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"I bet I can untangle you."
At an airport baggage claim, Penny Darling looks up from her knotted mess of ear buds to find the sexiest hunk of man she's ever seen. He's got a military haircut, a scar through his eyebrow, and he's rocking a pastel pink dress shirt like only a real man can. But Penny is on a man-free diet so she leaves the airport without succumbing to his delicious double-entendres...or his dreamy dimples.
PI Russ Macklin can't take his eyes off Penny. As she sashays out of the airport with hips swaying and curls bouncing, he suspects they may share more than just sweltering chemistry. That suitcase she's rolling along behind her? It looks a lot like his.
Because it is.
When he tracks her down, he holds her bag hostage in exchange for a date. Their night begins with margaritas and ends in urgent care, and Russ proves that Cosmo's theory about a very particular type of orgasm was oh-so-wrong.
In Penny, Russ finds a small-town sweetheart with a very naughty side. For the first time ever, heās thinking about picket fences. Penny finds in Russ a loving, caring man who understands the power of massaging showerheads.
But Russ is only in Port Flamingo for a week. They agree it'll be a fling and nothing more. Because really, they can't fall ass-over-teakettle in love just like that...
Can they?
99k words. HEA. Dual POV. No cheating.
Featuring a big drooly dog named Guppy.
1
Russ
I step off the escalator, and there she is. Sheās looking down, doing something with her phone. Air conditioning blows on her from above, making the hem of her purple dress flutter against her leg. And fuck, look at those legs. Look at that body. Look at that woman. Underneath the dress, instead of a bra sheās wearing the top half of a pink bikini, tied at the nape of her neck in a bow.
āWelcome to Florida. God bless the Sunshine State.
āThe place is dismal, except for her. On the walls are 1980s tourism posters, rippling with the humidity. All the guys have Magnum, P.I. mustaches, and all the women look like extras from Baywatch. Sheās a vision in the middle of all of it, an oasis at the goddamned baggage claim. I circle the clumps of old people bumping into each other with walkers, like slow-motion bumper cars. As I get closer, I see her face. Her freckles, her slightly shiny pink lips. Her breasts, which are fucking beautiful. But her expression, it isnāt beautiful. Itās seriously pissed. Nostrils flared, teeth set, jaw clenched.
āIn her hands is a whole big tangle of ear buds, and maybe a phone charger. A big knot of cords, like a wad of cold pasta.
āI get closer. Not too close, because I donāt want to be that guy, but close enough to see the small starfish necklace dangling from her neck, and close enough to smell something warm, and sweet. Familiar. Vanilla, maybe. Whatever it is, itās fucking delicious.
āOn the wall behind her is a big banner. Itās got a faded old cartoon flamingo, flapping his wings and grinning. Underneath is the caption:
WELCOME TO PORT FLAMINGO! HOME OF THE FIRST AIR CONDITIONER!
āNo shit. Because itās hot, and I donāt mean like ordinary summertime hot. I mean hot like the time the sauna malfunctioned at my gym and turned all the drywall in the locker room into oatmeal. She doesnāt look hot at all though. She looks cool, and soft, and beautiful. Just the thing I need. Like a vodka soda after a long fucking day.
āI set my shoulder bag at my feet and take off my suit jacket. Her braid comes down over one shoulder, the curl at the bottom nestling into her cleavage. I roll up my sleeves. āI bet I can untangle you.ā
āShe looks up at me. Her eyes are deep blue and sparkling. A smile starts to pinch her cheeks. The end of the charger swings between us. āIām okay. Got myself into this mess, got to get myself out of it.ā
āāSometimes two is better than one.ā
āShe smacks her lips at the cords. āSometimes.ā She pulls hard on the plug end, making the wires tighten even more. āYouād think Iād learn to keep that little plastic box that comes with these, but oh no, everyāā She tugs. āāsingle.ā Tugs again. āātime.ā
Granted, sheās not exactly in need of rescue from a burning building, but no way am I going to stand here and watch her struggle, no fucking way. Without another word, I start undoing the end of the tangle thatās nearest me, and I watch that smile of hers get bigger. She doesnāt look at me, but I see a dimple, and she bites her lip.
Still focused on the knot, she says, āLet me guess. Youāre not from around here, are you?āā
Canāt imagine what gave me away. Maybe the fact that Iām the only guy in the building wearing slacks and actual shoes. āHere on business.ā
She looks me up and down. āWhat kind of business? FBI?ā
Fuck. Not the first conversation I want to have, definitely not. Also, I donāt know a single fed who wears pants this nice. āPrivate business.ā
āHmmm.ā She eyes me more mischievously. āTall, dark, and a military haircut. Something tells me youāre not here to do some competitive bass fishing. ā
Oh man. Cute. Really cute. āNo, Iām not.ā
Slowly, the tangle comes undone, until weāre in the middle together. Reminds me of that scene in Lady and the Tramp.
But before I can say anything moreālike, for instance, Iām down for 20 questions, as long as itās over a drinkāthe buzzer on the carousel roars to life, as loud as a tornado siren. The crush of people starts to tighten around the conveyor. She winds the three sets of ear buds and the cord around her palm. From the pocket of my bag, I take out the plastic case that came with my ear buds and hand it over. āThere.ā
She laughs through her nose. āIāll be okay.ā
āI insist.ā I press it into her hand, and her eyes meet mine.
āIāll bet you do.ā She looks away as a blush covers her cheeks.
The bags start to rumble off the conveyor. For one long second, she watches me, smiling. Sizing me up. The little curls around her face tremble in the air conditioning, and Iām about to say You, me, a pitcher of margaritas, tonight when she looks away and hoists her purse up on her shoulder.
āThatās my bag,ā she says. āI should get going. Thanks forā¦untangling me.ā
She steps away and threads her way between a handful of old ladies in walkers. I know I should help her, I know I should grab her bag, but holy fuck look at that body.
āShe grabs her bag herself and flips up the handle.
āGive me your number. Let me take you out for dinner.ā
āHer smile dissolves into a scowl. āYou married?ā
I shake my head slowly. āIām a lot of things, but married definitely isnāt one of them.ā
āSeparated?ā
Shake my head again. āNope.ā
She takes her starfish charm between thumb and forefinger and loops the chain over her lip. āUnder any restraining orders? Involved in a complicated love triangle that your Match.com profile describes as an open marriage? Divorced five times and counting? Polyamorous?ā
Whoa. This girlās got to find a new dating pool, stat. āPromise. Iām Russ, and what you see is what you get.ā
Zip-zip-zip goes her necklace.
āJust a drink.ā I lift my hands out between us, to say Cāmon. āMaybe dinner, if I make the cut.ā
She blinks hard a few times and she drops her necklace charm. āIām sorry. Youāre sweet, but I canāt.ā
Well, fuck it. The first time I try to get back in the saddle in ages and the goddamn thing slides right down onto the ground again. I respect it though. I donāt want to overdo this, so I give her a final nod and clear my throat. āHad to try.ā
She swallows hard. āIām glad you did.ā
Fuck.
And sheās gone. As she goes, her hips sway with her dress. She works that sashay, as my aunt says, like a fucking pro. She looks back over her shoulder, only once, as she walks through the sliding doors. I give her a wink.
And she fucking winks back.
Jesus Christ.
She takes a left out of the door, which means she isnāt gone yet. Not by a long shot. The architecture does me a favor, and I get to watch her sashay right past the floor-to-ceiling windows. I couldnāt take my eyes off of her, not even if I wanted to. She smiles at the sidewalk without looking up, and laughs a little. Like she knows Iām watching her and is feeling pretty good about it.
āGod, what a cutie. And what a bummer. She was fucking sexy, she seemed sweet, and there was something about her that was up to no good. I couldnāt quite put my finger on it, but it was somewhere between the bikini top and Iām glad you did. But the spark wasnāt all we had in common. I realize, as she finally disappears from view, she also has a bag that looks just like mine.
Medium-sized black Samsonite. Sensible, dependable. Number One Amazon Bestseller in Luggage.
āBut that couldnāt be my bag, I think to myself as I turn back toward the conveyor. Couldnāt be.
***
āIt was. Twenty minutes later, Iām the only guy standing by the carousel, and thereās a single black bag going around and around in front of me. Itās exactly the same as mine, except itās overstuffed and has a pink puff of yarn tied to the handle. Same color as her bikini top and literally hanging by a thread.
āIt slides to a stop, and the yarn ball swings off the side of the carousel. Tick-tock, tick-tock.
āA rattle from the center of the conveyor sounds promisingāI was early connecting through Atlanta, so my bag had to be the first one onābut no dice. What comes off the conveyor isnāt a bag at all, but instead one of the baggage guys in big set of protective earphones and a reflective vest. He crawls up through the flap and pokes his head out. He wipes his forehead on his bare leathery shoulder and then looks from me to the bag and back again. āNice pom-pom, man,ā he says and backtracks down the hole.
āI glance around for some airport help on this, but all I see is a handwritten sign at the baggage claim desk. Will Return On Monday!
āItās Saturday.
āChrist.
āAs I take hold of the bag, I notice itās got not one but three āLIFT WITH CAUTIONā tags: the first one new, the second one beat up, and the third one halfway shredded, all together the way people keep lift tickets from ski areas. I give it a hoist. The thing is so heavy it makes me grunt like Iām doing a dead lift. With a two-handed lug, I yank it off the conveyor and set it on the ground, wheels down.
āSqueezing the roller handle, I pull it upā¦and it snaps off right in my hand. The arms stick up from the suitcase like the tines of a fork.
āI clench my eyes shut and think back to āthe most helpful critical reviewā from Amazon. āLooks like every other bag on the planet. Sh**ty handle.ā
āTouchĆ©. But it is what it is. Which is her bag, hopefully.
āI wheel it along to a bank of benches, by some old beat-up phone booths, lining the far wall. I open up the ID pouch and read:
PENELOPE DARLING
125 E. BEACH POINT DRIVE
PORT FLAMINGO, FL 34102
I bite down on my gum and groan. How cute is that name? Jesus Christ, come on. Penny Darling. Whatās more, itās not a business card or typed up like mine, but written by hand. Her writing is sweet, pretty, and feminine, with big plump letters written in bright pink marker thatās bled into the plastic cover, so theyāve got a haze around them like neon lights. And there, at the bottom.
āHer number.
āJackpot.
āIt might not be my smoothest move, but Iāll take it. I pull my phone from my pocket and give her a call. As I wait for the ringtone, I decide to hell with suave and understated. I want her, and I need her to know it.
āBut then in my ear I hear, āMobile Network Temporarily Unavailable.ā
āGoddamned Verizon, jamming up my plans. So I try to text her instead.
This is Russ.
From the airport.
I've got your bag and I think youāve got mine.
How about that drink?
āI hit send, and Iām answered immediately with a row of red exclamation points and four repetitions of NOT DELIVERED. What. The. Fuck.
āThen I noticed my cell service flips over from 1 bar, to Roaming, to Searching for serviceā¦
ā I pull my hot pack of gum from my sweaty pocket and take out a second piece. The gum is weirdly melted even before I put it in my mouth.
āThe options now are pretty simple: I could touch base with the guy who hired me to come down here to the land that Verizon forgot orā¦
āI think about those tan lines, the curve of her hips. That bikini. The glisten on her rosy lips. The way she wrinkled her nose when she smiled.
āWhy is this even a goddamned question? Itās four oāclock on a Saturday. A beautiful woman is on East Beach Point Drive with all my stuff. And somewhere in this town, Iāll bet thereās a beachside bar with a pitcher of margaritas with our names on it.
āWelcome to Florida. God bless the Sunshine State.
āThe place is dismal, except for her. On the walls are 1980s tourism posters, rippling with the humidity. All the guys have Magnum, P.I. mustaches, and all the women look like extras from Baywatch. Sheās a vision in the middle of all of it, an oasis at the goddamned baggage claim. I circle the clumps of old people bumping into each other with walkers, like slow-motion bumper cars. As I get closer, I see her face. Her freckles, her slightly shiny pink lips. Her breasts, which are fucking beautiful. But her expression, it isnāt beautiful. Itās seriously pissed. Nostrils flared, teeth set, jaw clenched.
āIn her hands is a whole big tangle of ear buds, and maybe a phone charger. A big knot of cords, like a wad of cold pasta.
āI get closer. Not too close, because I donāt want to be that guy, but close enough to see the small starfish necklace dangling from her neck, and close enough to smell something warm, and sweet. Familiar. Vanilla, maybe. Whatever it is, itās fucking delicious.
āOn the wall behind her is a big banner. Itās got a faded old cartoon flamingo, flapping his wings and grinning. Underneath is the caption:
WELCOME TO PORT FLAMINGO! HOME OF THE FIRST AIR CONDITIONER!
āNo shit. Because itās hot, and I donāt mean like ordinary summertime hot. I mean hot like the time the sauna malfunctioned at my gym and turned all the drywall in the locker room into oatmeal. She doesnāt look hot at all though. She looks cool, and soft, and beautiful. Just the thing I need. Like a vodka soda after a long fucking day.
āI set my shoulder bag at my feet and take off my suit jacket. Her braid comes down over one shoulder, the curl at the bottom nestling into her cleavage. I roll up my sleeves. āI bet I can untangle you.ā
āShe looks up at me. Her eyes are deep blue and sparkling. A smile starts to pinch her cheeks. The end of the charger swings between us. āIām okay. Got myself into this mess, got to get myself out of it.ā
āāSometimes two is better than one.ā
āShe smacks her lips at the cords. āSometimes.ā She pulls hard on the plug end, making the wires tighten even more. āYouād think Iād learn to keep that little plastic box that comes with these, but oh no, everyāā She tugs. āāsingle.ā Tugs again. āātime.ā
Granted, sheās not exactly in need of rescue from a burning building, but no way am I going to stand here and watch her struggle, no fucking way. Without another word, I start undoing the end of the tangle thatās nearest me, and I watch that smile of hers get bigger. She doesnāt look at me, but I see a dimple, and she bites her lip.
Still focused on the knot, she says, āLet me guess. Youāre not from around here, are you?āā
Canāt imagine what gave me away. Maybe the fact that Iām the only guy in the building wearing slacks and actual shoes. āHere on business.ā
She looks me up and down. āWhat kind of business? FBI?ā
Fuck. Not the first conversation I want to have, definitely not. Also, I donāt know a single fed who wears pants this nice. āPrivate business.ā
āHmmm.ā She eyes me more mischievously. āTall, dark, and a military haircut. Something tells me youāre not here to do some competitive bass fishing. ā
Oh man. Cute. Really cute. āNo, Iām not.ā
Slowly, the tangle comes undone, until weāre in the middle together. Reminds me of that scene in Lady and the Tramp.
But before I can say anything moreālike, for instance, Iām down for 20 questions, as long as itās over a drinkāthe buzzer on the carousel roars to life, as loud as a tornado siren. The crush of people starts to tighten around the conveyor. She winds the three sets of ear buds and the cord around her palm. From the pocket of my bag, I take out the plastic case that came with my ear buds and hand it over. āThere.ā
She laughs through her nose. āIāll be okay.ā
āI insist.ā I press it into her hand, and her eyes meet mine.
āIāll bet you do.ā She looks away as a blush covers her cheeks.
The bags start to rumble off the conveyor. For one long second, she watches me, smiling. Sizing me up. The little curls around her face tremble in the air conditioning, and Iām about to say You, me, a pitcher of margaritas, tonight when she looks away and hoists her purse up on her shoulder.
āThatās my bag,ā she says. āI should get going. Thanks forā¦untangling me.ā
She steps away and threads her way between a handful of old ladies in walkers. I know I should help her, I know I should grab her bag, but holy fuck look at that body.
āShe grabs her bag herself and flips up the handle.
āGive me your number. Let me take you out for dinner.ā
āHer smile dissolves into a scowl. āYou married?ā
I shake my head slowly. āIām a lot of things, but married definitely isnāt one of them.ā
āSeparated?ā
Shake my head again. āNope.ā
She takes her starfish charm between thumb and forefinger and loops the chain over her lip. āUnder any restraining orders? Involved in a complicated love triangle that your Match.com profile describes as an open marriage? Divorced five times and counting? Polyamorous?ā
Whoa. This girlās got to find a new dating pool, stat. āPromise. Iām Russ, and what you see is what you get.ā
Zip-zip-zip goes her necklace.
āJust a drink.ā I lift my hands out between us, to say Cāmon. āMaybe dinner, if I make the cut.ā
She blinks hard a few times and she drops her necklace charm. āIām sorry. Youāre sweet, but I canāt.ā
Well, fuck it. The first time I try to get back in the saddle in ages and the goddamn thing slides right down onto the ground again. I respect it though. I donāt want to overdo this, so I give her a final nod and clear my throat. āHad to try.ā
She swallows hard. āIām glad you did.ā
Fuck.
And sheās gone. As she goes, her hips sway with her dress. She works that sashay, as my aunt says, like a fucking pro. She looks back over her shoulder, only once, as she walks through the sliding doors. I give her a wink.
And she fucking winks back.
Jesus Christ.
She takes a left out of the door, which means she isnāt gone yet. Not by a long shot. The architecture does me a favor, and I get to watch her sashay right past the floor-to-ceiling windows. I couldnāt take my eyes off of her, not even if I wanted to. She smiles at the sidewalk without looking up, and laughs a little. Like she knows Iām watching her and is feeling pretty good about it.
āGod, what a cutie. And what a bummer. She was fucking sexy, she seemed sweet, and there was something about her that was up to no good. I couldnāt quite put my finger on it, but it was somewhere between the bikini top and Iām glad you did. But the spark wasnāt all we had in common. I realize, as she finally disappears from view, she also has a bag that looks just like mine.
Medium-sized black Samsonite. Sensible, dependable. Number One Amazon Bestseller in Luggage.
āBut that couldnāt be my bag, I think to myself as I turn back toward the conveyor. Couldnāt be.
***
āIt was. Twenty minutes later, Iām the only guy standing by the carousel, and thereās a single black bag going around and around in front of me. Itās exactly the same as mine, except itās overstuffed and has a pink puff of yarn tied to the handle. Same color as her bikini top and literally hanging by a thread.
āIt slides to a stop, and the yarn ball swings off the side of the carousel. Tick-tock, tick-tock.
āA rattle from the center of the conveyor sounds promisingāI was early connecting through Atlanta, so my bag had to be the first one onābut no dice. What comes off the conveyor isnāt a bag at all, but instead one of the baggage guys in big set of protective earphones and a reflective vest. He crawls up through the flap and pokes his head out. He wipes his forehead on his bare leathery shoulder and then looks from me to the bag and back again. āNice pom-pom, man,ā he says and backtracks down the hole.
āI glance around for some airport help on this, but all I see is a handwritten sign at the baggage claim desk. Will Return On Monday!
āItās Saturday.
āChrist.
āAs I take hold of the bag, I notice itās got not one but three āLIFT WITH CAUTIONā tags: the first one new, the second one beat up, and the third one halfway shredded, all together the way people keep lift tickets from ski areas. I give it a hoist. The thing is so heavy it makes me grunt like Iām doing a dead lift. With a two-handed lug, I yank it off the conveyor and set it on the ground, wheels down.
āSqueezing the roller handle, I pull it upā¦and it snaps off right in my hand. The arms stick up from the suitcase like the tines of a fork.
āI clench my eyes shut and think back to āthe most helpful critical reviewā from Amazon. āLooks like every other bag on the planet. Sh**ty handle.ā
āTouchĆ©. But it is what it is. Which is her bag, hopefully.
āI wheel it along to a bank of benches, by some old beat-up phone booths, lining the far wall. I open up the ID pouch and read:
PENELOPE DARLING
125 E. BEACH POINT DRIVE
PORT FLAMINGO, FL 34102
I bite down on my gum and groan. How cute is that name? Jesus Christ, come on. Penny Darling. Whatās more, itās not a business card or typed up like mine, but written by hand. Her writing is sweet, pretty, and feminine, with big plump letters written in bright pink marker thatās bled into the plastic cover, so theyāve got a haze around them like neon lights. And there, at the bottom.
āHer number.
āJackpot.
āIt might not be my smoothest move, but Iāll take it. I pull my phone from my pocket and give her a call. As I wait for the ringtone, I decide to hell with suave and understated. I want her, and I need her to know it.
āBut then in my ear I hear, āMobile Network Temporarily Unavailable.ā
āGoddamned Verizon, jamming up my plans. So I try to text her instead.
This is Russ.
From the airport.
I've got your bag and I think youāve got mine.
How about that drink?
āI hit send, and Iām answered immediately with a row of red exclamation points and four repetitions of NOT DELIVERED. What. The. Fuck.
āThen I noticed my cell service flips over from 1 bar, to Roaming, to Searching for serviceā¦
ā I pull my hot pack of gum from my sweaty pocket and take out a second piece. The gum is weirdly melted even before I put it in my mouth.
āThe options now are pretty simple: I could touch base with the guy who hired me to come down here to the land that Verizon forgot orā¦
āI think about those tan lines, the curve of her hips. That bikini. The glisten on her rosy lips. The way she wrinkled her nose when she smiled.
āWhy is this even a goddamned question? Itās four oāclock on a Saturday. A beautiful woman is on East Beach Point Drive with all my stuff. And somewhere in this town, Iāll bet thereās a beachside bar with a pitcher of margaritas with our names on it.
Nicola Rendell writes dirty, funny, erotic romance. She likes a stiff drink and a well-frosted cake. She is at an unnamed Ivy and prefers to remain mostly anonymous for professional reasons. She has a PhD in English and an MFA in Creative Writing from schools that shall not be named here. She loves to cook, sew, and play the piano. She realizes that her hobbies might make her sound like an old lady and sheās totally okay with that. She lives with her husband and her dogs. She is from Taos, New Mexico.
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