Chapter One
THE FACT THAT Beau Simon was supposedly coming to town to pick up his new custom ride had most of New Waterford in a tizzy. Even Marianne Phibbs, who never went anywhere or did anything, had her hair and her nails done.
Her blue-white curls bobbed in the late afternoon sunlight as she made her way out of Fifth Heaven Salon, with every intention of buying a new outfit at Harper’s Boutique. And she didn’t care if there was anything on sale either. Nope. She was willing to part with her hard earned cash, and willing to pay top dollar.
You know, in case she happened to run into Beau Simon.
Betty Jo Barker watched Marianne waddle down the sidewalk as she slid inside her gramps’ old Crown Vic. She turned the key and listened to the rust bucket groan to life before reaching for the air conditioning knob.
Oh. Right. It wasn’t working.
With a sigh Betty pushed her long, damp hair behind her bare shoulders and watched Marianne Phibbs until those blue-white curls disappeared inside the boutique.
The woman was on the wrong side of eighty and acting like a teenager. But then, that’s the kind of power Beau Simon had over women.
“Shit,” she murmured.
The whole town was crazy. Why in hell would Beau Simon come all the way out to New Waterford to pick up his bike when he could have it shipped to LA? It didn’t make sense.
A hint of unease slide through her gut and Betty grimaced.
“Nothing makes sense anymore,” she muttered. At least nothing in Betty’s life did.
But then had it ever?
She glanced to the seat beside her, at the meds tucked away in the little white bag she’d just picked up from the pharmacy. Meds for her dad. Meds for a man who was rapidly going downhill.
It wasn’t fair, but maybe after all the crap she’d pulled, it was exactly what she deserved. At twenty-five she was stuck in a dead end town, caring for a father whom she loved, but a father who barely recognized her. And when he did, she wasn’t so sure he liked her all that much. The only memories he seemed to focus on were the shitty ones.
And Lord knows, Betty was the queen of the shit.
Impatient, she pressed the button on the door and waited for the window to lower. It was mid July and hot as hell, but at least the breeze cooled the sweat on her skin. That was something.
The radio kicked in all of a sudden, blaring an old Doors song, Riders on the Storm, at the same time her cellphone rang out. Betty scooped her cell from inside her purse and glanced at the screen. It was her agent. Or rather, her ex-agent. Again.
Why the hell was he bugging her after months of nothing?
She tossed it back without answering, put the car in gear and pulled away from the curb. She’d barely made it into the road when a horn blasted, tires squealed. Gramp’s car lurched back toward the sidewalk, and the sickening crunch of metal rang in her ears.
For a moment everything went black. The noise from outside receded and she stared ahead, unseeing. Unfeeling. Pretty much the norm for Betty, but considering she’d just been in an accident, what the hell did that say about her?
Marianne Phibbs came running out of the boutique along with several other townsfolk. Betty blinked, and when her vision cleared, she watched them huddle excitedly, whispering and pointing, though not one of them was looking at Betty.
Their attention was behind her and as a tingling sensation spread across her forehead, she decided she better haul ass out of the car and see whose day she’d managed to ruin, other than her own.
She had to tug on the door a bit before it swung open and Betty unfurled her bare legs, noticing the chipped blue nail polish on her toes. It matched the state of her fingers but she really didn’t care. Gone were the days when a weekly pedicure was the norm.
As she swung around, the sun hit her in the face and she had to squint in order to focus. Along the sidewalk, a few more curious souls had ventured into the heat, and Gerry Mason, a local kid who was watering the potted plants that lined the streets, dropped his can and shoved his Detroit Tigers cap back, shaking his head slowly.
An expensive looking car rested up against the back end of the Crown Vic, its black hood gleaming in the late afternoon sun. The windows were tinted a dark hue, and Betty gritted her teeth. It was a BMW. Great. The freaking bumper alone would cost a small fortune to repair.
And she’d have to pay for it. There was no way she’d let it go through Gramps’ insurance. She glanced back at his car. The thing was old and even if he had collision—which she doubted—there would be a deductible.
“Way to go, Betty,” she muttered.
Could this day get any worse?
The door to the black car swung open and she wiped damp palms along her hips, smoothing out her dress. It was strapless, pale blue, and on the short side for New Waterford—she’d grabbed it this morning because it was handy and more importantly clean—but maybe in this situation it would help things. It’s not as if she’d never used her looks when it meant gaining an advantage.
She knew she looked good—she wasn’t vain, some things just were—Betty Jo Barker always looked good. Even with only a hint of gloss on her lips, a brush of mascara on her lashes, and hair that she’d barely brushed.
All of the triplets were exceptional and sure they looked the same, but Betty had always had that ‘extra’ something. A photographer once told her it was the expression in her eyes. She was hot and cold all at once
and for the camera, it was gold.
Or it had been gold until the demons inside her had taken over and she’d fallen into the cliché of drugs and booze and diva behavior. Her career had ended as abruptly as it had begun.
But it didn’t change the fact that Betty had been graced with clear blue eyes, classic bone structure, and a mouth that had been described as porn star perfect. Her face had looked out from magazine covers and billboards. She’d appeared in music videos, snagged the coveted Sports Illustrated Swimsuit cover—twice—and she’d almost made a movie. She’d traveled the world over on the strength of her looks and Betty was used to working it when she needed to.
She thought of her craptastic bank account and grimaced.
She really needed to work this one.
So she stared ahead, smiling through the dull ache that was beginning to spread up her neck and across her forehead. She smiled as if she was standing in front of Francisco, her favorite photographer. She smiled and she worked it.