Shoe Strings

After being hounded by her estranged father just as her boutique shoe business is taking off, Atlanta’s Angelita Barros heads for the mountains of North Carolina where she couldn’t be a bigger fish out of water. The cabin she rents is perfect, but one look at the owner’s son and Angelita’s in lust big time. She finds resisting the charming Jesse Bloodworth as difficult as maneuvering small town life in her custom made stilettos.

Jesse has spent years rebuilding his relationship with his teenaged son and ex-wife after running out on them eleven years ago. But his dad’s not so quick to forgive and forget. The water under the bridge becomes mighty choppy when beautiful Angelita walks into their lives.

Jesse’s ex, Kerri Ann, is a far cry from where she thought she’d be in life. Even before she got pregnant with Ty, things between her and Jesse had faltered, and there was only one person to blame: Bryce Jenson. Kerri Ann never expected her long-ago crush to settle back into Sequoyah Falls to practice law. Hell, no one did.

Bryce had his reasons for returning home and Kerri Ann was at the very top. They seem destined to remain just friends, until Angelita comes to town and stirs everything up.

As Angelita and Jesse embark on a relationship, her father’s demands become threats and she’s forced back to Atlanta. Jesse’s attempt to save her uncovers more of her past than he bargained for. Will Angelita’s prince charming come to her rescue or does Jesse’s love come with Shoe Strings attached?

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Chapter One

Every second of the last ten years disappeared when Angelita Barros drove up to her boutique and saw her father fingering the shoes she’d created, the same shoes that were making waves in the industry where names like Manolo Blahnik and Jimmy Choo were synonymous with style and fashion. One look was all it took and she knew everything she’d built since the day he’d thrown her out of the house–her business, her success, her sanity–meant nothing. How dare he, after everything he’d done, after everything he hadn’t done, come trespass on the life she’d built despite him?

There was gray in his hair now, just a dash around the temples, and she saw a paunch around his beltline that hadn’t been there before, but everything else was the same. After all these years, she’d recognize Davi Barros anywhere. But what was he doing inside her store? Her shoes were fun, frilly, and fabulous, the tag line Atlanta Wears magazine intended to use in their upcoming spread. From flip-flops to low-heeled sandals to drop dead gorgeous three-inch heels, Angelita Feet was becoming the brand everybody wanted and the brand she wanted everyone to know about. Everyone but him.

Lita watched him smile at Sophie, her business partner and best friend, the only one who knew the sordid details of her past. To Sophie, Davi was no more than a stranger, a customer who deserved the best. If only Lita could warn her, tell her to throw him out, tell her not to reveal a single detail of her life to the man responsible for nearly crushing it. But she couldn’t risk exposing herself, so she peeled out of the parking lot and headed north, instead of south toward the airport and her planned vacation to Florida. Sophie wouldn’t tell her father anything, even if she didn’t know who he was. She’d never give a stranger, or the father she knew Lita hated, any personal information. But if he’d shown up at her shop after ten years of no contact, her father was up to something. Damn. Her beach vacation, in the span of seconds, had become a thing of the past. But where should she go?

Just drive, she told herself as she pulled onto I-85 and kept on going, past Atlanta’s affluent Buckhead community, beyond the edges of its perimeter highway and out beyond the teeming suburbs. She drove and drove until her need for a clear-cut plan forced her off the interstate. What now?

She pulled into a gas station and decided a clear plan called for a clear head and that meant caffeine. She purchased a large coffee and, back inside her car, pulled up a map of the southeast on her phone. Where could she hide for awhile until she figured out what to do? A Google search for mountain cabins in the Southeast brought her to a Web page advertising two cabins for rent by the week or month in western North Carolina. Owner Calvin Bloodworth answered on the second ring and the singsong melody of his voice sounded as peaceful to Lita as his description of the brook that ran through the property and the stunning bird’s-eye view the cabins offered.

Both cabins were available, as early March was before the official summer crunch, but only one was ready for occupancy. As the first caller of the season, Lita could rent the smaller cabin for as long as she liked. Since she’d chucked all common sense out the window when she peeled out of her boutique parking lot, she agreed to a two-week rental with an option for more. What better place to hide and figure out what her father was up to than a spot that promised the extremes of both quiet nature and adventure at a leisurely pace? Could it really only take two-and-a-half hours to get a lifetime away?

It wouldn’t be such a big deal to change her plans and stay away a week or so longer than she’d planned. The photo shoot for Atlanta Wears had taken two days and nearly twenty hours to complete. Angelita Feet was on the brink of expansion. Where she’d once thrown herself into work after losing the most important thing in her life, now she needed to come up for air. Her exhaustion, the looming decisions about her company, and her inability to design over the last few months had prompted her getaway. The reemergence of her estranged father simply meant a spontaneous change in plans.

She took the exit into the tiny riverfront town of Sequoyah Falls and wound her way through the old-fashioned two-block downtown and up a side street into the foothills. She passed mobile homes, log cabins, and small structures she could only describe as shacks tucked beside oceans of forests. The rich smell of pine sifted through the car’s windows along with the pungent aroma of the red clay earth. She couldn’t have been farther from her life in the city if she’d taken a shuttle to the moon.

The entrance to Bloodworth Cabins was marked with an overhanging wooden sign dangling between two enormous tree trunks and a drive that led straight up the mountainside. This, she mused as she geared down to low, was not a driveway she’d want to traverse in the winter. Around the second bend, the trees parted to reveal a wooden and stone structure as quaint as the footbridge that led to what looked like a storage shed. She pulled her car to a stop next to a late model Lincoln Towncar.

Two oversized cats greeted her as she got out of her SUV. One was a shiny black and the other a gray with brown stripes. Angelita wasn’t sure what to do when they began purring and rubbing furiously at her ankles. Just as she shook her ankle to dislodge the black cat, a tall man with a head full of windblown silver hair walked around the side yard onto the drive to welcome her. He wore fraying khaki pants, a well-washed golf shirt, and rubber boots.

“Angelita?” he asked and walked to within a few inches of her. He removed a soiled glove and offered his hand for a shake.

She nodded and placed her hand in his larger one. She could feel the calluses on the underside of his tanned grip. “Mr. Bloodworth. Thank you for letting me stay.”

“Thanks for inquiring. And since you’re going to be here awhile, you’d better call me Cal. I won’t think to answer to Mr. Bloodworth.” He flashed a crooked smile complete with dimples and a chiseled jaw. Lita grinned like a schoolgirl. Despite his age and shabby attire, Calvin Bloodworth was a devilishly handsome man.

“Please, call me Lita.” She turned to look over the crest of the property, shielding her eyes as the sun had finally burned away the morning fog. “You have a beautiful property, Cal. Your website doesn’t do it justice.”

“Thanks. I’ve enjoyed that view every day for the last thirty years. My wife and I moved up here in ‘74. Couldn’t see another living soul in any direction. Still just as peaceful now, even with the few cabins and homes that have popped up over the years.” He ran his hand through his mass of silver hair. “Tell the truth, I’m glad to have some neighbors around. Gets pretty lonely sometimes.”

“And your wife?”

“Oh, she passed eleven years ago next month. Cancer. Took her fast, mercifully fast.”

“I’m very sorry.”

“She’s in a better place.” With a hand on his lower back, Cal arched into a stretch. “Way I’m feeling lately, won’t be too long before I’ll join her.”

Lita looked at Cal. He couldn’t have been more than sixty. How could someone as virile and robust looking be near death? “Are you ill?”

Cal laughed, a deep-chested rumble that seemed to come all the way from his toes. “Just feeling my age.” He walked with her to the back of her car. “You got some luggage I can help you carry?”

Lita struggled with the unfamiliar latch on the back of her new SUV and watched as Cal, despite his claim to be aging quickly, heaved her bursting-at-the-seams suitcase from the back as if it weighed no more than a sheet of paper. She gathered her cosmetics bag, shoe suitcase, and purse before trailing after him into the nearest cabin.

Cal set the heavy case down at the start of a small hallway. “You don’t travel light, do you, Lita?” he said with a huff.

As she looked at the mountain of suitcases at their feet, she had to agree. “I’m a shoe designer. I’m afraid most of these are filled to the brim with shoes.”

He looked down at the zebra print wedges she’d slipped on that morning. “Oh, well…” Men were always at a loss when it came to her line of work and most were surprised at her success. Few would believe the humble beginnings that had inspired her first creation.

The Mommy Sandal, she’d called it. At seventeen, seven months pregnant, and no longer able to reach her toes, much less see them, her feet were a size and a half larger than normal and swelling in Atlanta’s signature summer humidity. Because none of her shoes would fit and she didn’t have the money for new ones, she attached an adjustable watchstrap to her dollar store flip-flops and managed to ease both her comfort and her bank account as word of the pregnancy shoes spread.

Cal carried the suitcases back through a small hallway as Lita looked around. The one floor cabin contained a den with mismatched furniture, a small table for eating, and a good-sized kitchen. It wasn’t a five star resort with a spa, but it would certainly do. She could all but hear the well-worn couch calling out to her weary bones.

“This is it,” he said a moment later. “As you can see, you’ve got a full kitchen with all the silverware and dishes you’ll need.” He opened a few drawers and cabinets. “There are plenty of pots and pans under the counter. Down the hall is the bedroom and bath. Bedroom’s got a queen bed and closet and the bathroom’s just across the hall. Plenty of linens and towels. I’ll collect them every couple days and do a wash.”

“Oh, that’s not necessary. If you’ll direct me to the laundry, I’ll do them myself.”

“Nonsense. You’re a guest and it’s all a part of the service. Besides, I’ve got a girl who does basic housekeeping. What’s today? Wednesday? She’ll be around Saturday to freshen up, then back again Wednesday. If those days don’t work for you, just let me know.”

“Wednesday and Saturday work just fine.” She eased the bag from her shoulder and placed it on the scarred counter. “Is there a grocery store nearby where I can pick up a few things?”

“Sure is. You passed it on the turnoff coming up here. They’ll have everything you need, including movies to rent. The den has a DVD player, but not the bedroom. Both TVs have cable. Remotes are on the coffee table and back on the nightstand. Got the basic package plus HBO.” He winked at Lita. “I like their series shows.”

Lita smiled, as she had no idea what series were on HBO, but couldn’t help but be charmed by the engaging Cal Bloodworth. “Sounds perfect. I’ll just wheel this back to the bedroom and head to the grocery.”

“I’m headed into town too. My house is just over the ridge there.” He pointed out the kitchen window to the roof about fifty yards away. “You just holler if you need anything.”

“Oh, Cal,” Lita said as he turned to leave. “Do you have a key?”

Cal laughed and leaned against the doorjamb. “I haven’t locked this place since I built it. No crime around here, but if you’re set in your city ways, there’s a key in the bowl on the table by the front door.”

As the door shut behind him, Lita turned to look at the key in the bowl, then at the door. There was no deadbolt, only a turn lock on the door handle. With security measures like that, she may as well leave the door unlocked.

* * *

Jesse Bloodworth peeled off his wetsuit and shook his icy limbs in the cool March air. He didn’t have a temperature gauge, but he’d guess the river wasn’t much above forty degrees. Hopping into the cold river was, during this time of year, like taking a cold shower. It worked about as well as a gallon of hot coffee for getting the day going.

He’d spent the morning scrubbing clean the rafts that would soon carry hundreds of families, church groups, day campers, and adventure seekers down the class two and three rapids of the Powollachee river. And as much as he hated cleaning, be it his room as a teenager or his house now, he was pretty damn pleased with the job he’d done so far.

He’d gotten a good jump on the day and now he was starving. He checked his watch. Noon—he should have known. His stomach worked better than any timepiece. He heaved the wetsuit over the banister of the registration cabin and stretched his back. He could head into town and weasel a pizza and beer out of Kerri Ann, but he was a whole lot closer to Cal’s and he hadn’t seen his dad in over a week. He could kill two birds with one stone and be able to swing by the high school and get Ty to help him this afternoon.

He whistled as he hopped into the ancient Super Scout II he’d had since high school and headed toward his hometown. God, it felt good to be home. It was a thought that entered his mind almost every day this time of year before the tourists started coming and the mountains were just waking up from winter.

He pulled onto Main Street, honked at Bobby Joe under the hood of somebody’s old Ford just to see him slam his head into the lift. He chuckled as he turned off toward Bloodworth Cabins. He’d just passed the grocery when some idiot in a brand new Land Rover swerved into his lane and nearly caused him to run off the road. “Damn tourists,” he muttered as he chugged along, the wind from the doors he’d removed this morning rushing past so fast that he had to turn his radio up to max volume to sing along with George Strait.

Jesse bypassed the main entrance, choosing to make the trek to his dad’s on the rocky side road used mainly for hauling wood because it always made him feel like the reckless teenager he used to be. Seeing as how Ty was sliding headlong into the reckless years, Jesse knew he needed to curb his indulgences. But Tyler wasn’t there, so he geared down and gunned the engine, nearly howling in delight as the car bumped over rock and gravel. He pulled to a stop by the woodpile and hopped out.

Cal’s car wasn’t parked in its usual spot along the garage by the one-bedroom cabin he rented, but that didn’t mean he wasn’t up at the larger cabin or fooling around in the storage shed. Jesse made his way to his mom and dad’s house just to be sure. Funny how Ellie Bloodworth had been gone for over a decade and yet Jesse still couldn’t think about his parents’ house as anything but hers.

She was everywhere, from the flowers that lined the stone walkway to the pink and white dogwood trees just springing to life under the larger oaks and pines. She’d spent weeks planting those trees when Jesse was young enough to want to follow his mom around and do whatever she was doing, be wherever she was. If he’d known how much he was going to miss her later in life, he’d have followed her around more often, instead of chasing girls and getting into trouble with his buddies.

The door was unlocked and Jesse stuck his head inside. “Dad,” he called. He got no reply, save for the ticking of the mantle clock in the living room. He pulled the door closed behind him and walked down to the storage shed. The building was open, as were all the buildings on the property, but sat dark and unoccupied. Damn. Jesse scratched the hair at the back of his neck, made a mental note to get a haircut sometime soon, and let out a big breath. He was still hungry and now that he’d stood still for a moment, he realized he smelled like a big rubber flotation device.

He decided to grab a shower before heading back to town and he made his way to the small cabin. He threw his keys on the counter and walked to the bathroom.

* * *

Angelita knew she’d overbought at the grocery store. She confirmed it when it took her three trips to unload the bags from the car and up the stairs to the cabin. She was heaving for breath as she set the last bags down and put her hands on her hips. She was wondering where to store all the food as she began placing items in the fridge.

When she was done, she had enough supplies to easily last two weeks and the time to indulge in one of her much loved pastimes, cooking. Cal had been right. The grocery had a wide selection of all kinds of food and, much to her delight, carried her favorite brand of coffee. It was the last item she stored, in the cupboard right above the automatic coffee maker. She turned to the sink to wash her hands and realized she’d forgotten soap. Oh well, there had to be some in the bathroom.

She’d just rounded the corner to the hall and had her arm outstretched to grasp the knob of the door when it opened and Lita found herself face to face with a wet, nearly naked man. “Ahhhhh,” she screamed and backed into the wall behind her, knocking a framed picture onto the floor and shattering its glass.

“Damn it,” the man said as he tightened the towel around his waist. “You scared the shit out of me.”

Lita backed into the kitchen and positioned herself along the counter nearest the block of knives should she need to use one in defense. She’d startled the man and, despite the fact that he hadn’t made a grab for her, she didn’t want to be careless. “Who are you and what are you doing in my cabin?”

“Your cabin?”

“I’m renting this cabin from Calvin Bloodworth. He carried my bags up just this morning.”

The man ran his hand through his sopping wet hair, a disheveled mop whose ends curled around the base of his ears. “Hell, I didn’t know he had a renter.” He placed his hands on the ends of the small towel, pushing it dangerously low on his narrow hips. “I’m Cal’s son, Jesse. Didn’t mean to scare you.”

“Oh.” She loosened her grip on the counter. “Well…” Not that his explanation made much sense, but it did relieve her nerves. “What are you doing here?”

He smiled and she saw it then, the same crooked smile as his father, the nearly identical chiseled jaw. He ducked his head in an aw-shucks move. “He’s not home and he keeps the better shampoo over here,” he said with a quick jerk of his shoulder.

She shouldn’t have done it. She shouldn’t have let her gaze follow the droplets of water as they slid from the hollow of his neck, past two very impressive pectoral muscles, down to bounce over his six pack abs like skiers on a moguls course. For a woman whose libido had been in hibernation for the better part of two years, her reaction to him was practically feral. Lust, in its purest, most basic form, caused her mouth to go dry and every coherent thought to fly out of her head. “Oh…”

He’d seen the change in her, smelled it like a male dog smells a female in heat. She could see the smirk on his lips, feel the heat of his hazel eyes on her body. When he zeroed in on her face, she knew it was beet red.

“I’ll just put some clothes on and be out of your way.” She nodded and waited for him to turn and walk back down the hall. Lita angled her head to take a good look at his retreating backside and was caught when he turned back around. “There’s a broom and dustpan next to the refrigerator. If you’ll set them out, I’ll clean this up for you.”

When the door closed behind him, Lita let out the breath she didn’t realize she’d been holding. Please, God, she prayed. Let him be stupid, so incredibly dim that she couldn’t possibly be attracted to him. Because of all the reasons she’d stepped away from her life at the drop of a shoe, falling head over heels in lust wasn’t one of them. It wasn’t even in the ballpark.

* * *

Cal Bloodworth strolled along the path that led from his garage to his house, whistling and swinging the bag full of miscellaneous supplies he’d picked up at the hardware store. That’s when he spotted Jesse’s Scout. Shit. With one impressive toss, the bag landed neatly on the front door mat as if he’d gently placed it there and Cal sprinted toward the cabin and the lovely Ms. Barros.

He knew she was home, as he’d just parked next to her SUV. But even without the car, he’d have known she was around. She smelled good, like flowers and woman, all wrapped into one and her perfume lingered in the air around the cabin. He’d been thinking on his stroll toward his house how nice it was to have a woman around again, how it seemed to make the flowers brighter, the budding leaves of the trees perkier, and the air almost cleaner.

And now all he could think was, “Holy hell.”

He gave a quick, but hardy knock on the back door and tried to rein in his breathing before opening the door an inch and peeking his head around. “Hello?” he called before moving inside and flashing his most innocent grin. “Angelita?”

She jerked around from the hallway holding a broom and dustpan. “Cal. Oh, you startled me.”

“Sorry about that. I saw your car and wanted to be sure you found the grocery and got everything you needed.” He inched further inside the room, all the while casually glancing around for any sign of Jesse.

“Yes, I got everything. Listen, Cal, I…broke one of the beautiful prints you had framed in the hallway.”

“No, she didn’t.” Jesse stepped out of the bathroom with steam and the fresh scent of soap in his wake.

Good Lord, he was too late.

Jesse reached over and gently took the broom and dustpan from Lita’s hands. “Well, I guess technically she did, but it was my fault.”

Cal closed his eyes briefly and shook his head. Jesse spoke to him, but he didn’t for a second take his eyes off Lita. Couldn’t say he blamed the kid, and Lita didn’t seem annoyed by it, but the last thing Cal wanted was for his son to scare away the first and only renter of the season.

“I see you’ve met my son, Jesse.”

“Yes.” Lita’s face appeared flushed.

Was she embarrassed, Cal wondered, or had something happened between them already? How long had he been gone?

“I’ll clean this up,” Jesse said. “And I apologize again about the shower and the scare.”

Lita nodded up at Jesse and made her way into the kitchen where Cal stood tongue-tied. She wouldn’t look him in the eye and he had the sudden urge to bolt. “Well, I guess I’ll be going then. You holler if you need anything. Jesse,” he called, purposely loud, “I could use your help with something before you go.”

“Be right over,” Jesse said and with that Cal smiled at Lita and walked slowly back to his house. Christ, maybe it wasn’t so nice having a woman around after all.

* * *

“Good as new.” Jesse replaced the broom and dustpan in their spot along the refrigerator. He turned around and blessed his dad for having enough smarts to leave them alone. “Angelita, is it?” What a name, but it fit. It was the kind of name that could only work on a Vegas stripper or a gorgeous woman. And considering the amount of blushing she’d done in the last fifteen minutes, he knew she had to be the latter, despite the spiky-heeled sandals and fancy clothes.

“Um hum,” she said and watched him with the deepest, darkest chocolate brown eyes he’d ever seen. “I hate to take you away from your smelly shampoos, but I’ll be here for awhile.”

“That so?” There truly was a God. “How long?”

“Two weeks, maybe longer.” Her voice was deep, too, and thick, like rich caramel syrup drizzled over ice cream. But despite her exotic and definitely foreign look, there wasn’t any trace of an accent coming out of her pipes.

“Well, I guess I’ve got some time to make a better impression.” He stepped an inch closer and had to fight the urge to reach out and run his hand over the dark brown curls swirling around her shoulders. Everything about her was dark and touchable.

“It can only go up.”

He’d made her uncomfortable; just that tiny step forward and she’d reached around to grip the counter like she had when he’d first popped out of the shower and found her screaming at him. He wondered what made a woman like her, a woman who packed a punch with just a glance, so vulnerable? “I’d better get out of your hair. It was nice to meet you, Angelita.”

“You too.” She followed him to the door. When it shut quickly behind him, he heard the distinct click of the lock that hadn’t been engaged in, well…ever, as far as he knew.

Jesse patted the knotted muscles of his stomach. Lord have mercy. Seemed driving up the old logging road wasn’t the only teenaged behavior he was indulging in today. He hadn’t had that kind of reaction to a woman, or from a woman, since Kerri Ann performed her cheerleading dance to “Flip Fantasia,” looking him directly in the eye during the half-time show at county finals when he was thirteen. He’d had to borrow Bryce Jenson’s jean jacket to spread over his lap until he’d gotten things under control.

Thankfully he’d learned to regulate that particular area of his body, but that didn’t stop his heart from damn near leaping out his chest. What a looker. It was like someone, maybe the God he occasionally prayed to, put all his favorite parts of a woman together in one unbelievable package—and dropped her right into his lap.

The mass of curling dark hair, the shimmering olive skin, the strong straight nose, and those full red lips. But it was her eyes–deep set, molasses brown, and slightly turned up at the ends–that did him in. And what the hell had she been wearing? He hadn’t seen clothes like that since he’d been clubbing in Atlanta and women were dressed to lure and tease.

He must have been dreaming. But no, when he turned back around, there she was, peeking through the blinds. He had to stifle a cocky grin. He’d caught her looking twice now.

Jesse was so mired in thoughts of the mysterious and beautiful Angelita, he didn’t even realize his dad was calling to him from the porch.

“Jess, are you deaf, son?” Cal called and let the screen door slam behind him.

“Huh?”

“What the hell were you doing in the cabin or do I even need to ask?”

“Oh, I was, ah…”

Cal stepped off the porch and met Jesse halfway down the stone walkway, reached his hand out to feel the damp ends of his hair. “Is that strawberry-kiwi I smell? Damn it, Jesse. If you’d ever bother to answer your cell phone, you’d have known I had a renter.”

“Now you tell me.”

“She just got here this morning.” He put his hands on his hips and closed his eyes. “Did she see you naked?”

“No, but she damn near gave me a heart attack when I came out of the bathroom.” He patted his heart. “But the bigger jolt was her looks. Where’d she come from? You been rubbing bottles and asking genies for wishes?”

Cal smacked Jesse affectionately on the head. “Atlanta. She called this morning and now she’s here. And I want her to stay. Haven’t had any rental income since October.”

“Believe me, Dad, I want her to stay too.”

“Then find somewhere else to shower and take a nap. If she bolts, I’m going to have to start paying Ty in IOUs.”

Jesse cocked his head and put his hands on his hips. “I don’t ever remember you paying me to do work around here.”

“That’s because you lived here. Ty’s my grandson and he’s a teenager. If I want to see him, I’d better make it worth his while.”

“Well,” Jesse looked back toward the cabin, “I hope you’re prepared to see a lot of me because Angelita’s made putting up with you worth my while.”

Cal ran a hand over his face. “I don’t even know her story, son. For all I know she could have a husband coming up on the weekends.”

“Did you ask her?”

“No.”

“Find out for me, would you?” He punched his dad in the shoulder and made his way to the Scout. “God knows you love to pry.”

“Where’re you going?” Cal asked with an exasperated sigh.

“Getting Ty from school. He works for me for free.”

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