Page 34
Story: True Dreams (True Men #2)
Like slipping into sexy lingerie and becoming a different person, she’d explored her body in ways she’d never dreamed of, Campbell’s ragged whisper a goading enticement. She knew she was in deep when, upon waking, all that came to her was slight embarrassment and zero regret.
She wasn’t sorry she’d told him about her father, either.
That was a kicker.
She actually felt relieved, less alone —which wasn’t wise when the man in question was on a fast track out of her life.
Shit, shit, shit . Fontana pressed her fingertips to her temples. The newsflash from an area near her heart wasn’t good.
She liked Campbell True.
A lot.
He wasn’t perfect, and he was definitely more complicated than she needed. But there were good things.
So many good things.
He was funny when he let the aloof act drop—witty, sharp, unafraid to laugh at himself. Incredibly intelligent, but not the kind to beat his chest and declare himself the smartest man in the room. And handsome. No, more than handsome.
The dimples, the hair, the face, the body. Those golden eyes. Yum.
Then there was the talent. The way he handled a camera like it was something rare, something precious. A jewel .
He was protective of the people he loved, and fully capable—she was coming to understand—of taking care of them. But he was also vulnerable, which made her want to take care of him .
And she could. She knew that. She’d been doing it her entire life with Hannah.
On the complicated side, he didn’t like himself. Didn’t trust himself. Which made her heart ache, made her want to go and fall in love with him.
“Fontana Quinn, as I live and breathe. Do I have you on my calendar?”
She lifted her head, sure everything she’d been thinking was written across her face. “Um…no, I…” Her hands rose in a vague gesture, drifting uselessly before she caught a strand of hair and twisted it around her finger like she was eight years old.
A change , she wanted to say. I’ve come for a change .
Tammi took her arm and led her to the back of the thankfully empty salon, her sweet scent drifting to Fontana, overriding the salon’s chemical burn.
Tammi always smelled like flowers and honey—delicate, feminine.
Nothing Fontana could pull off with dirt streaked across her cheek and pine straw stuck in her hair.
She’d never really known how to be a woman, not in that way .
And she’d had no one to teach her.
“Lucky, I had a cancellation. Sarah Maxwell,” Tammi said, nudging Fontana into a chair that resembled a pink fielder’s mitt.
She could tell when someone was on the verge of bolting.
“That woman never respects my time. If she can’t make it, she just doesn’t show.
Rude, right? I could have gone home a little early, drawn a bubble bath, put on some Stevie Nicks, poured a glass of vino, and had me a relaxing evening. Unlike some, I enjoy my own company.”
Fontana scooched until her butt found a comfy depression. “A change,” she said, then swallowed and repeated it.
Tammi tilted her head, assessing. “How much of a change?”
She met Tammi’s gaze in the mirror, the metal edge lined with photos, ticket stubs, and a beautician’s license. Who checked if their stylist’s license was up-to-date? Was it like milk, with a solid expiration?
“I ask, darling girl, because I’ve done change-jobs before, only to have someone cussing because I went too short, too blonde, too dark.
Too curly.” She pulled a silver cape sprinkled with blue dots from a drawer and, with a snap, settled it over Fontana.
“For example, small means a trim—no more than an inch. Medium gets you bangs and a little more length off. A sexy bob with loads of layers would be fantastic on you. Extreme is, say, a pixie cut, which your face can totally hold. But that’s an adjustment.
No more scrunchies, no more ponytails until it grows out. ”
“Medium,” she whispered.
She was doing extreme with Campbell, so no need to go there with her hair.
“I could also pop a few highlights around the front to lighten you up for winter. No foils, no fuss. Would look great with the cut.” She drew her fingers through Fontana’s hair, fluffing and mussing.
“I’ll even give you a discount since you’re making up for me staying late with no one coming in.
I have a color mixed that will work perfect. Curse that Sarah.”
Again, their eyes met in the mirror, and Fontana started to sweat beneath the cape. Tammi’s expression wasn’t far removed from Campbell’s laser-sharp keenness.
“While I color, wash, and cut, we can chat.”
In response, Fontana hummed low in her throat, Campbell’s move when he didn’t want to chat.
“Uncross your legs, or I’ll get an uneven cut. Especially those bangs.” Tammi leaned over Fontana, then plucked one of the photos tucked into the mirror’s frame. “This could get us started.”
The photo was in Fontana’s hand, and she could do nothing but accept it.
Oh .
Her stomach dropped to the floor as she brought it closer. Sneaky . This woman was so sneaky. Chemicals stung her eyes as Tammi began painting on color in wide swaths around her face. Fontana blinked but did not— could not —look away.
“He’s maybe fifteen there. Before we dated.
I liked this picture, so he let me have it.
He’d be shocked I still do. Like I remember his birthday, but we’re women, right?
” She stepped around Fontana, dipped the brush in a bowl, and began laying color on the other side.
“You may not know this, but that boy loved messing around in his granddaddy’s cotton fields.
Asking questions, taking pictures. John Nelson was patient, a good teacher.
Camp’s father never cared a lick for the land.
Or him, if you ask me. Business, business, business.
An angry man. First pictures he ever published were of those fields in bloom.
Lord, when I saw them, I knew he was headed somewhere. ”
Fontana had been wrong when she assumed Campbell grew into his looks, that he’d gone through an awkward phase where the bits and pieces of him didn’t quite fit together.
Nope. Splendid from the start.
Lanky body perched atop a split-rail fence, boots hooked on the middle rung, ever-present camera in hand. Smile nonexistent. Gaze intense. Not a dimple in sight. Even then, there was grace in his bearing, the land—his legacy—rolling out behind him in an endless vista.
To her eyes, and perhaps no one else’s, it was a somber portrait of a young man in crisis.
This is when he started building a wall no one can tear down.
By then, it was already too late to reach him.
Tammi tucked a towel around Fontana’s neck.
“He’s different. We’ve seen each other here and there when he came back to town, a drink, nothing more.
” Another tuck, an unnecessary bit of handling.
“Maybe you’re why he’s changing. Kismet.
One of those bizarre instances when you meet a person at just the right time.
Neither looking, and boom! Two pieces of a puzzle fitting together perfectly. ”
“There’s no kismet. No puzzle.” No perfection . There was only a flaming-hot attraction. A sexy guy, a curious woman. Lust.
Anyway, Fontana didn’t believe in fate.
She believed in hard work. Discipline. Cautiousness.
Preparation. She would have stuck her head in an oven years ago if she thought her past was her fate—a predetermined path she was set to follow instead of the wild ramblings of a fanatical man.
Her father, tied to her in some spiritual way, like she could never , ever get away from him.
She needed to give Tammi something to chew on or risk this conversation straying into territory she had no intention of entering.
“Campbell’s attractive. Talented.” Complicated.
Fontana unfurled a twist at the neck of her cape because it was strangling her.
“I’m not immune. I’d have to be blind not to notice his appeal.
But it’s not”—she hesitated—“we’ve just found…
common ground. That’s all. Kit, for one.
” She peeled her back off the seat, her gaze meeting Tammi’s in the mirror for a beat before skidding away.
The traitorous area between her thighs heated like Tammi had aimed a hair dryer straight at it. Dammit. “Just things,” she said, as the image of his hard body sliding over hers—his mouth, hungry and urgent, consuming her, devouring her—rippled through her like his touch.
If only she could forget those talented, wicked fingers of his.
Tammi wound a timer in the shape of a hatching egg and plunked it on the table.
“I just wanted to tell you he’s kinder than he comes off.
Tender underneath all the bluster.” She twirled her scissors like a gunslinger with a derringer, then slipped them into the apron tied around her waist. “Don’t give up, if you were thinking you might. ”
Fontana made sure to avoid the mirror this time, truly afraid of what her gaze might reveal.
Tammi smiled, a wistful cant to her lips. “But you already know that, don’t you?”
“How long?” Fontana asked, pointing to the chemical mess on her head.
“Perfect, stubborn fit,” Promise’s stylist extraordinaire answered with a laugh.
“Twenty minutes. If it’s not turning fast enough, we’ll move you under the dryer.
” She touched Fontana’s shoulder, then hesitated.
“Darling, don’t discount how special it is—how special you are—if he’s sharing his past with you. I’m telling you, it’d be a first.”
Fontana ducked her head, suddenly fascinated by the seam edging the cape, wondering if this could possibly be true.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34 (Reading here)
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47