curve of her hips and calves, and I can’t help but wonder what her legs would look like if I peeled those jeans down to the floor.
“I know you’re wearing high heels with no socks and it’s spring in Alaska. I know the jeans you’re wearing are designer.”
Strike that whole thing about him being like his father. Jed is not selling this.
“Let me intervene,” I say, taking a seat at the table across from Jed.
“Oh please, what? Are you going to try to seduce me to get the space?” Presley asks.
This is what I was afraid of. “That’s not what I was doing.”
She nods as if she’s got my number. “Really? Do you always ask out girls you just met?” She looks at Clara. “Is Cade here the Casanova of Sunrise Bay?”
Clara bites her lip. She knows I’m not like that, and telling the truth will only hurt my case. “No. He doesn’t date a lot.”
Fucking hell.
“You were different,” I say, but Presley raises her hand.
“It doesn’t matter. Obviously that whole situation is over now. You tried to go behind my back and get the building from me.”
My forehead wrinkles. “What?”
“I think you have it wrong,” Jed says.
Presley waves her hands, reminding me of a child who puts her fingers in her ears and says no, no, no. She points at Jed and me. “Listen, I know you want the building. And I know you want to sell it,” she says to Clara. “I don’t know what I want yet, so just give me some space.”
Jed hops off the table. He’s not one to easily accept defeat. “This is a lot for you to take on. Not even just the store. Cleaning all this, making it your own, getting rid of whatever you want to sell. And then you have the town. The gossip mill around here is not easy to handle.”
Presley’s eyes narrow at Jed, so I hop down and go to his side. She turns her laser eyes on me.
“He means you should think about those things before committing,” I say.
“Oh really? Please enlighten me.”
“I saved you for twenty-four hours with our sister, Nikki. Well, my stepsister, but his real sister,” I say as Jed shakes his head and Presley looks as though she couldn’t care less. “She won’t report this whole thing on her radio show, but tomorrow morning, the entire story about you being Mrs. Harrison’s daughter will be on the news.”
“You saved me?”
I run a hand through my hair. “Yeah, it’s nothing. Don’t worry about it.”
She scowls. “Oh, I’m not worried about it. Do you people really think your small town gossip has anything on what I have going on back home? It can’t be any worse than attending a private school with privileged youth. The conniving and the lies would make your head spin. So I don’t need your saving, Cade.”
Clara laughs, and I look back at her. She bites her lip to stop herself, but I can tell she’s enjoying this.
Jed glances at me. “He’s just trying to help.”
“Oh my God. I’m not looking for a prince to swoop in. Why does everyone in my life think I need saving? I don’t. I’m a grown woman.”
My eyebrows rise. Is this the same sweet woman from yesterday?
“So what, you’re going to stay in town?” Jed says it with a laugh on the edge of his tone. Even I know that’s the wrong move.
“Maybe I am.”
“You are?” Clara asks.
Jed and I part to allow the two sisters to look at one another.
“I don’t know.” Presley shrugs.
Clara doesn’t say anything, and the room goes quiet.
“Can we talk?” Presley asks Clara in a calmer voice.
Clara nods and walks forward. “It’s why I came here. Because I didn’t like how I left it. That’s not me. This is just a lot to deal with.”
Jed and I share a look of surprise.
“I have no idea how to act,” Presley says with a vulnerability that makes my heart squeeze.
“Come on. I’ll show you around town,” Clara says, then tosses me a key. “Lock up, boys.”
I catch it, and they walk out, turning right down the street.
“What the fuck just happened?” Jed runs a hand through his hair. “This was ours. Your girl cannot be thinking she’s going to stay and take over this place.”
I’m still staring at the door. “Suffice it to say, she’s not my girl. And probably never will be.”
He smacks me on the back. “I think you dodged a bullet.”
We walk out of the building and I