To Me I Wed Read online




  ALSO BY K.M. JACKSON

  Holiday Temptation

  (with Donna Hill and Farrah Rochon)

  The Unconventional Brides Series

  Insert Groom Here

  To Me I Wed

  An Unconventional Brides Romance

  K.M. JACKSON

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  http://www.kensingtonbooks.com

  All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.

  To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.

  DAFINA BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  119 West 40th Street

  New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2017 by Kwana Jackson

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the Publisher and neither the Author nor the Publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”

  Dafina and the Dafina logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.

  ISBN: 978-1-4967-0570-9

  First Kensington Mass Market Edition: May 2017

  eISBN-13: 978-1-4967-0571-6

  eISBN-10: 1-4967-0571-8

  Kensington Electronic Edition: May 2017

  VD1_1

  Table of Contents

  ALSO BY K.M. JACKSON

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  COLLECT THEM ALL - The Unconventional Bride Series

  Insert Groom Here Teaser

  To Will

  Your love takes me from enough to more than.

  Acknowledgments

  Though writing is a solitary endeavor, no book is truly written alone. Because of that, there are quite a few people I’d like to thank for helping me through this process and for mainly keeping me sane and pulling me out of my own head when I most needed it. Because, though it’s fine for a while, woman cannot live by social media alone.

  As always first and foremost thank you to God for being my rock and by my side when there is only my voice and no one else’s.

  Thank you to my Dear, DH, Will, for always being an inspiration. You remind me that love is in the small moments.

  To my children, Kayla and William, for always being a driving force. And to the rest of my family for being the grounding that keeps me laughing at what most would cry over.

  All the gratitude in my heart goes out to the phenomenal team at Kensington Publishing. To my editor, Selena James, I never imagined it could be this good. All of you at Kensington are jewels to work with.

  Thank you to Team KMJ, who never fail to remind me of what a privilege this writing gig is. And to Amy and to Dana, you both are treasures.

  Karli, Wendy, Kiya, Patrice, Patricia, Eileen, Jackie & Marva. I’m throwing kisses and confetti to my amazing friends who truly lift me up with joy each and every day just by being who they are.

  To: Farrah, Adrianne, Shelly, Lauren, Deborah, Sofia, Katana, Cheris, Falguni, Megan, Sonali, Kaia, Synithia, Stacey and all my supercool Destin Divas. If we’re doing like the young chippies do and calling out squads, then mine is LIT!

  Yes, I’m a lucky woman indeed. But please don’t pinch me, because I don’t want to wake up anytime soon.

  And lastly, Nana, your heart beats on.

  All the best,

  KMJ

  Chapter 1

  “You’re not just gaining a wife, you’re getting my best friend.” Lily Perry took one look at her sister, Sophie, and realized her mistake. Shit. Now I’ve done it. Did she really just use the same best friend line on Sophie that she had with Sophie’s twin, Audrey, at her wedding? Or was it Peggy who she used that line on when she married Marcus? Her sisters had been getting married left and right, and all the weddings and toasts were starting to blur together. You’d think they were in some sort of great marriage race.

  Lily looked around the banquet room of the VFW hall and caught her mother’s sister, Aunt Ruby pulling a face and whispering something to her newly engaged daughter, Nikki. Lily swallowed back a grimace. Jeeze, even Nikki was jumping the broom. At the rate her family was going, there would not be a broom or a groom to be snagged in all of the Rockaways. Not that Lily was actively looking for either. She had a vacuum in her apartment for sweeping, and, well, for other tasks, if her dating life hit a lull she had an electronic device to take care of that too. It was way more reliable than men anyway. Still, Lily glanced left and caught her mother, Renée Henton-Perry, staring too. The hyphenation in her name was still new to her and intentionally left off the wedding invitations. She preferring to keep things simple she said and going the traditional route of Mr. and Mrs. Perry request the honor blah, blah, blah and so forth. Her hair and makeup were flawless, as usual, and her skin was smooth and unlined. The untrained eye would never determine that she was the mother of six grown daughters—four married—with a grandchild on the way. One would also not know that right then she was highly pissed. But Lily knew. She caught the glint of disapproval in her mother’s eye and the ever-so-slight pull of tension around her perfectly lined mouth. Lily wondered if it was due to her speech faux pas or the fact that, one table over, Lily’s father, Philip Perry, was sitting with his arm draped casually around his current girlfriend, who was happily sipping on her pink cocktail and batting her long, glued-on lashes.

  Lily cleared her throat as her cousin Nikki smirked and rolled her eyes in her direction. Unperturbed by her cousin’s cutting glance, Lily raised her glass higher, giving her sister what she hoped passed for a glowing smile before turning to the crowd. “I’m the luckiest woman in the world to have been blessed with the world’s best sisters. And to all my brothers-in-law, you’d better treat them right, or there will be hell to pay.” She then directed her final words to her newest brother-in-law, Simon, who looked ecstatic to be marrying Sophie. His big blue eyes shined brightly for her as they had every day since they’d met in Sophie’s improv class.

  Both budding actors, they made a slightly sickeningly perfect couple. Sophie with her cocoa-brown skin and finely chiseled model features, and Simon with his wavy dark hair and captivating eyes. They looked like a couple in an aspirational car ad or in the picture that comes in the picture frame that you replace with your mediocre second best. Plus, they were always smiling and complimenting each other. If Lily didn’t know them in person and up close, she’d swear their love was faked for some reality TV show. Lily smiled at her new brother-in-law and continued from her heart. “Simon, I’m not worried about you. Your love for Sophie has been shining bright since day one. May it shine on forever.” Lily turned back to the now-beaming crowd. She had them. Hell, even Aunt Ruby was blinking back a tear.

  But just as
Lily took a sip of her champagne, she caught sight of a sneer from freaking Lacy Colten. Ugh, why had Sophie invited that man stealer? A nemesis since high school, Lacy was well known for frequenting weddings to get free booze and easy prey. Lily watched as Lacy stopped sneering, quickly sat up straighter, and stuck her already-on-display double Ds out even farther as she looked across the room, no doubt at her next victim. Lily’s eyes shifted.

  It was him, and surprisingly, he was staring at her, not Lacy. Oh crap. His eyes so dark and intense they reminded her of hushed quiet in the dead of night. Midnight. Lily frowned as the heat of his stare penetrated her being. Working her over from the inside out. Stirring up feelings that she’d long told herself she was well and good over. What the hell, dude? Mind your own business. Lily pointedly tried to look in any direction but his as she wondered what he was doing there and mentally cursed Thomas for backing out at the last minute and leaving her to attend this wedding on her own. She’d fix him the next time he needed someone to attend one of his boring corporate functions and one of his usual cookie-cutter airheads just wouldn’t cut the mustard.

  “Your toast was great,” Scott, Simon’s brother, said as he took his spot to make the best man’s toast and thankfully pulled Lily’s attention away from Midnight and back to the task at hand.

  “Thanks,” Lily said, her voice slightly shaky.

  Why was he staring so dang hard? As a matter of fact, why was he there at all? Lily knew he was a friend of Simon’s, but were they really close enough to warrant an invite to an intimate family affair? She snorted to herself. Hell, Lacy was there. Seems anyone could get into this party. But still, she couldn’t believe she missed his name on the guest list. Wait, she couldn’t believe she missed his name all together, as in the fact that she couldn’t remember it. How could a person not remember the name of another person she made out with pretty hot and heavy one night? Lily inwardly shifted as she wondered what her mother would say to that. She’d probably purse her lips so hard she’d pull a muscle. But still, there it was. For the life of her she couldn’t remember his name. Not that it was all that much of a bad thing. The not-remembering-his-name deal Lily considered it a bit of a triumph, as after their hot-and-heavy make out session on the beach those months ago he went radio silent with zero communication sent in her direction. So Lily made it a point to not dwell on him for longer than the week she’d given him to call and then mentally erased his name from her “give a crap” database.

  Still Lily worried at her bottom lip. It was a short name, that she knew, and her face heated up when she recalled that his name was the only thing that was short about him. Lily felt the heat rise in her cheeks to a near boiling level as she looked back at midnight eyes and caught a distinct raise of his brow just as she was turning to take her seat once more. It was as if he knew what she was thinking. And it was then that she almost tripped on the hem of her dress, getting it caught in the toe of the stupid dyed-to-match satin-and-sparkle shoes that Sophie insisted they all wear. If it were her day, there would be no matching dresses. Come on, no one dress flattered everyone and dyed-to-match. Please. The horror. This was not nineteen ninety-eight. Had she not taught Sophie anything?

  Lily righted herself with the back of the spindles of the rented gold chairs, and once again her eyes connected with Midnight’s. He smirked and raised his beer in mock salute. The freaking nerve.

  Lily squelched her blush as she turned away and tried to focus on Scott’s speech. He was going on about something to do with a keg and a goat, and she told herself she really should have vetted what he’d planned to say. It was a rookie move leaving the best man’s speech up to chance. More than one fight has broken out due to mention of a boys-gone-wild bachelor party.

  Lily shook her head as the crowd laughed and her thoughts went back to Mr. Eyes. Maybe he was the plus-one of another guest. At that thought Lily got a surprising and completely unwelcome knot in her stomach. What should she care if an old hookup was a plus-one at a wedding she was attending? That wasn’t awkward at all. Well, not all that much. And what was he doing looking at her like that if he was someone else’s plus-one? She let out a deep breath and did a quick flip in her mind, his overly dark, midnight eyes taking Lily back to their first and only meeting the summer before, on the beach where Sophie and Simon were on a not-quite-date with a group of friends and she tagged along, still feeling slightly salty after Thomas giving her his little speech about their not being mutually exclusive. Well, hell, she’d wished she’d had known that bit of bullshit before she’d gone and turned down her fair share of good-looking man candy while he was tipping around the city spreading all his joy. For the life of her she didn’t know why she still gave Thomas the time of day. And now here she was, obviously dateless, when he was supposed to at least be available as her plus-one, mutually exclusive or not. They had an understanding.

  No matter though. Right now Lily was focused on Midnight, and she couldn’t help but note that he looked just as good now as he had then. Though now he wore his hair shaved close to his scalp, and he had this scruff that looked quite, well, touchable in a rough but irresistible way on his chin. And his shoulders, which were wide then, seemed even wider now. As a matter of fact they were practically straining the hell out of his black suit jacket. And just as he’d done on the beach that afternoon, where they’d shared beers and tacos then later quite a bit more, making out under the dock, he was looking at her as if he could see right through her dress, past her mask of calm reserve and down to the fact that just his stare was making her hot as hell. Forget the champagne, maybe she needed a cold shower.

  Sophie leaned over to Lily and patted her hand. “Nice toast, sis,” she whispered between smiling clenched teeth. “I liked it the first time I heard it too.”

  Lily shook her head and turned her younger sister’s way. “Can you cut me just a little slack? You gave me only three months to put this shindig together, and I pulled out all the stops for you, calling in many markers with my vendors, mind you—even passing on a job in order to slip you in. So sorry if I bungled the toast, but you have to admit the rest of your day has been perfect.”

  Duly chastised, Sophie shook her pretty head in agreement. Yes, it had been perfect, Lily knew that. As a high-end social event planner, Lily was just getting to the top of her game, or at least she could envision the top from where she was standing in the valley. And she had been working overtime for her sisters as of late. “Thank you, this day has been wonderful,” Sophie finally said. “I just wish you would be in the moment with me and stop to enjoy what’s going on. You’re not a robot, you know. And we’re family, I’m not just any of your other clients.”

  “Of course you’re not just any other client,” Lily started just when the DJ decided to strike up a particularly annoying nineties dance track that had the crowd quickly exiting the dance floor and heading back to their seats. Lily frowned and looked at her sister. “If you were any other client, I wouldn’t have let you hire Awful Roy from high school to DJ this gig.” She let out a sigh. “But thanks to me and my extraspecial way of treating all my clients like family, I’m going to handle this for you and go kick some sorry DJ ass right now to get this party on track.”

  As Sophie let out a breath and shook her head, Lily headed in Roy’s direction, a new and improved set list the only thing on her mind.

  “So when is it going to finally be your turn to walk down the aisle? You can’t let your sisters have all the fun.”

  Really? The slightly slurred voice came at her from behind and instantly ruined Lily’s semi-good mood after the Roy smackdown. Just when things were starting to get back on track. People were dancing once again; DJ R-Town, aka Roy Husker, had promised no more songs with the words groove or celebration in them; and Sophie was currently booty shaking in a semi-disrespectful way around her longtime love, newly minted husband, Simon.

  All was in place and running beautifully. Not to mention the normally slightly drab VFW hall on the North Shor
e of the Island had been transformed to a bridal oasis. All done up in Sophie’s colors of lavender and rose. It took Lily pulling quite a few strings with some of her vendors to get everything in place, but when they heard the wedding was for her sister, none of them would turn down the opportunity to do Lily a favor with hopes of being called upon for some of her more high-profile clients.

  Yes, the day was going well, or at least better than expected given the fact that she was once again being showcased as a bridesmaid. It wasn’t all that much of a problem, despite the shoes, but she was a surprisingly dateless one, thanks to Thomas and his unreliable ass. Well, that just made things unnecessarily inconvenient. He was supposed to be there for her as a buffer against stupid-ass questions like this one.

  Lily gave herself a mental kick. She should have known the question was coming. Even with Thomas by her side at Audrey’s wedding, she hadn’t made it out without the big M question coming her way. She didn’t know why she’d thought she’d make it through this one. Maybe it was the long lull that gave her a false sense of hope that just once she’d get through one blasted family wedding without the focus turning to her lack of a significant other. Today it was Uncle Gene holding up the singleton mirror as he jabbed at her with his not-so-innocent questions. Lily turned away from her inspection of the ice-cream martini bar to face a bleary-eyed Uncle Gene. She tried her best to reach the back corner of her heart to come up with a retort that was, if not kind, at least not the “step off and mind your own damn business and while you’re at it maybe lighten up on the whiskeys. Oh, and by the way, my eyes are up here, Uncle Gene” retort that she really wanted to blurt out.