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Fooled: The Cartwright Brothers Boxset
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Copyright © 2018 by Lilliana Anderson
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Cover design by Ember Designs
Editing by Hot Tree Editing and Making Manuscripts
Created with Vellum
Contents
Foreword
Book 1
1. Best Night Ever
2. I Didn’t Come Here to Talk
3. Complete and Utter Fool
4. Payment for Services Rendered
5. Comfort Food and Family
6. Duchess
7. To the Man Who Steals Your Heart
8. Reconnaissance Only
9. Maybe You Drank Pee
10. I’m Saving You
11. There’s Always A Choice, Duchess
12. Slave to Desire
13. Air to Breathe
14. Snitches Get Stitches
15. It Might Work
16. No One Touches My Wife
17. A Sentimental Sod
18. No Fucking Clue
19. Begging Duchess
20. At First Sight
21. Don’t Leave Out a Thing
22. A Loveable Rogue
23. Teach Me
24. Playing Angles
25. An Olive Branch
26. Don’t Keep Your Husband Waiting
27. The Beast You Are
28. All On Me
29. Cash or Cheque
30. Are They What I Think They Are?
31. Me Over You
32. Blanche and Stella
33. I Know It
34. Pinch Me
Book 2
1. At First Sight
2. The Giant Fishbowl
3. My Exorcist Impression
4. Oh My My
5. I Stole A Unicorn
6. Kiss Me Again
7. The Family Business
8. I Get It Now
9. Marriage By Default
10. Good Enough
11. Because You’re Family
12. Get Yourself A Nicer Boyfriend
13. She Doesn’t Get To Feel Sorry For You Anymore
14. Her Horn’s A Little Bent
15. Everyone Has Something To Prove
16. Trying To Change Him
17. Who The Fuck Are You
18. Don’t Change Yourself For Anyone
19. Samuel Cartwright 101
20. Need
21. The Good China
22. Fucking Freedom
23. Fight For It
24. Perfect Job
25. Despite Everything
26. Starvation
27. Swooping In
28. Best Be On Your Way
29. Fucking Selfish Bastard
30. Worse Things To Be
31. I’m Not Sorry
32. Renewal
Book 3
1. MacGyver is full of shit
2. None Of This Makes Any Sense
3. All The Space In The Room
4. Nothing To Lose And Everything To Gain
5. Searching For Meaning
6. You’ll Never Be Done With Me
7. I Should Have Gone To Bed
8. Two People Who Don’t Hate Each Other
9. A Puddle Of Liquid That Can’t Even Speak
10. Dog On A Leash
11. The Woman You Need To Be
12. It’s Been Weird
13. Holy Fucking Pissflaps
14. Castle Grayskull
15. Do You Kill A Lot Of People?
16. Knight In Stolen Armour
17. Battle Cat
18. Stand Here And Look Pretty
19. All Hands On Deck
20. A Completely Fucked-Up Kind Of Right
21. Take It
22. Born To Do This
23. Criminals Are Like Cockroaches
24. Hopeful Comfort
25. The Cruellest Of Cruel
26. As Green As Green Can Be
27. Eight Hours
28. The One Person Who Gives A Damn
29. I’m Not A Cartwright
30. Where Do I Sign?
31. Let Me Be Your First
32. A New Kind of Debt
33. Band of Thieves
34. Soppy As Fuck
35. For A Girl Like Me
Book 4
1. Cartwright Property Management
2. One Of The Boys
3. Buds
4. Just Sloane
5. Drop Bears
6. Pop a Mint
7. Challenge Accepted
8. Battle Of Wills
9. Think of the Money
10. The Devil’s Doorbell
11. Wrong Brother
12. Cat and Mouse
13. Rogue
14. No Girly Friends Shit
15. Ace of Fucking Spades
16. Just Friends
17. Heads or Tails
18. On The Clock
19. Yahtzee
20. Level The Playing Field
21. Highly Inappropriate
22. A Fucking Mess
23. Mummy Issues
24. Stick Around
25. A Little Too Much
26. A Twenty-First Century Woman
27. Consequences
28. The Last Word
29. Something Worth Making It Back For
30. Fucked-Up Shit
31. Drowned In Secrets
32. Perfection
33. Fool Me Twice
34. What If
35. Security
36. Promise
37. Step One
38. Red Towels
39. Happily Ever After Goddammit
40. Positive
41. You Said To Call
42. The Shit Hit the Fan
43. War is Coming
44. Willow
Book 5
1. Blissfully Alone
2. And I’m Leaving
3. Stuck On Things
4. Hey Siri
5. Sleeping or Passed Out
6. Don’t Turn That Key
7. Spill
8. Don’t Call Me Daddy
9. Babe?
10. Always In Charge
11. A Gentleman Too
12. He’s a Devil
13. Filthy
14. Let’s Pretend
15. Broken Together
16. Pull Over
17. A Lumbering Ballet
18. The Monsters in my Mind
19. Such a Baby
20. Yours
21. I’ll Hold Your Hand
22. That Biker Could Really Bake
23. My Fault
24. A Terrible Man. Really Bad
25. Failsafes
26. Forever Yes
27. Not Weakness
28. My Paradise
Epilogue
Also by Lilliana Anderson
About the Author
Acknowledgments
For the fools who dare
Foreword
This book was a dream. I woke up one night, laughing from the silliness of it, and the first thing I did was grab my phone and put everything I could remember into notes. I just had to write it. So it went on my list along with everything else I wished I had time for.
This story had been itching the back of my mind, and I talked about it frequently, eager to work it into my schedule. I couldn’t really find time for it, then I thought fuck it, and shuffled everything to fit it in. And wow, did I have fun
writing this book!
It’s supposed to be funny. It’s supposed to be silly. It’s supposed to be a little out of the realm of possible. The whole point of this story is to have a little fun and get lost in the crazy for a while and swoon a little while an expert lover behaves like the man every woman dreams off.
If you finish this book smiling, then I’ve done my job.
I’ll stop talking now. Enjoy!
Book 1
Fool Me Twice
Chapter One
Best Night Ever
“I can’t believe your cousin themed her hens night pink and black. We look like we’re extras in a shitty stage production of Grease. Or worse, stewardesses on the Barbie Glamour Jet.”
“Oh, Holland, it’s really not that bad.” Alesha sighed, leaning close to the worn-looking mirror of the club’s bathroom while she carefully touched up her bow-shaped pout. The colour she used was a shade of pink a little darker than the Barbie pink of our outfits. Pink looked great on her. It made me look like I fell in a vat of fairy floss while I got my snack on. Not pretty.
With my mouth tight, I positioned my bleached-blonde locks over my shoulder and studied my reflection. My most striking feature peered back at me: two very big, round, honey-coloured eyes. In the warmth of the evening, my kohl eyeliner had smudged, giving them a slightly smoky look that I was unable to create on purpose. But I liked this happy accident, and decided to wear pencil eyeliner on hot nights more often. I sucked in my cheeks and turned my head side to side. The rest of my face was super-basic—round with a functional nose and some very average lips—nothing to write home about. I considered applying a fresh coat of lip gloss for something else to do while I waited for Alesha but chose not to. I was just going to drink it all off again, anyway.
“I don’t know why we let her have outfit approval as well. We could’ve worn all black with pink earrings or something tiny like that to buck the trend.”
Alesha laughed, moving on to powdering her nose. “Because we’re pushovers. And because it’s her wedding. We’ll get to boss everyone around and force them to wear unflattering colours too one day.”
I scoffed. “Unlikely. We’re already in our thirties and haven’t even come close to a long-term relationship, let alone a marriage proposal.”
Alesha and I had been best friends since primary school, when I moved in with my aunt who lived next door to her. She was practically my sister. In all that time, I could count our collective boyfriends on one hand—and that wasn’t even using all my fingers. We were perpetually single, a fact I’d grown accustomed to since my big three-oh. That was two years ago.
She tucked her make-up into her purse, shrugging. “I still have hope.”
She would. Out of the two of us, Alesha was by far the prettiest. She was tall and Olive Oyl thin, with light brown hair, chocolate doe eyes, and a heart-shaped face that she accentuated with a carefully crafted layer of make-up. Guys often approached her, but she was painfully shy and socially awkward. The last time a hot guy spoke to her, he asked if he could buy her a drink and she just looked at him, then blurted, “I put make-up on dead people.” Yes, Alesha was a beautician at a funeral parlour—a fact I kept advising her to save for at least the second date, but her awkwardness always beat out her common sense.
I, on the other hand, was short and a little on the round side. Growing up, my aunt used to assure me that I was like a caterpillar, eating my way through all the leaves until I spun my cocoon and emerged a beautiful butterfly. She lied. I’m still a chubby caterpillar. But as I’ve gotten older, I’ve learned to embrace my curves and be unapologetic over my love of food—life’s too damn short to apologise for enjoying anything. I knew that better than anyone, especially since I was currently the exact age my mother was when she and my father died in a car accident. I was thirty-two and had hardly done a thing with my life. It was hard to imagine having it over already.
The fact that my parents were gone wasn’t the reason I was still requesting a table for one. I wasn’t damaged in any way because of their passing; I’d been raised by an awesome woman who loved me so fiercely that I never once felt alone. Sure, I missed my parents, and I often wondered what my life would’ve been like if they’d stayed home that night, but I wasn’t defined by my orphan status. No, the only thing that defined me was a single word—big. Big booty, big personality, big boobs. I was larger than life in every way, and that wasn’t easy for a lot of men to take.
I wasn’t always without male company, however. Every now and then, I managed to hook up with a chubby chaser. You know, those guys who just love the sight and feel of all that flesh. They were a riot for a short period of time. It just rarely went anywhere because I couldn’t handle that fetish long-term. I mean, what if I got sick and dropped all the weight? Would they leave because I didn’t fit their ideal anymore? At the end of the day, I just wanted someone who liked me for me. But at my age while attending the hens night for Alesha’s twenty-four-year-old cousin, I was pretty sure that particular someone didn’t exist for me. And I loved myself too much to settle for anything less than what a big beautiful woman like me deserved. I wanted a man who worshipped every part of me, inside and out.
The bathroom door burst open, causing the previously muffled noise of the club to invade the room at full blast. Two giggling twenty-somethings rolled through the door and rushed for the stalls.
“We should probably get back out there,” I said, dreading rejoining the black-and-pink, penis-straw-wielding gaggle of women. Hens nights typically stuck out like sore thumbs, but with us all dressed the same, it was even more obvious. Honestly, it was embarrassing.
“One sec.” Alesha ran her fingers through her super-straight hair, neatening it even more than it already was. For someone who struggled to speak to the opposite sex, she sure spent a lot of time on her looks.
Still waiting, I looked in the mirror and studied my face a moment longer. Maybe I should put a little more effort in too. Maybe wear a little more make-up, figure out what the hell all that contouring business was about. I was often told that I had ‘such a lovely face’. I didn’t know exactly what a ‘lovely face’ was supposed to be, but I did always hear the unsaid part of the sentence: ‘If only you’d lose the weight.’ Not like I hadn’t tried. I didn’t get why people needed to be so freaking judge-y; it wasn’t like they could catch my fatness from me.
“OK. I’m done.” Alesha smiled, then tucked her purse under her arm. “Ready to sing some karaoke?”
I laughed, following her out of the bathroom. “It’s literally the only reason I came.”
Most clubs have dark walls and a colourful light show to create the ambience. This particular one was all white: white walls, white floors, white tables and seating. The lighting glowed soft and blue, and the stage was a round platform directly across from the bar, big enough for a DJ, a microphone and the TV prompter. At full capacity, there was no shortage of warblers to take the stage. Some of them were OK, but others were nails-on-a-chalkboard terrible. I sat and listened, made conversation, sipped my margarita, clapped, and even whistled in all the right places. Then my patience was rewarded—it was my turn.
“Holland, whooooo!” The hens girls cheered when my name was called, hooting and hollering while I made my way up to the stage. Once there, I waited for my song to start with a smile on my face as I adjusted the height of the mic. I could hear the murmurs in the audience, see people whispering to each other. I knew I harped on a lot about my size, but that was the world for a big girl—it was the sole focus of everyone who looked at you. Every time you stood up and tried to shine, everyone was judging and thinking the F-word—Fat. That’s why, whenever I got up to sing, I chose the most empowering song I could think of. My current favourite was Meghan Trainor’s “No”.