Rainy Day Friends Read online



  Mark strode into the room. “If you think I can’t recognize pretend sleeping, you can both think again.”

  If he’d spoken to Lanie in that scary baritone when she’d been the girls’ age, she’d have peed her pants. But his girls squealed and tossed back their covers, and then two bundles flew at him with the now-familiar “Daddy, Daddy, Daddy!” coming from Sam.

  Lanie held her breath, but he caught them both with ease, snuggled them in close, kissed each of them, and then . . . tossed them back onto the bed.

  More squeals and peals of laughter, and Mark covered them both with the blanket.

  “Daddy, Sierra has an owie!” Sam said. “She was playing a game in bed and the iPad fell and hit her in the head.”

  Mark took in the half-inch scratch on Sierra’s forehead. “I can fix that.”

  “You can?” Sam asked while Sierra’s eyes went hopeful.

  Mark walked to the whiteboard on one wall, grabbed a pink marker, and came back to Sierra. He turned the scratch into a lightning bolt.

  Sam shrieked in delight. “Now you’re Harry Potter!” she told Sierra, who jumped up to look in the mirror on the closet door.

  Beaming, happy, they both crawled back into bed.

  Mark sat on the edge of the bed. “Do I even want to know why you left this house alone at night, when the both of you know better?”

  “Daddy, she’s got lip gloss and pretty purple nail polish that sparkles and everything!”

  “She?”

  “The new lady. Lanie.”

  Mark craned his neck toward the door.

  Lanie leapt back out of sight, feeling her face heat. Why was she even still standing there? Horrified and embarrassed, she hurried down the stairs, her chest tight, her pulse in her ears. She’d gotten all the way to the kitchen when Gracie barked.

  “Seriously?” Lanie whispered. “You’re going to be a guard dog now?”

  Gracie jumped up, put her paws on Lanie’s shoulders, and licked her chin.

  “Okay, okay,” Lanie whispered. “We’re friends now, right? Good.” And with that she slid outside. She’d just shut the back door when it opened again.

  She didn’t look. Instead, she picked up her pace but for the second time that night she nearly leapt out of her own skin when a hand settled on her arm and pulled her around.

  Mark.

  “Sorry,” she said, maybe gasped, because she was out of breath from holding her breath. “I wasn’t eavesdropping.” Much.

  “Actually,” he said. “The sorry is on me. They’re insatiably curious.”

  “It’s okay. I like them. No one else has asked me who my third favorite superhero is. They’re . . . cute.” And she was surprised to find that was actually true.

  “They’re something, all right.” Mark gestured her toward the trail, a hand at the small of her back. Not a flirtatious gesture. More like an impatient one.

  “You don’t have to walk me,” she said.

  “You got the two people who mean more to me than anything else on this planet home safe and sound,” he said. “I’m going to return the favor.”

  “I can handle myself.”

  “Of that, I have no doubt,” he said. “But I’m still going to walk you home.”

  “But—”

  “Look,” he said, exasperated. “I’m exhausted. How about we just get this over with.” And then without waiting for an answer, he once again nudged her in the right direction. “Let’s move.”

  “I don’t take orders very well,” she warned. “In fact, I barely take suggestions.”

  She got an almost smile at that and they walked through the night. In silence. At her door, he waited until she opened it to speak.

  “Again,” he said. “Thanks.”

  She met his gaze. “Is it really ‘again’ if it’s the first time you said it?”

  He let out a low laugh and scrubbed a hand over his stubbled jaw. “I’m not very good at this. So you’re . . . okay?”

  It was an odd question. She couldn’t remember the last time someone, anyone, had asked her such a thing. “Why wouldn’t I be?”

  This got her an actual smile. “Are you always so prickly? Or is it something you save for just me?”

  “It might be just you,” she admitted.

  Small smile still on his lips, he nodded. “Good to know. I’ve got to get back. I promised they could tell me a bedtime story.”

  “Isn’t it supposed to be the other way around?”

  “We take turns.” He shook his head. “You know what takes longer than a kid telling a story?”

  She had no idea, so she shook her head.

  “Nothing,” he said and startled a quick laugh out of her. And then before she could recover, he was gone, vanished into the night.

  Fine by her. She crawled back into her bed and this time fell right asleep, although she maybe had a few crazy dreams involving a tall, dark stranger with a bad ’tude and a really great laugh and incredible hands. She had no idea if the incredible hands part was true, but in her dream it definitely was.

  Chapter 3

  Me: What can possibly go wrong, though . . . ?

  Anxiety: I’m glad you asked . . .

  The end of her first week found Lanie at her desk, working on her new designs. Ostensibly. Because what she was really doing was staring out the window at Mark and Holden.

  Their shirts were off, and they were headfirst inside the engine compartment of a tractor, working on . . . something. It didn’t matter what. What mattered was that they were a little hot and sweaty, jeans pulled taut across two incredibly nice asses, and it was an even better view than the lush countryside behind them.

  She was very busy looking at said asses while on the phone with a silk and embroidery screener because Cora wanted the winery to open an apparel shop, and this fell into Lanie’s territory. She was talking about the design she hoped to use and still staring outside—specifically at Mark’s ass—when she realized he’d straightened and was looking right at her.

  Watching her watch him. Brow raised.

  Oh, crap. She ducked low, grimaced, and then peeked out the window. He’d been interrupted by three women. Winery guests, who were all dressed up in pretty sundresses, hats, and heels, looking like a million bucks as they sipped wine and flirted. That they were flirting with the same men Lanie herself had been ogling didn’t ease her annoyance one bit.

  Neither did the fact that Mark laughed at something they said, spoke a few words that made them laugh in return, and that’s when Lanie remembered—she didn’t like him much.

  She was reminding herself of just that when her phone vibrated. It was a frantic text from Mia to come to the employee bathroom.

  Good. Something to do. So she rushed down the hall where she found Mia in the bathroom on her knees praying to the porcelain god.

  “Hangover,” Mia moaned and curled up on the floor. “Drank too much last night. In other news, if you know a guy looking for a slightly alcoholic, psychopath girlfriend who swears too much, eats too much, and will probably try to fight him while drunk, I’m the girl.”

  “Good to know,” Lanie said. “But I’m off men at the moment so I don’t have any guys to recommend you to—in spite of those attractive attributes.”

  Mia laughed and then groaned, holding her head. “Do you have future plans?”

  “Yeah. I’m hoping to see Australia sometime.”

  “No,” Mia said. “Beyond that.”

  “Oh. Lunch?”

  Mia snorted. “I really do like you. I need you to cover for me and take the tour I’m supposed to give in half an hour to a group of fifteen.”

  “Oh no. No, no, no,” Lanie said, horrified at the thought. “I couldn’t possibly give a tour.”

  “Why not? Are you bitchy with people too?”

  “Of course not, I’m a delight.”

  Mia grinned and pointed at her. “You’re doing this.”

  “Okay, first,” Lanie said, pointing back, “I don’t like