Read Snowed In Online

Authors: Sarah Title

Snowed In

Romance in the Freezer Aisle
“Did your dog die?”
“What?”
“Is that why you're crying? Your dog?”
“No, I don't have a dog.”
“Well, what else is there to cry about?”
“My boyfriend, okay? My stupid boyfriend decided after two years that he's ‘not feeling it' so he dumped me.”
“Idiot.”
“And I was naked!”
She caught him looking her up and down, no doubt taking in her spinster sweats and frazzled hair. “Double idiot.”
“Yeah, right.”
“You know what you need?”
“A hit man?”
He laughed again, quick and smooth. “No. What you need is someone to take your mind off your boyfriend. Ex-boyfriend.”
“Are you propositioning me? In a grocery store?”
Also by Sarah Title
Kentucky Home
 
Kentucky Christmas
 
Home Sweet Home
SNOWED IN
SARAH TITLE
A Southern Comfort Novella
LYRICAL PRESS
Kensington Publishing Corp.
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
To the real MMM, my oldest and dearest friend.
Thanks for the inspiration, but not in the way you
are all thinking about, you pervs.
Chapter 1
“I don't think this is working out.”
It sure isn't,
Maureen thought as Dave climbed off her, tossing one leg to her side of the bed.
But he had never commented on it before.
“I'm sorry. What?” Maureen pushed her sweaty hair out of her eyes. Not her sweat, she thought with a little grimace. She never got around to working up a sweat with Dave.
“Love daze, huh? I just said, I don't think this is going to work out. This thing with us.”
Maureen saw his thin lips forming the words, words that
looked
remarkably like the words she was hearing. She just wasn't sure she believed her eyes—or her ears. This
thing
? Was he referring to their two years together, three months of which had been spent crammed into his studio apartment because he was “too busy” for them to look for a place together? Two years of her bringing him lunch when he ran out of cash, writing his résumé when he lost his job recently, and unreciprocated oral sex?
“Are you dumping me? In bed? While we're still naked?”
“Come on, you would have wanted one last hurrah,” he said, slapping her affectionately on the ass. “Anyway, don't worry about it. I'll give you plenty of time to find a new place. Now, hush, the weather's on.”
Still naked and sprawled on top of the covers, Dave flipped the TV on. The familiar, hair-gelled, goofy-tied Channel 11 weatherman told them about a cold front coming in. Duh, it was February.
Maureen just sat there, the minimal post-coital glow disappearing into waving blobs of blue and white over the mountains to the east. She was naked, dumped, and watching the weather.
She
hated
winter.
Chapter 2
By the time she got to the ice cream freezer, Maureen couldn't hold it in any more. So she just let it go. Why not? It was a Friday night. Now that she was apparently single, why not let fat, ugly tears stain her oversized, hooded sweatshirt while she stood in the ice cream aisle of the grocery store?
“There's frozen yogurt, you know.”
Maureen jumped and turned to see . . . well, a god. He was at least a head taller than she. His brown hair was a smidge too long and curled into the collar of his flannel shirt. His jaw was strong and sharp—a man face. His dark eyebrows emphasized deep blue eyes—eyes that were looking at her with curiosity, sympathy, and, if she wasn't mistaken, a hint of mischief.
“I'm sorry?”
“If you're so upset about the calories, try frozen yogurt.”
“Oh, no, it's not that, it's just—” Maureen was stammering. Stammering in front of a god.
“Kidding.”
“Oh. Ha.” Bad jokes. Okay, so he wasn't perfect.
“Sorry. I do my best work in produce.”
Damn, that was cute.
He's definitely perfect,
Maureen thought as she stood there dumbly, unable to process the perfection of his face (and those shoulders—even through his beat-up leather jacket she could see he had strong shoulders). Not to mention the fact that a god was making bad jokes at her while she stood crying with the freezer door open.
“Can I just—” He reached around her for a pint of mint chocolate chip.
“Oh, my gosh, yes, sorry.” Maureen completed that articulate thought by backing into her shopping cart.
“Hey, easy now,” the god said as he placed a steadying hand on her arm. Even through her sweatshirt she could feel his hand was warm and strong.
“Listen, are you okay?”
“What? Yes! I'm fine.”
“It's just that I don't always see beautiful women crying in front of the ice cream.”
Ha. Beautiful. “Where do you usually see them crying?”
He laughed. “Nowhere, if I can help it.”
“Well, I don't usually do this. I'm just a little . . . emotional,” she sniffed, wiping her nose on her sleeve. Smooth, Maureen. Real smooth.
“I can see that.”
“I didn't mean to bother you.”
“The only thing that will bother me is if I leave this store without seeing you smile. I bet you have a great smile.”
She raised an eyebrow. Was he flirting? He was pretty sure of himself. Probably came from being so perfect.
“Ah, a look of disdain,” he said. “We're getting somewhere. So, what's it gonna take to make you smile?”
“Maybe I just don't feel like smiling, okay? Maybe I have nothing to smile about.”
“Did your dog die?”
“What?”
“Is that why you're crying? Your dog?”
“No, I don't have a dog.”
“Did you lose your job?”
“No.”
“Inoperable cancer?”
“No! That's not funny.”
“Well, what else is there to cry about?”
“My boyfriend, okay? My stupid boyfriend decided after two years that he's ‘not feeling it' so he dumped me.”
“Idiot.”
“And I was naked!”
She caught him looking her up and down, no doubt taking in her spinster sweats and frazzled hair. “Double idiot.”
“Yeah, right.”
“You know what you need?”
“A hit man?”
He laughed again, quick and smooth. “No. What you need is someone to take your mind off your boyfriend. Ex-boyfriend.”
“Are you propositioning me? In a grocery store?”
He looked a little flustered, but soldiered on. “I've seen it dozens of times. Beautiful, sharp women dropped by undeserving idiot men. And you're going to go home and drown your sorrows in ice cream and wonder what you did wrong.”
“Are you suggesting I shouldn't eat ice cream?”
“Hey, I've got no problem with ice cream,” he said, indicating the pint melting in his cart. “I have a problem with you feeling bad.”
“You don't even know me.”
“I know you're gorgeous.”
Maureen snorted.
“Okay, almost a smile. Have a drink with me?” He took a step forward.
Maureen felt somewhere in the back of her mind that she should step back. But he smelled good, like that crisp Irish soap she loved, so she didn't.
Instead, she matched his step forward.
“Gorgeous, huh?”
“Absolutely. I love this hair.” He fingered a blonde curl that had escaped her ponytail. “Your freckles are adorable.” He ran a finger over her cheeks. “Your lips,” he ran a thumb over her lower lip, and Maureen couldn't take it anymore.
She took that last step, closing the distance between them, and his mouth came down to meet hers. His lips were soft and warm, and she felt his fingers gently tickle her neck as she opened her mouth to let him in.
All of her tension, all of her heartache rushed out of her the moment her tongue touched his. At first he was tentative, but she began to wrestle his mouth, fighting to get closer. His hands moved boldly down her back, pulling her hips until she slammed into him. She threw her arms around his neck and tilted her head so he could move deeper, deeper, exploring her with teeth and tongue. She lifted her foot onto the lip of the open freezer, tipping her knee out so she cradled his hips and the impressive bulge in his jeans. She clamped her fingers in his hair to get a hold on him because she thought she was melting away and she wasn't ready for this to be over. This was nothing like kissing Dave. This man was a complete stranger and his kiss possessed her, bewitched her more thoroughly than Dave ever had. He wrapped his arms around her waist and lifted her off her feet so she was pressed against him, molded to solid muscle. He felt so strong and so sure.
But a girl had to breathe. Reluctantly, she pulled back and he gently lowered her to the ground. She was glad to see he was as dazed and breathless as she was.
“Whoa.”
His simple exclamation, said on a swift exhale, hit her right in the gut.
She
had done that to him. She, disheveled and in sweatpants, had flummoxed a god.
She looked up into those deep blue eyes, still dark with passion.
And she smiled.
“I guess I do have something to smile about.”
And she turned and pushed her cart toward the produce aisle.
 
 
By the time Gavin's body registered his brain's message—
Go after her, stupid!
—she was gone. He abandoned his cart and ran—not quite like a madman, but close—but she wasn't in produce, not in canned goods, not in the bread aisle. For Christ's sake, the store wasn't that big. But he'd lost her.
The hottest kiss he had ever experienced in thirty years of kissing women, and he didn't even know her frigging name.
He went back to retrieve his cart, and stuck his head in the freezer for a few seconds, just for good measure.

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