Read Best Man for Hire (Entangled Lovestruck) (Front and Center) Online
Authors: Tawna Fenske
Tags: #brothers, #romantic comedy, #hawaii, #Tawna Fenske, #Entangled, #Lovestruck, #wedding, #navy, #military, #Best Man for Hire, #Front and Center, #contemporary romance
Chapter Three
Anna had no idea where Grant came from.
One minute she was ordering Janelle to stop squealing like a four-year-old every time Bryce the photographer fired the paintball gun.
The next thing she knew, Bryce was flat on his back with Grant’s massive forearm across his windpipe.
Anna gulped and splashed out of the water, her bare feet slipping on the soggy red earth.
“Grant!” she yelled, before it occurred to her she should probably be yelling Bryce’s name. He was the one flailing with Grant’s knee to his groin.
Grant looked up just as Anna reached his side. Janelle was three steps behind, panting for breath.
“Stop, Grant!” Anna gasped. “What are you doing?”
“Urg,” said Bryce.
Grant released the pressure on Bryce’s throat, but kept him pinned to the ground. He turned and stared at Anna’s chest. “You’re bleeding.”
Alarmed, she looked down at herself. With a flutter of relief, she swiped a hand over her breastbone and held it out for him to see. “It’s paint. Red paint, I swear. Nontoxic, water-based paint so it doesn’t hurt the fish.”
Grant blinked, but didn’t move. “But you screamed. And the gun—”
“A paintball gun,” Janelle said, toeing it with her bare foot. It had come to rest about three feet out of Bryce’s reach, which Anna thought was probably a good thing.
“It was Janelle screaming,” Anna said. “She doesn’t like guns, even paintball guns.”
Janelle folded her arms over her chest. “Not when they’re aimed at my sister.”
“It’s practice for a wedding,” Anna said. “A paintball wedding later this week. Bryce is the photographer, and he wanted to make sure—”
“A paintball wedding,” Grant repeated.
“Yes,” Anna said. She watched him process the information and couldn’t help noticing his eyes again. The hue was like no eye color she’d seen before. The gray was warm, almost taupe, which sounded ridiculous when she thought of it that way, but it looked great on him.
Grant looked down at Bryce, who still hadn’t spoken. “And you’re the photographer?”
The man tried to draw himself up into a sitting position, which was impossible with Grant’s elbow wedged into his chest. Grant shifted his weight, making it easier for Bryce to breathe, but not much else.
“I’m
not
the photographer anymore!” Bryce huffed. “They flew me out here to photograph all these ridiculous weddings, and it’s been one atrocity after another. First the bride and groom want me to shoot from the water where there are
sharks
—”
“It’s a river,” Anna pointed out. “There are no sharks.”
“—and then another pair of lunatics expects me to go traipsing through the jungle with poisonous snakes—”
“It’s Hawaii,” Anna said. “There are no snakes.”
“—and now I’ve been
assaulted
,” Bryce spat, glaring up at Grant. “I’ve had it with this place. I’m catching the first flight back to the mainland. You can find another damn photographer.”
He squirmed and struggled and flailed until Grant pressed a palm to his chest and held him still. Grant looked up at Anna. “You want me to let him go?”
Anna shrugged. “I can’t exactly hold him hostage and force him to take pictures.”
Grant looked back at him. “I could probably arrange for the hostage thing.”
She shook her head, though she didn’t doubt he was capable of it. “It’s fine, let him go.”
“You’re free, Bryce,” Grant said, releasing the indignant photographer from his grip. Grant stood and offered a hand up. “I’m very sorry about the misunderstanding.”
Bryce stared at the proffered hand like Grant had just blown his nose in it. He sputtered with disgust and struggled to his feet without assistance. Anna reached out and began dusting red dirt off his sleeves, but Bryce slapped her hand away.
She winced and drew back. Grant took a step toward Bryce, his eyes glittering with fury. Anna put her hand on Grant’s arm and shook her head. “It’s okay.”
“It is
not
okay,” Bryce snapped. “You’ll be hearing from my lawyer about this.”
He turned and stomped away.
They all watched him go, politely restraining their laughter when Bryce tripped on a vine and shrieked, “Snake!” before kicking it into the grass.
For a brief moment, Anna considered going after him. Three of her four wedding couples
had
requested Bryce out of all the photographers Anna worked with. She’d paid to fly him out here, and the couples had paid hefty deposits.
Before Anna could take a step forward, Bryce turned, flipped them off, and flung open the door to his rental car.
Anna sighed. “Have a safe trip,” she called.
“Bite me!” Bryce yelled and revved the engine.
The second his car was out of sight, Grant shook his head. He turned to Anna, looking like a dog that had just chewed up the newspaper. “I’m really very sorry,” he said. “I didn’t mean to ruin anyone’s wedding.”
“You didn’t ruin any weddings,” Anna assured him, though that remained to be seen. Now what was she going to do? But Grant looked guilty, so she added, “I can see why you might have assumed we needed help.”
“Though we’re unaccustomed to defining
help
as a chokehold,” Janelle added.
“I shouldn’t have been so rough,” Grant insisted.
“There’s a time and a place for roughness,” Anna assured him, flushing when she realized how that sounded. Grant looked like the sort of guy who knew all about a time and a place for roughness. “Your instincts were good, even if the situation didn’t call for that.”
Janelle grinned and gave Grant a nudge with her elbow. “So, tough guy—know any photographers we could get on short notice?”
Grant scratched his chin, considering. “Well, there’s Pete Nicholson over on the north shore but he usually books up months in advance. Probably the same with Katie Kurtail from Dream Images, or—”
“She’s talking about you,” Anna interrupted. “That was Janelle’s idea of a subtle hint.”
“Me?”
“I told her about the engagement photos you took for Mac and Kelli.”
Janelle nodded, eyeing Grant up and down, and Anna resisted the urge to yank her sister’s ponytail. “She said you’ve got a great eye.”
“He does have great eyes.” Anna coughed. “I mean a great eye. For photography. But I’m not sure this is a good idea.”
“Why not?” Janelle asked.
“Well, for starters, he’s not a wedding photographer.”
“But you said yourself he took the best engagement photos you’ve ever seen. Weren’t they even on a beach?”
“Yes, but besides that, we don’t even know he’s available or what his fees are like.”
Janelle rolled her eyes. “We could ask him instead of standing here talking about him like he doesn’t speak English.”
Grant shook his head. “Your sister’s right,” he told Janelle. “I’m not really a wedding photographer. That was just a one-time thing.”
“One-time things can sometimes turn into more,” Janelle argued.
“It was a photo shoot, Janelle, not a one-night stand in a romantic comedy,” Anna said. “Wedding photography is a very specialized art. We don’t even know if Grant has the skill do it.”
She didn’t mean for it to sound like a challenge, but the flash in Grant’s eyes told her he’d taken it as one. He folded his arms over his chest and leveled his gaze at her.
“I said I wasn’t a wedding photographer, not that I couldn’t do it,” he said. “I minored in photography in college, and I’ve kept my skills sharp shooting for friends and freelance gigs over the years. I’ve had several special assignments from the Department of Defense to photograph combat zones for military public affairs. I’m not exactly a photographic novice here.”
“With all due respect,” Anna said, “shooting pictures of hand grenades is a little different from shooting pictures of brides.”
“Both sound volatile, deadly, and likely to explode at a moment’s notice.”
“I can’t argue with that.” Anna bit her lip, considering her options. Finding a photographer on short notice on a small island would be next to impossible. She could try to talk Bryce into coming back, but she knew from experience that wasn’t likely. Besides being temperamental and moody, he was stubborn as hell. She sighed and considered the hulking Marine in front of her.
“Would you even want the assignment? You’d be paid, of course, but still.”
“I don’t need the money.”
She raised an eyebrow at him. “What would you do it for then?”
“Because I’m a nice guy.” He almost sounded glum about that.
“Do you have a portfolio?” she asked. “Something I could look at, maybe show to all the other couples so they can decide if they want to use you?”
“Nothing formal, but I could walk you through a few of the photo collections on my computer. How about tonight at my place?”
Anna felt her mouth go dry and she licked her lips. “Your place?”
“Sure. I’ll even make dinner. Come over early, maybe five?”
“I—well, I—”
“She’d love to,” Janelle said, giving Anna a small shove. “Here, write your address down on this.”
Before Anna could protest, her sister was handing him a small notepad and pen. Anna just stood there like an idiot, trying to think of something to say that didn’t involve blurting out a desire to see him shirtless again. Grant took the notebook and flipped to a blank page. His writing was neat and clear, each number in perfect form even though the page didn’t have lines.
“Here you go,” he said, handing her the notepad. “See you at five.”
“Five it is.” Anna reached out to shake his hand, expecting a dry, professional grasp in return.
There wasn’t anything unprofessional in the way Grant took her hand, but something in his touch sent a jolt of electricity buzzing through Anna’s fingertips and all the way up her arm. His palm was huge and warm, and the strength in his fingers prompted several parts of her body to stand up and request site visits.
Part of her wanted to draw her hand back.
Most of her wanted to grab his other hand and put it on her butt.
Anna met his eyes and saw his expression was warm, but serious. His fingers gripped hers with a fierceness that surprised her.
“Just so you know,” he said, “I don’t generally condone violence.”
“Aren’t you a Marine?”
“I specialize in counterintelligence and human intelligence.”
“What does that mean?”
“I catch spies, or I get other people to catch spies. I don’t kill them. Much.”
“That’s reassuring.”
“Anyway, I really am sorry about Bryce.”
Anna nodded and bit the inside of her lip. “Thank you. I’m not sure I’m that sorry.”
“Me neither. I was being polite.”
“We try not to make that a habit around here,” Janelle said.
Grant smiled and drew Anna’s hand to his lips. She shivered as he planted a chaste kiss across her knuckles.
“See you tonight, Anna.”
She watched him go, her heart lodged thickly in her throat. Her hand was still tingling long after he was out of sight.
…
“So let me get this straight,” Mac said as he handed Grant a bottle of wine. “You’re making dinner for a woman you don’t know to land a photography job you don’t want for a paycheck you refuse to accept.”
Grant set the wine on the counter and got to work hunting for the meat mallet, ignoring his brother’s look of dismay. “I didn’t say I didn’t want the job. Just that wedding photography isn’t really my thing.”
“And neither is wine. You want a corkscrew for that, not a hammer.”
“What would I do without you, big brother?” Grant began unwrapping the butcher paper from two steaks he’d grabbed earlier at the grocery store. He laid them on the cutting board, arranging them carefully with their edges touching. He sprinkled each one with a healthy dusting of salt and pepper, doing his best to ignore Mac’s gaze following his every move. He wiped his hands on a paper towel, then picked up the mallet. “The photo shoot sounds interesting, and the girls need help,” he said. “I’m doing it as a favor.”
He could feel his brother studying him, but he refused to make eye contact. Instead, he focused on pounding the holy hell out of the steak. Mac was silent, watching. Grant drew his arm back and smacked the meat harder, the one-pound mallet solid in his hand.
“Are you tenderizing that meat or punishing it?”
Grant gave it one more whack and set the mallet down. He moved to the sink to wash his hands. “Don’t you ever feel like doing something for a stranger just to be nice?”
“No.”
“Well I do.”
“Clearly. I imagine it doesn’t hurt that Anna is quite attractive.”
Grant gave a grunt of acknowledgment, but refused to offer more. Instead, he yanked a knife out of the block and grabbed one of the russet potatoes he’d washed earlier. He pulled out a clean cutting board and set the potatoes in the middle. Drawing the knife back, he eyed his target. He stabbed a small, clean hole right in the center of the first potato. He studied it, then drew the knife back again. Only a hole or two was really necessary to keep it from exploding when he baked it, but a few more wouldn’t hurt.
Grant stabbed the potato a few more times, then reached for the second one.
“For a chronically nice guy, you have serious aggression issues in the kitchen,” Mac said, shaking his head in Grant’s peripheral vision. “So this photo gig—are you doing this to get laid, or because you can’t resist the urge to do favors for people?”
The knife slipped in midstab, and Grant nearly took his thumb off. Good thing for quick reflexes. He set the knife down and reached into the drawer beside him for the foil.
“I’m just trying to help out,” he said, maneuvering past his brother. “I’m the one who screwed things up, so I’m trying to make it right.”
“Are we still talking about tackling the wedding photographer?”
Grant felt his gut twist, but he ignored it and grabbed the first potato. “What the hell else would we be talking about?”
Grant didn’t answer, and Mac said nothing else. When he finally stole a look at his brother, Mac was watching him with his usual unreadable expression.
How much does he know?
Grant cleared his throat. “I need to grab the foil out of that cupboard.”