Author: Lynnette Austin
Publisher: Sourcebooks Casablanca
Date of publication: June 2018
This baby's not the only one in need of a cuddle…
Brant Wylder is a bachelor and loving it! He's in Misty Bottoms, Georgia, property-hunting for his vintage car repair shop when he gets the call. His sister's been in an accident, and Brant has to drop everything and take care of his five-month-old nephew. That's the end of the bachelor lifestyle.
Bridal boutique owner Molly Stiles is all business all the time, until she sees that Brant's in trouble. In this Southern town, nobody ever has to go it alone. And besides, how can she resist that beautiful baby in the arms of a beautiful man…?
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Enjoy this excerpt:
But a man could look.
“Hey, you still with us?” his elder brother, Tucker, asked.
“Yeah.” Brant tugged at the annoying bow tie.
“Good, because we have a job to do, and so do you,” Tucker said.
“Understood.” Brant met his brother’s gaze. “Chill. This isn’t one
of your Marine reconnaissance missions.”
“No, it’s not. Which means no sniper’s waiting to take a potshot at
you, so stop whining.”
“I’m not whining,” he groused. “This wedding’s a waste of time. I’d
rather go with you to pick up that car.”
“We’ve got it covered.” His younger brother, Gaven, slipped into the
rental car. “You’ll check out those places we spotted yesterday, right? See if
one of them will work for us?”
“Absolutely.” His answer was automatic, his attention on the petite
bridesmaid he’d escorted down the aisle. The woman was so drop-dead gorgeous,
she made his palms sweat.
“It’s important,” Tucker reminded him.
“Yep.” Brant eyed his watch. “That plane’s gonna leave with or
without you two.”
Gaven started the car’s engine.
Riding shotgun, Tucker rested a tattooed arm on his open window.
“Sure glad it’s dark. Anybody sees us in this four-door, plain-vanilla, sorry
excuse for a car, our reputation’s shot.”
Brant laughed. “Drive safe.” He tapped the car’s roof, then took
several steps back as it headed down the winding, oak-lined drive.
The taillights disappeared, and he was alone.
Well, as alone as he could be with a hundred and some other people.
Resigned, Brant turned back to the wedding reception. Because the
temperature was in the balmy midsixties, unusual for January even here in
Georgia’s Low Country, Magnolia House’s massive front door stood open. Light,
conversation, and laughter spilled onto the restored antebellum home’s front
porch.
At the bar, he ordered a club soda with a twist of lime and, popping
cashews, chatted with a friend of the groom’s. All the while, he kept the
brunette front and center on his radar.
She threaded her way through the small clusters of guests, paused to
speak to several, then plucked a grilled shrimp kebab and a napkin from a
passing waiter’s tray. Raising the appetizer to her Kewpie-doll lips, she
headed outside. Alone.
Brant set his nearly untouched drink on the bar and nodded to his
new pal. “You decide you want us to do something with that ’72 Chevy Chevelle,
give me a call.”
Casually, he crossed the room and stepped into the night. Molly had
wandered to the edge of the large front yard and stood in a pool of moonlight.
The two of them had bumped into each other twice now, and she stirred up
feelings in him—feelings he had no time for, yet itched to explore.
For such a petite thing, the lady had curves. Shiny, coffee-colored
hair curled halfway down her back, and his fingers practically begged to mess
it up. She smelled sexy as sin on a dark night and all but made a guy drool. Her
pale pink, bee-stung lips cried out to be kissed…but instinct warned him Molly could
be dangerous. Very dangerous.
Brant ran a finger under his bow tie again and swore beneath his
breath.
He felt restless. Last night, he’d driven through town a little
after eight. It had been quiet, buttoned-down, and locked up tight. The carpet
rolled up early in Misty Bottoms, Georgia. He could live with that.
Good thing, because if things worked out right, he’d be spending a
lot more time here. But right now? Instead of hanging around Magnolia House in
this monkey suit, he could be flying off to Texas with his brothers or at their
garage in Tennessee in his old jeans, replacing a clutch in the ’48 Chevy they were
restoring. Heck, for what the daddy of today’s bride had shelled out, Brant
figured he could rescue a whole fleet of cars.
Music drifted on the soft night air and entwined with the scent of
roses and jasmine. Muted voices rose and fell. He slipped a hand into the
pocket of his tux pants and, feet crossed, leaned against one of the massive
columns. Life had been bumpy lately, but at this moment, it was pretty darn good.
A full moon added its magic to the star-filled Southern sky. As he
picked out several constellations, he imagined even the seated queen,
Cassiopeia, danced tonight with Orion, the hunter. No doubt every single woman here
had hearts, flowers, and wedding rings on the brain. It tended to make a single
man nervous.
Even so, he’d see if he could sweet-talk himself into a dance or two
with sexy-as-all-get-out Molly.
At his previous wedding here, she’d tried her darnedest to escape
the rush of single women desperate to nab the bridal bouquet. Now, she stood
beneath a magnolia tree, her face tipped to catch the moonlight. The breath
caught in his throat, and for one fanciful second, Brant imagined a mythical
princess or fairy.
He shook his head. The woman was real, and he wanted a dance, wanted
to hold her in his arms. A little flirting? Harmless.
Stepping out of the shadows, he made his way to her. “How about a
dance?” Holding out a hand, he tipped his head toward the temporary dance floor
in the backyard.
She hesitated.
“I’m not asking for a lifelong commitment, sugar. Just a single
dance under the stars.”
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