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Falling for her Brother's Best Friend (Tea for Two Book 1)
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Falling for her Brother’s Best Friend
Noelle Adams
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright © 2017 by Noelle Adams. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means.
Contents
Characters
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Epilogue
Excerpt from Her Reluctant Billionaire
About Noelle Adams
Characters
There are three different brother-sister combos introduced in this book (and series), so in case you need a little cheat sheet early on to keep them straight, I’ve outlined them below by family.
The Harts
Noah Hart – hugely successful in business, coming home after many years
Ginny (Virginia) Hart – his sister, co-owner of Tea for Two
Nan – their grandmother
The Stevensons
Emma Stevenson – does finances for her brother’s IT company, is not crazy about Noah
Patrick Stevenson – her brother, a tech genius
The Murphys
Carol Murphy – co-owner of Tea for Two
Ryan Murphy – her brother, a large animal veterinarian
One
“I’ve got a plan,” Emma Stevenson announced, bringing a plate of Russian teacakes over to the small table next to the window, where her two best friends were sitting with a pot of tea and three pretty teacups on matching saucers.
Carol rolled her big gray eyes. “Seriously? We’ve been working on plans for eighteen months now. If we add any more plans to the mix, the whole enterprise is going to implode from the weight of our brilliance.”
Virginia, called Ginny by everyone since she was two years old, chuckled as she leaned back in her chair. “I don’t think she was talking about Tea for Two plans.”
A couple of years ago, Carol had come up with the idea of opening a tearoom in downtown Blacksburg, the town in the mountains of southwest Virginia where the three of them had lived all their lives. Carol had been making pastries and serving drinks in a coffee shop since high school, and Ginny had been working at a marketing firm in Roanoke but hated the commute, so they’d combined their skill set to make the tearoom happen.
Emma already had a full-time job doing the finances for her brother’s IT company, and she wasn’t about to bail on him, but she’d helped them put together the business plan and had set up the accounting system, since neither Ginny nor Carol were numbers oriented.
The three girls had become friends when they were ten, thrown together because their older brothers were best friends and so their parents thought they should be too. Back then—and still today—they had little in common in terms of character traits. Carol was the dreamy, creative one. Ginny was the confident, flirty one. And Emma…
Emma was the boring, brainy one.
They’d never stopped being best friends, though, and Emma assumed they never would.
“What was the plan then?” Carol asked, her eyes still wide. She was pretty in a soft, curvy way with long reddish hair and eyes like melting silver.
“The plan is for me personally,” Emma announced, taking a sip of the tea Ginny had just poured for her. As the liquid hit her tongue, she was immediately distracted. “Wow! What kind of tea is this?”
Carol looked pleased and slightly guilty. “Just some new loose leaf I got in this morning. First flush Darjeeling.”
Ginny had been taking a sip too, but at this she gave a jerk and almost spit it out. “What? And you’re serving it to us?”
“We have to try it out before we sell it.”
Ginny made another face, but that didn’t stop her from taking another sip. “If we keep drinking the expensive stuff on our tea breaks, we’re going to go broke before we even open.”
Emma laughed, used to her friends’ occasional disagreements about the shop. “One pot isn’t going to break you, as long as it doesn’t become a habit. This is really good.”
“It is good,” Ginny agreed. “No wonder it costs so much.” Then she put down her cup and focused on Emma. “So tell us what this personal plan of yours is.”
“Oh,” Emma said, clearing her throat. “I’ve been thinking a lot and came up with this plan. To avoid any more Dex-debacles.”
“You can avoid Dex-debacles by not dating any more jackasses,” Ginny said.
A month ago, Emma had gone through three painful, angst-ridden weeks of breaking up with a guy named Dex. She’d believed they were exclusive after dating for four months but had started to suspect they weren’t, and he’d strung her along with a lot of lies until Ginny had gone on a spying mission and taken pictures of him with another woman’s tongue in his mouth.
Emma still cringed at the humiliation of it.
“I know that,” she said. The tearoom wasn’t going to open for two more weeks, so they were completely alone in the shop. There was no risk of anyone else overhearing. “But my problem is I’m incapable of spotting the jackasses. In fact, they’re all I seem to be attracted to. So that’s where my plan comes in.”
“I can’t wait to hear this,” Ginny muttered dryly. She was tall and slim and very blond—the most traditionally pretty of the three of them.
“Shh.” Carol gave Ginny a poke. “Let her tell us before you get snarky.”
Emma cleared her throat. “I’m going on a Man-Fast.”
Both Carol and Ginny were silent for a moment. Then Ginny asked, “Can I get snarky now?”
“You can mock if you want, but I’m serious about this,” Emma replied, trying not to giggle at her friends’ stunned expressions. “It’s exactly what I need. For six months, I’m fasting from men. I’m not going to date them or dream about them or think about falling in love. It’s going to be a complete fast—just to clear my mind and give me a better perspective on what I want.”
“Most people call that a break,” Carol said softly.
“A break isn’t strong enough. It has to be a complete fast. I’m tired of only dating losers.”
“So find a nice guy to date instead,” Carol replied. Ever since childhood, she’d firmly believed that there was one nice guy intended for each of them. They only had to wait, and he would appear. Carol had never once wavered from that belief.
“I’m not attracted to nice guys! I’m only attracted to assholes. Think about it. There was Dex, and before that there was Larry the married liar, and before that there was Jackson who did nothing but boss me around, and before that there was Mark who only wanted open relationships.”
“Mark wasn’t really an asshole,” Ginny put in. “He was honest about what he believed in. He just wasn’t right for you.”
“That’s not the point. The point is I’m not attracted to the guys who are right for me.”
“You might have a point. You had a crush on Noah all through high school, and you believed beyond all reason that he was finally going to stop calling you Pudge and fall in love with you. It was honestly kind of embarrassing. Talk about the wrong guy for you.” Ginny’s eyes were sparkling. Noah was her older brother, but she never had any qualms about admitting her brother’s nature, which was hopelessly prone to wander and resistant to ties of any kind. Ginny actually had some
of the same propensities, although she seemed content to stay in town, rather than move all over the world like Noah.
Emma blushed slightly. She knew very well that she’d been incredibly stupid as a teenager with her crush on Noah. She’d been plain and awkward and shy—exactly the kind of girl he wouldn’t look at twice. He’d called her Pudge, and everyone assumed it was because she’d been a little bit chubby. She didn’t believe that was true, but she’d finally had to admit the nickname wasn’t a sign of his lingering fondness or affection for her. It should have been clear to anyone with half a brain that when he thought about her at all, it was just as his best friend’s little sister.
She’d kept swooning over him, though, until he’d finally graduated from high school and moved away.
She’d only seen him once after that—at his mother’s funeral, which had coincided with her high school graduation. He’d come for his mother’s funeral and stayed to see Ginny graduate, and he hadn’t made an appearance in Blacksburg since.
Seven years now.
“I know I was idiotic,” she admitted. “I always am. That’s what I’m trying to say. That’s where the Man-Fast comes in. No guys at all for six months. But you both are going to have to help me. You have to keep me on track if I start to stray from the straight and narrow.”
Ginny wasn’t even trying to hide her amusement. “I give you about two weeks.”
“No, I’m serious about it. Please. I really think it will be good for me.”
“Of course we’ll help you,” Carol said. “I think it’s a smart idea. And, just think, the man of your dreams always comes along when you least expect it.”
“No! That’s not going to happen for the next six months. It’s got to be a complete Man-Fast. No hopes or dreams or anything.”
“Man-Fast it is,” Ginny said. “It will give you more time to help us with the launch anyway.”
“Exactly. I have better things to worry about than guys. I’ve got to get to the mental place where I’m not attracted to jackasses. I really think this is the way to do it.”
“We’ll support you however you need,” Carol said, her face as serious as Ginny’s was amused.
“Good. Thank you. Tea for Two is a lot more important than dating assholes. Is there anything else you need me to do in preparation for the grand opening?”
“No,” Ginny said. “Just make sure Patrick shows up.”
Patrick was Emma’s older brother. “He’s not going to want to. He hates big parties and gatherings.”
“He has to come,” Ginny said, glancing over at Carol, who nodded. “If we don’t get some good-looking guys here, then it’s all going to be old ladies and college girls pretending to be British. We all have to drag our brothers along.”
“Patrick?” Emma asked, raising her eyebrows. “You’re calling Patrick a good-looking guy?”
“Of course he is!” Carol’s eyes got even bigger. “He’s adorable.”
“He’s super-cute,” Ginny added, with a matter-of-fact nod that left no room for argument. “He’s really improved over the years. You just can’t see it because he’s your brother.”
Patrick was a lot like Emma. Brown hair, brown eyes, nothing particularly noteworthy. Emma was oddly pleased to hear her friends’ assessment, although she would likely never think of her brother as anything but the plain little nerd he’d been in high school.
“Okay,” she said. “I’ll do my best to bully him into coming. And I assume you’ll get Ryan to come.” She glanced over at Carol.
“Yes. He’ll come. I’ll just tell him there will be a lot of hot, single girls there, and I won’t be able to keep him away.”
In his own way, Carol’s brother, Ryan, was just as dreamy as she was. In his case, however, it was channeled into seducing anything in a skirt. They’d had many a giggle about his romantic conquests over the years, except for the six months in college when he’d gone out with Ginny. That hadn’t worked out, though, and the two had managed to remain friends. Ryan showed no signs of settling down yet, but he wasn’t mean or heartless about it, so most of the women ended up still liking him after it was over.
Emma had no idea how he did it.
“So that’s two brothers who will be here,” she said. “Not bad, considering.”
She saw Ginny glance over to meet Carol’s eyes.
“What?” Emma demanded. She knew a significant undercurrent when she sensed one.
“Noah is definitely going to be there,” Ginny said with a little smile.
Emma gasped. “How are you going to get him here from Tokyo?”
Noah was some sort of business super-star. He worked for a huge, multi-national corporation, and he seemed to get promoted every six months. It was hard to keep track of him because he got transferred so often all over the world. New York. London. Geneva. São Paulo. Toronto. And now Tokyo.
Emma might not have seen him since high school, but she kept up with his doings through Ginny. He’d gotten an MBA like her, but unlike her, he’d gotten as far away from Blacksburg as he could get.
“He’s coming in a few days,” Ginny said. “I gave him a guilt trip because Nan’s been so sick lately. It’s really bad that he never comes to see her, and I made sure he knew it. He might not want anything to do with Dad, but he still loves Nan. He got his company to agree to let him work from here for a month or two.”
“A month or two?” Emma gasped, trying to wrap her mind around the fact that, not only was Noah visiting, but his visit was going to last a long time.
“Yep. I gave him a master guilt-trip. You’d have been proud of me. Anyway, he’s coming next week. Since his trip just happens to coincide with the launch of Tea for Two, he’s going to get dragged to the opening, whether he wants it or not.” The set of Ginny’s chin proved how stubborn she was going to be about this.
Emma’s heart did a weird little flutter at the idea of seeing Noah again.
She might not have seen him in seven years, but it felt like she still knew him well. Intimately.
She wondered if he still looked the same. If he’d still see her as that pudgy little girl she used to be.
But, no, it didn’t matter. She was on a Man-Fast now.
She didn’t care about men for the next six months.
She didn’t care about Noah’s return.
“Still doing the Man-Fast thing?” Ginny asked, a lilt to her voice.
“Yes.” Emma nodded firmly. “Absolutely.” She glanced at her watch, finished her tea since it was too good to waste, and then leaned down to pick up her purse from the floor. “I better get going. I’ve got to pick up Patrick in Roanoke. He’s flying in this afternoon.”
“He’s making you drive all that way to pick him up? Why didn’t he just drive himself?” Ginny asked.
“My car is getting some work done, so I’ve been driving his while he’s out of town. Since he let me borrow it, I’m picking him up. I don’t mind. We should be out of there before rush-hour traffic.”
“Okay. I’d be annoyed by it, though,” Ginny said as Emma stood up. “I used to have to make that drive every day, and I-81 over the mountain is always a pain.”
“Tell Patrick I said hi,” Carol added.
“Sure thing.”
Emma left the pretty little tearoom and walked down the block to the parking lot for her apartment building.
She tried to think about the launch this weekend.
She tried to think about her Man-Fast.
She tried to think about her brother’s business trip and whether he’d managed to acquire the big client he was after.
She tried to think about anything except Noah Hart, coming back home after so long.
***
Noah Hart was attempting not to raise his voice and not having much luck in it. “How could you possibly lose my luggage?” he demanded. “There are about four gates at this airport.”
“It didn’t happen here, sir,” a flustered clerk explained. “It happened at LaGuardia.”
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“If they hadn’t insisted on checking my bag, this wouldn’t have been a problem.”
“I understand, sir, but it was a full flight, and you walked on at the last minute.”
Noah hadn’t been planning on coming into Blacksburg until next week, but his work schedule had changed so he’d decided to come in early, mostly because he was afraid if he delayed much longer, he’d change his mind and not come at all.
The flight from Tokyo to New York had been fine, but the only flights from New York to Roanoke were on very small planes without first class or business class cabins. So he’d been treated like any other passenger, and they’d insisted on checking his bag when he’d tried to board.
Naturally, his luggage hadn’t made it.
What else could he expect? He’d never wanted to make this trip to begin with.
He was on the verge of loudly expressing his displeasure, but he cut himself off. The clerk looked like she might cry at any minute, and it wasn’t even her fault.
He swallowed over his frustration and gave a curt nod. “I’m on my way to Blacksburg. Am I going to have to drive all the way back up here to pick up my bag?”
“No, sir. We’ll have it delivered to you. But if you don’t mind waiting a few minutes, I’ll double check and make sure it’s not here after all and just slipped through the cracks somehow.”
“I’ll be at the bar,” he muttered.
The Roanoke airport was tiny, but it was clean and sunny and more pleasant than a lot of airports he’d been to over the years. He wandered in the direction of the only bar he could see. He wouldn’t be surprised if it was the only bar in the whole airport.
As he approached, he noticed a young woman watching him.
She was perched on a stool at the end of the bar, her hand wrapped around a glass of what looked like club soda. She was crossing a pair of very fine legs.
His body immediately tightened with interest.
She was a pretty little thing. Small but with a great shape to her. She wore a knee-length dress and sandals. She had shoulder length brown hair, clear skin, dark eyes, and lovely, lush lips.