Read I Want Candy Online

Authors: Susan Donovan

Tags: #Romance, #Erotica, #General, #Contemporary, #Fiction

I Want Candy (22 page)

BOOK: I Want Candy
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“Shocking,” is how Miller described Gerrall’s behavior. “I fired him on the spot, needless to say.”

Turner couldn’t say he was sad to see Gerrall leave the place.

He craned his neck, searching out Candy’s car. Where the hell was she headed? He might have been three cars behind, but there was no way in hell he’d lose her—all he had to do was follow the cloud of smoke and the rancid odor, now worse than when he’d written her up for an emissions inspection weeks ago. Turner sighed, thinking that the old Chevy was a lot like Candy’s life in general—it needed quality parts and a lot of skilled labor.

“Damn, girl,” Turner mumbled to himself, watching her pull into the Tip Top. Why there, of all places? He just prayed Gerrall wasn’t there for a drop—that would be a little awkward. Turner parked his SUV on the other side of the diesel pumps and waited to see what she’d do.

After a few minutes, Candy exited the car with a large shoulder bag and headed for the entrance. Turner pulled around until his SUV blocked her way to the building. She looked up and shook her head slowly, then tried to walk around his vehicle. Turner got out.

“Candy, please. Just talk to me for a minute.”

“I need to be alone right now, Turner.”

“Really?” Turner heard the snarkiness in his own voice but didn’t feel like hiding it—especially since he’d had enough standing around in the rain for one night. “Because I’d think by this point you’d be good and sick of being alone, handling everything by yourself.” He paused. He ran a hand over his chin as the truth hit him. “I know I am.”

Candy stood clutching her bag, shaking her head as her lips trembled.

He decided she had to be the most bullheaded woman he’d ever laid eyes on, and that was saying something considering he had been married to and raised by two of the most stubborn women God ever created. Turner approached her slowly, then wrapped her tight in his arms and kissed her wet hair. “Just get in my damn truck, okay?” When he felt her body relax and her head nod in surrender, he opened the door and got her settled.

A few minutes later they were parked at the edge of the truck stop lot under a huge old pawpaw tree. Candy was sipping hot coffee with her bag of shower supplies at her feet, snuggled under a blanket Turner had fetched from her car. It nearly broke his heart to see that the Chevy was crammed with everything the girl owned.

The way Candy now sat, hunched over and protective of herself, made Turner think of some kind of exotic, graceful bird nursing a broken wing. He knew her bones were intact. It was her spirit he was worried about.

Turner had asked her several times to tell him what was going on, but she’d remained silent. As frustrating as it was, he had nowhere else he had to be. His cell and radio were on, and save for the call to Cherokee Pines, the night had been quiet.

“You know, Candy, I got all the time in the world, but you’re going to catch pneumonia if you don’t get out of those wet clothes.”

Finally, he got a response. She peered over the rim of her paper cup and looked him up and down. “You’re as wet as me,” she whispered.

“I know. And I’d sure like to get dry. So I’ll tell you what. How about we both drive to my house. It’s only about five minutes from here and you can get a hot shower that you don’t have to share with a gang of female truck drivers, not that I have anything against showering with female truck drivers, per se.”

That got a small smile from her.

“This will be a completely legitimate arrangement, Candy. Just come home and get some rest and we’ll figure this out together.”

She glanced sideways at him, doubt lingering in her eyes. At that instant, with her wet curls plastered to the sides of her face, she looked like she was about seven years old.

“What will people say?”

Turner laughed. “Probably the same shit they said after you kissed me at the counter at Lenny’s today.”

Candy’s eyes went huge. “You heard about that?”

“Of course I did. I hear everything. That was why I was so shocked that I somehow missed the news that you’d left Viv’s house over two weeks ago to stay with your mother! It hacked me off something awful.”

Candy’s brows met in consternation. “Why?”

Turner backtracked, knowing he had to stay cool. He shrugged. “I just wanted to keep an eye on you. Make sure you were all right.”

She nodded. “I appreciate that.”

“Candy. C’mon now. Let’s go home. Enough of this foolishness. We’re grown-ups. I care for you. I am not taking you to my house to get you in bed—although I’d be a damn liar if I said the thought had never crossed my mind, because you know it has—but not tonight. Please. Trust me. Come home with me.”

Turner watched her stare straight out the windshield, the muscles of her jaw working. He figured it was time to play his best card. “I’ve got a wall safe at the house,” he said.

Her head snapped around and her eyes widened in excitement. “Are you serious?”

“Serious as a heart attack.”

But just as quickly as Candy had perked up she scowled again. “Why do you think that would be important to me?”

Turner laughed once more and shook his head. He was still trying to recover from the vision that had greeted him upon arrival at Cherokee Pines earlier that night—Candy’s perfect, round, luscious, snow-white ass covered in a tiny pair of pink panties, sticking right in his face, some kind of money belt contraption secured around the juiciest part of her left thigh. Whatever she had in there she wanted to keep close by. Real close by.

“Oh,” she said, her voice flat. “I guess you saw it.”

“Whatever
it
is, yeah, I saw it, and I figure that anything that important to you should be in a safe and not tied to your thigh. Although don’t get me wrong, I think your thigh would be a fine place to be tied to.” Turner cleared his throat, thinking that might not have come out right.

After Candy stared at him for a moment in bewildered silence, he was sure it hadn’t.

“But you don’t know me,” Candy said, her voice barely above a whisper.

“Huh?” Turner reared his head back. “What’re you talking about, girl? I’ve known you since—”

“I’m a failure,” she said, cutting him off. “I showed up in Bigler with about sixteen dollars to my name and nowhere to go. I lived in my car for a few days before I agreed to stay with Gladys Harbison, which is how I knew I could buy a hot shower at the Tip Top for a dollar-fifty.
That’s
who I am.
That’s
who you’d be taking home with you.” Candy jutted out her chin in challenge.

“And you immediately set about changing that. Which you’ve done. That’s not failure, Candy.”

“I’m greedy and shallow and materialistic.” She sniffed. “I brought Cheri down with me because I kept pushing for more and more success and more and more money! It was my fault we lost everything in the real estate crash. I’m one hundred percent to blame!” Candy emitted a sound that was part wail and part hiccup, and Turner decided to retrieve the small package of tissues from the center console of his SUV.

“Here, darlin’,” he said. “Have you talked to Cheri about this?”

“Oh, sure,” she said with a dismissive wave of her hand. “She told me I’m nuts, that we made decisions on the way up together and we went down together. But that’s a bunch of crap.” Candy grabbed the pack of tissues and began twisting the plastic in her hands. “I transferred to three colleges down in Florida, did you know that, Turner? I owned six houses while I lived down there. I started a bunch of businesses for the sole purpose of selling them—what does that tell you about me?”

Turner shrugged. “That you’re an entrepreneur?”

“Ha!” Candy grabbed a few tissues and blew her nose. “I didn’t care about those businesses. They were stupid! They never helped anyone! All I cared about was the money they made! What I’m trying to tell you is that I’m greedy!”

“Okay,” Turner said. “But you provided a legitimate product or service someone needed, right? It wasn’t like you were out selling drugs or something.”

She grimaced. “My most successful business was a dog poop removal service, okay? Rich people paid money so they didn’t have to bend over and clean up their own damned backyards!”

“Wow,” was all Turner could think to say. “There are companies that do that?”

“And when I sold Doo-Away I had sixteen full-time employees, a fleet of eight cars, and over two hundred and fifty clients so lazy that they’d pay a hundred bucks month to have someone else pick up their dog’s crap!”

Turner laughed. “What a great name,” he said.

Candy cocked her head to the side and produced a smirk. “What I’m telling you is that my businesses weren’t created to save the world. They were created to make me rich. I’m materialistic, like I said.”

“Hey, some of my best friends are capitalists.”

“And I’ve dated a whole bunch of men, but no one for very long,” she said, obviously too far gone to appreciate his sense of humor. “I got bored with them, Turner, that’s what I’m trying to tell you! I’ve never been big on commitment!”

He nodded. “They weren’t right for you, I guess.”

“And my family—my God!” Candy waved her hands around. “You know my mother and I have never been close, and I’m just now understanding what a racist asshole my father was. But here’s the thing, Turner, here’s what you need to know—I was a
coward
! I didn’t stick up for you with Daddy! I didn’t stand up for what I knew was right! Is that the kind of woman you want staying in your house? Is that the kind of woman you want
kissing
you in public?”

“Candy,” he said, reaching out for her hand. “You were a kid. You were scared of your dad. It’s over and done with.”

“I hurt you,” she said, shaking her head, the tears slipping down her cheeks.

“You’ve already apologized. I accepted your apology. It’s done.” Turner squeezed her hand until she raised her eyes to him again. “Anything else you want me to know?”

Candy laughed. “Oh, Lord-ee! Seriously? You can take more?”

Turner smiled and plied a fresh tissue from her clutches to dab at her tears. “I’m a pretty strong man. I can take a lot, darlin’.”

She rolled her eyes. “Okay, well, I should tell you about the thing on my thigh.”

“If you’d like to.”

“I’ve got a bracelet in there.”

“Okay.”

She laughed again. “A really valuable one—over twenty thousand dollars’ worth of pavé diamonds and sapphires in platinum.”

If Candy’s goal had been to shock him, she’d finally done it. Turner felt his jaw unhinge.

“Yeah. That’s what I was trying to tell you—I’m shallow! When Cheri and I were hocking everything to stay alive, I kept it, and I never told her I had it. I just couldn’t part with it. To me it symbolizes everything I ever wanted, it symbolizes success. Sophie is my lucky charm. I thought if I kept her, I could keep my dream alive, and someday she’ll provide the seed money to make my dreams come true.”

“The bracelet has a name?”

“Sophie. I thought it sounded like a nickname for sapphire.”

“Ah.”

“That’s it?” Candy’s eyes went huge. She gestured toward him. “That’s all you have to say to me?”

“I’ll add one thing—thank you. Thank you for telling me all that. You’re right—there was a lot I didn’t know and I’m sure there’s a lot yet to find out.” Turner leaned closer to her. “I’m looking forward to the adventure.”

Candy pulled her mouth tight. “I do not want to interfere with your life. I will be gone as soon as I find a place.”

“If anything, you make my life more interesting. You add spark to it. And I’m in no hurry to kick you out.”

It happened slowly, but Candy finally smiled, and once it started it couldn’t be stopped. The smile plumped the apple of her cheeks and filled her beautiful eyes with light. “Okay, then,” she said. “What are we waiting for?”

She threw off the blanket, placed her coffee in his cup holder, and ran through the rain to her car.

And just like that, Candy Carmichael was coming home with him. Turner’s hands gripped the steering wheel as his heart banged around in his chest like a just caught fish in the bottom of a boat.

 

 

Chapter 15

 

The hot water beat against the clenched muscles of her body. Candy leaned her palms against the tile of Turner’s shower and let the warmth penetrate her skin and soothe her jangled nerves. If she’d learned anything in the last few weeks, it was that she couldn’t predict what the next day might bring, so that’s why she’d decided to allow herself a few moments simply to feel where she was in the here and now. Candy savored the heat seeping into her bones. She breathed deeply, aware of the expansion of her lungs. She sensed her legs and feet strong beneath her, reliable and balanced.

Sure, she’d had a wild day, but Candy reminded herself that she still had everything a person needed to get by. She had her friends. She had her dreams—with Sophie tucked away in Turner’s safe. She had a job. She had a car. She had cash in her pocket.

Candy had herself.

After she shampooed and conditioned her hair, dried off on a fluffy towel, and rubbed moisturizer all over, she felt almost normal—whatever normal was for her lately. She put on a pair of yoga pants and a hoodie, which she zipped up to her clavicle. It wasn’t because she didn’t want Turner to want her. She did. She just wasn’t sure she was one hundred percent ready for everything that would come
after.
What would they say to each other? Would their friendship ever feel natural again? Would they discover a new natural?

One thing was certain—once they went there, there would be no going back.

She exited Turner’s bathroom and immediately headed into the guest room, deciding that she needed a couple of minutes before she faced him. But she rounded the corner and there he was, in a dry and pressed navy blue sheriff’s department uniform, bent over the far side of the guest bed, smoothing out a top sheet. He glanced up when she entered the doorway.

Turner was a gentleman, which she’d always loved about him, so he didn’t feel compelled to say something about the obvious “man-woman-bed” moment they were having. He simply smiled up at her and assured her he was almost done. Oh, but in that instant his eyes had connected with hers, Turner told Candy all she needed to know.

BOOK: I Want Candy
10.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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