Wedding Date with the Best Man. Melissa Mcclone

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Wedding Date with the Best Man - Melissa Mcclone страница 2

Wedding Date with the Best Man - Melissa Mcclone Mills & Boon Romance

Скачать книгу

moved here, but it wasn’t the same as all four of them living in San Diego, dishing face-to-face, getting pedicures and going to tea.

      Jayne sank in her chair, feeling as buoyant as a deflated hot air balloon.

      Maybe coming to the teahouse this Saturday afternoon hadn’t been such a good idea. She remembered her first visit, when her then-fiancé’s sisters had thrown Jayne a bridal shower. That ‘welcome to the family’ party seemed like years ago, even though it had been only months.

      So much had changed since then. She touched the bare ring finger on her left hand. So much still hadn’t changed.

      At least not for her.

      Jayne looked down at the silver-rimmed plate containing two golden-brown scones and a dollop of honey butter.

      Too bad she wasn’t hungry.

      Uh-oh. If she weren’t careful she’d soon be hosting a pity party for herself. Jayne sipped her tea to clear her head.

      No sense wallowing in the past.

      Her teacup clinked against the saucer as she placed it on the table.

      So what if memories of her bridal shower with the Strickland sisters were bittersweet? Jayne had other memories, good memories, of subsequent visits here with Alex, Molly and Serena. Her three friends might not be related to Jayne by blood, but she considered them the sisters of her heart. Nothing, not distance or their marriages, would ever change that.

      Determined to make peace with the present and enjoy herself, Jayne removed a library book—the latest offering from a top personal finance guru—from her purse. She opened it to her bookmark: a picturesque postcard with a palm tree arcing over a crescent of sugar-white sand and turquoise water stretching all the way to the horizon.

      A perfect place for a honeymoon, she thought with a twinge of regret.

      No regrets.

      She straightened.

      So what if things hadn’t turned out with Rich Strickland as she’d planned? Because of what had happened—er, hadn’t happened—her three best friends had found the loves of their lives. Jayne could never regret the end of her engagement and the wild weekend with her friends in Las Vegas afterward that had brought romance and so much happiness to the three people who mattered most in her life.

      She flipped over the postcard she’d received two months ago and reread Serena’s loopy, almost whimsical handwriting.

       Jayne

       Having a great time! This trip was the perfect way to celebrate Jonas’ election victory and recoup from campaigning! As soon as we’re home you must come to Las Vegas! I want to see you! Alex and Molly want to see you, too!

       Hope all is well! Miss you!

       Love,

       Serena and Jonas

      The number of exclamation points brought a smile to Jayne’s lips. Serena lived life as if an exclamation point belonged after everything she did, whether at work or play, but she’d found her center with Jonas Benjamin, the newly elected mayor of Las Vegas. He absolutely adored his wife.

       As soon as we’re home you must come to Las Vegas!

      Jayne wanted to see her friends, but she’d been putting off their invitations to visit. Venturing back to the neon-lit city, with its monstrous resorts and hundred-degree-plus temperatures, held little appeal and way too many memories of the time right after the breakup. Hmmm, maybe she could talk them into coming to San Diego instead. Her friends could bring their husbands and show the three men what their lives here had used to be like.

      A life Jayne was still living.

      She placed the postcard next to the plate of scones on the table and adjusted the book in her hands. Happily living, she reminded herself, even if her dreams had been put on hold and she was alone. Again.

      She focused on the page, mentally taking notes on fresh ideas that might help the clients she counseled at the debt management center where she worked. No wonder the book had hit the bestsellers’ list. The author had some great ideas for getting one’s finances under control.

      Several minutes later, the noise level in the teahouse increased exponentially, as if a crowd had entered all at once.

      She looked up from the book, glanced behind her and saw a large group of women standing around and holding presents.

      Her gaze collided with someone she recognized—Savannah Strickland, her ex-fiancé’s youngest sister. A look of disbelief filled Savannah’s hazel eyes before she turned away.

      Was this a birthday party? Perhaps a baby shower for Grace, the oldest sister? Her third child must be due soon.

      Curious, Jayne peeked at the colorfully wrapped presents. No bunnies. No duckies. No baby carriages. A few umbrellas, though.

      Rich’s other sister, Betsy, noticed Jayne, gasped and elbowed her twin, Becca. Both turned bright pink.

      Jayne didn’t understand their embarrassment. Sure this was a little awkward, considering what their brother had done to her, but his sisters weren’t to blame for his…

      Oh, no.

      There she was.

      Every single one of Jayne’s nerve-endings stood at attention with a combination of shock and horror.

      The other woman.

      The reason Jayne was still single and her three friends were now married.

      She forced her gaping mouth closed.

      Jayne had only seen the woman once. At Rich’s apartment. Days before their wedding. A living, breathing Barbie doll in lingerie.

      Today, the woman’s modest Wedgwood-blue dress and smart cap-sleeved white jacket were one hundred and eighty degrees from the black push-up bra with a bow at the center and the lace-trimmed leggings she’d worn at Rich’s place. The pristine white headband securing long, straightened blonde locks was a far cry from the bed-tousled hair that had left no room for misinterpreting what had been going on between two consenting adults.

      But it was her.

      The woman’s flushed cheeks were exactly the same.

      And so were Jayne’s feelings of betrayal.

      Not a baby shower, she realized, stricken to the heart. A wedding shower.

      Rich was getting married, and his sisters were throwing a bridal shower for the woman their brother had cheated on her with.

      Jayne struggled to breathe.

      Look away, she told herself. But, like a moth drawn to a flame, Jayne couldn’t.

      The scene was surreal and eerily familiar. A lot like her own bridal shower.

      Tears

Скачать книгу