Next to her, Guy just shook his head, then patted her back lovingly. “Gotta hand it to you, Missy. I’ve never seen a yard sale like this one.”

  Neither had she. “Let’s go through the neighbor’s yard, Guy. Let’s get around the back and into the house through the pool patio. No one will even notice us.” Not with a superstar like Coco headed in the front door.

  He blinked at her. “Why?”

  “So we can…” She rooted around her brain for a reason that would get him to move. “Meet the hostess. That’s who they’re bringing inside.”

  “Nicey?”

  She urged him across the street, ignoring the strange looks from the neighbors. “Not this time, Guy. Her name is Coco. And I cannot wait to hear what she has to say.”

  “She’s gone. And so is her father.”

  Will blamed sleep deprivation on his brain’s refusal to process what Lacey said when they got Coco inside the house.

  Coco processed it, though, and instantly started to whine. “I can’t make any statements without her!”

  “Wait a minute. Wait.” Will held up a hand to silence her, just as he caught Guy’s picture in the middle of the TV screen with some reporter talking. What the hell?

  A bad, bad feeling crept through his gut, but he tamped it down and stayed focused on Lacey and Clay. “Where are they?” he demanded.

  “We don’t know.” Clay said, a protective arm around Lacey, who looked pale and as stressed out as Coco, only she was quieter about it.

  “I have to talk to Jocelyn,” Coco insisted. “I’m not going out there until I talk to her. I have to—”

  Zoe swept in and practically scooped the actress away, and Tessa instantly leaped to Coco’s other side.

  “Let’s get you in the back and calmed down, Ms. Kirkman,” Tessa said.

  “Yeah,” Zoe added, leaning close to Coco. “ ’Cause, honey, you could really use a little makeup before you get in front of any cameras.”

  Will shot them a grateful look and turned back to Lacey, Clay, and Slade. “Someone tell me what the hell is going on.”

  As they explained, only certain words really took hold. Guy had been missing since yesterday. Woke up and Jocelyn was gone. Silver Alert got the media here.

  And they had plenty of questions of their own, but the need to find Jocelyn and Guy shot like liquid mercury through his veins.

  “We have to find them,” he said simply, marching to the door, ready to take on every damn reporter and an army of deputies to get his woman back. And her father.

  Damn it, they all belonged together. They all—

  “William!”

  He froze at the sound, the punch of relief making his gut drop. He turned toward the patio to see Guy hobbling across the grass with Jocelyn next to him, both of them soaked, bedraggled, filthy, and absolutely the most beautiful sight Will had ever seen.

  Ignoring the noisy reaction of the others in the room, Will strode to the sliding glass door and threw it open, running across the patio and practically tearing the screen door off its hinges to wrap these two people he loved so damn much in his arms.

  Guy might have sobbed and Jocelyn let out a soft, sweet moan, but for the space of one breath of joy they all held each other and no one said a word. They just stood together in complete union.

  Finally Guy pushed away. “Where’s Nicey?”

  “What the hell happened to your face?” Guy was covered with welts, his glasses damn near collapsed, his clothes filthy and wet.

  Jocelyn was just as wet, her face streaked with dirt and tears. “He spent the night on an island in the canal,” she said, her voice cracking. “He got… lost.” She closed her eyes and dropped her head against Will’s chest. “We have to take care of him. Please, Will. Please don’t put him in a—”

  “Shhh.” He quieted her with a kiss on her wet head and a finger to her lips. “We won’t. I promise. We won’t.”

  “Where’s this hostess?” Guy broke away from them and started toward the house. Will turned to follow, but Jocelyn grabbed him by the shoulders.

  “Will, he isn’t the same man.”

  “I know,” he admitted. “And neither am I.”

  She frowned at him. “What do you mean?”

  “No more waiting. From now on, I act. And don’t be too surprised, but I brought someone back from L.A. with me. She wants to come clean, clear your name, and help other abused women. You don’t have to live this lie for her anymore, Joss.”

  “Oh, Will.” She leaned into him for another embrace. “I can’t believe you did that. I can’t believe…” She pulled away, searched his face, confusion making her frown. “What about the coaching job?”

  He snorted. “I turned that down before I left Mimosa Key. I’m not going to L.A., I’m staying right here, building things that last. Like villas and houses and a life with you.”

  She put her hand on her mouth like she couldn’t contain her happiness. “Here?”

  “Right here.” He pulled her closer, wrapping his arms around her. “Right here where you belong, Bloomerang.”

  She answered with a salty, sweet, straight-from-the-heart kiss on his lips.

  Chapter 32

  Will took over caring for Guy while the five women somehow squeezed into the hallway bathroom Jocelyn had often locked herself in during Guy���s episodes, shaking with fear, hating her life, wishing him dead.

  Coco was the one shaking with fear now, perched on the toilet seat so Lacey could fix her hair and Zoe could apply makeup. Tessa leaned against the counter, making notes for Coco’s speech.

  Jocelyn crouched on the floor, holding the actress’s tiny hands.

  “You don’t have to do this, Coco.”

  Coco looked down. “Yes I do.”

  “But you do have to look at me,” Zoe insisted. “Unless you are willing to settle for less-than-perfect makeup.”

  Coco complied. “And I want to do this, Joss,” she added. “Not just for you, not just for me, but for every woman who’s ever been trapped in an awful situation.”

  “Great opening line,” Tessa said, scratching on paper.

  “Thanks,” Coco said. “I came up with that on the plane.”

  “You don’t need lines.” Jocelyn squeezed Coco’s hands gently. “You just have to talk from the heart.”

  “I’m an actress. I need lines.”

  “You’re a woman, just like us,” Jocelyn told her. “And if you want to be heard, you will have to look at the camera and speak honestly. And, honey, you have to be prepared for backlash.”

  “Backlash?” Lacey asked, holding up a strand of Coco’s hair as she combed through it. “What kind of backlash could there be for doing something so right?”

  “Miles’s fans, for one,” Coco said. “They’re rabid women who would die for him.”

  Zoe snorted. “Then maybe they should move in with him.”

  Coco smiled up at her. “I like you. Have you ever thought about acting?”

  Surprising all of them, Zoe shook her head. “No limelight for me, doll face. But I wouldn’t mind the cash and cars. Close your eyes. I’m going all smoky on the creases.”

  Coco obliged and gave Jocelyn’s fingers a squeeze back. “I’m going to be fine,” she said. “As long as you’re with me and you field the questions about why we did this.”

  “Gladly.”

  “And maybe that’ll help you get some clients back,” Coco added. “I’m really sorry that your business has crashed and burned.”

  Jocelyn shrugged. “I’m not. I’m moving on.”

  Lacey froze mid-comb. “You are?”

  “I’m going to be the spa manager at Casa Blanca.”

  Zoe shrieked.

  Tessa gasped.

  And Lacey dropped the comb and fell to her knees. “Jocelyn! Thank you!”

  “Why are you all surprised?” Coco asked. “She’s got the stud ballplayer who’d do anything for her and great friends who rally. And a kind of quirky but very cute little old
father.”

  Jocelyn smiled at her, so eternally grateful that Coco hadn’t given her a fight when she’d explained her decision to forgive Guy. “Exactly,” Jocelyn agreed. “Why are you all shocked?”

  “But I thought…” Tessa put down the paper, frowning. “Will was interviewing for a job in L.A.”

  “He blew it off to stay in Mimosa Key and be the best damn carpenter this island’s ever had.” And the best damn man Jocelyn had ever known.

  “The only job he’s interviewing for is to be your main squeeze,” Coco said. “That man loves your ass.”

  “Ahem,” Tessa said pointedly.

  “Amen,” Lacey replied.

  “I like this girl,” Zoe said with a grin.

  Jocelyn just beamed. “He might get that job.”

  “Great.” Coco laughed. “It’ll be awesome for you to finally let go of that pesky virginity you’ve been carting around for a lifetime.”

  That was met with stunned silence and Jocelyn felt heat creep up her neck.

  Zoe’s hands froze mid-eye-shadow-stroke. “You’re a virgin?”

  Jocelyn swallowed. “Not anymore.”

  “But… with Will… that was your first?”

  She nodded, then looked up to Lacey and Tessa for help, but got nothing except open-mouthed, wide-eyed disbelief.

  “You know I was never with anyone in college,” Jocelyn said.

  “But, we assumed… after… no one?” Zoe shook her head as if the thought just would not find a place in her brain. “At your age?”

  “Zoe, not everyone is the sexual tigress you are.”

  “But not anyone is a virgin at your age.”

  “Well I was,” Jocelyn said.

  Zoe gave Jocelyn a look, then straightened to get back to work on Coco’s face, still unable to process the unbelievable news.

  “So,” Tessa said, tapping her pen on the paper. “You don’t tell your three best friends that you’re a virgin, but you share that with a client.”

  “Coco’s more than a client,” Jocelyn said quickly. “She’s my friend, too. And she is a sister in…” She closed her eyes. She’d have to talk about this now, so she might as well practice with the ones who loved her the most. “Abuse.”

  No one spoke for a few long seconds, but Jocelyn and Coco squeezed each other’s hands, the shared experience always there between them.

  “All right, Ms. Kirkman,” Zoe said, grabbing a hand mirror. “Now you’re ready to face your adoring fans.”

  “Yes, I am.” But she didn’t even look, standing slowly and pulling Jocelyn up with her. “You guys are all awesome and Jocelyn is lucky to have you.”

  “We know,” Tessa said, reaching out to hug Jocelyn. “We love her even if we don’t know her secrets.”

  “You know them all now,” Jocelyn said. “And in a few minutes, so will the rest of the world.”

  “Except the Oldest Living Virgin part.” Zoe grabbed Jocelyn to nudge her onto the toilet seat. “Uh, you need a little makeover, too, Joss. You don’t want the only man you ever slept with to see you like this.”

  Ten minutes later, Coco and Jocelyn walked hand in hand to the front patio of 543 Sea Breeze Drive, the place of so many unhappy, violent moments in the past. The sun had finally slipped out from behind the clouds and the crowd of reporters had grown exponentially.

  A cheer erupted at the sight of Coco, who walked up to a podium hastily erected by a media outlet after she’d requested one for the press conference.

  She glanced nervously at Jocelyn. “Maybe you should, you know, introduce me.”

  “Maybe you should introduce yourself.”

  Coco nodded and headed toward the microphone, the papers Tessa had written fluttering on the stand. She tapped the mike, and that just elicited more of a roar and a cringe from Coco. Jocelyn walked up next to her and took her hand.

  “C’mon, Coco, you can do this. You can do this for every woman just like us.”

  “Hello,” she said into the mike. When the crowd quieted, she leaned closer and said, “I’m here to speak on behalf of every girl who’s ever been hit, every woman who’s ever been beaten, and every wife who’s ever had to lie to get away from violence.”

  Complete silence fell over the crowd and a soft gust of wind picked up one of the papers and floated it away. Coco ignored the loss, looking out to the crowd.

  “I have a message to give to you, and I want you to deliver it to every corner of this earth because abuse has to stop.”

  Behind her, the screen door opened and Guy stepped out on the patio, his face the image of confusion. Instantly Jocelyn stepped away, but Coco kept talking.

  Jocelyn reached him, turned him around, and guided him inside. Will was in the living room, leaning against the brick wall, dividing his attention between Coco live on TV and Jocelyn.

  “He’s not quite understanding what’s going on,” Will said. “I did my best to explain.”

  “It’s just part of the show, Guy,” she said, guiding him to his recliner.

  “I never saw this part of the show.” He slumped into the chair, automatically patting the arm for his remote. “Where’s the gifting part? When do you gift me with something special?”

  “Right now,” she said, kneeling next to him.

  Will walked in and handed her the remote. “It was in the—”

  “Dishwasher, I know.” She smiled up at him. “What do you think we should gift Guy with for all the trouble he’s been through these past few weeks?”

  Will reached for her. “Let’s talk about it.” Wrapping her in his arms, he took a few steps away from Guy. “You’ve forgiven him?”

  She nodded. “Completely. I can’t let the past ruin the present, Will. And I can’t spend whatever time he has left hating him.” The announcement felt so good and right on her lips.

  “And me?”

  “You? I could never hate you. I love—”

  “Wait.” He cupped her face with both hands. “Me first. Jocelyn, I love you. I want to live every day for you, with you, next to you. I trust you, I need you, and you have always been the only one for me. Always.”

  A happiness so bone-deep she could feel it down to her toes washed over her. “I love you too, Will.”

  “Am I on your list of everything now?”

  The list that now included family and trust and forever love? “You’re right at the top, where I intend to keep you for the rest of our—”

  “Excuse me!” Guy called. “My gift, Missy?”

  “—lives,” Will finished for her, guiding her back to the recliner. “How’s this, buddy? We’re getting married.”

  Jocelyn sucked in a soft breath at the announcement, but Guy sat bolt upright. “Really?”

  “Yup,” Will continued. “We’re going to live right next door and keep an eye on you.” He threw Jocelyn a questioning glance, and she nodded happily. “And we’re having kids.”

  Guy tried—and failed—to hide his smile. “Kids running around here calling me crazy?”

  “No.” Jocelyn put one hand on Guy’s arm and the other on Will’s strong shoulder, gratitude for the gift of forgiveness and love bursting in her chest. “They won’t call you crazy. They’ll call you… Grandpa.”

  Epilogue

  Seven Months Later

  Casa Blanca’s parking lot was no longer a gravelly home to a construction trailer; it was a smooth asphalt expanse currently filled with shiny Mercedes, Beamers, and Jaguars. The new surface was so smooth that Jocelyn’s high heels made a satisfying tap as Will opened the door of her Lexus and she climbed out.

  As her silky skirt slipped way up her thigh, Will let out a low whistle of appreciation.

  “Zoe picked this outfit,” she said.

  “A true believer in form over function.” Will loosened the knot around his neck, taking his eyes off her only when the whine of a sports-car engine stole his attention. “What do you call this thing again?”

  “A tie?”

  Laughing, he took h
er hand as she stepped out. “I meant this shindig we’re all dressed up for.”

  “A soft opening.”

  “I like the sound of that.” He pulled her closer, inhaling deeply as if he couldn’t get enough of her scent. “You know, Artemesia is the only villa not finished yet. I left the back door unlocked. Let’s sneak up there and find your soft opening.”

  She added a little pressure to his embrace, their fit against each other so natural now they didn’t even have to think about it. “Later, I promise. But now it’s time to entertain the moneyed set from Naples, here for the VIP preview of the resort.”

  She turned when a candy-apple-red Porsche swung into a space a few feet away.

  “Arriving in true style,” he noted.

  “Don’t knock it. These ladies pay top dollar for luxury, and Lacey and I plan to deliver.”

  “Lacey plans to deliver any minute now, from the looks of her.”

  She gathered her wrap and bag, tucking her hand into his arm. “As of an hour ago, she was pretty sure she’d be here, but she’s been having contractions all day. I have no such excuse and, as the spa manager, I need to make friends and charm potential customers.”

  A man climbed out of the Porsche looking like he’d been plucked from central casting for the event. Black hair with maybe a whisper of silver threads, jaw-droppingly handsome, dressed in Armani, a phone pressed to his ear.

  “If she’s not responding to the sandostatin, then we need to closely monitor her kidney function overnight,” the man said with gruff authority as he walked around the car to the other side, reaching for the car door. Jocelyn thought there was something vaguely familiar about him. “Administer it with high-dose conditioning protocols for the next three hours and keep the patient sedated. If anything changes, call me.”

  He opened the passenger-side door and an exquisite brunette dressed in a strapless white dress climbed out, her expression as icy as the diamonds around her neck. “You said your partners were handling the calls tonight.”