Naughty, But Nice. Jill Shalvis

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Naughty, But Nice - Jill Shalvis

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She got up and fed the ingrate. Then, using both pillows now, she settled back on the bed against the headboard.

      The sound of a roaring truck ruined her peace, and she went to the window. The trash truck. Now there was a job. The guy on the back of the truck hopped off at her neighbor’s house and hoisted the cans. He had a slouch and a gut and…and it was Biff. In an instinctive gesture she backed from the window. Assessed how she felt.

      And grinned. There had to be some justice in the world if she—a Tremaine—was living on Lilac Hill and Biff—former star football player—was collecting her trash.

      She called Kate, who’d appreciate the irony.

      “Kate, Biff is the trash guy,” she said when her cousin picked up the phone. “And he’s not even the driver. He picks up the trash.”

      “Perfect job for him, I’d say.”

      Oh, yeah, she could count on Kate. “I’m sprawled on the most luxuriously silk-covered bed in a luxurious bedroom surrounded by the most amazing, luxurious house. Can you believe it? My mother lived like a queen after I was gone.” And because it felt good, so good to relax, she arched her neck.

      “My God,” Cassie murmured.

      “What? A spider?”

      She stared at herself in the mirror framed above the bed. She’d seen the mirrors before now, of course, but they were still a shock. She studied herself dispassionately. Her body was barely covered in azure-blue imported silk, showing off her full breasts and the belly that didn’t look quite as flat as it should for a lingerie model. With a grimace, she tossed the cookies aside. “No, it’s just this place. The garage is full of furniture from the duplex and my mother has mirrored ceilings.”

      Kate let out a startled laugh. “Well, we always knew Flo wasn’t a prude.”

      Funny how even though Cassie knew exactly who and what Flo was—a woman unable to resist a man, any man at all—when it came right down to it, it was hard to picture her own mother having sex on this bed and enjoying the view from above. “You realize I’m on Lilac Hill, right? Lilac Hill. My fancy neighbors would have a coronary at the secrets this bedroom holds.”

      “I imagine that was part of the fun for her.”

      Ever the voice of reason, her Kate. Despite Kate’s own demons, she’d always helped Cassie see things differently. And more importantly, she made Cassie smile. “Flo did enjoy a good scandal. But Lilac Hill, for God’s sake.” The place that as children they’d stared at enviously, fantasized over. “I feel like I fell down the rabbit hole.”

      “You deserve it,” Kate said with a sudden fierceness in her voice. “Both of you. You’ve worked so hard all your lives, and now Flo is sailing the Greek Islands and you’re a world-famous lingerie model. You both paid your dues for so many years. You’re supposed to enjoy this.”

      “But I miss work.” Cassie sighed. “The photo shoot I bailed on this week was in the Bahamas.”

      “Which is where your stalker was going to meet you. Isn’t that what the last threat said?”

      Yes, but she didn’t want to go there. She so didn’t want to go there. “So I’m here. In a house my mother never paid for.”

      “Of course she did. She loved…who was it—Mr. Miller the banker, right?—and he cared enough about her to give it to her. Just like Mr. McIntyre, who left her that building downtown.” She laughed. “I bet Mrs. McIntyre is spitting nails over that.”

      “Oh, yeah. If looks could kill, I’d be six feet under. Which reminds me.” Cassie took a deep breath. “I have some ideas.” She sat up because she had to be careful how she phrased this. After all, Kate was a Tremaine, which meant that like Cassie, she had more pride than sense when it came to accepting help. “You said you were ready to open another shop.”

      “I said I wanted to open another shop, I never said I would open another shop. Successful as I’ve been in Chicago, I don’t have the money for that yet.”

      “I know. But I do.”

      “I’m not taking any more of your money. I just paid back the start-up loan you gave me for the first Bare Essentials.”

      “I’m not talking money, per se. I want you to take the building, the old men’s store that Flo inherited from horny old McIntyre.”

      “No.”

      “Kate.”

      “Cassie.”

      Cassie had to laugh at Kate’s calm annoyance. “Stop it. I have an ulterior motive.”

      “If you want a new toy, all you have to do is ask. We just stocked up.”

      “Hey, I still have Mr. Pink that you bought me for Christmas and I just loaded up on batteries, thank you very much.”

      Miss Priss leapt back onto the bed, and with one long daring glare, she settled at Cassie’s head.

      “If I wake up with a fur ball lodged in my throat, you’re dead meat,” Cassie told the snooty cat. “And you,” she said to her cousin, “will you listen to me for a moment?”

      “You got one minute. Fifty-nine, fifty-eight, fifty-seven…you’d better hurry.”

      “Should have been a comic, Kate. Listen, I want you to have the building because it feels right. I don’t know what to do with it, and it’s just sitting there going to waste. Besides, it’s right downtown. Right smack in the middle of downtown…are you following me here?”

      “Let me see if I am…you see Bare Essentials, basically a very naughty ladies’ store—”

      “One which sells a most excellent dildo, I might add.”

      “Thank you. You see Bare Essentials fitting right in with the Rose Café and the five-and-dime.”

      “Why not? This town could use some spice.”

      “More than having their wild child come home?”

      “Hey, they made me this way. Come on, say yes. It’s on our lists of things to do…”

      “Cassie.” Kate laughed. “Those lists were written by bitter teenagers.”

      “So?”

      “So…it’s not that easy. I was just there, I don’t want to move back to that place any more than you want to be there.”

      Cassie flopped back on the bed and stared at herself in the ceiling mirror. Her agent had cleared her schedule for the entire summer and it was only early June. The police and her friends had convinced her that a low profile would be best.

      She knew that to be true. No matter her outwardly brave facade and joking, cynical manner, she hated the fear, the terror. Because of it, she sat in Pleasantville with no one but a mean old cat for company and nothing to do but pay her moving violations.

      Oh, and stare at the sheriff’s ass. It was a mighty fine ass, but that simply wasn’t

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