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Barefoot Dreams




  Barefoot Dreams

  A Barefoot Bay Novella

  Barefoot Bay Undercover Series Book 4

  Roxanne St. Claire

  Barefoot Bay Undercover

  Barefoot Dreams

  Roxanne St. Claire

  roxanne@roxannestclaire.com

  www.roxannestclaire.com

  www.facebook.com/roxannestclaire

  www.twitter.com/roxannestclaire

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  Copyright © 2017 South Street Publishing

  ISBN 978-0-9981093-0-5

  This novel is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  All rights to reproduction of this work are reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without prior written permission from the copyright owner. Thank you for respecting the copyright. For permission or information on foreign, audio, or other rights, contact the author, roxanne@roxannestclaire.com

  COPYEDITOR: Joyce Lamb

  COVER ART: The Killion Group, Inc.

  INTERIOR FORMATTING: Author E.M.S.

  Table of Contents

  BAREFOOT DREAMS

  Copyright

  More Books from Roxanne St. Claire

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Barefoot Bay Short Story – WHIRLWIND

  About the Author

  The Barefoot Bay Series

  Roxanne St. Claire writes the popular Barefoot Bay series, which is really several connected mini-series all set on one gorgeous island off the Gulf coast of Florida. Every book stands alone, but why stop at one trip to paradise?

  The Barefoot Bay Billionaires

  Secrets on the Sand

  Seduction on the Sand

  Scandal on the Sand

  The Barefoot Bay Brides

  Barefoot in White

  Barefoot in Lace

  Barefoot in Pearls

  Barefoot Bay Undercover

  Barefoot Bound (prequel)

  Barefoot with a Bodyguard

  Barefoot with a Stranger

  Barefoot with a Bad Boy

  Barefoot Dreams (Gabe’s Wedding)

  The Original Barefoot Bay Quartet

  Barefoot in the Sand

  Barefoot in the Rain

  Barefoot in the Sun

  Barefoot by the Sea

  Chapter One

  Blood.

  Gallons and gallons of wine-red blood rushed like a stream, gushing, flowing, moving fast enough to create a current.

  At first, she watched it like a bystander on a riverbank, staring at the ruby-colored torrent in wonder. But watching wasn’t enough. It couldn’t be enough.

  She had to touch it. Crouching down, stones jabbed her knees, some sharp enough to make her cry out as she thrust her hand into the warm, sticky liquid, shocked at the thickness of it. She hadn’t expected it to be the consistency of clotted cream.

  Suddenly, behind her, a push. Hard. A grunt. A cry. She tumbled forward, falling into the rushing blood, drawn under, unable to fight or swim or breathe. She sucked in a terrified breath, but that just meant a lungful of blood choking her. She was dying. This was death. This was—

  “Mummy!”

  Lila’s body jerked at another hard shove on her back.

  “Mummy, wake up! It’s wedding day!”

  One more gulp of bloody…air.

  Clean air. Breathable air. Lila inhaled sharply and pulled herself out of the depths of the foul, dark dream.

  “Rafe,” she murmured, turning on her pillow and blinking into the morning light, focusing on the deep-blue eyes that never failed to give her a jolt of joy.

  And this morning? Those eyes gave her raw relief while adrenaline pumped through her. That bloody, gross, ugly dream had no place in her lovely world on her…yes. She was marrying Gabriel Rossi this very day, at sunset on Barefoot Bay.

  There was no room in Lila Wickham’s heart for anything but bliss.

  “Mummy and Dad are getting married!” His wiry little five-year-old frame slammed up and down, making the mattress bounce. “And I am Dad’s Ring Man.”

  She smiled at the title that, of course, Gabe had cleverly made up for their son, the ring bearer. She reached out to touch Rafe’s face, the soft skin and realness of her little boy like a balm on the memory of all that blood. Who on earth would dream of drowning in a river of blood on her wedding day?

  “We are getting married,” she murmured, frowning as her brain fully engaged and sleep disappeared. “And you, young man, are not supposed to be here at my bridal villa. You’re supposed to be with Dad and your great-grandpa down in the bachelor pad.”

  Which was their home, in truth, but the owner of Casa Blanca Resort & Spa had offered Lila this sumptuous villa for the whole wedding week. It was truly a luxury, made better by the fact that the resort was packed full of friends and family who’d come to celebrate the nuptials of Gabriel Rossi and Lila Wickham. Lila had stayed here alone last night, but only because Poppy, a resort housekeeper, had insisted.

  Poppy said it was bad luck for the bride and groom to spend the night together the night before their wedding, despite the fact they already lived in the same house on the south end of the island while they ran Gabe’s privatized witness protection program under the cover of the resort security firm. After years of being apart, and Gabe thinking Lila was dead, they hated to be anything but together.

  Still, Lila had given in to Poppy and convention, but with the dregs of that dream swirling in her head, she wished she hadn’t. If Gabe had been holding her, she wouldn’t have had such terrifying images haunting her slumber. With him, all the darkness had been taken away, replaced by light, hope, and a family.

  Her eyes stung and she squeezed her lids shut. No crying today. No letting a silly dream, the power of her emotions, or the knowledge of just how important this day was make her eyes well up. No, she would not shed a tear on this, the happiest day of her life.

  “We came for breakfast,” Rafe announced. “Great-Grandpa said everyone needs his peppers and eggs on their wedding day. Oh, and Poppy got mad because Dad said a bad word.”

  “Why should today be different than any other day?” she teased, giving him a kiss. “Go tell them all I’ll be out in a second.”

  A few minutes later, Lila joined the gang in the villa’s kitchen. Nino, Gabe’s grandfather, was at the stove, as always. Poppy was on the patio setting a table so they could eat poolside, and Rafe had gone out to help her.

  But it was Lila’s beloved fiancé, Gabriel Rossi, who caught her eye as she entered the room, his own gaze a piercing cobalt blue and unwavering. God, she loved that man. Loved his muscular body, his sharp wit, his dirty mouth, and loyal heart. His handsome features never failed to thrill her, and she still swooned at his touch. Would any of that change when they were married? No. It would get even more intense.

  “Morning, blondie.” He winked, and Lila felt a thousand butterflies flutter around her stomach.

  “Hey.” She slid into his arms and looked up at him with a satisfied smile. “Couldn’t stay away, could you?”

  “Nino was sure Pop-Tart would poison you with wild oxtail pie dipped in gizzard juice and that would ruin the whole wedding.


  Poppy came bounding in through the open French doors. “I heard that,” she muttered, her Jamaican accent always a little bit thicker when Nino or Gabe teased her. Which was every time they had a chance. “They are not supposed to be here, Miss Lila. On this one day, you two are not supposed to see each other until you walk onto the beach and say your vows.”

  “Ah, the vows.” Gabe gave Lila a squeeze. “Love, honor, cherish, and obey.”

  She rolled her eyes. “As if you, or our son, know the meaning of that word.”

  “Obey is definitely not in Rafe’s dictionary.” Gabe threw a smile over his shoulder at the boy, who seemed to be settling down since Gabe and Lila had reunited, but would be an easy child. “He climbed the stairs again,” Gabe said. “And I don’t mean the conventional way.”

  Lila groaned softly, knowing exactly what he meant. Last week Rafe discovered that the curved staircase in their home was more fun if you climbed outside the rails. Which was probably a metaphor for how that kid would live his life. “Was there a consequence?”

  “I flipped a shit.” Gabe smiled. “But you probably mean like time-out or no TV or something. Nino handled that.”

  “Nino?” Lila asked, already knowing that meant no one did anything to discipline Rafe, because Nino was putty in that child’s hands.

  He didn’t turn from the stove, but shrugged his shoulders. “Ehhh. He’s a boy. Gabriel was the same way at that age. You know those machines with the claws and the stuffed animals? I once caught him inside the hole where you get your prizes when he was four.”

  “Only because my oldest, evil brother stuffed me in there.”

  “JP did that?” Lila asked, not totally surprised considering the bursts of animosity between the two brothers.

  “Bad is in the blood, baby,” he said.

  But she didn’t feel like discussing discipline challenges of their wild child today. “Speaking of blood,” she said. “I had a wretched dream I’d like to forget. Is there coffee made?”

  “Right here,” Nino said, grabbing the pot to pour with his left hand while still stirring his signature breakfast with his right. The oldest living Rossi was spry, although no one, not even Nino himself, who was born on a kitchen table in Southern Italy with no official documentation, actually knew his true age. Living in Barefoot Bay and working for Gabe, plus running a household that included Poppy’s Jamaican nephews, had given the eighty-something year-old Rossi family patriarch a new lease on life. And Uncle Nino—as almost everyone, even his own grandchildren, called him—would certainly make a handsome best man tonight.

  Gabe eased Lila onto a barstool at the counter, eyeing her a little more closely. “You do look like you had a rough night.” He stroked her hair and gave her head a kiss. “Whose brainless idea was it for us to sleep on opposite ends of this island, anyway?”

  “It was just a bad dream, but so vivid. And…ugly.” She turned to see where Rafe had gone, spying him out on the patio, walking very slowly, cupping something in his hands, uncharacteristically slow and focused. “What is he doing?”

  “Practicing,” Gabe said, following her gaze and grinning. “Little dude wants to be the world’s best ring bearer. And if we can convince him to wear a suit and not a Pokémon costume, he will be.”

  “Oh, he will be.” Her heart swelled with love for her son and awe at the thought of how close the three of them came to never having this life together.

  When the woman she’d been—the spy she’d been—had disappeared from Gabe’s life to assume a new identity, face, personality, and even a British accent for a long-term anti-terrorism assignment, she wouldn’t have given a dime for their chances of being a normal family. She’d endured the unexpected pregnancy alone, worked a dangerous undercover mission for four years, and all that time, Gabe hadn’t known if she was dead or alive, and certainly didn’t know they had a son. But they overcame the odds, and she was certain that, together, they would continue to do that for the rest of their lives.

  Lila was still the “new” person, accent and all, on the outside. Inside, she was the woman Gabe had always loved and the one who’d always loved him back, mind, body, and soul. He didn’t care about her new face, changed name, or British accent, and she couldn’t “change back” to Isadora for fear it would have a lasting, negative impact on Rafe, who knew only his blond, British mum.

  None of that mattered now. They were together. They were forever. And they were blissful.

  “Tell me about your dream.” Gabe rounded the counter to get her coffee.

  “It was disgustingly full of blood.”

  “I’m cooking here,” Nino called out in warning.

  Next to him, counting out silverware, Poppy elbowed him. “Let her tell the dream. It helps to say it. Makes it go away.”

  “This one won’t go away easily,” Lila said. “Nothing happened, really. It was just so much blood. Like a raging river of blood.”

  Gabe made a face as he handed her the cup, but Poppy whipped around with a loud gasp. “You dreamed of a river of blood?” Her voice rose with the question.

  “That’s exactly what it was. Like the Mississippi River, only filled with gushing red blood, not water.”

  Poppy stared at her, her giant ebony eyes growing wider. “Did you touch the river?”

  She snorted. “I nearly drowned in it, but then Rafe woke me up.” She lifted the cup and smiled over the rim. “And all was right again.”

  “Oh, Miss Lila. Oh no. Oh, that’s no good.” Poppy tsked, shaking her head.

  “What do you mean?”

  “Just…” She heaved a noisy sigh. “Not good.”

  “Oh, for crying out loud,” Nino exclaimed. “It was a dream. She probably ate too much of that jerk chicken at the rehearsal dinner. I told you to go with my nice cacio e pepe. I make that just for your jittery nerves, Lila.”

  “I’m not jittery,” Lila told him, but her focus was on Poppy. “Why isn’t it good, Poppy?”

  “It’s…” She gave a full-body shiver. “Just an old superstition. Black arts. Evil things.”

  “It’s Jamaican voodoo time,” Gabe joked, sharing a look with his grandfather who hummed The Twilight Zone music in response.

  “Oh, scoff all you want,” Poppy said. “I don’t believe in anything but my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, but…” She averted her eyes, suddenly focused on the silverware she’d been counting.

  “But what?” Lila pressed.

  “That dream,” she sighed. “Not good.”

  “It’s a sign,” Nino said, more to Gabe than anyone else.

  “A sign I’m bleeding money for this wedding,” Gabe lobbed back.

  Poppy glared at him and moved her wide girth out of the kitchen. “There are people who do believe in Obeah,” she said.

  “Some ancient Jamaican religion?” Gabe asked.

  She shrugged. “They believe the supernatural cross through your dreams.”

  Behind her, Gabe stole a pepper from the pan and dangled it above his lips. “I’ll tell you what’s supernatural. This food, old man. And it’s crossing through my dreams into my mouth.”

  He patted Nino’s shoulder, but Poppy harrumphed as she went back out to finish the table. “Where are you going, Rafael?” she called.

  “I want to come in and out of the gate to practice. Can I, Mummy?”

  Lila turned to look out the French doors, seeing her son opening and closing the gate that led out of the patio to the grass and trees that separated this villa from the next. “Just outside and right back in, Rafe,” she said.

  “This dream really bothered you, didn’t it?” Gabe, always in tune with Lila’s feelings, leaned over the counter, his handsome face serious now that he’d stopped teasing Poppy. “Just let it go, babe.”

  “I will,” she assured him. But when Poppy walked back in, Lila turned to her. “What does dreaming of a river of blood mean?”

  Gabe barely managed not to roll his eyes.

  “Nothing if you did
n’t touch the blood,” Poppy said without hesitation. “But…”

  “But I did, at least in my dream. It wasn’t real.”

  Poppy’s brows flicked in silent disagreement. “Then it means three things.”

  “Let me guess,” Gabe interjected, standing to deliver his jokes to Nino. “Snow is piling up in hell, a fleet of pigs is taking off at LaGuardia, and… What else, Gramps?”

  “The Cubs will win the World Series. Oh, wait. They did.”

  Poppy’s eyes shuttered in disgust. “Some people take Obeah very seriously.”

  Lila looked over her shoulder to check on Rafe, watching him go in and out of the gate and walk slowly down the patio, pretending to be in a wedding.

  “Something will be lost,” Poppy said, pulling Lila’s attention back. “Something of great value. That’s the first thing that happens after you dream of a river of blood.”

  “Well, I’m losing my mind listening to this,” Gabe said. “Does that count?”

  “What else?” Lila asked, ignoring him.

  “Something will be broken,” Poppy replied. “Something that is not easily fixed.”

  “I just broke an egg,” Nino added, making Gabe snort with laughter.