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Ain’t
She Sweet?
Susan Elizabeth Phillips
To Jayne A
A dear friend, a wonderful writer,
and the romance novel’s most eloquent
and insightful advocate
No reference to examples in books. Men have had every advantage of us in telling their own story. Education has been theirs in so much higher a degree. The pen has been in their hands. I will not allow books to prove anything.
J
ANE
A
USTEN
,
Persuasion
Contents
Epigraph
Chapter One
The wild child of Parrish, Mississippi, had come back. . .
Chapter Two
She swallowed hard and spoke around a croak.
Chapter Three
Sugar Beth finished the potato chips that made up her breakfast. . .
Chapter Four
Old bitterness curdled in Sugar Beth’s stomach.
Chapter Five
Sugar Beth switched the grocery bags she was carrying. . .
Chapter Six
Sugar Beth didn’t like the butterfly rumpus going on. . .
Chapter Seven
Where the devil have you been?”
Chapter Eight
Colin’s voice slid over Sugar Beth like a trickle of cold water.
Chapter Nine
Colin finished shaving and made his way to his closet.
Chapter Ten
Colin watched as Sugar Beth came into the living room,
Chapter Eleven
Wi
Chapter Twelve
Sugar Beth rolled to her side.
Chapter Thirteen
Colin answered the door.
Chapter Fourteen
The apartment above Yesterday’s Treasures was cramped. . .
Chapter Fifteen
Sugar Beth let herself inside the carriage house,
Chapter Sixteen
Ryan waited until Wi
Chapter Seventeen
Sugar Beth watched the smoke trailing from the window.
Chapter Eighteen
All that day Sugar Beth kept her eye on the comings. . .
Chapter Nineteen
Sugar Beth looked like a diet Pepsi ad,
Chapter Twenty
Wi
Chapter Twenty-one
The painting had been here all along,
Chapter Twenty-two
By di
Chapter Twenty-three
Blazes of azalea and dogwood a
Epilogue
Everyone called her Honeybell, except her father,
Acknowledgments
About the Author
By Susan Elizabeth Phillips
Credits
Copyright
About the Publisher
“I am afraid,” confessed Pen, “that I am not very well-behaved. Aunt says that I had a lamentable upbringing.”
G
EORGETTE
H
EYER
,
The Corinthian
CHAPTER ONE
The wild child of Parrish, Mississippi, had come back to the town she’d left behind forever. Sugar Beth Carey gazed from the rain-slicked windshield to the horrible dog who lay beside her on the passenger seat.
“I know what you’re thinking, Gordon, so go ahead and say it. How the mighty have fallen, right?” She gave a bitter laugh. “Well, screw you. Just . . .” She blinked her eyes against a sting of tears. “Just . . . screw you.”
Gordon lifted his head and sneered at her. He thought she was trash.
“Not me, pal.” She turned up the heater on her ancient Volvo against the chill of the late February day. “Griffin and Diddie Carey ruled this town, and I was their princess. The girl most likely to set the world on fire.”
She heard an imaginary howl of basset hound laughter.
Like the row of tin-roofed houses she’d just passed, Sugar Beth had grown a little shabby at the edges. The long blond hair that swirled to her shoulders didn’t gleam as brightly as it once had, and the tiny gold hearts at her earlobes no longer skipped in a carefree dance. Her pouty lips had lost the urge to curl in flirtatious smiles, and her baby doll cheeks had given up their i
Thick lashes still framed a pair of amazing clear blue eyes, but a delicate tracing of lines had begun to make tiny fishtails at the corners. Fifteen years earlier, she’d been the best-dressed girl in Parrish, but now one of her calf-high stiletto-heeled boots had a small hole in the sole, and her scarlet body-hugging knit dress with its demure turtleneck and not-so-demure hemline had come from a discount store instead of a pricey boutique.
Parrish had begun its life in the 1820s as a northeastern Mississippi cotton town and later escaped the torches of the occupying Union army, thanks to the wiles of its female population, who’d showered the boys in blue with such unrelenting charm and indefatigable Southern hospitality that none of them had the heart to strike the first match. Sugar Beth was a direct descendant of those women, but on days like this, she had a tough time remembering it.
She adjusted the windshield wipers as she approached Shorty Smith Road and gazed toward the two-story building, empty on this Sunday afternoon, that still sat at the end. Thanks to her father’s economic blackmail, Parrish High School stood as one of the Deep South’s few successful experiments with integrated public education. Once she’d ruled those hallways. She alone had decided who sat at the best table in the cafeteria, which boys were acceptable to date, and whether an imitation Gucci purse was okay if your daddy wasn’t Griffin Carey, and you couldn’t afford the real thing. Blond and divine, she’d reigned supreme.
She hadn’t always been a benevolent dictator, but her power had seldom been challenged, not even by the teachers. One of them had tried, but Sugar Beth had made short work of that. As for Wi
As she gazed through the February drizzle at the high school, the old music began to drum in her head: INXS, Miami Sound Machine, Prince. In those days, when Elton John sang “Candle in the Wind,” he’d only been singing of Marilyn.
High school. The last time she’d owned the world.
Gordon farted.
“God, I hate you, you miserable dog.”
Gordon’s scornful expression told her he didn’t give a damn. These days, neither did she.
She checked the gas gauge. She was ru
She turned the corner and saw the empty lot marking the place where Ryan’s house had once stood. Ryan Galantine had been Ken to her Barbie. The most popular boy; the most popular girl. Luv U 4-Ever. She’d broken his heart their freshman year at Ole Miss when she’d screwed around on him with Darren Tharp, the star athlete who’d become her first husband.
Sugar Beth remembered the way Wi
As she drove toward the center of town, she saw that Parrish had capitalized on its newfound fame as the setting and leading character of the nonfiction best-seller Last Whistle-stop on the Nowhere Line. The new Visitors Bureau had attracted a steady stream of tourists, and she could see the town had spruced itself up. The sidewalk in front of the Presbyterian church no longer buckled, and the ugly streetlights she’d grown up with had been replaced with charming turn-of-the-century lampposts. Along Tyler Street, the historic Antebellum, Victorian, and Greek Revival homes sported fresh coats of paint, and a jaunty copper weathervane graced the cupola of Miss Eulie Baker’s Italianate monstrosity. Sugar Beth and Ryan had made out in the alley behind that house the night before they’d gone all the way.