Avril Tremayne

Getting Even


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that counted as a forever—immortalized in literature. Just not the Till death do us part kind of forever she’d envisaged when he’d said Te amaré por siempre, Verónica that day in the garage of their DC town house.

      “Till death do us part,” she said softly, thinking of the souls inside the mausoleum who were traveling into eternity together. She’d heard there was a married couple laid to rest in there who’d been together sixty years and died a day apart. That was what forever was.

      She’d felt envious hearing Romy and Matt repeating the “till death do us part” vow in the chapel today. She’d hadn’t made that vow at either of her weddings—appropriately, as it turned out, since one marriage had lasted a mere twelve months and the other only twenty months. The idea of being interred with either Piers or Simeon for eternity in a place like this would never have entered her head. That kind of commitment belonged to a different kind of love. A consuming love. A Wuthering Heights kind of love. The kind that made Heathcliff bribe the sexton to remove the side of Cathy’s coffin so that when he was buried beside her, in a coffin identically opened, their remains would mingle in death.

      “‘I wish I were a girl again, half savage and hardy, and free...’” she murmured, and the wistfulness of that quote from Wuthering Heights had her eyes rolling. “Get out of my head, Cathy,” she called out to the moors, “and take Heathcliff with you!”

      She listened for an echo but instead she heard a gravelly voice with the barest hint of an accent say behind her, “Rereading Wuthering Heights, Veronica? Again?

      She turned...and there he was.

       CHAPTER THREE

      RAFAEL NOTED THE way her eyes went wide, the way her nostrils flared, the uptick in her breathing, the tension that ran through her, the flare of rage.

      And then she drew herself in, tipped up her chin, arched her eyebrows and controlled the flame. She was like ice water drip-dripping onto hot coals—a hiss, a sizzle, no more. “You know what a sucker I am for a doomed love story,” she drawled.

      “I’m sorry Piers and Simeon didn’t live up to your expectations,” he said, out-drawling her, “but ‘doomed’ seems a little harsh.”

      Drip, drip of ice—but the steam was rising from those coals and it was only a matter of time before the ice melted. “Hmm, yes, I suppose it is a little harsh,” she agreed. “At least they had the courage to try, right?”

      “Try...but fail.”

      “I don’t think you’re the man to talk to me about marriage failures when you’ve never actually made it to the altar.”

      “Is that a proposal?”

      “It could be...the day hell freezes over.”

      “Maybe that’s just as well, given the three and a half years you had with me lasted longer than both your marriages combined. Marriage obviously doesn’t agree with you. I wonder why...?”

      She laughed—a long, fake peal of it. “How about you explore my marriages in your next book?”

      He smiled, left it hanging there for a heartbeat and then said, “What do you mean my next book?”

      He saw her chest rise with the breath she slowly drew in, then fall as she let it out. Oh, she’d definitely learned some methods to maintain her self-control over the years. A pity.

      “So you’ve skewered them already, have you?” she said, and he might have believed she was bored if not for the scalding heat in her eyes.

      “You tell me.”

      Another of those peals of fake laughter. “I don’t see how I can since I haven’t read your books.”

      Okay, that threw him. Enough that he had to actively work to keep his face impassive. His books had both been number one New York Times bestsellers, and she was an editor at Johnson/Charles—one of the most prestigious midsize publishers in America. Those two facts should have guaranteed a read for both books, even without their personal history. “Can I assume that means you’re still blocking me? After all these years? A more egotistical man might think you weren’t over him.”

      The flare of anger, the tamping down, the slow breath. “Tell you what—” pulling her cell phone out of her purse “—how about I download them now? Old times’ sake and all that. You were always so particular about how I spent my money, but I assume you have no objection to me slinging you a few bucks this way.”

      “By all means sling away, since it’s money I’ve earned,” he said smoothly, admiring her nerve while simultaneously wanting to shake it out of her. “Maybe we can get together sometime and you can tell me what you think.”

      “Sure,” she said—but her eyes told him he could drop dead. “Can you give me the titles?”

      He bit back a laugh at the sheer arrogance of her. “The first one is called Catch, Tag, Release.”

      “Ah, yes,” she said, tapping away at her phone. “As in hooking some poor fish, whacking an invasive tag through its fin, then throwing it back in the sea.”

      “My second book—Liar, Liar if you’re really clicking—looks at what that fish does when it gets its new lease on life.”

      “How uplifting that sounds—Liar, Liar.”

      “I’m sure you’ll find both books...instructive.”

      “Oh joy!” she said, and rolled her eyes, which had him vowing to make her eyes roll all the way back in her head for him before the night was over. “Just what I look for in a novel—to be instructed!” She put her cell phone away. “Right. All set. Now, I’m sure you’re anxious to return to Felicity—must have been painful, unjoining yourself from her hip!”

      Oh God, it was so hard not to laugh. “Jealous, Veronica?”

      “Jealous? Please!” She spluttered that out. “I assure you, you have my permission to fuck whomever you want to fuck.”

      He stepped in close, crowding into her space, and the vanilla scent of her flooded his senses. She dabbed that special oil everywhere, even between her legs—and the taste memory of licking it from her was so vivid, he had to swallow because his mouth had flooded with saliva. “You sure about that?”

      “Most certainly.”

      “Then that is very good to know.”

      “If that’s all, I have husband number three waiting in the wings for me at the reception.”

      He took her left hand in his, rubbed his thumb along her ring finger without taking his eyes from her face, found nothing there. Good. The photos he’d seen of her with her husbands, the massive diamond engagement rings they’d given her flashing in the camera lights, had caused him to break two expensive cell phones throwing them against the wall. Time for her to pay for what seeing those rings had done to him.

      He smiled at her—made it as chillingly seductive as he could. “I know you came on your own, Veronica, and I can make a good guess as to why.”

      She snatched her hand back. “Husband number three is a work in progress but it’s going to happen, I promise you that.”

      “Then I look forward to being introduced to him.”

      “And I look forward to meeting your conjoined twin just as soon as you’ve reattached yourself,” she said, and stalked past him.

      Veronica stormed her way across the lawn, furious with herself.

      So much for coming on her own—he’d seen right through her.

      So much for her rehearsed lines—he’d gotten in first about the books.

      So