Stephanie Bond

Manhunting in Mississippi


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      Her friend tapped her fingers against the receiver again. “Piper, I can’t remember you ever having a lasting relationship with a man. A few dates, yeah, but were you ever serious about anyone?”

      Piper pursed her lips and fidgeted with the cord. “I guess I’m picky.”

      “I’m telling you, Piper, you’d better start hunting for a man before all the good ones are gone.”

      “Justine, you’re two hundred miles away in Tupelo where the men are plentiful and passable. I’m in Mudville—when you visited, did you happen to see anyone who would put me in the manhunting mood?”

      “You’ve got a point.” Her friend hummed in sympathy. “You really should move to the city—any city.”

      “Except Blythe Industries can’t find cheap labor to run their plant in the city.”

      Justine scoffed. “Oh, and no other company in all of Mississippi could use a food scientist?”

      Piper pursed her lips. “Maybe—but then I’d be farther away from Gran, and you’ve got to admit, I have a terrific job.”

      “True—most women wouldn’t have to be paid to design desserts.”

      “Well, it’s not all fudge sauce and whipped cream, Justine. It’s harder than it sounds.”

      “Yeah, yeah…bottom line, Piper, you can’t let your career or your family get in the way of finding your soulmate, your dream man—your hero.”

      “The only hero I’ve seen in Mudville, Mississippi, is the sandwich special at Limbo’s Deli.”

      “Oh, come on. There has to be at least one eligible man in that podunk town. You’re going to have to extend yourself a little, you know. See and be seen.”

      “I’m not so sure I want to see and be seen at a tractor pull.”

      “You’re going to have to work for this one, Piper. You need a man plan.”

      Piper laughed. “Which comes first—the man or the plan?”

      “Do you have a good-looking co-worker? Boss?”

      Her assistant, Rich, was good-looking. But it was a well-guarded secret that he was gay, too. And her boss, Edmund, was a married man, besides being old enough to be her father. “No one remotely eligible.”

      “Neighbor?”

      “Nada.”

      “UPS man?”

      “He’s a woman.”

      “Well, you’ve got three whole months to come up with a dance partner for the wedding—all the men in the wedding party are taken.”

      Piper flopped down on top of the dress pile, sending the hangers clanging. “Oh, well, that should be a cinch. After all, ballroom dancing is such a popular pastime in Mudville.”

      “You’ll think of something. Cheer up—I’ll bet every happily married woman had a strategy to snag their man. Take Stew, for example. He dragged his feet for three years. Then, when I told him I had a job offer in Tennessee, he fell to his knees.”

      Piper frowned. Her bedroom ceiling needed to be painted. “I didn’t know you had a job offer in Tennessee.”

      “I didn’t.”

      “Oh.”

      “Piper, it’s our job to convince men they can’t live without us. Keep your eyes open for someone older—maybe a divorced man.”

      “I’m not so sure I want a retread.”

      Justine clucked. “Sophie says men are better husbands the second time around—you don’t have nearly as much training to do.”

      “This is starting to sound like a lot of work.”

      Justine sighed noisily. “Piper, do you want to grow old alone?”

      Shutting her eyes against the welling misery, Piper relented, puffing her heated cheeks. “No.”

      “Then you’d better start doing something about it.”

      “Okay, okay, I get the message. Can we please change the subject?”

      “Aha!” Justine whooped. “I just thought of the perfect color for my bridesmaids’ dresses—salmon!”

      Piper bit back a groan, bounced up from the bed and walked her fingers over the collection of gowns still hanging in the cramped wardrobe. Burgundy, tangerine, moss green, silver, baby blue, pink, coral, eggplant, peach and plum.

      But no salmon.

      IAN BENTLEY BLINKED at the thick gold band, topped with two rows of sparkling diamonds, then glanced across the table to Meredith. “M-marry you?”

      “Sure.” She shrugged her lovely shoulders, a dry smile curving her glazed red lips. “I won a trip to Europe for top sales, but I’m only allowed to have a spouse go with me—no ‘significant others.’”

      Ian pursed his lips and studied her classically beautiful face and mane of blond hair, which no doubt contributed to her sales success. Meredith was a walking billboard for the line of cosmetics she sold to department stores, more striking than most of the supermodels who endorsed the products. But was hers a face he could wake up to for the rest of his life? “Meredith, forgive me, but a trip doesn’t seem like a great reason to get married.”

      She laughed and waved off his concern. “Silly, I know that, but the trip started me thinking. Why the hell not get married? We spend most nights together anyway—when we’re both in town,” she added. “Getting married is the next logical step.” She leaned forward and touched his hand. “Come on, Ian, neither one of us is getting any younger.”

      The uneasiness that gurgled in Ian’s empty stomach ballooned into dread, then full-fledged terror. In the space of a few seconds, the innocent, quick lunch had morphed into a life-altering experience. Meredith was an elegant woman, an immaculate dresser and a skilled lover. He enjoyed her company very much. But did he love her?

      Ian skewered the elusive concept and turned it over in his mind like a rotisserie. Would he even recognize the emotion if it sneaked up on him? He always thought he’d be married, perhaps even have a child or two, before the age of forty. But forty was approaching more quickly than he’d expected, and he was still waiting for someone to capture his heart the way his mother had captured his father’s nearly five decades ago.

      Meredith’s flawless face lost some of its sparkle. “Gee, Ian, you look like you siphoned gas and swallowed a mouthful.”

      Straightening in his suddenly uncomfortable chair, he squeezed the gray ring box and grappled for the right words. “You caught me a little off guard, Meredith.”

      She angled her blond head at him. “That would be the idea behind a surprise, wouldn’t it?”

      A weak laugh erupted from his tight throat as moisture broke out along his hairline.

      “Try it on,” she urged, lifting her wineglass for a sip, then added, “your left hand.”

      His gaze dropped back to the ring. Ian extracted it carefully, marveling how an expensive bauble could come attached with so much emotional baggage. “It’s very nice,” he murmured, estimating that two carats’ worth of diamonds studded the gold band. Meredith’s taste ran a bit on the flashy side. With his heart pounding, he slid the ring onto his third finger, then gave her a tight smile. “Perfect fit.” Dammit.

      “You don’t have to answer right away,” she offered, withdrawing a black-cased lipstick and mirror for a quick touch-up. “Wear the ring for a few days, see how you like the idea of being a married man. If you say yes, we’ll simply buy me a band to match.”

      “I’m leaving tomorrow on business,” he blurted, changing the