty, city girl.” Then he gives me a look over his shoulder. “Not in the way you want.”

Bastard.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, C.M. Steele, Jordan Silver, Bella Forrest, Madison Faye, Jenika Snow, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Dale Mayer, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Piper Davenport, Penny Wylder,

Random Novels

Auctioned to Him 4: His Addiction by Charlotte Byrd

The Redeemable Part Four by Grace McGinty

The Christmas Stranger by Campbell, Anna

Edge of Insanity by S. E. Smith

Give Me Your Hand by Megan Abbott

A Real Man: Volume Four by Jenika Snow

His Dirty Virgin (The Virgin Pact Book 3) by Jessa James

Hellcat (Age of Night Book 6) by May Sage

Within Six Months (A Wild Roses Novel Book 1) by Cleo Scornavacca

Rock Me by Phillips, Carly

Stripped Bare: A Vegas Billionaire Novel by Heidi McLaughlin

August (Blue Belles Investigations Book 1) by Tee Smith

The Prince's Triplet Baby Surprise - A Multiple Baby Royal Romance (More Than He Bargained For Book 8) by Holly Rayner

Scars Like Wings (A FAIRY TALE LIFE Book 4) by C. B. Stagg

First Time with the Major by Mia Ford

Dallas Fire & Rescue: From the Ashes (Kindle Worlds Novella) (Lone Star Shifters Book 3) by Dawn Montgomery

Black Bird of the Gallows by Meg Kassel

Blood Moon Dragon (Dragon Investigators Book 2) by Shelley Munro

King's Fancy (Wild West Book 1) by Sable Hunter

Mating Bite by Cynthia Eden