Borrowed Treasure

About the Book

Sissy Ames has been driven to succeed her entire life. On her own, she’s turned her Bittersweet Café into a success, and she’s rebuilt a friendship with her cousin Harper after years of going it alone, but her past bad judgement in trusting Hunter Wells during their relationship continues to cast shadows on the future she’s trying to build for herself.

Hunter Wells has been coasting through life, working at the family business and creating the life that his family expects for him. He’d once hoped for a different existence, but he’d been forced to move on and make do after Sissy Ames had ended their three-year relationship without an explanation.

Even in their small town, the two have managed to avoid each other, but then Hunter’s fiancée, Sissy’s nemesis, disappears after a suspicious confrontation, leaving them both looking like likely suspects. The only hope they have of clearing their names and figuring out what led to the disappearance is to find the one item that drove them apart two years ago: The Ames BORROWED TREASURE.


Excerpt from the Book

Sissy

            Sissy Ames ducked behind the ostentatious flower arrangement with its oversized lilies and Hyacinthian sprays shooting out at unnatural angles. The thickness hid the center of the room but exposed her to the tableclothed tables lining either side where the overdressed elite of Thibodaux and its surrounding areas sat. Tonight represented everything she typically avoided, mainly so that she could stay out of the proximity of the woman commanding the center floor. Why her arch nemesis must flit around the ballroom gloating about her latest accomplishment was beyond Sissy. That woman’s pretentious fake smile and sickly-sweet voice had followed Sissy wherever she went in the large ballroom until her hands had begun to shake and her jaw to ache from the clenching.

            Harper, her cousin, approached from the buffet table near the rear of the room.  “The lobster bisque’s edible.” Holding out a tiny plastic bowl towards Sissy, Harper shrugged bare shoulders in defeat. Although the food lacked appeal, Harper certainly stunned in the black skintight number Sissy had sent over for her to wear tonight. Sissy had been right to prod the usually casual attired woman into vintage satin as it hugged her hips and showed off the curvy body that Sissy unfortunately did not possess. Sissy had inherited her mother’s straight form among other genetics she wished she could trade in.  

            Accepting the ecru soup, Sissy’s eyes scanned the crowd, looking for Cecelia Domangue, the bane of her existence since they were fifteen years old and fighting over president of student council. Currently, the petite blonde in a fuchsia Valentino stood chatting with a town councilman and the sheriff, her fake laugh chiming her existence from twenty feet away.

            Sissy ran a clear plastic spoon through the watery consistency of the bisque. In her head she mentally critiqued the recipe’s minimal usage of cream.  “Anything has to be better than that beef dish.” 

            Narrowing her emerald eyes, Harper twisted her lips and flashed Sissy a familiar look. Sissy’s cheeks warmed. Her resentment must be showing. 

Sissy had submitted a bid to cater the fundraiser tonight in an attempt at a business expansion, but her bid had been accepted under condition. As the serving contract had been awarded to Cecelia’s restaurant Twilight Fare, Sissy would have to submit her recipes to Cecelia for approval and preparation. As if Sissy would ever turn over her recipes to the woman who’d opened a restaurant blocks over in her continuing effort to encroach on every aspect of Sissy’s life. Even if Sissy’s own Bittersweet Café catered to a different crowd than Cecelia’s Twilight Fare, that woman had branched right into catering which Sissy had cautiously tested the waters only a month before Cecelia had gone full blown into advertising her own services.

            Harper glanced away to scan the room, and Sissy returned to the soup, which she knew she could have done better.  “How long do we have to stay?”

            Discarding the bowl, Sissy picked up her champagne glass from the table instead. At least they’d bought the good stuff.  “We need to be sure the right people see our faces, but besides from that, the committee already has our hundred bucks a head, so I don’t think they care if we are here an hour or close the place down.”

            Tonight’s fundraiser for the Downtown Revitalization committee had the special purpose of raising money to spruce up the downtown area with seasonal decorations to help promote the Christmas festival. The event had filled the local university ballroom with the social society of the small-town area and all its neighboring towns to be sure. As part of the committee, Sissy had aided in promoting the event, even though Cecelia’s recent addition to the committee had managed to sway votes and shut her out of the menu selections.

            Harper picked up her own glass from the table and sipped. “I see a few local lawyers from Emmett’s last mixer. I’ll go over and say hello. If I’m lucky, I may get home early enough to speak to Emmett before the different time zones mean he’s sleeping.”

            Sissy had Cecelia in her crosshairs, and she waited for her to prance to another unsuspecting guest, so she could emerge from behind the flowers that Sissy had voted against. Currently, Cecelia stood near Rudy Klingman, councilman for her district, who dropped in every Wednesday for a number six special, and she’d promised to propose streetlamps to him on behalf of the committee. Distracted, she asked Harper. “Any indication when he’s going to return from New York?” 

            Harper shrugged. “He says the case should wrap up in a day or two. I believe he’s enjoying it way too much.”

            Sissy waved Harper’s doubt away with her champagned hand. “Pish, Emmett will be home soon, and you two will be making me sick with your sweetness.”

            Harper smiled, her olive complexion flushing. “Okay, no arguing with my date tonight, especially since you drove. Let’s make our rounds and be out of here in thirty minutes.”

            Sissy nodded and raised her flute in the air as if to toast. “That’s a plan I can drink to.”

            Harper clinked her glass against Sissy’s, and then they departed into the mingling crowd.

            Avoiding Cecelia’s group, Sissy slunk over to Suzy Rhodes, greeting a few of the lawyers and two judges that frequented her business for lunch during the week. In her two-piece blue suit, Suzy stood removed from the invitees, her eyes watching everyone. Her stance hadn’t changed since high school although she’d updated her attire to pant suits and cut her hair into a short bob she tucked behind her ears. Back then, she’d taken photos for the yearbook and everyone had wanted her attention to get within the pages. Today, she wrote a monthly column in the local entertainment magazine—specifically a review of local eateries. Sissy had attempted getting the café featured for months now, even sending a personalized gift certificate two months ago. The woman had never responded to the invitation nor shown up as even a patron, but Cecelia’s Twilight Fare had been prominently featured, not only as a food review but as a front-page feature on up-and-coming restaurant owners.

            Suzy Rhodes smiled, her cheeks dimpling as Sissy approached. “Why, Sissy Ames, I’m surprised to see you at a swanky function like this. Not your usual soiree, huh?”

            Plastering a smile on her face, Sissy drew upon her southern manners she knew lay beyond her desire to give the woman a good tongue lashing. “Since my café is located in the center of downtown, I have a vested interest in its revitalization efforts.”

            Laughing airily, Suzy’s eyes wandered the room as if bored with the conversation. “Right, that’s true, your little café is down there. I never remember it’s there.”

            Sissy raised an eyebrow, holding her glass closer to her lips. “I know. I’ve invited you several times as part of that little column of yours, but you have yet to accept my invitation.”

            A short, fierce laugh escaped as Suzy’s eyes met Sissy’s. She returned to her survey of the room just as quickly though. “My lord Sissy, I can’t accept every invitation I receive.”

            “Hmm.” Sissy scanned the room, her eyes naturally falling upon Cecelia, who stood facing Chef Homme from Le Homme, the elegant downtown restaurant. The two’s expressions revealed deep, serious conversation—too serious for a social mixer. “Is that why your material has been repetitive?”

            Suzy’s stance shifted. “Excuse me?” 

            Sissy smiled, tilting her head. “Oh, I thought you were just so busy that you recycled material from the same four restaurants. Everyone has been talking.”

            Sissy continued smiling as Suzy’s eyes lit with anger. The dark haired, flat nosed woman bit her tongue though. They’d all been raised too southern to truly speak their minds at events such as these.

            “Well, it was nice running into you,” Sissy said, bowing her head in exit. “But I see a city council member I need to have a word with about lamp posts.”    

            Sissy pivoted, feeling a surge of confidence from the conversation. Moments ago, she’d hid behind hideous flowers to avoid her high school tormentor, but they had grown up, even though some didn’t behave as if they had. Cecelia and even Suzy hid behind country club houses and designer labels still, making others feel as if they didn’t measure up in the circles they all moved in. She had to remind herself in their vicinity that she was proud of her downtown renovated apartment and scavenged consignment finds.

            Spotting Cecelia ahead on her path though, she pivoted and turned the other way to avoid her. She told herself that with her new found attitude, she would probably lose her southern manners and regret it later.

            Her attention lingered too long over Cecelia, and when she turned, she hit a wall of black cashmere and white softened woven cotton. Reaching her hand out, she pushed herself away, inhaling the masculine smell of sandalwood and musk. From his chest hugging shirt, her eyes followed the Italian silk woven tie in its beautiful pastel green and yellow swirl pattern. The feminine color selection had been a brave choice for a function such as this where the men showcased their masculinity and their pocketbooks. So, he either didn’t know better or his power came with his name.

            She continued on up to his tie’s perfectly anchored knot and landed on the chiseled jawline and soft brown, waiting eyes of Hunter Wells.

Her nose flared as she inhaled deeply, an awareness of their nearness. She took a step back.

“Excuse me.” Sissy felt her cheeks burn as the back of her neck flushed.

            A light flickered in his warm chocolate eyes.

            “Of course.” Hunter nodded, and his lip twitched. “How have you been?”

            Hearing her heart pound in her throat, Sissy straightened her spine, bracing herself for the old anger to return, but his nearness tempered any old residual anger.

            Sissy gritted her teeth, forcing a smile. “Oh, you know me, I always make do.”

            His eyes slid down her red vintage Maid Marion style dress, and his head came down in a sharp nod.

            A pain stabbed through her side as someone’s elbow caught her as they jostled by. “Why, hello. Imagine seeing you at this party, Sissy.” Cecelia’s high octave voice scratched Sissy’s ears, and she forced herself not to cringe. Then, Cecelia raised a perfectly micro bladed eyebrow at Hunter. “And the two of you together.”

            Sissy fought the urge to laugh at the irony in those words.

            Sissy turned to face Cecelia to avoid looking at Hunter. “You know, Cecelia, I get out the café occasionally.”

            Cecelia laughed, running a hand down the length of Hunter’s chest in some possessive gesture. Anger began to surface in Sissy, causing her jaw to clench.

            “Ah, that little café.” Cecelia wrapped an arm around Hunter, crumpling his tie. “I forgot about that place, but of course my restaurant keeps me so busy I barely get out anymore.”

            “Mmm… I’ve heard.”

            Cecelia’s overly exaggerated face froze as she stared at Sissy. “Success makes some so jealous, don’t you think?” Then, she laughed, rubbing a hand across Hunter’s chest. “But some just have a knack for being great at business.”

            Sissy mumbled, “Or a knack for taking things that don’t belong to you.” Puffing out a breath of air, her heart skipped at her slip in her decorum.

            Cecelia gasped. “Beg your pardon?” 

            Sissy shook her head, mostly at herself. She’d gone and stepped in it already. She supposed there was no use backing gracefully out of this one.  “Success doesn’t include stealing what other people have, Cecelia. That’s not how it works.”

            Color rose to Cecelia’s cheeks as her light brown, heavily charcoal eyeliner eyes widened. “I have never. Who told you that?” She glanced toward Hunter and then back to Sissy. “You really should be above repeating rumors.”

            Sissy grimaced. This woman had an extremely short attention span it seemed. “I don’t need rumors, Cecelia.”

            “Ladies, you have an audience.” Hunter muttered below the noise of the surrounding crowd.

            Cecelia looked around at the people near them openly gawking at their conversation. “Why would Sissy worry about her reputation? It’s not as if she has anything to lose.”

            A sharp anger surged through her, and Sissy placed her hand on her hip. “You and I have very different standards of decency, Cecelia. I don’t come wave an engagement ring in someone’s face who doesn’t even realize her boyfriend is dating someone else. Apparently, I was raised much better than you.”

            Cecelia gasped, and Hunter’s expression darkened as he glanced between Cecelia and Sissy. Feeling the eyes of all the bystanders, Sissy felt a cold sweat taking over her body, and the fear of ruining the vintage fabric with sweat stains only carried her anger further.

            A warm arm wrapped around her waist, and in mid-recoil Sissy recognized Harper’s highlighted hair and gardenia scent. “I think we should make our exit now.” Harper tugged Sissy away from the two who hadn’t recovered yet to respond.

            “Most certainly,” Sissy said. “The food is absolutely awful. We should get something descent to eat. I’m starving.”

            She was too full of anger to really be hungry, but she couldn’t resist the jab as the bystanders broke into heated whispering. She caught more than a few looking down at their plates and putting forks down. Harper steered her through the crowd, pass the ostentatious flower arrangements, and the sparse food lines toward the exit.

            Maybe she could talk Harper into a drink. They could toast Sissy finally saying what she’d needed to say to the two of them for the last two years.

            She just wished she felt better about it.