Frenemies - Emma Hart

CHAPTER ONE – IMMY

Blast From The Past

“That is one hot piece of ass.”

I eyed my grandmother across the room. She was standing in front of the window, her head shoved between the two curtains. Since her dress was the same navy blue as the curtains, it gave the illusion that the curtains had grown a body.

Or that she’d grown a pair of curtains.

Either one would fit her.

“Grandma,” I said. “Stop perving on Mr. Hawkins.”

She’d had an inappropriate crush on the gentleman who lived opposite us for two years, and I’d caught her peeking at him more than one time.

Hell, he’d caught her. Usually, when he was mowing the lawn in his shorts, but that was a nightmare for another day.

“It’s not Mr. Hawkins. It’s the sexy as hell man in front of the moving truck next door.”

I frowned. The ‘SOLD’ sign had been banged into next door’s front yard for two months now, and we’d just talked yesterday about how we thought nobody was ever going to move in.

“Someone is finally moving in?” I got up from the dining table, careful not to knock my coffee onto the canvas I was painting, and joined her from her neighborhood watch spot.

That’s how she referred to it, anyway. She fancied herself as the great keeper of the neighborhood, ready to call the police like an elderly vigilante Superwoman-esque kind of person.

I called it her nosy parker spot.

“Oh, now you want to look with me.” She sniffed when I joined her. “Look? See? That’s his daughter.”

I peered out at the little girl—she had to be four at most—who was dancing on the front lawn in a pink, glittery princess-like dress. It was the exact style of dress I spent my early years living in, and I smiled as her crazy, blonde curls flew around her head as she twirled around.

“Cute,” I said. “Why are you perving on her dad?”

“Because I’ve been watching them for twenty minutes, and I don’t see her mother, so I assume Mr. Muscles is single.”

“Maybe she’s at work?”

“And he’s moving house by himself? No, darling.” She scratched her nose. “You’re showing your single. If you were married, you’d know this important thing: if he was married, his wife would be there to stop him from messing it all up.”

Showing my single. Right. That’s what she was calling it this week.

“Where is he, then?” I narrowed my eyes, shifting to get a better look.

“There! Coming out of the house in those heaven-sent pants!”

If this man wasn’t at least forty, I was hiding her contact lenses. Given that the woman was eighty, even forty was pushing it as acceptable.

All right, so that made her a raging cougar, but it was the age we’d agreed on. it brought us both necessary peace.

I caught a glance at the guy and froze. He looked way too familiar to me. As in, I knew that profile as well as I knew my own, and my stomach was already hurting from how tight it was over the sight of him.

If he was who I thought he was, I was going to regrow my hymen and join a nunnery.

He disappeared into the moving truck. I stared a hole in the side of it until he came back out, this time carrying a huge box.

My heart jumped into my throat so hard it shot out of my mouth and boomeranged right back in there.

No.

This was not happening.

“Oh, hell,” I breathed, staring at him as he set the box down and crouched in front of the little girl.

“Do you know him?” Grandma asked, turning her blue eyes my way.

“Yeah.”

Yeah, I know him.

I knew that face.

I’d know that face anywhere.

In fact, I’d know any part of his body anywhere, given that I’d spent two years of my college life under it, over it, and in front of it.

Mason Black was, apparently, the equivalent of a fine wine. It’d been six years since I’d seen him last at his college graduation, and he’d only gotten hotter since then. From what I could see, anyway.

He was still tall, still impossibly handsome, still built like a romance novel hero with muscles in all the right places. Even his hair, his thick, dark hair, was cut in the same style—short on the sides, longer on top, and swept to one side like he was a freaking rockstar.

But the short beard, not quite a full one but not quite stubble? That was new.

The problem was that none of that covered the main issue: unless we were