No Other Way: Sparks in Texas, book 4 Read online
No Other Way
Sparks in Texas, book 4
Mari Carr
Contents
Copyright
No Other Way
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Epilogue
Sparks in Texas
About the Author
Other Titles by Mari Carr
Copyright © 2016 by Mari Carr
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
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No Other Way
When Harley returns home after a year away, her best friends and bandmates, Caleb and Tyson, are there waiting for her. After all, the men have had twelve long months to worry about Harley's real reason for leaving Maris. Shortly after her brother's death, they made a mistake. One that haunts them and keeps them up all night, tossing and turning--with desire. They kissed her. Together.
* * *
Harley left Texas and headed to Florida to mourn her beloved brother, escape her screwed-up parents and to figure out these new feelings she has for Ty and Cal. The three of them grew up together and there was nothing on earth more precious to her than their friendship. So why is she now imagining the three of them doing the horizontal mambo. And what the hell would the guys think if she told them she wanted them both? Would they be willing to throw convention and society's rules to the curb? Or would they force her to choose?
* * *
After years spent in limbo, Harley is ready for an adventure. And it includes love, laughter, skinny-dipping, music and the two men who make her heart dance.
Chapter One
“Well, look what the cat dragged in.”
Harley Mills grinned as she got out of her car. “Hey, Eugene. Good to see you.” She walked around the car as Eugene uncapped the gas tank and started to pump. After a year in Florida, she was used to pumping her own gas. However, in Maris, Texas, the one-pump town came complete with Eugene Barton, who believed in full service only. Mainly because—like his mother, Phyllis—he loved to talk.
“You back to stay?”
She nodded as she gestured to the backseat of her car, loaded with boxes. She wasn’t sure how she’d managed to acquire so much crap in just twelve months, but somewhere along the line, shopping had become therapy.
Eugene finished filling her tank, washed her windshield and thanked her for the cash. She had come prepared. Eugene could do credit, but it took him some time—typically a lot of time—to run it through the machine. Harley was anxious to get back to the farm.
She was saved from further conversation when a phone inside the station started ringing.
“Welcome home!” Eugene shouted as he hustled inside to grab the phone.
Home.
Harley smiled. When she crawled out of Maris last year, she’d been a broken girl, and in her distraught mind, she had wondered if she would ever come back. However, time had a way of healing all wounds, and now she was pretty sure she’d never leave again.
* * *
“Hey, Eugene. I’m making pot roast for dinner. You planning on stopping by?”
Eugene rolled his eyes, grateful his mama couldn’t see him. She’d whack him on the head if she saw him being disrespectful to her. But damn, why did she feel the need to call him every blessed afternoon? He never ate anywhere but her house for dinner, and hadn’t in twenty-eight years. She knew that.
“Yeah, Mama. Closing up here at six. Be there by six-fifteen.”
“Good. Can you stop on the way and pick up some bread from the bakery? I got a hankering for some sourdough. Beverly Sparks makes the best.”
“I’ll grab a loaf for you. Speaking of…guess who’s back in town?” The quickest way to get off the phone with his mother was to feed her gossip. She wouldn’t waste words on him if she thought she had the scoop on something no one else knew.
“Who?”
“Harley Mills.”
“No! Really?”
“Just filled up her tank.”
“She back to stay?”
“Says she is.”
“Hmmm.” His mother digested that information and then did exactly what he expected. “Well, I gotta go. Don’t forget the bread.”
Mama disconnected the phone before Eugene could say goodbye.
* * *
Beverly wiped her hands on her apron when the phone started ringing and smacked her brother-in-law’s hand when he reached for another fresh-from-the-oven chocolate chip cookie. “Dammit, TJ. You’re gonna eat me out of business. Go back to work.”
TJ grinned sheepishly but didn’t bother to move. Instead, he remained where he was, his eyes glued to the tray, letting her know he would simply wait for another opportunity to grab a second cookie when she wasn’t expecting it.
“Louise!” she called out across the shop. “Control your husband.” She would let her sister-in-law deal with TJ. She picked up the phone on the third ring. “Sparks Bakery.”
Beverly closed her eyes, instantly sorry she had answered the phone when she heard Phyllis Barton’s voice. The woman wore her out. Constantly telling tales or, in lieu of anything juicy, complaining about whatever aches and pains she was feeling that day.
“Oh, hey, Phyllis. How are you?”
“You hear who’s back in town?”
Despite the part of her that knew gossiping was bad, Beverly’s interest was instantly piqued. “No. Who?”
“Harley,” Phyllis replied.
“Really? Are you sure?” Beverly asked.
“Is she sure about what?” TJ leaned closer, trying to listen to her conversation. The man was the biggest busybody in town, and he’d no doubt heard her say Phyllis’ name. TJ knew that if he had any serious competition for being Maris’ most shameless gossip, it was Phyllis.
“Shh, TJ,” she admonished as Phyllis explained how Eugene had filled up Harley’s tank and how she had told him she was moving back home.
“Well, isn’t that something?” Beverly replied.
“Isn’t what something?” TJ asked impatiently.
She waved him away and then assured Phyllis she would hold back a loaf of sourdough for her. “I’ll have it ready for Eugene when he gets here,” she promised before saying goodbye.
When she hung up, TJ was still standing next to her.
“Well?” he asked.
Beverly chuckled. “I’ll tell you the gossip if you promise to keep your grubby paws out of my cookies and go back to work.”
“If you give me something juicy, I’ll have a reason to go back to work.”
Beverly thought—as she always did—how lucky TJ was to have the girls. He may own Sparks Barbeque, but it was the Sparks’ girls who kept it running and thriving.
“Harley is back in town.”
TJ’s eyes lit up as if he’d just won the Powerball. “I gotta go.” He turned toward the door—but quickly snatched two more chocolate chip cookies off the tray before hustling out.
“Thomas Junior! You scamp!” Beverly called out as Louise shook her head, not at her husband, but at Beverly.
“You should have known better, Bev,” Louise said as the door closed behind TJ.
Yeah, Beverly thought. I should have.
* * *
 
; Her dad strolled into the restaurant, wiping the last remnants of chocolate from the corners of his lips.
“Aunt Bev is going to start locking you out of that bakery if you don’t stop stealing her cookies. Was that batch for us?” Macie asked.
Sparks Bakery didn’t just operate their own little sales counter; they also supplied all the desserts sold at the restaurant next door. But her dad had a way of eating more than his fair share from both places.
“Naw,” Dad said. “That batch was going in the display case. And I only stole three.”
Macie topped up the bourbon she’d just poured with a splash of Coke and handed it to her cousin, Gia, to deliver to Roger Millhouse.
“Only three?” Macie added, continuing the conversation with her dad. “You must be losing your touch.”
“Needed to get back here. I have some news.”
Macie tried to act impassive, but failed to dim her interest quick enough. Dad grinned, pleased to have sparked her curiosity. Now he’d make her beg for whatever juicy tidbit he claimed to have.
“Oh yeah?” She adopted a casual, bored tone that fooled no one.
“You got some gossip?” Earl asked from his perch at the bar. If Macie could have reached, she would have whacked him on the back of the head.
Never show interest.
That was rule number one with TJ Sparks. If you did, he’d keep you hanging on for hours, simply because he got a kick out of it.
Her dad rubbed his hands together. “That I do. Just learned something very interesting.”
“What’s that?” Coop asked.
Macie sighed. Et tu, Brute?
Hank Cooper, a regular at the restaurant since his wife’s death, should have known better too. He’d been here plenty enough to know how this shit would go down.
“Coop,” she muttered softly.
Coop looked at her, and then chuckled when he realized what he’d done. “There’s something wrong with your family, sweetheart.”
She didn’t take offense. She’d known that since the cradle. “Tell me something I don’t know. And strap yourself in. It’s gonna be a long night.”
Her dad continued to hem and haw, teasing them as his news evolved from something merely of interest to the biggest thing to happen in Maris in months, maybe years. Somewhere along the line, her father’s cronies had convinced TJ to play Twenty Questions as a way of making the revelation.
That was when Macie lost it. “Good God Almighty. Don’t you fellas have anything better to do with your time than to sit in this restaurant, drink beer and tell tales? Don’t your wives want you at home? Don’t you want to be with them?”
The matching looks of horror on the faces of no less than six older retired men answered her question.
Regardless, old man Baxter put it into words. “Good Lord, no. Sparks Barbeque is the reason I’m celebrating my sixtieth anniversary next month. Me and the missus would have split up ages ago if I hadn’t had this oasis to come to.”
Macie laughed loudly. “Jesus. Oasis! This place?”
It wasn’t that she disagreed with the assessment. In her mind, there wasn’t anywhere better on earth than her little spot behind this bar, surrounded by family and friends. Unless, of course, it was Vegas. But she didn’t want to live there. Just see it.
Secretly, she was pleased Baxter loved it as much as she did, and she certainly approved of his description.
The men ignored her outburst and began their game.
“Is the gossip about a male or female?” Earl asked.
“Only yes/no questions,” TJ corrected as the men took turns throwing questions at him.
“Is it about a man?”
TJ shook his head.
“Female?”
He nodded as Macie rolled her eyes. “If it’s not about a male, I think we can assume female, jackass. Way to waste a question.”
Coop chuckled. “Thought you didn’t want to play the game.”
“Shut up, Coop.”
“Somebody having an affair?” Baxter asked.
“No.”
“Somebody movin’ away?”
Dad tilted his head. “No, but that’s close.”
“Someone movin’ back?” Coop asked. Macie lifted her eyebrows at him, but Coop just shrugged and gave her a sheepish grin. “Sorry. Got carried away.”
“Yes,” Dad confirmed.
A woman moving back?
Macie had the answer in an instant. And she agreed with her dad. It was big news. “Harley.”
Her dad sighed and leaned back against his chair. “Dammit, Macie! You’re not supposed to blurt out the answer like that.”
She snorted. “Actually, I’m pretty sure you are. That’s the whole point of the game.”
“What about Harley?” Adele asked, lugging a tray full of food into the dining room from the kitchen.
Macie grinned at her sister. “Apparently, she’s back in town.”
“Harley’s back?” Paige said, following Adele into the dining room. It was as if there was some sort of Bat signal that went up whenever someone had something interesting to tell in Maris. Macie didn’t have a clue how everyone knew, but it felt to her as if more and more people were just suddenly showing up as word of Harley’s return spread.
Unfortunately, despite the sudden influx, the two people Macie wanted to see the most right now hadn’t arrived. Regardless, she kept one eye on the door. They’d be here soon enough—and she’d tackle her dad if she had to, to be the first one to give them the news.
* * *
Tyson hadn’t made it three steps into Sparks Barbeque before he was hit with Macie’s question.
“You hear who’s back in town?”
He wasn’t sure what the answer was, but when every head in the place turned in his direction, it was apparent the good people of Maris were anxious to hear his response.
He shook his head as he approached the bar and claimed a stool next to Chas and one of the guys who worked on his construction crew. From the looks of it, both men had just gotten off work. He smiled and nodded an unspoken hello.
“Nope, Mace. Been at the hospital in Douglas all day, checking on a few patients.”
Macie grinned, and then poured him a draft. Without answering her own question. Damn woman loved drawing out suspense. She’d gotten the annoying habit from her father, who was Tyson’s Uncle TJ.
It drove him nuts when they played this game. Always had.
He took a sip of his beer, pretending he couldn’t care less who’d decided to return to their tiny two-horse town. In truth, he was dog-tired and really wasn’t particularly interested in whatever scrap of gossip she had to spread. “What’s the special tonight?”
She scowled and pursed her lips. “You’re not even a little bit curious?”
He shrugged. “Macie, there are a lot of folks who’ve made it out of this town. I can’t even begin to venture a guess as to which one decided to come back.”
“Harley,” Macie said.
Tyson fought to keep his expression blank. Too many eyes were still pointed in his direction, including Uncle TJ’s, as he walked into the dining room from the kitchen. The look on his uncle’s face told him TJ was pissed he’d missed the opportunity to break the news himself.
“Really?” Tyson asked, trying to adopt a nonchalant tone, but he failed. It came out too anxious.
“Yeah. Eugene filled her tank at the gas station. Said she told him she was back to stay.”
Tyson was supposed to meet Caleb here for dinner. They shared a house on the lake, but the cupboards were bare this week. Neither one of them had had time to hit the grocery store. As such, they’d decided to just hit the restaurant for supper. Groceries would be tomorrow’s problem. Since his dad’s heart attack, Caleb had been pulling longer hours at the Feed and Seed, and as one of only two general practitioners in town, Tyson had learned shortly after opening up shop that illnesses and accidents never took a holiday.
Paige walked into the room from he
r office. His younger sister had no ability for cooking or bartending and, according to his cousins, her waitressing skills left something to be desired as well. However, she was the best math student to ever graduate from Maris High School and she had a knack for business. As such, TJ had declared her office manager, putting her in charge of the books, ordering, scheduling and everything else he hated to do that resembled paperwork.
She made a beeline for him. “Hey, big brother.”
Tyson gave her a quick hug. “Hiya, munchkin.”
“Macie tell you Harley was back in town?”
He nodded. “Yeah, she did.”
“You didn’t know she was coming home?”
“No, Paige. You know I haven’t talked to her in a year.” And he’d missed her like crazy every single second of it.
“I know. I was thinking maybe she called to give you a heads-up. I mean, y’all are only best friends.”
Tyson didn’t blame Harley for keeping her return to Texas a secret. When she’d left, her life had been in total turmoil, something he’d inadvertently added to. It wasn’t like they’d parted on bad terms. She had simply asked him and Caleb for time, and they had given it to her because they knew she needed it. Desperately.
“You going to see her?” Paige asked.
He nodded. “Yeah. I am.” Tyson stood, realizing he didn’t give a shit what anyone thought of his hasty exit. Harley was back in town and he was going to go see her. Let TJ and his cronies make of that what they would.
“Listen, Mace. Put the beer on my tab.”
Macie smiled and gave him a wink. He absentmindedly waved goodbye to a few folks as he dug his cell out of his back pocket. Tapping the number, he waited for Caleb to answer.
“Change of plans, Cal. I’m going to swing by the store to pick you up. Our girl is back in town.”
Chapter Two