The Ugly Truth Read online




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Acknowledgements

  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

  A word about the author...

  Thank you for purchasing this publication of The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  The Ugly Truth

  by

  Cheryel Hutton

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  The Ugly Truth

  COPYRIGHT © 2013 by Cheryel Hutton

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  Contact Information: [email protected]

  Cover Art by Debbie Taylor

  The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  PO Box 708

  Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708

  Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com

  Publishing History

  First Faery Rose Edition, 2013

  Print ISBN 978-1-61217-854-7

  Digital ISBN 978-1-61217-855-4

  Published in the United States of America

  Dedication

  To my Mom,

  wish you were here to enjoy this with me.

  I miss you.

  Acknowledgements

  Thank you to the

  Chattanooga Area Romance Authors.

  CARA rocks!

  Chapter 1

  Welcome Back, Ugly Grads!

  I gaped up at the banner draped across the front of Ugly Creek High School gymnasium. How had I let myself get talked into coming to this thing? I needed my head examined, that was for sure.

  Me? I’m Stephie, and somebody else’s reunion is so not my idea of a fun time.

  “Welcome to the reunion.” A guy with blond hair and wire-framed glasses smiled toward me. The long table he stood behind was covered with nametags, flyers, and programs.

  I turned to my companion, only to find she wasn’t there. “Excuse me a minute,” I said to the handsome gatekeeper, and headed back to the big double doors. She was there, cowering near the entrance.

  “Come on, Maddie. This is your gig. I’m only riding shotgun.” I tugged on her arm, and she literally dragged her feet as she slowly walked into the gym.

  “I’m going to throw up.”

  I resisted the urge to roll my eyes. Barely. “No, you’re not. You’ll be fine.”

  “I’m serious.”

  I caught sight of Maddie’s face and decided to rethink the situation. I figured the green tint of her skin was due to the bad lighting, but what if I was wrong? “Take deep breaths,” I told her, for lack of any other useful advice.

  “Oh, Stephie! It looks exactly like it did ten years ago.”

  I looked more closely and realized there was a hint of wildness in those big blue eyes of hers. If she got hysterical, I had an obligation to slap her to calm her down, right? Then again, that might not be such a good idea—she had an awesome right hook.

  “All school gyms look alike,” I told my green-around-the-gills friend. Why do they say that anyway? It’s not like people actually have gills.

  Maddie pointed to a sign stenciled on the back wall in huge green and black letters, Ugly Creek High School, home of the Gators. Below it, a humongous green alligator was drooling to devour the other team. Any other team.

  “The lettering is the same; the floor is the same; the smell is the same.” Her eyes glistened and she sniffled. “Everything is exactly the same. It’s almost like there was never a fire.”

  I put a hand on her shoulder. I’d never thought of Maddie as anything but strong and determined, but she seemed on the verge of a meltdown. “I’m going to get you through this week of high-school-reunion-slash-Big Foot-Festival.” I would too. I owed her big time.

  “I really don’t think I can do this.”

  “Yes, you can.” Personally, I was sure envy-inducing Madison, tall, blonde, self-assured woman with a great fashion sense—in other words, the opposite of not-envy-inducing me—would be fine in any situation.

  She shook her head. “I’m not so sure.”

  I realized I had to do something before she lost it. The way I saw it, my options were to slap her, distract her, or throw her over my shoulder and head for the door. Since slapping her did seem a little mean, and since I’m only five-two, I knew I’d never get her Amazonian bod to the door. Distraction seemed the best choice.

  “When do I get to meet a Sasquatch?” I asked, eyes innocent, grin sternly quashed.

  Maddie groaned. “How many times have I told you? The Big Foot Festival was named after the town founder.”

  “They seriously named a festival after the guy’s big feet? Sounds insulting to me.” Distracting her was working. Yay for me.

  “His feet were huge, okay?” There was exasperation in her voice.

  I pretended to think a moment. “I bet he had a tiny car.” I leaned closer. “A big red nose, a white face, and a multicolor wig.”

  She didn’t look green anymore. Now her face was Irritation Strawberry.

  “I told you, Stephanova,” she said, her voice quiet, “There are no legendary creatures in Ugly Creek.”

  By this time, I’d managed to pull her over to the table again. Me, the girl with the crazy brown hair and the sundress without a designer tag, had managed to get my fashion-conscious friend to the check-in. Whew, crisis averted.

  “Maddie?” the guy with glasses asked, though it was obvious he knew her. “How are you?”

  “Steve, hi! I’m fine. How are you?”

  Then they leaned across the table to hug. I guess she was all better now. He gave her a nametag, while they talked rapidly about things I knew nothing about—and didn’t want to. He shoved a yellow “visitor” tag my way, along with a black marker. “Would you mind?”

  He asked nicely and smiled, so I wrote “Stephie” on the tag and hung it around my neck. My name is really Buffy Stephanova, but that’s nobody’s business but mine. I’m not a vampire slayer, or a bitchy rich girl.

  “Maddie!” a loud, high-pitched voice squealed.

  “Liza!” Madison shrieked and took off toward the squeal.

  My ears rang as I watched as Madison and a slightly shorter blonde grabbed each other and proceeded to shriek, squeal, and jump up and down. They reminded me of two odd, and loud, birds.

  I aimed my camera toward them and shot some pics for my friend. And yeah, my amusement.

  The squealers turned toward me, and I used my Nikon to hide the wide-eyed-oh-my-God-they’re-headed-this-way expression. Luckily, as a photojournalist, I’m used to operating in the line of fire.

  Still, dodging a livid senator or celebrity I did all the time. The closer Maddie and her friend got, the more this felt like strip poker. And I was losing.

  I used every tactic I’d ever learned as a terminally shy, stumbling-through-her-career photojournalist, and by the time Maddie and her friend got to me, the compulsion to race out of there and back to D.C. had lessened to heart-p
ounding apprehension.

  I lowered my camera and hoped I didn’t blow chunks right there in the middle of the Ugly Creek High School’s ten year anniversary meet and greet.

  Why was it again I had felt the need to go to somebody else’s reunion?

  “Stephie, this is my good friend Liza. Liza, this is my also good friend, coworker, and roommate from D.C., Stephie.”

  “It’s nice to meet you, Stephie. Every time Maddie writes or calls she mentions you.” She tipped her head to one side as she eyed my yellow visitor tag. “Odd, she’s never mentioned your last name.”

  And then I remembered. I was there to support my best friend and reliable confidant, Madison Clark. I smiled her way and she gave a little wink to let me know she knew I knew she had kept quiet, and this Liza wasn’t on any need-to-know list.

  “So what is your last name?” Liza asked.

  Oh great, she’s pushy. Kind of like Maddie. Figures. Oh, what the hell? “Stephanova.”

  “So...Stephie is short for Stephanova?”

  And quick with the connections. Again like Maddie. I was irritated, but I couldn’t help but admire this chick. “Yep.”

  Liza leaned her head to one side. “What’s your first name?”

  Okay, game over. I opened my mouth to tell her it was none of her damn business—in a polite way, of course—but I didn’t get the chance.

  “Nobody knows,” Maddie said. “Rumor has it a couple of people found out, but we don’t know for sure because they mysteriously disappeared.”

  Liza snorted, but didn’t push the issue. “Maddie tells me you’re a photojournalist.”

  “Yeah, we both work at Capitol Spy Weekly,” I felt a familiar twinge when I said the name. Just because it was a D.C. tabloid didn’t change the fact that it was, in fact, a tabloid.

  “Do you work together, doing the reporter and photographer thing?” Liza asked.

  “When we’re lucky,” Madison said. “And we have a blast when we do.”

  Before we could get into the talking about the job section of our conversation, the blond guy from the welcome table walked up and draped an arm around Liza.

  Liza turned an admiring face up to him while sparks flew around the room. She still had a spellbound gaze when she said, “Stephie, this is my awesome husband, Steve.”

  I held out my hand, and he gave it a shake. “Nice to formally meet you,” I said.

  “Same here.”

  Maddie giggled. “Oh, I see Johnny Bright over there, and I do believe he has the worst comb-over in the history of the world.”

  Liza slowly pulled herself away from her man. “Let’s go check him out.”

  “Wanna come?” Maddie asked me.

  To see an ugly comb-over on a guy I don’t know and don’t want to know? “I don’t think so. You two go on.”

  Liza and Maddie headed toward the eleventh wonder of the high school reunion world, leaning close and giggling like the teenagers they were ten years ago.

  “Madison is all Liza’s talked about for months.”

  I turned to the nametag guy, who still stood near me. As I moved, I caught sight of his nametag. Steve Zapata.

  I recognized the name, and immediately shoved my size-seven-Italian-made-sandals-that-I’d-discovered-at-a-thrift-store into my overanxious mouth. “You’re ‘Shoe’.”

  Had I really just said that? I did the whole wishing I could go through the floor, the ground, maybe check out China. “Oh, God, I’m so sorry! I don’t know why I said that.”

  Steve chuckled, while my face cooked in its own heat. “It’s okay. I’m quite sure Maddie has told you all about me, and how I got my nickname.”

  “She said it was in Spanish class. Zapata, zapato.”

  He used one finger to nudge wire-frame glasses up his nose. “Close enough to the word for ‘shoe’ to be funny to Maddie, Liza, and approximately three hundred of our closest friends.”

  “I guess I never really got that you were the guy who married Liza.”

  He gazed across the big room toward Liza with a little smile of contentment and an admiring expression of his own. “Yep, I’m the lucky man.”

  The love I saw in his eyes gave me the warm fuzzies. It also, I am ashamed to admit, sent a small dose of jealousy through me. I wanted a man to look at me like that. Ridiculous, I know, but sometimes I get these romance novel ideas. Like that kind of stuff ever happens in real life. But then, the way Steve looked at Liza...

  I clicked off a couple of shots, both to catch the moment and to cover the pathetic longing expression I feared covered my face. I’d embarrassed myself quite enough for one reunion.

  “Hey, Steve,” a male voice said. “How’re you doing?”

  Something about the resonant baritone played tingles of a happy song up and down my spine. I looked toward the source of the remarkable voice, and damn near dropped my camera. Handsome. Sexy. Dark. Well-built. With a smile that could knock a girl off her sandals and all the way into the realm of lusty infatuation.

  “Jake, old man,” Steve said. “Glad you came out.”

  “Figured I might as well make an appearance, prove I’m still breathing.”

  His gaze caught mine, and I swear I heard birds singing. Then he grinned. Full lips, straight teeth, the cutest little dimple near one side of his wonderful mouth. I thought I was gonna melt.

  “Hi, I’m Jake.”

  He’s talking to me. Wake up, self, he’s talking to me! “I’m Stephie,” I managed, as I stuck out my hand.

  He nodded to my yellow, visitor’s, nametag. “So, you’re here with somebody.”

  I nodded. “A friend.”

  He narrowed those dark, sexy eyes of his. “Boyfriend?”

  I gave him my very best smile. “No. I’m here with Madison Clark. She’s right over there.”

  I was still pointing when I looked back at him. He was staring toward Maddie with an expression of long-simmering-pissed-off-ishness. Great. Perfect Guy and my best friend had a history. And just when I was beginning to think this trip had potential. I probably should just keep my mouth shut, but curiosity was tugging at my sleeve. Besides, maybe it wasn’t as bad as I thought. “So, you know her?”

  “Yes.” He stared for a moment longer. Then he looked at me, and there was regret in his eyes. “It was nice meeting you, Stephie. Later, Steve.” Then he turned and headed toward the other side of the room as if something was chasing him.

  Disappointment filled my insides and weighed me down. I wanted him back. Sigh.

  “I’m surprised Maddie didn’t tell you about Jake.” Steve was staring in the direction Jake had gone.

  “She actually doesn’t talk much about the past,” I told him, still staring after Handsome.

  “Makes sense, I guess.”

  I had to know. Didn’t want to, but had to. “Were they an item, Jake and Madison?”

  He shrugged. “Not really.”

  My curiosity started to poke me in the belly. “They had some kind of falling out?”

  He searched my face for a moment. “She really hasn’t said anything?”

  “Nothing. Honest.”

  “Jake was hurt in the fire.” He frowned then. “You do know about the fire, right?”

  “Prom night, in the gym, it was the night Maddie’s dad died.” I glanced toward my gorgeous friend. She’d never gotten over that night, and I was pretty sure she never would.

  “That’s the one. Jake got hurt pretty badly.”

  He stopped, and my curiosity jumped up and down. “And?” I prompted.

  “You need to ask Maddie,” he whispered.

  I looked up to see Madison and Liza coming our way. Dang, things were just getting interesting.

  While Maddie and her friend babbled about people I’d never heard of, I wondered what Steve had been hinting at. My always inquiring mind screamed at me to find out. Due to the combination of reunion and festival, Maddie and I planned to be here a week. By the time I returned to D.C., I intended to know the whole, sordid
story. Besides, what else did I have to do in a little town like Ugly Creek, play fetch with alligators? Wait a minute, Tennessee is landlocked. There are no gators here. What the heck did alligators have to do with anything? Weird place.

  A few minutes later Maddie and Liza took off to make fun of more of their fellow reunion-goers. Soon thereafter, Steve took off to talk to some of his friends. I was left alone to contemplate what the hell I was doing at a high school reunion that wasn’t even mine, in the midst of a Big Foot Festival in a place that apparently didn’t have Sasquatch, Bigfoot, Yeti, or even fake-human-in-a-suit creatures. How not fun was that?

  There were, however, a lot of people in the building. Did I mention I’m not fond of large groups of anything, especially people?

  With a huge, self-pitying sigh, I looked around for something to distract my nerves. Metal tables and chairs were scattered throughout the huge, blue tarp-covered floor, except for a raised area, with a microphone—a bad indication of boring speeches yet to come.

  A thought came to me out of nowhere. When Maddie denied there were legendary creatures in Ugly Creek, she hadn’t looked at me. In fact, two months ago, when she asked me to come with her, she had brushed off the name of the festival. Wouldn’t talk about it. Hmm, maybe there was something she wasn’t telling me. Maybe there were Bigfoot creatures in these parts. Maybe I could do some exploring.

  Or maybe I was trying to find something to think about besides how out of place I felt at another person’s high school reunion.

  “Wasn’t Mr. Blackwood’s history class the pits?”

  I looked toward the speaker, who was standing so close I could smell his expensive cologne.

  The man’s pinstripe gray, moderately expensive suit fit tight around his beach ball middle. His sparse brown hair was cut in a flattering style. He moved even closer, and I stepped back to get him out of my personal space. “I wouldn’t know,” I told him.