One Summer Weekend Read online




  Best friends. A fake relationship. And only one bed.

  New York Times bestselling author Shannon Stacey delivers the feel-good beach read you’ve been waiting for.

  Noah Stafford loves his life—his happy, single life. So what if he made up a fake girlfriend to stop his boss’s matchmaking? He kept things close to the truth—Carly really does have long, sexy legs and a killer sense of humor. She just happens to be his best friend. His wicked awesome and completely platonic best friend.

  But now his boss is having a destination wedding, and Noah is expected to attend...with Carly, his girlfriend.

  Carly Randall has no interest in living out a rom-com plot. But Noah is her best friend, so she agrees to help. Still, once they arrive on Cape Cod, she can’t explain the sudden butterflies she feels when he looks at her that way. Or why she doesn’t mind when Noah’s hands stray a little south of her back.

  What happens on the Cape stays on the Cape.

  Except not really, not at all, and once their sexy faux-cation is over, Noah and Carly return to a reality where everything’s changed. Going for it would mean risking their friendship...but forgetting how good they were together just isn’t an option.

  This book is approximately 27,000 words

  One-click with confidence. This title is part of the Carina Press Romance Promise: all the romance you’re looking for with an HEA/HFN. It’s a promise!

  Also available from Shannon Stacey

  and Carina Press

  The Kowalski Series

  Exclusively Yours

  Undeniably Yours

  Yours to Keep

  All He Ever Needed

  All He Ever Desired

  All He Ever Dreamed

  Love a Little Sideways

  Taken with You

  Falling for Max

  What It Takes

  The Boston Fire Series

  Heat Exchange

  Controlled Burn

  Fully Ignited

  Hot Response

  Under Control

  Flare Up

  Also available from Shannon Stacey and Carina Press

  Holiday Sparks

  Mistletoe and Margaritas

  Slow Summer Kisses

  Snowbound with the CEO

  Her Holiday Man

  A Fighting Chance

  Holiday with a Twist

  Hold Her Again

  Also available from Shannon Stacey and Harlequin

  Alone with You

  Heart of the Storm

  Coming soon from Shannon Stacey and Carina Press

  One Christmas Eve

  One Summer Weekend

  Shannon Stacey

  For my husband. We’ve had two and a half decades of adventures together, and I can’t wait for all of the adventures yet to come!

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Excerpt from Slow Summer Kisses by Shannon Stacey

  Chapter One

  “We’re really looking forward to finally meeting your girlfriend.”

  Noah Stafford froze in the act of shutting down his computer as one word echoed around in his head.

  Shit.

  Outside of Jim telling him the company’s accountant had embezzled all of the business profits and fled to a small island in the Caribbean, leaving them all out of work, those were the last words he wanted to hear from his boss.

  He didn’t actually have a girlfriend for Jim and his fiancée to finally meet. That was a problem.

  “We’ve heard so much about Carly,” Jim continued. “It feels like we know her already, and I think she and Emily will get along great.”

  They probably would, right up until the moment Emily said something about Carly and Noah dating and Carly laughed at her.

  Carly Randall was his best friend, and had been for their entire lives. But she was definitely not his girlfriend.

  And when the truth came out, the best boss he’d ever had—at his dream job no less—would know he’d been lying for the last six months. And then he’d be fired, two months before his one-year anniversary of working with the best architectural engineer in the region.

  Jim had taken a chance on him. Noah’s degree wasn’t from a top school because he hadn’t been able to afford it, but he had the paper, talent and drive. And not having to move to a big city to make a living just made it all the sweeter. He’d worked there for barely two months before Jim put an addition on the building to give Noah his own office and started strategizing about how they were going to grow the business. Together.

  He not only had the job of his dreams but his boss’s respect and now one really stupid lie threatened everything.

  “I’m not sure she’ll be able to get the time off,” Noah said. “We’re hoping she will, but it’s a busy time of year for her with the tourists in town and all.”

  “It’s only a week and a half from now, Noah. And she works for herself, doesn’t she?”

  “Uh.” Shit. “She owns a bookstore with her cousin, but they usually both work on weekends because it’s busier.”

  Technically that was the truth, although Carly and Zoe had covered for each other in the past if one of them had something important come up. Whether Carly thought the predicament he’d put himself in was important was another thing entirely.

  If it came down to it, he could always wait until it was time and claim Carly had come down with something. Worst case scenario, he claimed they were both sick and skipped the weekend entirely.

  He didn’t really want to do that, though. Jim not only signed his paychecks, but they’d become good friends. And he liked Emily, her determination to hook him up with her sister notwithstanding.

  “I’ll remind her about it this weekend,” he promised. “I know she wants to go and she was going to talk to her cousin about getting the time off.”

  That was a flat-out lie, since she knew about the wedding but had no idea she was supposed to be his plus-one.

  It wasn’t hard for him to picture her reaction to that, since he and Carly had been friends for so long neither of them had a memory of the first time they’d met. They’d just always been friends. He’d have trouble seeing her blue eyes, since she’d probably have her long, dark hair in a ponytail pulled through the hole in the back of a ball cap, but he could already hear her laughter in his mind. She was going to laugh her ass off when he confessed what he’d done.

  But he had to accept his impending humiliation and make the confession. It was Tuesday and he had a date to go four-wheeling with Carly tomorrow after work.

  Well, maybe date was the wrong word since he was going to be asking her to go on an actual date with him. But fake. An actual fake date.

  He’d put it off too long, unable to tell Jim they’d broken up or to find the words to explain it all to Carly. He kept telling himself he’d ask her next time.

  And now he was out of time and next time was tomorrow.

  * * *

  Something was bugging Noah. Carly had known it as soon as she showed up at his house, where he kept her ATV on the trailer with his since she didn’t have a place to keep it or a vehicle to pull it with. Since she never went riding without him, it was easier to leave
it with him.

  He looked normal from a distance. His dark hair was short, but since she occasionally trimmed it for him in a pinch, she knew it was deliciously thick. And soft, unlike his beard, which was also thick, but more coarse. One of his hands was shading eyes the color of chocolate pudding from the sun while the other lifted to give her a wave. But as soon as she’d parked her small car off to the side and joined him by the trailer, she could tell something was off. He was jittery, as if he’d drunk about two gallons too much coffee, and every time she looked at him, his gaze darted away.

  “Everything’s in the truck,” he said, “so I’ve just gotta lock up the house and I’ll be ready to go.”

  “You okay?”

  “Yeah, why?” he asked, not meeting her eyes.

  “No reason.” That was weird. He was definitely hiding something.

  Noah told her pretty much everything and anything, so if something was bothering him and he didn’t want to tell her about it, maybe it was her. She couldn’t think of anything she’d done or said that might have upset him, though, so she let it go. For now.

  It was a twenty-minute drive to the trailhead and he laughed at all the right places when she shared some funny stories from the world of tourist-driven retail. But he was drumming his fingers on the wheel.

  She’d bide her time. Noah would crack. He always did.

  But he said nothing while they parked and unloaded the four-wheelers. Or while they grabbed their gear—helmets, goggles and gloves—from the backseat of his truck. Maybe some time on the trail would shake loose whatever was stuck in his head, she thought.

  She lost a quick Rock Paper Scissors best-of-three, so Noah got to lead and she’d have to ride in his dust trail thanks to a lack of rain in the last week. He took off up the trail and she followed, unable to keep from smiling as she hit the throttle. In their teens, they’d saved up their money and gone in halves on an old, beat-up quad they spent as much time working on as they did riding it. And they had to share it, riding double and taking turns driving, but they’d loved being out in the woods and they still did.

  Not even five miles later, Noah’s tire went flat and they ended up on the side of the trail, looking for the puncture. Carly let him work in silence for a few minutes, but finally she couldn’t take it anymore.

  “Spill it,” she said.

  Having found the puncture, Noah opened the kit they always had with them and worked on plugging the hole in the tire. “What are you talking about?”

  “You’re acting weird, like you do when something’s bugging you. Just tell me whatever it is you don’t want to tell me.”

  “What makes you think I’m acting weird?”

  “I’m not going to tell you because I like being able to tell when you’re hiding things from me.”

  “Or maybe you’re imagining things.”

  “Am I?” He might try to hide things or hedge around the truth, but he wouldn’t lie to her. And it wouldn’t do him any good to try. She knew those tells, too.

  After plugging a small air compressor into his ATV’s accessory port, he popped it onto the tire’s valve. “Fine. My boss is getting married weekend after next on the Cape.”

  “Yeah, you mentioned you had to go to that when we were trying to figure out when we could ride.” When he made a face, but didn’t say anything, she pushed. “What part didn’t you mention?”

  “So Emily—the bride—has a sister, Sara, who’s single. And she seems to like me. Like a lot.”

  That wasn’t earth-shattering news. A lot of women liked Noah a lot. “And?”

  “And Jim and Emily think we’d make a great couple. Plus, it would tie me more to the business, being family, so to speak. They were not subtle about it.” He killed the air compressor and sighed, one hand resting on the tire. “So I told them I have a girlfriend. Like a serious one.”

  She laughed. “You did not.”

  “I did.”

  “Have you been watching romantic comedies without me?” She unplugged the compressor from the machine and started coiling the cord. “So now you have to find a woman to pretend to be your girlfriend for your boss’s wedding. That’s some funny shit, Noah.”

  “Trust me, I haven’t even gotten to the funny part yet.”

  “It gets better?” After stowing the stuff they’d used back in the cargo box, she turned to him and crossed her arms. “I can’t wait.”

  “They think you’re my girlfriend.”

  That surprised another burst of laughter from her, but Noah didn’t even crack a smile. “They think I’m your girlfriend? Like kissing, sexy-times girlfriend and not your best friend who just happens to be a girl?”

  He sighed. “They think you’re my kissing, sexy-times girlfriend.”

  The idea of her and Noah having sexy times was so funny she had to laugh again, and he even joined in this time. “Why didn’t you make somebody up?”

  “I was going to, but then I realized I have a shitload of pictures of the two of us on my phone, and all kinds of true stories of fun shit we’ve done. I’ve heard when you’re going to lie, it’s best to stick as close to the truth as possible.”

  “If you were shooting for close to the truth, you missed.”

  “Yeah.” He spent a longer time than necessary brushing dirt off his pants and hands before finally looking at her. “So you gonna help me out or what?”

  “Help you how?” When he sighed and dropped his head, she realized what he was asking. “Oh, wait. You think I’m going to go to this wedding with you and pretend to be your girlfriend?”

  “Yeah.”

  “No.”

  “Carly, come on. Yeah, it was stupid, but we have each other’s back, right? We always do.”

  “This is next-level shit. Besides, I’m a horrible actress. Did you forget that one time I joined the drama club in school the year they did The Wizard of Oz? I wasn’t good enough to get cast as a flying monkey and they don’t even talk.”

  “This isn’t really acting, though. You love me.”

  “Not carnally.”

  He pressed his foot hard against the tire tread, checking to see if it was holding air. “Remember the time you went to college and forgot your favorite slippers? And you were so homesick, you cried and I drove seven hours roundtrip to bring you your slippers and got back just in time to go straight to work?”

  “I didn’t ask you to.” But the slippers and seeing his face had been enough to keep her from quitting and going home. And it was just one of God only knew how many times he’d been there for her, so she sighed. “I’ll think about it. Is that tire good to go, or what? The horseflies found us and I think they’ve invited their friends to dinner.”

  “Yeah. No pressure, but how long do you think you’ll need to think about it?”

  She just laughed and hit the button to start her quad. Let him sweat for a while, she thought. Maybe the horseflies would flock to him, instead, and he deserved it. This was by far the most ridiculous situation he’d ever dragged her into.

  Chapter Two

  Noah was pretty sure Carly would give in and go to the wedding with him. She’d always been there for him and always would be. But she was going to make him suffer first because it was a big ask and he deserved it. And because she could.

  Rather than letting her know the suspense was slowly killing him inside, which would only encourage her, he didn’t bring up the wedding for the rest of the afternoon. The sooner he had her answer, the sooner he could either breathe easy or come up with a shitty plan B that might save not only his job, but his friendship with Jim and Emily. But he didn’t push her.

  Every time they stopped to have a drink and make sure his tire was still holding air, he let her talk about sports and books and family without bringing it up. They talked about television shows in the truck on the way home. And they didn’t talk at a
ll while hosing down the machines and putting their gear away in the shed behind his cottage.

  Maybe someday he’d buy a house with a big garage, but he liked his four-season cottage on the lake. And since there was no sign of a wife or kids on the horizon, he wasn’t in a hurry. He knew how his luck ran. As soon as he signed on a thirty-year mortgage for a house, he’d meet the woman he wanted to marry and she’d hate it.

  “About this wedding thing,” she said when they were done, and Noah’s stomach tightened. “I have a list of demands.”

  That made him laugh, and some of the tension eased. “It’s not a hostage negotiation.”

  “It kind of is. Weddings are not my favorite thing. Weddings when I only know one person and that person is not the bride or the groom are even worse.”

  “A free weekend at a resort on the Cape isn’t a hardship.” She just shrugged, poker face firmly in place. She was better at this than he was, so there was no point in dragging it out. “What are your demands?”

  “You’re paying for the room.”

  “Of course.”

  “And food.”

  He sighed. This was going to be an expensive trip. But if he was bringing a real girlfriend, he’d be the one paying, so he may as well cough up for his fake girlfriend, too. “I’ve seen you put away prime rib. I think we need some parameters.”

  She laughed. “You’ll probably feed me fast food on the road and the resort will provide the rest, so you’re getting off easy, whiner. Oh, and I get to pick the radio stations.”

  “No.”

  “Non-negotiable.”

  He shook his head. “The driver picks the music. Everybody knows that.”

  “I’m not spending hours stuck with you in Cape Cod summer traffic listening to guys cry about women running off with their tractors.”

  “Hey, you could be listening to guys sing about tractors, too, but since they’re all trying to scream over screeching guitars, you can’t tell what they’re saying.” He folded his arms, shaking his head again. “No.”

  She shrugged. “Okay. Have fun dancing with the maid of honor. All night. While your boss watches and plans your wedding.”