Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

The Truth about Cats
The Truth about Cats
The Truth about Cats
Ebook183 pages2 hours

The Truth about Cats

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Rick Engle had seen Jennifer Hollman, she'd been the rich girl dumping him for someone from her own background. He'd thought he had put her behind her but when he saw her working in that low-rent department store, the attraction still sizzled. When he gets her fired from her job and kicked out of her apartment, he has to take her in. Not that he minds too much.

Jennifer still hurts from the way Rick had left her years before. She knows he'll laugh when he discovers her father lost his fortune day trading. Still, she doesn't have a lot of options--although if Rick thinks he's going to get lucky just because he makes her ache with desire, he's got another thing coming. One thing about Jennifer, though. She is a planner and a fixer. Before Rick knows what's happening, she has a twelve step program that is certain to make him perfect. If only he'll sit still long enough for it to take.

THE TRUTH ABOUT CATS is about two people who are polar opposites, yet who fit one another like hand and gloves. Jennifer is poor now, but she sparkles with class and polish. Rick has become rich running a successful 'dot com' company offering tattoos and body art, but he's still a little rough around the edges. Maybe he could use a few of Jennifer's 'steps,' but he won't be anyone's project. This may be the funniest romance you read this year.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherRob Preece
Release dateSep 12, 2012
ISBN9781602152021
The Truth about Cats
Author

Robyn Anders

Robyn Anders writes with a sly touch of humor as well as a keen sense for emotion. A native of Texas, Robyn writes of cowboys, tattoo tycoons, soldiers, and the women who love them.

Read more from Robyn Anders

Related to The Truth about Cats

Related ebooks

Contemporary Romance For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for The Truth about Cats

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    The Truth about Cats - Robyn Anders

    THE TRUTH ABOUT CATS

    Robyn Anders

    Published by BooksForABuck.com at Smashwords

    Copyright Robyn Anders 2000-2012

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    Chapter One

    "You're late again."

    Jennifer Hollman ducked her head, trying to put her eyes below her boss's level. He didn't like it when people stood over him. That little character defect caused problems since, on tiptoes in his platform shoes, he towered a good two inches below her own five-six.

    Sorry, sir. It's just that

    I don't tolerate rules violations, Ms. Hollman. Late is late.

    Obviously Mr. Chuck Schilling, Jr., manager of his family's Schilling Department Store, wasn't having a good day. Jennifer couldn't remember his last good day, but his moodiness meant she couldn't tell him about the little discoveries she'd made on her walk to work. Animals, like just about everything else, were against the rules.

    As if tracking her thoughts, Schilling glared at her.

    What's in the sack?

    Jennifer looked at the brown paper bag she carried as if seeing it for the first time. It wobbled, and she wiggled her hand to make the movement seem natural. I always bring my lunch.

    Right. Well, Ms. Hollman. . . his gaze left her when he spotted an easier victim. You there. Ms. Rogers. I know that's your boyfriend you're talking with. The rule is, no fraternization.

    Jennifer moved to help Lisa but the scratching sound from her bag stopped her cold. If she didn't get out, she'd get both of them fired. Instead of staying, she escaped toward her station in the lingerie department.

    She whispered a little warning to silence the sweet mewing inside the brown paper bag that had once held her lunch but now held two kittens she'd found abandoned on the side of the road. She needed to find them a safe hideout until she could sneak them home.

    A frantic look around her department offered only one potential hiding place. The overstock drawer on the top shelf. It wouldn't matter what kind of a mess the kittens made there since that lingerie was going to be discarded anyway.

    She petted the little calico female, avoided a playful bite from the black-and-white male and wondered why anyone would abandon these precious animals? As quickly as she could, she made a cozy nest in the fading bra and panty sets, nestled her kittens, then closed the drawer.

    Her most regular customer, Mrs. Nash, strode up to the counter just as Jennifer clambered down the stepladder.

    I have a date, the woman declared.

    Fantastic, Jennifer effused as if the sixty-something Mrs. Nash hadn't had at least one date during each of the past fifty-two weekends. One of your regulars?

    This one is new, Mrs. Nash said with a girlish giggle. And special. I want him to notice me. The woman gave a hip roll that scattered a rack of sale panties across the floor. Mrs. Nash weighed over two hundred pounds, but she enjoyed her men. From what Jennifer could tell, they enjoyed her too. Since Jennifer's current male companions were feline rather than human, she didn't have any room to criticize.

    For a first date you'll want something conservative, Jennifer suggested. I've got a pair of navy tights that are extremely, you know, supportive.

    Out of the corner of Jennifer's eye, she noticed a man in Lisa Roger's department. He picked up a sports watch and studied it. Since Lisa had disappeared after Schilling's lecture Jennifer was responsible for both stations.

    You're not listening, Mrs. Nash insisted.

    I'm sorry. What were you saying?

    I don't want conservative, I want wild. Something to knock his pants off if you know what I mean. She gave Jennifer a leer. Something a hunk like him over there would notice. Mrs. Nash stuck her thumb in the direction of the male shopper.

    Jennifer looked at the man more closely.

    He was tall, maybe six-three, but not skinny like a lot of tall guys. In fact, Jennifer couldn't see anything wrong with his body. With everything else, yes. His work boots were scuffed and stained with grease. Paint-spattered cowboy-cut jeans hugged his perfectly shaped butt. His gray T-shirt held a logo for Tattoo.com proclaiming it the largest body art site on the web. His black hair was way too long for her taste, hanging down below a battered straw cowboy hat.

    Worse, in the instant Mrs. Nash had distracted her, the watch he'd held had vanished. Darn.

    Jennifer normally ignored men. None were involved in the Dallas Cat Rescue League and few bothered entering the lingerie department. When they did, they generally wanted out in a hurry. Still, this man was hard to ignore. Maybe it was the arrogant way he stood, as if he owned the world. Then he caught her gaze and quickly ducked his head, avoiding meeting her eyes. Like a shoplifter.

    Excuse me. She left Mrs. Nash and walked toward the man. His shopping bag could hide handfuls of small, valuable items. Like watches or lingerie.

    Would you mind if I looked in that bag, sir?

    Yes I would. His voice touched her at some subconscious level, and her hormones went into overdrive in a way they hadn't since she'd been in high school dating Rick Engle.

    She closed the distance between them, entering into his personal space. She could handle this. Sir, I'm going to have to insist.

    I don't think so, Jennifer.

    He knew her name.

    She couldn't help herself. Without conscious volition, her hand reached for his hat and tugged it off.

    The man's face was too strong to be movie-star handsome. His tan looked more like he'd earned it working in the sun than in a tanning bed. Hawklike black eyes glared at her. She knew those eyes, that face.

    Once his lips had kissed her to distraction. From their set grimace, now kissing was the farthest thing from Rick Engle's mind.

    Rick, she breathed. What are you doing here?

    Jennifer wasn't sure how she felt about meeting Rick ten years after he'd stormed out of her life. Obviously Rick didn't suffer any of the same confusion. He was mad.

    "That was my question. Don't you have anything better to do than slum in Oak Cliff?" he demanded.

    He obviously assumed she was still the little rich girl she'd been in high school. Tough. She didn't owe him any explanation.

    That's none of--

    A shrill scream interrupted her before Jennifer could complete her reply.

    What the-- Rick dropped his bag. His hands formed into fists that looked hard and dangerous. This man knew how to fight.

    Rats! Mrs. Nash screamed.

    ***

    For the first time in years, Rick didn't know how to react.

    As he watched the jiggle under the top of Jennifer's dress while she hurried to help her distressed customer, his common sense told him to walk away from a problem. His feet had other ideas.

    He followed Jennifer, letting his gaze trail her long blonde hair all the way to her backside. She was thinner than he remembered, but all her curves were definitely prime. Her long legs looked like heaven. Fortunately, he knew better. Once, they'd driven him to hell.

    Damn, he muttered. The last thing he needed was a hormonal reaction to the teen flame who'd dropped him like he was on fire.

    The customer squealed again.

    He didn't think, he just moved, covering the distance to the older woman in plenty of time to catch her as she collapsed and fell from a rickety step ladder.

    He couldn't suppress a grunt as way more than two hundred pounds of Rubenesque woman draped themselves over him. He coughed through the cloud of powder that erupted from her skin. Catching this woman was like wrestling jello, but he held on long enough to break her fall. Then he lowered her onto a padded bench outside of a dressing room.

    You look after the lady. I'll have a go at the rats, he told Jennifer.

    But--

    Do it.

    Jennifer's blue eyes flashed with anger but he didn't stay to argue. Rats make nasty neighbors.

    Rather than peer into the drawer like a dufus waiting to get bit, Rick took one step up the ladder, grasped the handles, and jerked the drawer from the wall. In a continuous motion he set it on the floor, and then snapped a three foot length off a nearby broom. He'd killed rats with his bare hands before; he hoped never to repeat the experience.

    No rats in sight. Instead, two tiny kittens wiggled in the cups of the most enormous bra he'd ever seen.

    He relaxed. Now that's an interesting way of stuffing a bra. He spared a glance at Jennifer's shapely chest. Not quite as good as some, he continued, but interesting.

    Careful to avoid the cats, he prodded the drawer full of brassieres and felines with his broom pole.

    Don't hurt my kittens! Jennifer swooped in for the rescue.

    One thing hadn't changed. Jennifer was still looking for helpless victims to salvage. It had taken him years to realize that's all he had ever been to her. Another luckless creature to be rescued, healed, and then sent on his way.

    I'm not going to--

    Now just what is going on here? An obnoxious and officious-looking man interrupted Rick.

    Rick kept his gaze on Jennifer, not even bothering to give the interloper his attention.

    Jennifer, I asked you a question. Apparently the jerk was a manager--probably Jennifer's boss.

    The older woman who had nearly broken his back sidled up to Rick. It's rats. In that drawer. They were wiggling and, ugh, so hairy. She ran a hand down Rick's arm squeezing his muscle like it was so much meat. This man rescued me.

    Rats? I assure you ma'am, that--

    There aren't any rats here. Rick ignored the jerk-boss, speaking to the woman. I suspect you just saw these--

    Kittens! The manager used his tie to wipe ugly beads of sweat from his face. No rats. He laughed like a dime-store Santa Claus on his way to the unemployment line. Then he glared at Jennifer. What are your vermin doing in my merchandise?

    I'm sorry Mr. Schilling. They're just kittens and I was going to take them home during my break. Jennifer's voice sounded ragged and she wrung her hands with concern--like she really cared about this job.

    Rick shook his head. What an actress. Her father's money was a safety net millions of dollars wide.

    I was going to take them home during my break, Schilling mimicked.

    I just--

    Rick didn't have a lot of use for kittens. He had even less use for bosses who enjoy throwing their authority around. He unwrapped himself from the clingy customer and closed the distance to Jennifer's manager. She said she would take them home. No harm, no foul.

    Let me handle this, Jennifer whispered.

    No harm? Schilling exploded. Look at the mess these animals made in that drawer.

    I'll pay for the damage, Jennifer offered.

    It was like Jennifer to buy her way out of trouble, Rick remembered.

    You're darned right you'll pay, Schilling growled.

    Rick had never been much good at butting out of trouble. He poked at the wad of girlie underwear in the drawer. These bras look pretty faded to me. You planning to make Jennifer pay for your rejects?

    Rick, this is none of your business.

    You know this man, Ms. Hollman?

    He's an old friend. He just happened--

    Just happened to come by, Schilling interrupted. Of course. His tiny teeth formed a fake-sad smile. I don't know why you clerks always think that old line will work for you. You know the rules on fraternization. I would have thought you'd learn from Ms. Rogers' mistakes. Schilling shook his head in mock sorrow. You can pick up your last paycheck next week. Minus damages, of course.

    Now just a minute, turkey. Rick grasped Schilling by his polyester tie and halfway lifted him from the floor. You can't fire a person because an acquaintance stopped by.

    Security, Schilling gasped.

    ***

    I could have talked my way out, Jennifer said, if you hadn't gone and attacked him. She was almost angry enough to attack someone herself and Rick was handiest. She balled her fists, but then took a deep breath and looked forlornly at the Schilling Department Store marquis. She'd had this job for almost a year and needed the money.

    Rick didn't bother defending himself, probably because he didn't believe he'd done anything wrong. Pompous jerks like Schilling belong behind bars, was his only comment.

    Judging from the scars on his knuckles and his hard muscular build, Jennifer wouldn't have been surprised if he'd spent at least some time in prison himself. What kind of a man wears an advertisement for tattoos?

    Mr. Schilling is trying to do his job, Jennifer told Rick. It isn't easy keeping retail alive in this neighborhood.

    Rick looked at Jennifer like

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1