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Not Her Real Fiance
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Not Her Real Fiancé
Carter’s Cove Sweet Beach Romance, Book 4
Elana Johnson
Contents
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Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Sneak Peek! She Loves Him…Not Chapter One
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Chapter One
Bradley Keith positioned the hardhat on his head, the construction site before him like a breath of fresh air. He loved the scent of concrete dust combined with the salty air only found on the island of Carter’s Cove.
He’d been back in town for a few years now, and gratitude for this hometown project spread through him. Sometimes his jobs took him all over the South, and it was nice to have a construction site just down the road from where he lived.
The Heartwood Inn was the premier destination on the island, and they wanted another pool on the second floor for their VIP guests.
The floor was relatively quiet, as most of their conference center space sat on this floor, along with two huge ballrooms where the rich and famous booked their weddings. Brad knew, because his once-fiancée had booked their marriage-to-be right here at the inn. Thankfully, Emily had called off the wedding before Brad had had to do it.
“Where are we with the tiles?” he asked his floor supervisor.
James sighed. “They’re delayed out of Atlanta. Apparently they’ve had some thunderstorms down there.”
“Surprise, surprise,” Brad muttered. He hated Atlanta, though he’d lived there for a few years. Started his construction business there, too. Maybe that was why he held such antagonistic feelings toward the city.
Because he’d almost lost everything there too, thanks to another fiancée that hadn’t become his wife. And he had been the one to tell Tamara that the relationship wasn’t going to work out between them.
That single act had caused him to lose his biggest financial backer—Tamara’s father.
He wiped the memories from his mind as he surveyed what looked like one big hole in the cement. “Is she cured?”
“Yep,” James said. “We just need those tiles. I have the guys working on the floor today. That’ll be the second coat. We’ll do the walls while we wait. And the floor tiles are in.”
“They are? Show me those.” Brad glanced at his clipboard as he followed James through the construction site. A couple of men worked in the dressing rooms too, where the white subway tiles had gone in last week.
Brad felt like his whole life had been consumed by tiles. But when building an indoor swimming pool, that was kind of how things went.
“How was your date the other night?” James asked, stepping past a workbench filled with power tools.
“Oh, uh.” Brad heaved another sigh. “I don’t think I’m going to be seeing Carmen again.” Anyone for that matter, but especially Carmen. He didn’t date journalists, for one, and if he’d known who she was, he never would’ve agreed to go out with her. Number two, she hadn’t really seemed interested in him, but in getting a story on him. And number three, she had the power to reduce him to ashes with a few strokes on her keyboard.
No, thank you. He’d left that high-profile life—but he hadn’t been able to get out of the restaurant without a reason why he couldn’t date her. He squirmed in his own skin just thinking about what he’d told her to get out of going on a second date with her.
“Why not?”
“I’m just not into the dating scene here,” he said. “I grew up here, you know?”
“So? What does that have to do with anything?” James stopped in front of a stack of boxes. “These are the floor tiles for the pool surround.”
Brad proceeded to cut through the tape on the top box to reveal—“These are red,” he said.
“No.” James frowned. “Didn’t we order gray?”
“We sure did.” Brad pulled one of the twelve-inch square tiles out of the box. “This is definitely red.” He lifted the burnt orange tile almost above his head, wanting to smash it at his feet.
James made a sound like a leaking balloon, and he pulled his phone out of his back pocket. “I’ll call them. Do you have the form?”
Brad did…somewhere. He looked at his clipboard and started flipping the papers attached there. “What was the name of the company again?” The letters in front of him blurred and rearranged themselves into nonsensical formations.
“Castle-something,” James said.
A big C caught his attention, and he pulled that paper out of the top clasp. “I think this is it.” No one knew about his reading struggles, and he’d managed to restart his business without help from anyone. Spending seventeen years playing professional football had allowed him certain…luxuries.
He’d returned to Carter’s Cove, as there always seemed to be some sort of development going on here, and he’d managed to make a decent living the past few years.
“So you don’t want to go out with Kelly,” James said, looking at the paper.
“No,” Brad said. “I’m not going out with anyone anymore.” He’d been engaged twice, and he was thinking maybe he’d just stay married to his business, the way Tamara had claimed he already was.
Plus, at age forty-seven, he wasn’t exactly in the prime years of his life for swimming in the dating pool. James had been the one to set him up with Emily here on the island, and in fact, every date Brad had been on once he’d re-established himself her in Carter’s Cove had been set up by James.
“You could be missing out,” James said, turning away a moment later with, “Yes, this is James Long with Keith Construction. We ordered….” His voice faded out, and Brad let him go.
He wandered out of the dressing room and back into the main pool area, where a few other people worked. He didn’t have a huge construction firm, but he knew plenty of people, and when he got hired on a big job, he could bring the manpower.
He loved the beach, but he had a sudden longing to travel to Lexington, where he’d spent summers growing up on his grandfather’s horse farm.
He’d lived a good life for his forty-seven years, even if he didn’t have a wife and kids to show for it.
You might be missing out rang in his ears, but he scoffed them away. James didn’t know what he was talking about. He couldn’t even set Brad up with someone even remotely compatible with him, and they’d been friends for five years.
A feminine form moved past the plastic separating the construction site from the rest of the hotel, and Brad turned away from the woman. Instant heat shot to his face, reminding him that even forty-seven-year-olds had hormones.
But Celeste Heartwood was one thousand percent off-limits. Not only was she completely out of his league, what with her pencil skirts and professionally pressed blouses—and those heels. Wow, Brad liked those heels that woman wore—but she knew she was out of his league.
“Did you hear me?”
“What?” Brad spun aw
ay from the plastic, where Celeste had been. She wasn’t even there anymore, and foolishness hit Brad right between his ribs.
“They’re putting a rush on the right tile,” James said. “It should be here by the end of the week.”
“Great,” Brad said. “Great.” He took a deep breath, wondering where he’d been on his to-do list for that morning before thoughts of Celeste had distracted him.
“Are you going down to South Port today?” James asked.
“Yes,” Brad said, seizing onto the topic. “I do need to go down there.”
“Okay, so—” He cut off so suddenly that Brad looked at him only to find him staring at something straight ahead. He followed his gaze to see Carmen Lunt standing there.
His stomach dropped to his boots, and whatever James said didn’t register in Brad’s ears. All he could see was that fiery Latina stalking toward him. She said something in rapid Spanish that Brad knew enough to translate into something bad, and then she arrived in front of him.
“You said you were engaged?” The words echoed throughout the entire construction site, as it was mostly cement and very open.
“You said what?” James asked.
“I am,” Brad said, his voice a little weaker than he’d like it to be.
“To who?” Carmen folded her arms and cocked one hip. Her head bobbled like one of those dolls, daring him to lie to her again.
He could see the headlines now…. He felt like he was falling for a moment, and his own name left his mind. Celeste walked by the plastic again, causing it to flutter, and he seized onto the idea. “Celeste Heartwood,” he said. “There she is. Excuse me.” He ducked around Carmen and jogged toward the plastic.
He’d known Celeste’s family growing up, though he was quite a bit older than the woman herself. Olympia, her older sister, was probably five years younger than him, and Brad had competed in the surfing championship right here at the inn before he’d been drafted into professional football and shipped all over the country.
He’d spent the most time down in Florida, playing for the Falcons, where he’d ended his career after eight years there.
“Celeste,” he called after her once he’d freed himself from the construction site. She turned back, surprise in those gorgeous eyes as she paused right outside her office door.
Gorgeous eyes? Where had that come from?
“Hey.” He chuckled as he jogged up to her. “Can I talk to you? For a minute?” He glanced over his shoulder and back toward the construction site. James and Carmen hadn’t emerged yet. She was his next-door neighbor, so maybe he was trying to calm her down.
Brad could hope and pray, and he needed a solution—fast.
“I suppose,” Celeste said, confusion on her face.
“Great.” He reached past her and twisted her doorknob, pushing the door in so she’d enter. Another quick look over his shoulder told him that he had maybe thirty seconds inside this office, as Carmen stood there, watching them now.
Celeste either didn’t care or didn’t see her, because she entered her office, one hand on the door while he followed. She closed the door and asked, “What’s going on? Is there a problem with the construction? I can get the manager—”
“There’s no problem with the construction.” Brad pulled himself out of the situation and put himself on the football field. Sure, he’d retired from the league eight years ago, but he’d never focused better than when playing football.
And he needed to focus now, on the right things. Not Celeste’s very feminine form, with all these curves and swells in the right place. Not her very pink lips that called to his male side. Not the pale blue eyes and the softly curled blonde hair that begged him to run his hands through it moments before he kissed her so completely that he’d forget the look of disdain on her face.
He really needed to get control of his thoughts, because he would never be with this woman.
“I said,” she said. “What’s the problem?”
“Oh, uh.” He glanced behind him. “I need a favor, and I’m afraid I need it right now.”
Carmen knocked on the door, a string of muffled Spanish following.
“What in the world?” Celeste asked, stepping one of those deliciously heeled feet toward the door.
Brad jumped in front of her. “I need you to say you’re my fiancée.”
Her eyes flew to his, wide and scared. Scared? Was that right?
Alarmed, for sure. Surprised. And yes, a little scared.
“Just tell her,” he said. “Please, Celeste. It’ll just be for the next ten minutes, and I just—” His voice got covered by louder knocking.
Pure desperation pulled through him, and he had no idea what he’d do if she said no.
She jumped as the door rattled in the frame as Carmen beat on it. She looked from it to him and tugged on the bottom of her blouse. It was pure white, with tiny pink palm trees on it, and Brad had a brief flash of the two of them lying on the sand, under some palm trees together.
“I’ll take care of this,” Celeste said, reaching for the door handle.
But that hadn’t exactly answered Brad’s plea, and he had no idea what she was going to say to the very angry woman on the other side of the door.
Chapter Two
Celeste Heartwood had dealt with many dissatisfied customers over the years. Heck, she could weather a bridezilla in the worst of times, so the scowling woman standing in the hall didn’t even scare her.
Oh, no, that honor belonged to the tall, beautiful man standing half a step behind her.
Bradley Keith, starting tight end for the Florida Falcons until a few years ago. Five, six, Celeste wasn’t sure. She didn’t really follow football, but he was the hometown hero, and she was well-connected around the island, so she couldn’t avoid every bit of gossip about the man.
When she’d learned it was his construction firm heading up the pool project, she’d been glad for the piece of plastic that kept his powerful presence contained. He’d never been interested in much to do with Carter’s Cove, and the proposal she’d put in to his construction firm for an outdoor wedding hall at the inn had gone unanswered.
Unanswered, as if the man didn’t have time for anyone on the island where he’d grown up. Why he’d come back was a complete mystery to her.
“Can I help you?” she asked Carmen Lunt, who’d folded her arms.
“Are you engaged to this man?” she demanded.
The last man Celeste had been out with had once been her boyfriend, and she’d hated every minute of it. She didn’t want to keep recycling through her past failures with men, but no one new had come asking for a while. Celeste had certain functions she had to attend for her job, and she couldn’t show up without someone on her arm.
So Boyd and Andre had satisfied those requirements, but little else, and she’d sworn to Gwen she wouldn’t go out with one of them again.
But maybe Bradley….
No, not Bradley, she thought, because he probably answered texts the way he answered business proposals—not at all, and she didn’t need to go through that.
But she knew who Carmen Lunt was—and she would publish something terrible and completely untrue about Bradley in her lame society rag.
“Yes,” she said, stepping back and linking her arm through his. “Do you have a problem with that?” Maybe she’d done it because she didn’t like the look on Carmen’s face. Maybe she could have Bradley for a few weeks. Maybe she just didn’t want Carmen to get the gossip. Or maybe she’d gone insane.
The fire inside Carmen deflated quickly, until the moment turned awkward with the three of them standing there, facing off. She finally looked at Bradley, hissed something in Spanish, and stalked away.
Celeste fell back a step, bumping right into the very solid form of Bradley a bit behind her. “Sorry,” she said, heat filling her whole body.
He moved away from her, collapsing into one of the chairs opposite of her desk. “I’m the one who’s sorry, Celeste. Do you even kn
ow my name?”
“Of course I do,” she said, practically scoffing the words. “You’re Bradley Keith, the famous football star from Carter’s Cove.” She moved around her desk and sat down, her eyes glued to him.
He wore a hardhat that he took off to reveal a mop of dark hair. A beachy breeze could easily tousle that up so that she would have to run her fingers through it and straighten it all out again. Her hands twitched like she’d actually get to do that, and she knew in that moment that she’d truly gone mad.
“So we’re engaged?” she asked when he said nothing.
He watched her with those bright blue eyes, though, almost seeing right through her carefully crafted façade. All the jewelry. All the makeup. All the professional clothes, and the carefully curled hair.
Celeste loved putting all the pieces of herself together to make the very best picture she could. She loved putting forth a good impression, and she liked having people look at her like she had everything figured out.
And when it came to running the events and weddings at The Heartwood Inn, she did. But in her personal life? Celeste felt like a bomb had gone off, and she wasn’t sure where all the pieces of herself had gone.
“Do you speak, Bradley?”
“Yes.” He coughed and sat up straighter. “And it’s just Brad. Only my mother calls me Bradley.”
“Oh, I’ve heard your father talk about you, too,” she said, fully flirting with him now and wondering when the real Celeste Heartwood would come back. “And I’m pretty sure he called you Bradley as well.”
Brad brought out his smile, and Celeste was glad she could get him to do that. She could tame anyone, even the talented football star. “Yeah, okay. But they’re the only ones.”