Killian Read online



  "That is never going to happen."

  She steps away from the counter – and away from me. She doesn't say anything else until she reaches the door to the front of the store. Then she looks back over her shoulder. "And for your information, I said you were barking up the wrong tree because I have a kid. She's seven years old. So I'm not the Jane to your Tarzan. And I'm definitely not a hook-up. So think about that before you decide whether you really want to keep up with this silly employee thing.”

  9

  Lily

  I storm out of the kitchen, my heart still pounding in my chest. I don’t know what it is about that guy, but I find him equal parts irresistibly sexy and totally repellant.

  The breakfast crowd is gone now, leaving the store quiet. This is usually the time when I go into the kitchen to bake, but I definitely can’t be in the same room with Killian. When he backed me up against the counter just then, I could hardly breathe. My heart raced, beating a million times a minute in my chest, and I swear every brain cell in my head went to mush.

  If Killian had kissed me then, I wouldn’t have stopped him.

  And kissing someone like him – rugged and rough around the edges and pushy and obnoxious – wouldn't be a good thing. Besides, with the way I just blew him off, it’s a matter of seconds before he waltzes out here and quits this whole employee nonsense.

  “Everything work out okay?” Opal asks nonchalantly, but with Opal, nothing is casual. I’ve learned that about her. There’s always something beneath the surface of her innocent questions.

  “Fine,” I say, my voice clipped. "You did not hire that man, did you?"

  Opal raises an eyebrow. "It was a busy morning and that man was kind enough to step in and give me a hand. And if you ask me, you need him."

  “I certainly do not need that ”

  "That extraordinarily handsome man distracting customers in your coffee shop?" Killian's voice, low and deep behind me, sends goose bumps down my arms.

  "Lily was just telling me how much she appreciated your help this morning," Opal says.

  "Fine," I admit. "It was nice to have an extra pair of hands here."

  "Then I accept," Killian says.

  "You accept what?"

  "Your offer of employment."

  "I didn't make an offer of employment. There's a 'help wanted' sign still in the window for a reason."

  "She has a terrible time accepting help," Killian says to Opal.

  "Child, you have no idea," Opal replies.

  "Traitor." I mutter the word under my breath.

  "Let me show you how to make some of the coffee drinks while Lily bakes. Remember, Lily, you have the cake for the Rogers girl's birthday."

  I groan, momentarily distracted by the birthday cake. Aster Rogers is a brat who's changed her mind three times about her birthday cake . . . after I made them. They're all "test runs" on birthday cakes before the eight-year-old's birthday party, at her mother's insistence. I should be happy they keep reordering cakes, since they’re paying me, but there’s just something about the spoiled girl’s insistence that she wants something different each time that bugs me.

  "Let's get started, ma'am." Killian winks as he steps around me.

  "Oh, sugar, don't ma'am me," Opal chides him. "Makes me feel old. Unless you think I look old. You aren't saying that, are you?"

  Killian chuckles. "You don't look a day over twenty-five, Opal."

  "I knew this one was a keeper the moment I laid eyes on him," Opal declares.

  "Wait a second," I interrupt, my voice hushed because there are still two customers in the store. "I did not say I was hiring Mr. –"

  "Saint," Killian says.

  "That is not your name," I say. Is he just screwing with me? He's as far from saintly as a person can get.

  "Killian Saint." His eyes crinkle at the edges. "Fits, doesn't it?"

  I don't respond to that, because the last thing I need to be thinking about is how un-saintly he is. "I did not say I was hiring you, Mr. Saint. In fact, I think we discussed the fact that a job in a bakery isn't really what you're looking for."

  "Oh, no." Killian looks at me meaningfully. "It's exactly what I'm looking for."

  "I vote yes on hiring Killian," Opal says.

  Killian raises his hand. "That makes two of us."

  "It's a win," Opal decrees.

  "This isn't a democracy," I point out.

  Opal gives me a stern look. “I wasn’t aware it was a fascist dictatorship, either."

  I don’t disguise my groan. Opal is the closest thing I have to a friend in this town, and she’s turning against me. “I don’t know why you’d want to work here."

  Killian looks at me for a long moment, his eyes searching. I half-expect him to say something inappropriate right here in the front of the store, but he doesn’t. Instead, he shrugs. “I’m bored.”

  “It doesn’t pay much."

  “I work for free."

  “You work for free.” I repeat the words flatly. Is he just trying to out-stubborn me? Or is he really going to keep this up just because he thinks he has a shot at getting in my pants? Well, two can play at that game. If he's that stubborn that he wants to work for free, I can call his bluff.

  “I don’t need the money,” Killian explains.

  “So you’re an independently wealthy mountain man, then?”

  “Well, I’m no billionaire.” He pauses for a beat. “I don't have a red room either."

  Did the bearded, gruff, brute of a man just reference an erotic romance novel? I open my mouth to respond, but Opal interrupts before I can. “Go work on the cakes, honey,” she says. “You can get ahead and not be scrambling at the last minute to get Chloe. We’re all set with training.”

  Opal opens the refrigerated case and begins pulling cupcakes out to show Killian the different kinds. “Now we always keep the basic cupcakes every day, but the special flavors rotate, depending on what Lily comes up with.”

  I walk to the kitchen, shaking my head. I can't believe I just let them talk me into hiring Killian Saint.

  The rationalizing part of me kicks into overdrive. It would be nice to have an extra pair of hands around here. And having Killian work here couldn't possibly be worse than the previous front-counter girl, whose work ethic was questionable at best. I’ll just have to keep my libido under control.

  I don’t hear a peep out of Killian or Opal for the next few hours, and I lose myself in baking, mixing the special batches of cupcakes for tomorrow and applying the fondant to my sculpted cake. The Rogers kid wants a mermaid this time – a fully-sculpted three-dimensional mermaid – on top of a cake that’s decorated to look like the ocean, complete with ocean creatures. That’s after the cakes that she already rejected a blue leopard-printed and bejeweled tier cake, and a three-dimensional ballerina cake made to look like a leotard and tutu.

  “I didn’t realize when you said you baked cakes that you were really talking about sculpture." Killian stands just inside the swinging door to the kitchen.

  “They are like sculptures,” I agree.

  “So all of this is cake?” Killian asks. When he walks around to my side of the workspace, my heart skips a beat, all too aware of his proximity to me. Why does he have to smell so damn good? His smell – a hundred percent masculine contrasts with the overly sugar-sweet smells in the kitchen.

  “Not quite. The mermaid is made mostly of marshmallow rice treats and modeling chocolate. She has a PVC pipe frame underneath all of that so the whole thing doesn’t collapse.”

  “Well, fuck.” Killian bends over to examine the cake more closely.

  Hearing this man speak that word sends heat racing through my body, and I clear my throat. Killian doesn’t seem to notice, though. He just stands there, scrutinizing. “It’s not done yet,” I say lamely.

  Of course it’s not done yet, Lily. It’s obvious that it’s not finished. Why do I sound like such an idiot around this guy?

  “What do you do next?” Killian asks. He