Chapter 3
3
SADIE
T he alarm on my cell buzzed, and I blinked up at the ceiling, already wide awake even though it was only six o’clock in the morning.
I’d barely slept. Every time I closed my eyes, I pictured Hunter.
He hadn’t said much when he was at the bakery yesterday, but that hadn’t lessened his impact. I didn’t think any woman would blame me for wondering about the tall, broad-shouldered biker.
He struck me as the strong, silent type. The kind of man who didn’t need to say much because just being there was enough. At least for me.
It wasn’t because I’d been scared, except maybe for my reaction to him because I had never felt a magnetic pull like this toward a guy before. I hadn’t been able to get his tall, muscular body out of my head. Or his thick black hair, beard, and kissable lips.
And then there was his piercing amber gaze. I’d never seen eyes quite the same color before. They were wild and sharp, almost animalistic. Like a lion sizing up something he wanted. Not that I actually thought he wanted me when he could probably have any woman he set his sights on.
He was easily over a decade older than me and drop-dead gorgeous. Not the kind of man who noticed someone like me. But for a second, when our fingers had touched while I handed over his coffee and cookie, I could have sworn that I caught the barest flicker of something.
He’d only been at the bakery for maybe fifteen minutes, but that had been just long enough to set my entire world spinning. And it felt as though it hadn’t stopped yet.
I was too inexperienced to know what my type was, but I never would have thought it to be a tatted-up biker. We were so different; even calling us opposites didn’t seem like enough. But that didn’t stop me from wondering about him. Which I didn’t have time to do if I wanted to make it to my second day of work on time.
Groaning, I rolled out of bed and shuffled to the bathroom, splashing cold water on my face in a futile attempt to knock some sense into myself.
“Get it together, Sadie,” I muttered at my reflection.
I needed to focus. Just because I had another shift at the bakery today didn’t mean that Hunter would show up again. Replaying his low, rumbling “thank you” over and over in my head wouldn’t make him magically appear. No matter how much I wished otherwise.
After quickly getting ready, I snatched my keys off the counter and headed out the door. I spent the entire drive to the bakery reminding myself that I needed to focus on my job. Staring at the door all day would only get me fired.
Unfortunately, my heart didn’t listen.
I parked behind the bakery and let myself in through the back door, breathing in the sweet, yeasty smell that had already begun to fill the air. Marcy was in the kitchen, pulling a tray of blueberry muffins out of the oven, her hair tucked under a pink bandanna.
“Morning, Sadie,” she called without turning around.
“Good morning!” I replied, dropping my bag in the office before washing my hands and grabbing an apron.
The front of the bakery was still quiet, and out of habit, my gaze darted to each door, reminding myself that I wasn’t trapped before my anxiety got the best of me.
Then I set about loading fresh pastries into the display case. It was only my second day, but I already moved on autopilot, arranging trays of croissants and cinnamon rolls next to the items similar to what we’d carried yesterday.
When I was done, I went back to the kitchen, rubbing my palms together. “Good call on the new additions. Those cinnamon rolls look so ooey and gooey, it was hard not to sneak a taste.”
“Then it’s a good thing I already saved you one.” Marcy jerked her head toward a small bakery box on the counter. “All ready for you to take home if you don’t get the chance to nibble on it throughout the day.”
I beamed a grateful smile at her. “Thank you.”
“Consider free baked goods a perk of being my best employee.”
“I’m your only employee,” I pointed out with a giggle.
“For now.” She pointed at a tray of chocolate cupcakes. “Frost those the way you did that cake yesterday, and I bet they’ll sell out before noon.”
It didn’t take me long to finish, and Marcy made a beeline over to my side to look the cupcakes over.
“Great job.” Marcy patted me on the back. “Keep up the good work, and you won’t be my only employee for long.”
She was proven right about how quickly the cupcakes were gone. Five hours after we opened the doors, the case didn’t have much left.
Even with how busy we were, every time the bell over the door jingled, my heart jumped. But I never spotted Hunter. I told myself that was a good thing because I needed to focus on my job. Not get distracted by a man who probably hadn’t thought twice about the shy bakery girl who gave him a cookie.
I felt a little guilty about not being as attentive to the customers as I usually was. Especially when Austin stopped by. He’d come in every day for a coffee and always took a few minutes to talk with me. He was nice enough, but there was no spark. Not like the fire that consumed me when a certain sexy biker was around. Austin had tried to ask me out a few times, but I’d managed to sidestep it. We were becoming friends, though, so I felt bad when he left looking so disappointed today.
I must not have hidden my anxiousness to see Hunter very well because when we finally slowed down, Marcy leaned her elbows on the counter and grinned. “Expecting someone?”
My cheeks heated, and I ducked my head. “No! I’m just making sure we greet everyone.”
“Uh-huh.” She didn’t seem to buy my excuse.
I busied myself wiping a spotless section of the counter, hoping she wouldn’t push the issue, but it didn’t do any good.
Marcy’s voice softened. “Was it one of the Rogues?”
I mumbled something unintelligible and prayed the floor would open up and swallow me whole.
“Aw, don’t be embarrassed.” She bumped my shoulder lightly. “You wouldn’t be the first girl to get a little tongue-tied around those guys.”
“It’s not—” I started, but that was as far as I got before she started laughing.
“Relax, Sadie. I won’t tease you. Not too much, anyway,” she promised, straightening up and giving me a wink. “Besides, if it was who I think it was…you have good taste.”
I made a noncommittal noise and focused hard on reorganizing the napkin dispenser.
Marcy let it go, thankfully, and we settled into the steady rhythm of the early afternoon rush. But every time the door jingled, my heart leaped all over again.
Only it was never him.
By the time the lunch crowd thinned, I told myself it was better this way. Hunter had probably forgotten all about me, and I needed to do the same.
Even if my heart wasn’t quite ready to listen.
By closing time, all of the pastries were gone, and the smell of fresh bread had faded into a faint, comforting warmth that clung to the walls. Marcy was cleaning the mixers in the back while I wiped down the empty tables and flipped the chairs upside down on top of them.
Once that was done, I walked into the kitchen. “Need help with anything else before I go?”
“Can you mop the floor in the walk-in?” she asked. “I did it earlier after dropping a couple of eggs, but I figure it’s better to be safe than sorry when it comes to cleanliness.”
“Definitely,” I agreed with a nod.
I was fine until I stepped into the walk-in. Although it was big as far as fridges went, it felt small when the door shut behind me. I didn’t like tight spaces, but I took a steadying breath and shook off my anxiety as best I could.
Still, my pulse kicked a little faster, the way it always did when rooms started to feel too closed in. I finished mopping as quickly as I could, telling myself it was silly to get worked up over nothing, heaving a deep sigh of relief when I finally escaped the fridge and joined Marcy in the kitchen again.
Not wanting her to notice I was feeling a little off, I grabbed a bag from behind the counter and tied it off, then called, “I’m taking out the trash.”
“Thanks!” Marcy’s voice floated from the kitchen.
I forced a smile and made my way to the side exit, pushing open the heavy door with my hip. The cool evening air rushed over my skin, chasing away the tight feeling in my chest.
I tossed the bag into the dumpster and wiped my hands on my apron. As I turned to head back inside, something glinted out of the corner of my eye. Frowning, I stepped closer to the window.
A jagged crack snaked its way from the bottom left corner to the center of the glass. It was too big not to notice, which meant that it hadn’t been there this morning.
Biting my lip, I leaned in a little, peering through the damaged pane. Nothing looked disturbed in the office. No broken glass on the floor. No sign anyone had tried to get in.
Still, unease curled low in my belly.
Heading into the kitchen, I let Marcy know what I’d found. We padded into the office, and she peered through the broken glass like I’d just done from the outside.
Shrugging, she murmured, “Probably just a truck that kicked up a rock from the parking lot. I’ll call Austin.”