The music ended and Lexi stopped moving. “I am not an arrogant ass like you.”
“Did you call me an ass?” he asked humorously. Before she could step away, the music started back up and Stephen pulled Lexi back into his arms. “Uh-uh,” he taunted her, “the music hasn’t stopped, and you don’t want to make a scene by leaving me on the dance floor.”
“You’re such a miserable bastard. Must you make everyone else around you the same?”
“Well, I guess we’ll just have to wait and see.” Stephen twirled her around and dipped her backward. “Get used to seeing more of me, Lexi Pendergrass.”
Chapter 4
Sunday morning, the streets of Southwood appeared to come to a halt. Cars filled the parking lots. As they passed along the bread-box churches with steeples, Stephen searched for one long gold Cadillac, finding it parked in front of her store. His dance with the beauty queen had left him unsatisfied.
For the second morning straight, he had woken up in his pullout bed in his office-slash-bedroom, forgetting he was not a preteen boy with uncontrollable, erection-producing dreams. He needed to get over this odd obsession with Lexi. She hadn’t squirmed enough in his arms Friday night, at least not until he suggested she get used to seeing more of him. Now he couldn’t wait to watch her squirm when he walked through the door. As soon as Nate pulled up beside Lexi’s car, Stephen’s blood began to quicken.
Nate cut off the motor, and before the engine had time to cool down, the girls were out of the car and running toward Grits and Glam Gowns, pressing their faces against the window to peer inside. The leather of the driver’s side seat squeaked, and Nate turned toward him, his left arm cocked on the black leather steering wheel.
“I’ve got this under control,” said Nate. “Find something else to do.”
Silence filled the front seat of the car. A church bell went off somewhere in the distance. Stephen recalled Nate’s eagerness to attend the fair a second night in a row. His brother claimed he wanted to chaperone Philly while she sat in the front of the parade car. Perhaps what Nate wanted to do was catch a glimpse of Lexi. How did Stephen know? Because that was his reason for going to the fair, too. “You’re into Lexi?” Stephen hated to ask, fearing the answer. They never competed for a woman.
“What I am into is this small town. Lexi’s had a hard time here.”
“And you know this how?”
Nate tore his eyes from the glare he held with his brother and stared up ahead. “I repeat,” he sighed, “this is a small town.”
“We came from a small town—” Stephen shrugged, gesturing his hand between the two of them “—on an island, secluded from the world.”
“Villa San Juan is not secluded.” Nate tried not to laugh, pressing his lips together and avoiding eye contact.
“Unless you had a boat or caught the ferry,” said Stephen, glad the tension between them had dissipated, “you were stuck if the bridge went out.”
“Look, all I’m saying is Lexi’s been through a lot, and a lot of people around here won’t let her forget her troubles.”
“Explain to me why we want someone troubled in Philly’s life.” Stephen’s mind grasped the nugget of information. He needed something to shake the feel of her silky skin out of his mind or the scent of her sweet body out of his head.
“If you’re going to act like this, go back to Atlanta.”
“I’m here.”
“What about your house in Berkeley Lake?”
“Just because I didn’t sell my place immediately doesn’t mean I’m not committed to the girls. I told you I’ve already found a place to set up shop here.” He inclined his head toward the shop wedged between Grits and Glam Gowns, and the café.
Nate’s gaze followed, then his mouth dropped open with horror. “What did you do?”
“I made an investment in our future, a future for the girls.” Stephen grinned proudly before manually unlocking the passenger’s side door to step outside into the late-morning heat. Already a cloud of humidity surrounded his frame. He loosened the knot of his yellow-and-gray paisley tie. Perhaps wearing a dark suit today was not the best choice. “You cannot honestly tell me you like working out of the house.”
“Is this about Philly sticking the piece of bologna in the DVD player?”
Stephen chuckled. “No, I am not upset with her for trying to hide a lunch you made. How does anyone mess up a bologna sandwich?”
“We’re not talking about my cooking.”
“Why are you acting so surprised? We need the office space.”
Nate scrambled out of his side and stood in front of Stephen, blocking him from stepping onto the curb. “Remember when I said you need to fix whatever you did wrong? We’re not destitute. We don’t need to continue working for a long while. We’re here to raise our nieces.”
Stephen decided to leave the arguing alone. He listened to the bells over the door until they stopped chiming. The traffic downtown seemed motionless. For a minute, he swore he heard the traffic signal changing colors. In a diner across the street, a few people sat in the window, peering disapprovingly at the newcomer. A few dozen sets of eyes peered out from the drugstore across the street.