Fake Wife Read online




  Fake Wife is a work of fiction. Names, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  A Loveswept Ebook Original

  Copyright © 2018 by Stacey Lynn

  Excerpt from Knocked Up by Stacey Lynn copyright © 2018 by Stacey Lynn

  All rights reserved.

  Published in the United States by Loveswept, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

  LOVESWEPT is a registered trademark and the LOVESWEPT colophon is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.

  This book contains an excerpt from the forthcoming book Knocked Up by Stacey Lynn. This excerpt has been set for this edition only and may not reflect the final content of the forthcoming edition.

  Ebook ISBN 9781524797843

  Cover design: Diane Luger

  Cover photograph: Volodymyr Tverdokhlib/Shutterstock

  randomhousebooks.com

  v5.1

  ep

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Prologue

  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

  Epilogue

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  By Stacey Lynn

  About the Author

  Excerpt from Knocked Up

  Prologue

  Teagan

  I stare at the man, the absolutely beautiful man, across the table from me, completely disbelieving what he’s just said.

  I had to have misheard.

  He couldn’t have just offered me what I think he did.

  Perhaps when I slammed into the back of his Mercedes forty-five minutes ago I gave him a concussion. Maybe the accident gave me a concussion.

  “Are you serious?” Propping my elbows on the table, I lean forward to hear him better. “You can’t be. We should get you to the hospital. I think when I rear-ended you it gave you a concussion. Are you sure you didn’t hit your head?”

  Corbin Lane relaxes against his chair at our table at Le Chat Noir. His golden-brown hair shines, a bit wavy, long on top but still short enough not to cross the line from professional to hipster. His cornflower-blue eyes haven’t veered from my direction for the last hour.

  A typical man would have yelled at me, threatened me with a lawsuit, demanded my insurance information, and returned to his day, doing whatever playboy billionaires do.

  Not this guy. He asked for my insurance information, and when he saw the tears streaming down my cheeks, the clothes and boxes strewn all over my cramped backseat, he asked me if I was okay. Then he escorted me to this nearby restaurant, asked me a million questions, and then this…

  This…proposition, as he called it.

  “I’m not joking. I think this solves both of our problems.”

  I drink the rest of my wine and set the glass aside. The alcohol has made me tipsy.

  Corbin smiles again. I’ve seen that smile plastered on the gossip pages and on the news for the last five years, ever since I moved to Portland. So sexy he makes girls stupid, he’s an heir to the Lane Holdings fortune, a great-grandson of one of the Oregon Gold Rush families, and son of the CEO of Lane Holdings. When his father retires, Corbin is poised to run the multibillion-dollar company.

  “I think you’re going to have to explain it to me again.”

  “It’s simple, really. You need a place to live and I’m offering you one. You need time to find a new job, and I’m providing financially for you to do that. We can iron out the details later, but this needs to last at least two years.”

  Two years. Two years of my life spent in close proximity to one of Time magazine’s top-ten sexiest and wealthiest bachelors in the world. Three years in a row.

  Yeah, I’m a fangirl.

  Shit.

  Two more years of life wasted.

  Although the money he’s offering will definitely help me set up my dream when it’s over.

  “Listen, Corbin—”

  “Consider it. Take all the time you need.”

  “I’m still not sure I understand what you get out of it.”

  Beautiful, luscious lips tip into a full-blown smile and I’m almost blinded by the brightness of his teeth. “Me? I get a wife.”

  Chapter 1

  EARLIER THAT DAY

  Teagan

  I brush my hand down Drake’s cheek and kiss his temple. “Good morning, did you get in late?”

  My boyfriend grunts and rolls over, throwing one arm over his eyes. “Fifteen-hour shifts are killing me,” he mumbles. “Have to go back this afternoon.”

  “Okay, honey.” I kiss him again, wishing we had the time or the energy to take it further. It’s been so long since we’ve been intimate I’ve forgotten what sex with Drake feels like. It’s understandable, though. His residency at Portland General keeps him incredibly busy. “I have to go to work. Have a good day.”

  He mumbles again and rolls to his side, away from me.

  I stand from his side of the bed and pull my purse to my shoulder.

  Drake is the first long-term boyfriend I’ve had. We met our junior year of college, and for the last seven years, I’ve been following him all over the country while he completed medical school and now his internal medicine residency. I would have thought by now we’d be married and living the life he’s continually promised to give me. With each year that passes, I’m beginning to think his promises have been more of a carrot dangled in front of me.

  At some point, our plans and our dreams we used to whisper about, bodies entwined after a marathon lovemaking session, have been pushed to the back burner. At least on Drake’s. I still want all the things I always have. A husband, a family, and an equine therapy farm for special-needs children.

  “I love you,” I whisper to his back, sculpted and lean, and one I used to spend hours running my hands down. It’s been months since we came together. It’s more than the lack of sex putting distance between us. I’m starting to doubt if he still loves me.

  Before I can cry over our messed-up relationship again, I head toward the kitchen. I quickly shove my bagel into the toaster, grab a coffee pod, and pop it into the machine. While the coffee is brewing and the bagel browning, I dig through my purse and apply a fresh coat of lip balm. It’ll come off in minutes, but I’m addicted to the old-school, cherry-flavored stuff.

  A quick glance at the clocks tells me I need to get the lead out or I’m going to be late to the library where I work. It’s not much of a job, but I didn’t finish college, choosing instead to quit after my junior year and follow Drake to med school in Chicago, fourteen hours from my hometown in Tennessee. I’m not exactly qualified to do much other than stack shelves, issue new library cards, help visitors, and ride horses.

  The last one has nothing to do with the library, but it’s been years since I’ve been on a horse, and the more time that passes, the more I miss them. After my parents died, my grandma took me in. She wasn’t the most loving woman, but she lived on a horse ranch in western Tennessee. I spent th
e majority of my days riding horses and taking care of them, and I’ve missed having horses be a part of my life ever since I moved away.

  Shaking off my morose mood, I make a plan for the weekend. It’s Friday and I’ll be home from work just before five. If I hurry, I can throw on a sexy dress, grab takeout, and surprise Drake at the hospital for dinner and perhaps a quickie in the doctors’ break room like we used to do.

  Perhaps we’ve been together so long we’re in a rut. That’s all it is. His hours are long and exhausting and more stressful than anything I can imagine. Perhaps he needs some early night stress relief in a form only I can provide.

  A smile stretches my lips and I pour coffee into my travel mug.

  Yep. That’s what I’ll do. Work, hospital, a quickie where I please my man and show him we still got it, and then home to rest.

  —

  My hands tremble and my chin quivers, but I can’t stop the emotions from threatening to overwhelm me.

  “Pardon me?” I ask William Tanner, Portland Central Library’s operational director.

  “I hate having to say this to you, Teagan. It’s simply that funding has been cut and the last levy didn’t pass in the election. We no longer have the resources to employ four assistants, and unfortunately, you were the last person hired. It’s nothing personal. We all admire the work you’ve put into the library over the last few years. And you know how much I adore you.”

  Nothing personal.

  Firing someone is absolutely personal—at least for the person who now faces the weekend with the stress of looking for a job.

  “William—” I start, but he covers my hand with his and stops me.

  “Please, Teagan. You’ve been given four weeks severance, more than one week for each year you’ve been with us. It’s generous, and it’s also all we have. We’ve tried fighting this, but our hands are tied. When Shelly from HR told me this was going to happen, I insisted I be the one to tell you. I’m truly sorry.”

  I know he is. William is more than a boss. He’s kind and generous and has a beautiful wife. Mary could never conceive and they decided against adoption, but they’d be the best parents in the world. He’s also been the director of this central location of Portland’s mass library system for fifteen years, and I know he cares about me.

  It doesn’t erase the sting any.

  “Okay,” I mumble, fighting back another chin quiver. “Thank you for everything.”

  He squeezes my hand. “Thank you, Teagan. Take care, and if you’d like, please keep in touch. Mary will miss you if you don’t.”

  I press my lips together and tug my hand from his grip. His wife is one of the sweetest women I’ve ever met and I have no doubt he’s being honest. In the three years I’ve worked here, I’ve spent countless holiday meals with their family, Drake joining me when he hasn’t had to work. They’ve become more like parents to me since I’ve moved to Portland.

  “Have a good weekend, William.”

  I don’t reply to his comment. I adore Mary. It’ll just take time before I can sit across from them and not remember this exact moment.

  He nods and pushes back in his chair. “You, too, Teagan. And don’t worry. You’ll land on your feet. Perhaps this will help nudge Drake into finally looking for one of those hobby farms you two have always discussed.”

  His comment brings back all the doubts I had only hours ago, but I don’t tell William. If he knows I’m fearful my relationship with Drake is slowly crumbling, Mary will be on my cellphone inviting me over for drinks and dinner before I can board the next MAX train.

  “Yeah, maybe.”

  William stands and presses a quick fatherly kiss to my cheek. “You’re a smart girl, Teagan. You’ll figure out what to do next, and if I hear anything, I’ll let you know.”

  He gives me privacy to load up my personal items. Other than a handful of pens and two packages of ChapStick, I only have one picture frame to grab. It’s a three-piece frame and holds a photo of Drake and me in the middle in one of our rare vacations to Saint Lucia. The other holds my parents, and the final one is on Drake’s medical school graduation day. He’s still in his robe, diploma held high, his other arm curved around my waist. The grin he’s flashing me is how I always think of him.

  We were so full of hope, so full of excitement, and the thrill of victory of him completing medical school.

  With my chest burning, I say quick goodbyes to the rest of the library’s employees, granting brief hugs to the friends I’ve made, even if most of them are at least ten years older than me.

  Out on the street with my picture frame tucked under my arm, I debate what to do. I only left the apartment an hour ago and Drake will still be sleeping.

  Instead of going home and disturbing him, I head toward Powell’s bookstore, grab another cup of coffee, and lose myself in the endless floors and rows of books.

  Perhaps buying a few new paperbacks will boost my spirits.

  —

  Armed with a sack holding three new paperbacks and the picture frame, I’m trudging up the stairs to our apartment building in the Pearl District of Portland. The trip to Powell’s boosted my spirits minimally.

  I never thought I’d love living downtown in a city or on the West Coast until we moved to Portland. We spent Drake’s medical school years in a crummy studio apartment in the Wrigley Field area of Chicago, but that was way more intense—busier and louder than Portland. There’s always a sense of calmness in the Pearl District, despite the crowds and the mass transit. People move at a more relaxed pace, much more like Nashville than Chicago. I love the country, but I’ve also enjoyed getting to experience living in different areas over the last several years.

  Still, there’s something about Portland that has soaked into my veins. Something I never want to dig out, either.

  I reach my apartment and fumble through my purse for my key. It’s only noon, and Drake could still be sleeping, so I’m quiet as the latch catches and I push open our squeaky door.

  I gently set my purse and bag down on our entry table, then put my travel mug on the counter.

  A grunting sound hits my ears and I frown.

  Then I grin. I know that sound. It’s the sound Drake makes when he’s close to coming.

  Perhaps he’s awake after all, and if he’s taking care of himself, I at least want to watch.

  I step around the corner and stop.

  All the blood rushes from my face, my fingers begin tingling.

  I’m frozen and have no idea what to do.

  I have a full view of our bedroom and our bed, where Drake has a woman bent over the mattress and is pounding into her like a man who can’t get enough. The stranger’s blond hair flies and flips from the force of Drake’s thrusting behind her.

  I hear another grunt and I’m flying down the short hallway to our bedroom before I can stop myself.

  “What in the hell is going on in here?” As soon as I begin screaming, Drake pulls out of the woman, who scurries over the edge of the bed. He grabs a towel from the floor and wraps it around his waist.

  This isn’t happening. This absolutely can’t be happening.

  It’s totally happening. How long? When? Why? A thousand questions pound against my brain, making my head hurt.

  “Teagan,” he says, stepping toward me. “Teagan, honey, please.”

  “Don’t you dare come any closer,” I hiss at him.

  Holy shit. This is actually real. He’s been cheating on me? I shake my head to dislodge the thought or the scene in front of me, but it’s no use. The blonde he was just fucking on our bed is crouched on his side of the bed, arms sliding into a shirt that is absolutely not hers.

  It’s Drake’s dress shirt.

  Oh my God. I’m going to explode, shatter into a gazillion furious pieces, and tear both of them to shreds with the fragments.

  “Get out,” I demand. “Get out of here right now, before I completely lose my shit.”

  “Honey, this isn’t what it looks like.”


  Everything, all of my doubts over the last several months, comes together. Every concern I’ve had, every fear that’s been niggling in my mind for months now. We’re not in a rut—

  We are over.

  I push down the bubbling hatred and anger and all the shit I’ve probably suspected but have been too naïve and scared to name for at least six months and turn to Drake.

  “Give me an hour to clear out. I’ll leave my key on the counter when I leave.”

  “Honey.” He steps toward me and I take a step back.

  The blonde is still getting dressed, and if she is bothered he’s not paid an ounce of attention to her she’s not showing it. Great. He’s not even cheating on me with someone that matters, he’s just fucking people he doesn’t give a crap about.

  “Please, Drake. It’s over. If you can do this”—I wave my hand out—“and in our bedroom no less, we have nothing left.”

  “But—”

  I shake my head, tears spilling down my cheeks. I swipe them away. Damn it! How many times can I cry today?

  “Don’t.” I stare at him, show him every ounce of pain I’m feeling, and only see a minimal amount of pain reflecting back in his eyes. God, that hurts, too. “Don’t fight me on this. Just give me an hour to get out of here.”

  Without giving him time to answer, I hurry to the bathroom and lock the door behind me.

  Then I sit down on the closed toilet seat, throw my head into my hands, and bawl my eyes out.

  Fired from my job.

  A cheating boyfriend exposed right in front of me.

  What in the heck am I going to do now? And where am I going to go?

  Chapter 2

  Corbin

  I tug on my platinum cuff links, one of my last gifts from Eleanor. Irritation isn’t prickling at my spine, it’s a bubbling, livable force threatening to explode.