Personal Relations
HEATHER MACALLISTER
The Plot: Courtney Weathers desperately needs a date–for her older sister! Jeff Ryan needs a break from his workaholic stepbrother. The Personal Touch! brings the teens together as partners in But will it also make them family?Brooke Weathers is counting the days before Courtney goes to college. At least then, she might get a life–a sex life. Chase Davenport has been so busy climbing the corporate ladder and looking after Jeff, he can't remember ever having a sex life.But when the two kids decide to get married, Brooke and Chase have to team up to stop them. Too bad they can't keep their hands off each other long enough to do
Love in a limo?
Brooke scooted inside the car, to the far side of a padded bench seat. Chase slid in beside her and gave her hand a squeeze. Across from them, Reverend Bob took his place and pulled out some papers. Looking around the interior of the limo, Brooke was overwhelmed by the garlands of greenery, flowers and ribbons that decorated the small space.
“Since we have some time before the ceremony, I’ll just point out the special features of this particular limo.” Reverend Bob gestured to the opaque glass partition behind him. “Soundproof. We’ll lower it during the ceremony so the driver can be your witness, but once you begin the honeymoon, it will be raised.”
“Honeymoon?” Brooke asked.
“Yes. You’ve got the limo for two hours.” He gestured for them to move apart, reached between them and lowered the padded panel. “You pull that handle there, and the seat will fold down to make a bed.”
Brooke was dumbfounded. He expected…people actually…
“Cool,” Chase said, giving Brooke a wicked grin.
Dear Reader,
I thought I’d get right to the good stuff—aphrodisiacs. After all, this is a Harlequin Temptation, right? In researching the scene where Brooke’s sister and Chase’s brother are trying to kindle a romance between their siblings, I learned some interesting things. Did you know that through the ages, there were a lot of foods—not just oysters—that were considered to have erotic powers? So, of course, I had to mention them….
One of the aphrodisiacs I used in the book was pine nut soup. Would you believe that pine nuts have been used to inspire romance since 116 B.C.? Do they work? I’ll let you be the judge of that. Look below for a recipe.
In the meantime, sit back and have fun watching Chase and Brooke as they struggle to avoid being caught in the romantic snare set for them by their siblings—and find themselves caught up in love anyway!
Have fun,
Heather MacAllister
P.S. You can visit my Web site at HeatherMacAllister.com
Recipe for Pine Nut Soup
Puree 1/2 cup of pine nuts and 3 egg yolks in a food processor until you have a smooth paste. Put the mixture in a saucepan and add 1 cup of chicken broth and 1 cup of cream. Add 1/8 teaspoon of saffron and heat gently, stirring consistently until the soup thickens. Don’t let it boil!
Serve immediately—and enjoy!
Personal Relations
Heather MacAllister
www.millsandboon.co.uk (http://www.millsandboon.co.uk)
To Trudy and Bill Hanes.
And Pilgrim.
Contents
Prologue (#ua619d6e5-3c4d-5bdf-b81e-e5b0da069e07)
Chapter 1 (#u406206cc-64b0-56b7-aecf-b718149cd850)
Chapter 2 (#u3cec216d-a5f5-5a64-88b6-abf4d3ccee26)
Chapter 3 (#ub191c0cc-2f20-5a94-b066-e89ce9c09fc4)
Chapter 4 (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter 5 (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter 6 (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter 7 (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter 8 (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter 9 (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter 10 (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter 11 (#litres_trial_promo)
Prologue
I’m a female West Houston High senior and am looking for a valentine for my overprotective older sister who’s cramping my style. She’s a babe-in-waiting, not a woofer. If you’ve got an available older brother who’s at least twenty-five, and isn’t a troll, call me and let’s hook them up. I’ll make it worth your while.
“HI, MY NAME IS Jeff Ryan and I’m calling about the ad you put in Additudes.”
“Oh, yeah. I’m glad my sister didn’t answer the phone. Hang on and let me kick my door shut…okay. I’m Courtney Weathers, by the way.”
“Uhm, I know who you are—you’re in South Pacific at school, right?”
“Yes, just the chorus, but I am the understudy for Nellie.”
“Is that good?”
“Well, not as good as being cast as Nellie, since that’s the lead, but better than not being the understudy. I mean, people can get colds, right? Anyway, you’ve got a brother?”
“Yeah.”
“Well, is he cute?”
“I’m a guy! I don’t know if he’s cute or not.”
“Do you look like him?”
“Not really. He’s my stepbrother, actually, my ex-stepbrother, but he never has a problem getting dates, if that helps.”
“So why doesn’t he have a girlfriend now? And I’m assuming he doesn’t or this call is so over.”
“He works all the time and they get mad when he bails on them. And when he’s not working, he’s bugging me.”
“I hear that.”
“I mean, he’s a great guy, and he’s letting me live with him while I finish up at West Houston, but he’s got this idea that I’m going to ‘follow in his footsteps,’ or some garbage like that. He’s got my whole life planned out to be just like his.”
“Oh, wow! You just described my sister! I’ve got a major case of goose bumps going here.”
“Hey, yeah?”
“I mean, Brooke, that’s my sister, she’s just so totally into this whole college thing and, like, I’m telling her I want to be an actress and she just so won’t listen.”
“And your parents are listening to her, right?”
“Oh, it’s so bad. My dad’s working in El Bahar, so they’re living overseas and they think that my sister is this perfect goody-goody, mainly because she is. They’re always taking her side. It’s like they think I’m still this little kid.”
“Well…I don’t think Chase—my step-bro—is the kind of guy to go for a goody-goody.”
“But that’s just it—she didn’t used to be. It’s this responsibility trip she’s on. It’s got her way too tightly wound. She needs a distraction.”
“Yeah…I’m thinking that’s what Chase needs. All he does is work—”
“Then is he going to have time to date my sister?”
“If your sister looks anything like you, he’ll make time.”
“Oh! Hey, thanks. That’s sweet.”
“Uh, yeah. See, here’s the thing. He’s trying to set this good example for me and so if he knows I’m watching how he treats your sister, then he won’t cancel out, or I’ll make a big deal out of it. You know, push the guilt button.”
“Okay. So we need to get them together. Do you have anything going on after school?”
“No.”
“Why don’t you volunteer to help backstage with the sets and props? We need more people.”
“I’ve never done anything like that before.”
“They’ll teach you and this way, I can introduce Brooke to your brother when they come to pick us up after rehearsal.”
“Uhm, I have my own car. Or right now, Chase’s.”
“Cool. So take it to get the oil changed or something.”
“Okay. I’ll think of something. So, when do you want to do this?”
“How about tomorrow?”
1
DOWNTOWN TRAFFIC had been worse than usual, so Brooke Weathers was later than she liked to be when she pulled her car into the West Houston High parking lot by the auditorium. Several teenagers gathered in clumps by the brick sign. It looked as though the South Pacific rehearsal had already finished.
She scanned the clumps looking for her dark-haired sister and finally found her draped against a silver Porsche as she talked to the occupants.
Some father had just had his midlife crisis, Brooke guessed, since the fancy car was out of the league of most of the students here.
She lowered her window. “Courtney!” she called just as Courtney spotted her. Her sister straightened and gestured for Brooke to come closer.
Talk about lazy. If Courtney could just be bothered to walk a few extra steps, then Brooke could exit now instead of being forced to drive the entire circuit of the parking lot. She shook her head, but Courtney beckoned again.
It had been a long day, a day in which Brooke should have stayed an extra half hour at work and would have, if she hadn’t had to pick up Courtney. In spite of the two cars behind her, Brooke shook her head again and gestured back.
Courtney was mad. She stormed over to the car, jerked open the door, then slammed it shut. “Why wouldn’t you come over there?”
Brooke got in line for the traffic light. “I didn’t feel like driving all the way around the parking lot just because you were in diva mode.”
Courtney jammed her shoulder belt into the clasp. “I only wanted you to meet Jeff’s brother.”
“Who’s Jeff?”
“You know, the guy who’s working on the sets. That was his brother’s car.” She gave Brooke a sideways look. “His single brother. I told him about you. He acted interested.”
“Interested in one thing.”
“Oh, come on Brooke! Lighten up and maybe you could go out with him.”
“Go out with him?” Brooke crossed her fingers in a warding-off-evil-spirits sign. “An older single man with a Porsche? Have I taught you nothing?”
“Yeah, how to spend weekends cleaning the house, then rewarding ourselves with microwave popcorn and a video. Whoopee.”
Brooke actually looked forward to Saturday nights with her sister. “You’re not dateless every Saturday.”
“You are,” Courtney said quietly.
“I’m too tired to date!” Brooke laughed.
Courtney didn’t. “I really wish you’d meet Jeff’s brother.”
“Thanks, but no thanks.”
The last thing Brooke needed right now was first-date stress, followed by will-he-call stress, and if he did call, and she did start going out with him, the should-I-or-shouldn’t-I stress. With Courtney watching her every move, it was darn well going to be shouldn’t. Besides, most men didn’t understand why a single woman in her twenties had a self-imposed midnight curfew. But Brooke couldn’t apply one set of rules to her dating life and another to Courtney’s even though Courtney was still in high school. Brooke shuddered just imagining the arguments. It wasn’t worth it.
What would be worth it was the satisfaction she’d feel when she got Courtney into a good college.
Then Brooke could enter the dating scene.
Until then, she didn’t need the stress.
“YA GOTTA MEET HER, MAN,” Jeff insisted. “If she’s anything like Courtney, she’s hot.”
Chase Davenport gave his brother a long look, then flicked on his turn signal.
“I mean hot in a good way,” Jeff tried to explain. “A classy way. Yeah. Classical hot.” He dug in his backpack and withdrew a piece of crumpled notebook paper. “Here’s her phone number.”
“No thanks,” Chase said. “I can find my own women.”
“For a guy who drives a serious chick magnet like this, you aren’t doing such a good job.” Jeff picked up Chase’s cell phone.
“What are you doing?”
“Programing in Courtney’s number in case you change your mind.”
Chase didn’t bother to object. He could always erase it later. “I was surprised to hear that you were on the stage crew. I didn’t know you were interested in that kind of thing.” Chase supposed he should be thankful that Jeff was finally showing interest in something, but he never would have guessed it would be the school musical.
“Oh, yeah. It’s cool.”
“Is that how you met Courtney?”
“Everybody knows Courtney,” he said.
Chase was beginning to get the picture. Jeff was more interested in this Courtney than he was in the play. He thought back to the girl he’d just met. She was pretty, in a drama student way. She’d had on a bright red sweater and lips to match and long silver earrings that had brushed against her cheeks when she talked. No one could accuse her of being the mousy type, which Chase would have figured more as Jeff’s style.
Chase smiled to himself as Jeff went on about lights and computer programs and the sets he was going to help build. This Courtney had high-maintenance written all over her. Jeff might as well learn about high-maintenance women now when he had time for them, because he sure wouldn’t have time when he started college in the fall.
And, as Chase had discovered, he wouldn’t have time for them when he was trying to establish a career, either.
Chase, himself, didn’t even have time for low-maintenance women. But that was all right. Contrary to popular belief, he’d discovered there were actually no maintenance women out there—women who agreed that work took precedence for now.
Chase downshifted for the approaching traffic light. The problems started when casual became not-so-casual. That’s when the expectations started. And, Chase had to admit, he’d been guilty of changing the terms of a relationship a couple of times, himself. But no more. He had a plan. It was a beautifully simple plan—make a potful of money and semiretire so he could enter the ultimate high-maintenance relationship—a wife and family.
He glanced over at Jeff. They were a lot alike—both children of parents who’d had children before they’d worked through all their selfishness. Jeff’s mother still wasn’t ready for children, which was why Chase was getting a sneak preview of parenting a teenager. He didn’t mind. Jeff was basically a good kid and Chase was flattered that he’d considered fixing him up with Courtney’s sister.
But since he suspected high-maintenance ran in the family, he’d have to pass this time.
“JEFF? THIS ISN’T working. It’s been days and they won’t even wave hello to each other.”
“I know. And Chase said he’s not going to call your sister.”
“It’s really too bad, because I think they’d be good together. You know where we went wrong? We shouldn’t have tried to set them up. We should have had them accidentally meet somehow.”
“Yeah, but they’re not going to fall for it now.”
“Unless we give them a good enough reason to get together. And we’ll have to come up with something soon, because I have to have my film school application and deposit postmarked the day after Valentine’s Day.”
“What does that have to do with anything?”
“I’ll need the money! Brooke won’t approve it and without Brooke’s okay, my parents won’t fork over the cash.”
“I still don’t—”
“If we come up with something drastic, then film school will look good by comparison, and Chase will be thrilled to let you do what you want to do.”
“I don’t know what I want to do.”
“You’d better decide soon, because you’re going to be in a great bargaining position.”
“MARRIED? Don’t make me laugh.” But Brooke didn’t feel like laughing. Actually, she felt a little sick and was getting sicker by the moment. Watching her bowl of high-fiber, vitamin-fortified cereal swell into a gray mass as it soaked up the milk didn’t help.
“So you’d rather we just live together first?” Courtney smirked. “Mom and Dad will be interested to hear that, especially after their little dairy lecture.”
Brooke blinked.
“You know, why would a man buy the cow when he can get the milk for free?” Courtney took a bite of cereal. Hers still crunched.
“Well, if you want to consider yourself a cow, then I can’t stop you,” Brooke retorted, goaded by the I’ve-got-you look on Courtney’s face.
“And since I’m eighteen, you can’t stop me from getting married, either.”
True, true, horribly true. But that didn’t mean she wasn’t going to try.
Last night was Courtney’s third date this week with Jeff Ryan, a boy in every sense of the word. Courtney said he was a fellow senior at West Houston High, but Brooke had a hard time believing it.
Baby fat still padded his muscles and if he had to shave more than once a week, Brooke would be surprised. In fact, when Brooke had met him just last Monday, she’d been surprised that Courtney had been dating him.
He wasn’t Courtney’s type. Not that there was anything wrong with the boy. If he had another ten years’ seasoning, he’d be exactly the type of husband Brooke would want for her younger sister. But right now, he was just potential with hormones and a car.
Yeah, the hormones were there, in spite of the smooth cheeks. Brooke had seen the way he watched Courtney, had seen the way he’d touch her shoulder and arm, and the way he’d tuck her hair behind her ear when they sat next to each other. The car wasn’t the only thing with something under the hood.
Brooke studied her sister, realizing she’d taken the wrong tack. She’d been antagonistic and had immediately put Courtney on the defensive. At Courtney’s age, she would have hated that. So why couldn’t she remember what it felt like to be eighteen, with her whole life ahead of her?
Maybe because she’d never been eighteen with a bright future ahead of her. Maybe because she’d screwed everything up at age seventeen.
Nobody knew better than Brooke how one bad decision could have far-reaching consequences. She was lucky that her parents trusted her enough to keep an eye on Courtney while they worked overseas in El Bahar.
This time, Brooke wasn’t going to let them down.
“SHE’S SO CUTE. And you should see the way her eyes crinkle and her nose kind of scrunches up when she laughs.”
Chase Davenport threw away the shiny silk tie that exactly matched his shirt and reached for a tie with a raised pattern. One that he could manage to coerce into a knot, which he was finding hard to do when his hands were shaking with suppressed anger. He should have known that Courtney was trouble. “A wife needs a few more qualities than crinkly eyes and a…scrunchy nose.” Chase spoke with deceptive mildness, so deceptive that his stepbrother continued to list more of his girlfriend’s insipid qualities, oblivious to Chase’s disgust.
The boy was barely eighteen and already a gold digger had her hooks in him. Chase had hoped to shield Jeff from women of this type. Women like Jeff’s mother.
Of course. Why should Chase be surprised? Jeff no doubt felt comfortable around gold diggers. It ran in his blood. Chase tightened the knot on his tie, satisfied at last. What irony. The son of a gold digger caught by a gold digger.
Too bad it wasn’t in Chase to appreciate the irony. He’d long ago abandoned any thoughts of revenge against Zoe Colquitt Ryan Zukerman Brown Davenport el Haibik del Franco. It was his father’s business, not his, and Chase had already been out on his own during their brief marriage. Besides, for a while, he’d had a little brother.
Jeff wasn’t so little anymore, if he was talking about marriage. It was absurd. He interrupted Jeff’s blathering. “Have you actually proposed to the girl?”
“Well, like, yeah. That’s how we know we’re getting married.”
“Did you give her a ring?”
“A ring?”
“An engagement ring, usually a diamond, which you’ll slip onto the fourth finger of her left hand. She’ll squeal happily, maybe even manage to squeeze out a tear or two, then race over to her girlfriends who will make all kinds of admiring noises while they mentally appraise the size and quality of the stone.”
“Uh, I don’t think Courtney is that kind of girl.”
“They’re all that kind of girl.”
“Courtney’s different.”
Chase stifled a sigh. “What does her family say?” Maybe they could form an alliance.
“Oh, her sister thinks we definitely should get married.”
“Would that be the hot sister?”
“I meant classy.” Jeff got that sappy look on his face again. “She can see how much in love we are and said we shouldn’t wait too long.”
Yeah, sounded like the sister had dollar signs in her eyes, too.
Great. Extricating his stepbrother from this mess was sounding more expensive all the time.
BROOKE DRANK her orange juice as she considered her next remark. “When’s the wedding?”
Courtney threw her a startled look, quickly masked. “Well…Valentine’s Day is coming up. It would be a shame to miss the opportunity.”
Brooke couldn’t stand it. This wasn’t a moment to be calm after all. “Two weeks? Are you crazy? You’re not even out of high school yet. And what about college? You’re just going to throw all that away?”
Courtney slammed down her spoon, sending droplets of milk over her sister’s sleeve. Brooke dabbed at them, knowing they’d be covered up by her suit jacket.
“Yes, let’s talk about college,” Courtney said. “I do not want to go to Texas, or A&M, or Texas Tech—”
“You don’t have to. I’ve been saving, too, so you can go to a private college if you want. You can go to Baylor, or George—”
“Or the Los Angeles School of Cinematic Arts?”
“No film school.”
Courtney sat back and crossed her arms over her chest. “Then I don’t see that I’m throwing away much.”
“How could you do this to Mom and Dad?”
“Oh, please, not that again.”
“Yes, that. They’ve worked hard so that you—”
“They wouldn’t have had to work so hard if it hadn’t been for you.”
The sisters stared at each other. Brooke couldn’t have spoken past the sudden lump in her throat even if she’d wanted to. Courtney suddenly couldn’t meet her eyes.
She might have even been going to apologize, except that there was a knock on the kitchen door. Leaping up, Courtney threw open the door to Jeff.
“Jeff,” she cooed and draped herself over him. “I’ve missed you sooo much.”
“I’ve missed you,” Jeff said, after he adjusted to Courtney’s deadweight and put his arms around her waist.
“I’ve missed you more.”
“I’ve missed you more.”
“Missed you more times infinity.” Courtney nuzzled against him, her lips inches from his.
Jeff moved even closer. “Missed you more times infinity plus one.”
“I missed you—”
“Oh, for God’s sake!” Brooke took her bowl of cereal over to the sink and dumped the contents down the disposal. When she glanced over her shoulder she saw that Courtney and Jeff were alternately kissing and murmuring at each other.
Teenagers and their overactive hormones. Why wasn’t there a pill for that sort of thing? Surely some doctor somewhere was working on one. Brooke should contribute.
She turned on the disposal, counting on the noise to break the mood.
“Let me put on my lip gloss—it’ll just take a sec.” Courtney dug the little pot out of her backpack and stepped into the half bathroom off the kitchen.
Good. If she took the time to put on lip gloss, it meant she wasn’t planning on a makeout session on the way to school.
“Did Courtney tell you the news?” Jeff stood in the still-open doorway, grinning a little wolfishly in Brooke’s opinion. Grinning like a male who’d gotten free milk.
“Yes.” Brooke cleared away the rest of the dishes knowing that Courtney would race out of the house without even thinking about it. Another sign of immaturity.
“I was kinda hoping for a congratulations or something.”
“Forget it. She’s mad. I told you she would be.” Courtney dropped the lip gloss into the backpack and slung it over her shoulder.
“How did your parents take the news?” Brooke asked Jeff.
“I haven’t told them yet,” Jeff cheerfully admitted.
Brooke gave Courtney a look. “Before you start griping at me, see what his parents have to say.”
“My parents aren’t together anymore. I live with my stepbrother—well, technically my ex-stepbrother. But he’s all for us getting married.”
So you’ll be out from underfoot. Ex-stepbrother. The poor kid. Outrage mingled with Brooke’s frustration. “How old is your stepbrother?”
“Oh, he’s old. Thirty or thirty-one. He doesn’t like having a party on his birthdays, so it’s hard to keep track of them.”
Thirtyish? Brooke gritted her teeth. The man should be ashamed of himself. Brooke had visualized someone a couple of years older than Jeff, since any rational adult would have tried to talk him out of marriage.
Therefore, Jeff’s stepbrother, or whatever his relationship was, was not a rational adult.
Actually, that wasn’t so bad. Brooke could be rational enough for everyone. “Did…did your stepbrother—”
“His name is Chase.”
Brooke acknowledged the information with a tight smile. “Did Chase say when he thought it was all right for you two to get married?”
“We didn’t discuss dates, or anything,” Jeff admitted as Courtney nudged him in the ribs.
“He probably didn’t realize you wanted to do it before you finished high school. When you stop and think about it, you’ll be missing a lot of fun.”
“Why would we have to miss anything?” Courtney asked.
“Because…because you’ll be too busy for anything but school and work. How do you think you’re going to afford an apartment?”
Their arms encircled each other. “We won’t have to work,” Jeff told her. “Chase said we could live with him. Isn’t that cool?”
“Cool” wasn’t the word Brooke would have chosen. Idiotic. Irresponsible. Moronic. Those were much better words. They had the added benefit of applying both to the situation and to Jeff’s brother.
Brooke was so angry that she found it hard to breathe. She was going to handle this herself. She was not going to bother her parents with it. But she was most definitely going to bother Chase Davenport.
2
“MAN, DID YOU see her face?”
“Oh, yeah. I think just a little more and we’ll have them.”
BY THE TIME she got to work, Brooke was a seething cauldron of rage. What Courtney had actually said was a “seething cauldron of repressed rage” but Brooke didn’t think her rage was going to be repressed much longer.
The only reason she didn’t go directly to Chase Davenport’s office after Jeff had helpfully supplied his business card, was that she had three scheduled interviews this morning.
Brooke was a personnel assistant for Haldutton oil. She’d gradually, but doggedly, worked her way up the corporate ladder and now administered screening interviews for clerical job candidates. When she got her degree in a year, she’d be in a strong position for promotion.
Brooke had spent seven years in night school working toward a business degree. She’d desperately wanted to finish before Courtney went off to school, but getting this far was the best she could do. She wanted to set an example for Courtney, to show her how much she valued education. To let Courtney see how hard it was to work and go to school at the same time.
Courtney wasn’t going to have to do that. After all, it was Brooke’s own fault that she’d had to get her degree the slow way. Courtney shouldn’t have to suffer for Brooke’s poor judgment.
And now…and now after all the long nights and the hours and hours of study, the sacrifices…Did Courtney think she actually enjoyed being a drudge? If Brooke were feeling really sorry for herself she’d dwell on all the valentineless Valentine’s Days she’d had in the past few years.
No, she hadn’t had time for a relationship. She’d tried dating a couple of guys, but frankly, they hadn’t been worth missing sleep over.
There’d be time next fall, she thought. Next fall when Courtney went off to one of the colleges where Brooke had sent applications. The same ones she’d applied to, but had had to turn down the acceptances.
Damn it, Courtney was not going to get married and throw away her future.
SO YOU THINK you can do a better job of raising him than I did you? Chase’s father’s words whispered through his mind.
Yes, he had thought he could do a better job with Jeff. The boy needed a stable environment. All children needed security, not a father who traveled most of the time and when he did come home, would announce that it was time to move again.
Once, Chase and his mother had lived in a hotel room for a month while they waited for their new house to be ready. Two days before they were to move in, his father had laughingly told them they were moving on and wasn’t it lucky that they hadn’t unpacked yet?
Jeff’s mother had been just as bad. So, when Jeff had asked to stay with Chase during high school, Chase had readily agreed.
And now this.
Man, wouldn’t his father get a laugh out of it when he heard.
No, Jeff wasn’t getting married, at least not any time soon.
Chase reached for his cell phone and looked at the number Jeff had programed in. He supposed nobody was home now, but tonight, he was going to find out how much it would take to buy off Courtney Weathers—and her sister.
BROOKE MANAGED to suppress her anger for the duration of her interviews, although none of the applicants passed her screening. She hoped it wasn’t a coincidence.
At ten forty-five, her hand shaking so much she couldn’t punch the number on the telephone, Brooke had to shut the door to her tiny office. She started to jog in place, hoping to work off some steam.
Jogging didn’t cut it, even after she kicked off her pumps, so Brooke resorted to old-fashioned jumping jacks. The jumping part was fine, but her panty hose gave her trouble during the jack part. She was ready to take them off as well, when a sudden easing in pressure heralded a run in her stockings. At least something could run in this small place.
Bare legs were better than a giant run, so Brooke ripped off her panty hose, tossed them in the wastebasket, did four more jumping jacks and breathlessly punched out Chase Davenport’s office number. While the number rang, she looked at the business card. He was a commercial property agent for the MacGinnis Group. In other words, a glorified salesman. A slick, glorified salesman, she added when she remembered the silver Porsche.
Brooke got his voice mail, but didn’t want to leave a message and punched zero for assistance.
“Mr. Davenport is at lunch,” the receptionist confirmed. “And is scheduled to go directly off-site from there.”
“Off-site?” Brooke asked.
“To visit one of our properties.”
“Oh. And when do you anticipate his return?”
“May I tell him who is calling?” the receptionist countered, frankly a little late for true professionalism in Brooke’s opinion.
“I’m in the Haldutton personnel department. We’d like to check a reference.” Brooke’s face had heated even before she told the lie. Which wasn’t exactly a lie—not much of one, anyway. She was extremely interested in Jeff Ryan’s references.
“It’s difficult to predict, but you could try back around three-thirty.”
Brooke thanked her and hung up before the receptionist could ask for her name again.
Three-thirty. There was no way she could do jumping jacks until three-thirty.
Fortunately, she didn’t have to. She even managed to choke down a light carbohydrate-less lunch so her mind would be clear when she went to do battle.
She was calm. She was focused. She was rational.
And then the phone rang.
“Hi, Brooke! Are you busy?” Courtney sounded way too happy.
“What’s wrong?”
There was a disgusted sigh. “Nothing is wrong. Why do you always think that?”
“Where are you?”
“With Jeff. Rehearsals were canceled while the choir director works with the soloists, so we thought we’d come downtown and go ring shopping! Jeff is getting the money from his brother right now. Want to come?”
Ring! Unfocused, irrational thoughts bombarded her. “I—I have an appointment this afternoon,” Brooke said. “In fact, I should be leaving right now.”
“Okay!” Courtney said breezily. “Just thought I’d check. You wouldn’t want me to settle for a ring that was too small, would you?”
Brooke saw an out. Jeff would probably freak when he saw the price of diamonds. “Oh, most definitely not. After all, you’ll be wearing this ring forever. It’s got to be special. You don’t want it to look chintzy.”
“Well, no.” Courtney sounded uncertain.
“All your friends will see it.”
“Yeah, they’re gonna be jealous.”
“Just remember the four C’s.”
“What are those?”
“Cut, color, clarity and size.”
There was a short silence. “That’s only three C’s.”
“Well, the other one means size.”
“Oh. It probably doesn’t begin with C because it’s the most important.”
Brooke was too frazzled to contradict her. “Whatever. Have a good time.”
“Okay, bye!”
Brooke gripped the phone and tried to take deep, calming breaths, but only succeeded in making herself light-headed.
Carat. The fourth C was carat. Oh, well, never mind. She’d planted the seeds of greed and it might make Courtney think twice about marriage.
That didn’t sound right, but she wasn’t going to worry about it now. Grabbing her purse from the bottom file drawer at her desk, she headed for Chase Davenport’s office.
“HEY, MAN, like, I need to borrow some major bucks.”
Chase winced and tilted back in his chair. “How major?” he asked Jeff, keeping his voice deliberately casual. “Concert ticket major? Car major? Spring break trip major?”
“Engagement ring major. You know, a real diamond.”
Ice formed in his veins. “Jeff.”
“And I’m not talking about a promise ring here. I want the real thing—like my mother has.”
Zoe’s diamond size had increased with each marriage. The one she had now could serve as the practice rink for the Olympic ice-skating competition.
“I see.” Chase straightened, thinking quickly. “Why don’t we talk about this when I get home tonight?”
“’Cause Courtney and I are going ring shopping now. No rehearsal today, so we’ve got time.”
“Jeff—”
“Courtney’s asking her sister to come with us to make sure we get a good one. She said something about C’s and that size was important.”
A red haze crossed Chase’s vision. “Make sure you inform Courtney and her sister that any major withdrawals from your trust account must be approved by me.”
“Well…like, that’s not going to be a problem, is it? I mean, if you’ve got issues, I can always ask my mom.”
Who would see nothing wrong with her son buying a diamond.
Back off, back off. “Hey, it’s your money, but I couldn’t look your mother in the eye if I let you buy an inferior stone. You know how she is about diamonds. Just don’t buy anything without me seeing it first.”
“Hey, no prob.”
Yes, prob. Big prob.
CHASE DAVENPORT worked in a nice, shiny building several streets over from Brooke’s own office building. She was able to reach it through Houston’s underground tunnel system, though she had blisters on the backs of her heels by the time she arrived.
As she took the escalator from the tunnel and emerged through the atrium, she was relieved to see that his company, the MacGinnis Group, was, like hers, one of the last bastions of proper business dress, with none of this business casual nonsense. Brooke was very happy to wear a suit, thank-you-very-much. It gave her authority and kept her comfortable in an office that was air-conditioned ten months out of the year.
When she reached the ground floor, she headed for the rest rooms and combed her hair, checked her makeup, and applied the Band-Aids she carried in her wallet to her blisters.
She wanted to look mature—intimidatingly mature, since Chase so clearly wasn’t.
The fact that he might not have returned to his office yet didn’t occur to her until she was actually asking for him at the reception desk.
“Brooke Weathers,” she gave her name to the receptionist, who sat in the center of a round room with hallways leading off it like a spider in the center of her web. “Tell him it’s personal.”
The receptionist murmured into her headset, then looked at Brooke in pseudo sympathy. “Could you be more specific?”
The nerve of him. There were so many things she could say—Sure, tell him I’m from the free clinic. I have the results of his tests and thought he’d like to hear them in person. Or…He’s behind on his Porsche payments and I’m here to repossess. Even better, Tell him the rabbit died.
Honestly. Anyone who ignored the “personal” label did so at his own risk. However, tempting as it was to be flippant, Brooke merely said, “Tell him I’m Courtney Weathers’s sister.”
The receptionist was relaying that information when a door off one of the hallways opened.
“I heard.”
A man in a crisp long-sleeved shirt rolled to his forearms stood staring at her. Although several dozen yards and a blond receptionist separated them, Brooke felt the tsunami-sized waves of hostility headed her way.
He wasn’t the pudgy, balding, affable goof she’d been expecting. Nope. No pudge, no bald spot and an expression of glacial politeness.
He jerked his head to indicate that she should join him in his office, then disappeared inside.
Make that an expression bordering on politeness. Brooke hesitated, unwilling to concede a battle so early.
On the other hand, the important thing here was not her pride. Her goal was to keep Courtney from doing something she would surely regret. And that was the only reason Brooke ignored the fact that Chase Davenport had all but told her to heel, and followed him into his office.
WELL, THE SISTER hadn’t wasted any time getting over here once she heard Chase had a hold on Jeff’s wallet.
Yeah, after Jeff’s mother had divorced Chase’s father, she’d made a couple of lucky marriages and now had more money than even she knew what to do with. Chase had hoped Jeff hadn’t known exactly how much money Chase was managing for him, but someone, probably that flake of a mother of his, must have told him. He’d probably bragged about it at school and the result was this: trouble in a navy blue suit.
She was mad, he could tell that right off. She held her chin up and looked him right in the eye. Ordinarily, he’d like that in a woman, but this sure wasn’t ordinary.
And neither was the internal wallop he got once she came close enough for him to see that she was a toned-down version of her sister. The hair wasn’t as short, wasn’t as black, the lips weren’t as red, the body wasn’t as thin—and the few pounds had been put to excellent use.
But his response was just the natural response of a male in his prime to an attractive female. It was biological. Nothing to get worked up about.
He deliberately ran his gaze over her, taking in a suit that showed signs of wear and hadn’t been all that expensive to begin with. Still she’d made the effort. Too bad the red lines on her feet from her shoes, and the fact that her legs were bare, undermined the professional image she was trying to convey.
Chase made a very comfortable living selling and managing commercial property, mostly because he was good at judging a potential client’s net worth. He’d been wrong a couple of times, but that was when he’d first started out and had been fooled by the “good ole boys” who’d dress down and pepper their speech with double negatives and college football talk. That was when he’d taught himself to notice the details—like the expensive ostrich boots, the custom hat, and the pinkie rings that they wore with the plaid shirts and faded jeans.
It was all in the details—and the details here said gold digger.
He smiled. Piece of cake.
From his power position behind his desk, he watched her cross no-man’s-land—the distance between the door and his desk. He didn’t bother to stand. He saw her glance at the overstuffed chair with the sprung seat. All but the tallest of men would sit in that chair and discover that they were inches shorter than Chase. She’d probably disappear altogether.
If only it were permanent.
He gave her a once-over. She wasn’t all that bad, considering. With the nose and the swingy haircut she was kinda cute.
No, not cute. Cute was appealing and appealing was bad. Not cute.
Cute in this case was being used as a weapon. She probably disarmed all her victims with that cultivated lil’-ole-me cuteness.
Fortunately, he was immune. “What can I do for you?” he asked, feeling his lips curl in a smirk.
“I’m Brooke Weathers,” she said and held out her hand, not extending it fully. If he intended to shake her hand, he’d have to rise from his chair.
Very good move on her part. She was clearly no stranger to negotiations and that was important to know.
As Chase decided whether to insult her by ignoring her gesture, their eyes locked. Hers were brown. The thought came out of nowhere. Certainly, he didn’t want to notice her eye color. Or the freckles dancing across her nose that made him think of summers spent at the beach in Galveston.
Freckles weren’t cute. Freckles were a sign of sun damage, he told himself.
He was going to shake her hand, he decided. There was no advantage to be gained by insulting her. This wasn’t about power, this was about getting Jeff out of the mess he was in.
Chase slowly rose to shake her hand. They touched, palms sliding together. Warming. Fusing. So many sharp tingles pricked his hand that he looked down, expecting to see that she had one of those joke buzzers.
No buzzer.
Must be static electricity, but it was giving him one heck of a jolt.
Her hand was cool and trembled slightly. A traitorous part of him noted her nervousness and wanted to reassure her.
“Have a seat,” he offered gruffly and resumed his own.
She wasn’t falling for that and perched on the padded arm of the chair.
She looked cute.
Maybe thinking of her as cute wasn’t a bad thing. He’d outgrown cute. Jeff hadn’t, which was why he was in this mess. But Chase wasn’t attracted to cute, summer beach bunnies with freckled noses anymore.
Besides, the women he worked with had banished the word “cute” as belittling.
He smiled. “You look cute sitting like that.”
“I want to discuss Courtney and Jeff with you,” she said as though he hadn’t spoken.
Chase leaned back, his body language deliberately insulting. “I thought you might.”
It backfired.
She let her gaze drift over his face and sweep across his shoulders, her eyebrows making a subtle not-bad-but-buddy-I’ve-seen-better quirk upwards.
Chase felt sweat gather in his armpits.
She continued her survey, her gaze bouncing down his ribs. His stomach contracted involuntarily. A smile whispered across her mouth and her gaze rolled south of his belt and stopped.
Stopped.
A drop of sweat trickled down his side. His throat went dry as he battled self-consciousness.
Oh, she was good, he reluctantly conceded, forced to adjust his posture before he embarrassed himself.
As soon as he did so, she gave him a limpid look.
Okay, round two to the sister. “It sure didn’t take you long to get over here after you heard about the ring,” he snapped.
“Can you blame me?”
“Someone in your position? Not at all.”
“Then you must have known I would disapprove.”
“Well, gee. Sometimes our plans just don’t work out the way we want them to.”
He saw her grit her teeth. “Understand that I want the best for Courtney,” she managed to say.
“I’m sure you do.” He straightened. “Just how much is that ‘best’ going to cost?”
She looked momentarily confused. “It depends on which college she attends.”
“College. Well, that’s a twist I hadn’t expected.” He glared at her. “I guess this beats filling out all those scholarship forms.”
“What are you talking about?” The confusion was back in her eyes. What an actress. Must be where Courtney got it.
“I’m talking about this shakedown.”
“Shakedown?”
“Yeah, this great little hustle you’ve got going here.” He opened a drawer, withdrew a leather-covered triplicate checkbook and register. “Tell me—how many other boys’ parents have contributed to your sister’s…scholarship fund?”
She stormed to her feet, the very picture of affronted virtuous femininity. “No one has contributed anything!”
“Then they’ve got stronger nerves than I do. So you’ve got a break here. How much?”
Her mouth opened and closed. Chase supposed she hadn’t been ready for him to capitulate so quickly.
“Are you trying to bribe me into giving my consent to their marriage?” she asked.
“Consent?” He gave a crack of laughter. “Cut the act, sweetheart. I’m offering to buy you off, and you know it.” His pen hovered over the checkbook. “Let’s see…private school, I don’t think so. Courtney looks like a junior college girl to me.”
“Wait a minute—”
Chase dropped his smile. “This is a ‘take-it-or-leave-it’ offer.”
“Suppose you explain exactly what I might be taking or leaving.”
He finished scrawling on the check, ripped it out and tossed it across the desk. “You and your sister take your hooks out of Jeff and throw him back into the pond. There are bigger fish out there.”
“I suppose that’s your clumsy way of saying that you don’t want Jeff to marry my sister and it’s worth—” She picked up the check and stared incredulously. “Ten thousand dollars? Are you kidding?”
“More money than you’ve ever seen in one place, right sweetheart?”
“Oh, please. This is your brother—”
“Stepbrother. And a former one at that.”
“Still—shouldn’t there be another zero?”
“That’s all you’re getting.”
She tossed the check back at him. “This may be all Jeff’s future is worth to you, but I’ll have you know that my sister is worth a heck of a lot more than ten grand. Besides, I’m really concerned about how out of date you are with college tuition costs.”
“News flash—that sister of yours isn’t exactly baccalaureate material. The only degree she’s after is her MRS.”
“What time warp did you beam through? Comments like that are politically incorrect now.”
He gazed up at her. “Actually, I was paying her a compliment. What I felt like saying was that your sister has mistress written all over her. She’s going to be some rich, old man’s plaything. At best, she’ll be a trophy wife.”
BROOKE’S KNEES gave out and she sank deep into the chair.
Who did he think he was? More importantly, who did he think she was?
He leaned forward and slid the check toward her. “Your sister’s not bad looking. Use this and fix her up a little. Buy her some nice clothes, a good haircut, maybe a nose job—but get her the hell away from my stepbrother.”
A hot fury burned away the desensitizing layers of composure Brooke had grafted onto her emotions. It had the effect of exposing all her feelings to an intensity she hadn’t experienced for years.
Everything was…more. The afternoon sun coming through the window was brighter. The air from the heating vent was dryer, the breath mint she’d eaten before coming in here was mintier.
Chase’s shirt was crisper, his jaw sharper, his eyes colder.
And the dimple in his chin was deeper.
It looked old-fashioned—kind of forties Hollywood. She hadn’t noticed many men with clefts in their chins these days.
But this wasn’t about the cleft in his chin, or his jaw, either, or her pride. This was about…about…
Yes, it was, too, about pride, damn it!
He, this jerk, this old-fashioned male chauvinist pig, thought that Courtney wasn’t good enough for his brother. He didn’t care that two young people were making a major life decision based on their hormones. His only objection was that Courtney wasn’t good enough or classy enough for his—for Jeff.
Brooke was furious and it hurt to breathe. She couldn’t draw enough air into her lungs anyway.
“Courtney is worth ten of Jeff! Marriage to her would be the best thing that could happen to him. He might even grow up.”
Slowly, Chase rose and leaned over the desk, propping himself on his fists. “He doesn’t need to grow up that way. Right now, he’s still young enough to believe in hearts and flowers and getting tickets to the prom. He doesn’t need to know that there are women out there only interested in him for his money.”
“What money? He had to borrow a few dollars from Courtney to pay for pizza the other night. I know, because she had to borrow the money from me.”
“I’m not talking chump change, and you know it.”
Actually, pizza was more than chump change to someone who was watching every penny. That had blown Brooke’s lunch budget and she’d had to brown bag it twice to get back on track.
“You’ve seen the kind of car Jeff drives,” he continued.
“The ten-year-old Honda?”
Chase flushed. “That’s my car. It runs great. Jeff’s is the silver Porsche. His mother gave it to him.”
“Then what are you doing driving it?”
“His grades weren’t up to par the past six weeks and that’s the deal. He maintains a B average, or we switch cars.”
“Oh.” What a great incentive. How could this jerk have thought of it?
Unless he wanted Jeff to blow off his grades so he could drive the Porsche. But as much as she wanted to believe that, especially after his next comment, she didn’t.
He eyed her. “You’re not trying to tell me you didn’t know he’s sitting on a nice little trust fund.”
“Not until you just told me. And it wouldn’t have mattered anyway.”
“Tell me another one.”
“Jeff doesn’t look like a trust fund kid.”
“He hasn’t been one for all that long,” Chase grudgingly conceded.
Their eyes met. Brooke’s anger had unaccountably cooled and as it did so, she found herself replaying their argument. He must have been doing the same because at that moment, his eyebrows drew together and he echoed her thoughts. “Let me get this straight—you’re against them getting married?”
“If it means Courtney giving up college, you better believe it.”
“Oh.” He straightened, his forehead still creased as he looked down at her. “Then that means—”
“We’re on the same side,” Brooke finished.
3
“JEFF! BROOKE’S OFFICE said she’s on her way over to see Chase!”
“Is that good?”
“Are you kidding? Film school, here I come!”
BROOKE AND CHASE stared at each other, each absorbing the implications of their changed status. Then they let out twin sighs of relief.
For the moment, all Brooke could think about was that she only had half the battle to fight she had before.
And then a wide grin split Chase’s face, which pretty much changed him from a shoo-in for jerk of the century—to…something else.
He dropped his head and shook it slightly, then looked skyward before beaming that smile her way again.
Brooke felt its impact like a punch to her stomach. She was still in the process of realigning her opinion of him and didn’t have any attractive-man filters in place.
Oh, boy.
Trying to regroup, she blurted out, “But if you’re against them marrying—and I’m including any living-together arrangement—then why did you tell them they could live with you?”
“I never—oh, yeah.” He winced. “Jeff had asked me to help him find a job so he could support the little gold—” Chase broke off abruptly. “No offense.”
“None taken.” Which wasn’t strictly true, but she was feeling generous. Relief could do that to a person.
“He wanted a job right away so he could earn the apartment deposit. I want him concentrating on his grades, not staying up half the night bagging groceries, so I said they could live with me.”
Brooke nodded. “I probably would have said the same thing.”
He turned down the wattage on his smile. “So what was with the get-a-big-diamond advice?”
It was Brooke’s turn to look sheepish. “I hoped that Jeff would be shocked at how much they cost. I thought maybe it might start an argument—or at least a discussion. Money is the number one topic couples argue about. I was just buying time until I could talk with you.”
The warmth was back in his expression. Unfortunately, she was feeling a little—okay, a lot of—warmth of her own.
He drew a deep breath. “This calls for a drink. And I’m talking all the caffeine and sugar. The full monty.”
He came from behind the desk and headed toward a worktable that had a wooden file cabinet beneath it.
Except as she quickly saw, it wasn’t a file cabinet but a small refrigerator filled with cans and bottles.
“Ohh…” She closed her eyes. “You wouldn’t happen to have a Dr Pepper in there, would you?”
“A woman after my own heart.”
Or maybe not. There was an awkward silence during which Chase sorted through the selections in the little refrigerator and they ignored any inflammatory interpretations of what he’d said.
“The vending machines on this floor only carry Coke, so I’ve got my own private stash.” He squatted down and dug way in the back, past bottles of water and diet sodas until he pulled out a single can of Dr Pepper.
“Here it is.” He held out the can as though it were a bottle of vintage burgundy.
Brooke’s mouth watered in anticipation. “You only have one?”
“Yeah. It’s for emergencies. We’ll have to split it.” He reached for two glasses emblazoned with a gold “$10,000,000 Seller” emblem, and removed the ice tray from the tiny freezer compartment.
“Oh, I couldn’t…you take it. I’ll have a can of whatever else you’ve got in there.”
“No way. We both deserve it.” He popped the top and Brooke heard a fizz as the liquid was poured over ice. “It’s been one of those days.”
Gesturing for her to take one of the two club swivel chairs on her right, he pulled one away from the worktable with his foot and handed her the drink.
“To our new alliance.” Chase clinked his glass to hers, then downed half the drink in a single swallow. “Oh, that hit the spot.”
“You can say that again.” Brooke closed her eyes and felt the sugar and caffeine jack up her pulse. Sure she’d pay with a sugar low later, but right now, she didn’t care.
“So…Brooke is it?”
She nodded.
“I’m really sorry for—”
Brooke stopped him by vigorously waving her hands. “No—please. Let’s just start over.”
He grinned. “I like your style.”
Brooke hadn’t been conscious of having a style. She’d just wanted to put the whole ugly confrontation behind them.
“So what do you do, Brooke?” Chase eased back in the chair, probably unaware that his shirt was stretched across his chest in a way that…in a way she normally didn’t notice on a man.
In a way she definitely shouldn’t be noticing on Chase. But…well, she did. She was a woman, even though she hadn’t been acting like one for the past several years, and he was…waiting for an answer to his question. “I work for Haldutton in the personnel department.”
“On Travis, or are you at The Woodlands location?”
“Travis.”
“The Travis building is one of the properties we manage.”
He gulped more of his drink, making Brooke feel guilty that she’d taken half of it. But this was like smoking the peace pipe after treaty negotiations with the enemy. It would have been rude to refuse the gesture.
“I cannot tell you how relieved I am that we’re on the same page here.” He slid a sideways glance at her. “We are aren’t we?”
“If you’re on the they’d-better-get-their-education-first page, then we are.”
“I am. Just verifying.” He set his glass on the laminated tabletop. “Jeff is living with me until he finishes high school. He’s a senior now and doesn’t know what he wants to do with himself. Which doesn’t particularly matter since I know what he should do.”
To an outsider, that should have sounded unbelievably arrogant, but Brooke not only understood, she felt exactly the same way about Courtney.
“I’ve spent months going through the college admissions drill with him and when he started talking marriage—marriage—I panicked,” Chase admitted with disarming candor.
“So did I.” A soul mate. The man was her soul mate. He was going through the same thing with his stepbrother that she was going through with Courtney. He knew.
“I mean, I pulled some serious strings to get him into Baylor. It’s a good, steady school. Not a party school. Jeff doesn’t need an excuse to party.”
“Oh, I know. I feel the same way about Courtney.” The words babbled out. She hadn’t met anyone else responsible for a sibling—like a parent, but not a parent—and being able to talk with him was such a relief. “The thing is, I’ve been so frustrated because she wouldn’t fill out the applications. I had to do it.”
“I know! What is up with that?”
“Well, Courtney claims she doesn’t want to go to college. She says she wants to be an actress and being in this play at school has only made it worse. It’s not as if I’m telling her she can’t be an actress, I just want her to be able to support herself and for that, she’s got to get an education.”
“Exactly!” His look of approval made her feel better than it should have.
A lot better. A dangerous kind of better. “So…where did this marriage talk come from? I mean, I thought Courtney and I had a good relationship, but this came out of nowhere.”
“Beats me. With a mother like the one Jeff’s got, you’d think he’d never want to get married. She’s bounced around the world leaving a trail of husbands in her wake—including my father. She dragged Jeff with her, but when he was ready to start high school, he wanted to stay in one place. When he asked if he could live with me, I was more than happy to have him. Our family moved a lot when I was growing up. I didn’t have any brothers and sisters and it was hell trying to fit in all the time.” He smiled slightly. “Jeff was the only brother I ever had and he’s basically a good kid. He just needs some grounding.” He looked at her. “Nothing against your sister, but he doesn’t need marriage right now.”
“Neither does Courtney. And it doesn’t make sense for her to want to get married unless…”
“Jeff said she wasn’t pregnant.”
“No, not that.” And Courtney had been mad when Brooke had asked. “But maybe she knows that Jeff has money and figures he’ll support her while she’s trying to break into acting.” Except that Jeff seemed more like the supportee than the supporter. In deference to her new alliance with Chase, Brooke decided not to point that out.
“Don’t worry. I’ll set them both straight on that. What do your parents have to say about all this?”
“They don’t know and I’d rather not tell them if I can avoid it. They’re living in El Bahar where my dad is working, so Courtney and I are living in the house while she finishes high school. Technically, I’m her guardian—or I was until she turned eighteen. And by the way, whoever made the stupid law about eighteen-year-olds being legal adults has obviously never been responsible for a teenager.”
“I hear you.” Chase laughed. “But I’ve got to tell you, you don’t look much older than high school age, yourself.”
“I’m twenty-five.”
He swept his gaze over her, the sort of gaze that made a woman hold in her stomach. He probably wasn’t even aware that he’d done so, but Brooke was. Extremely aware.
And she’d sucked in her stomach.
“Wasn’t that kind of a drag to have your sister dumped on you?”
Brooke was shaking her head even before he finished. “No, in fact I was glad.” She looked at him, at the face that was considerably friendlier than when she’d first entered the office, at the one person who understood exactly what her responsibilities had been the past several years.
And found herself telling him everything—everything about the day that had changed her life. “When I was her age, I really screwed up. This is a chance to redeem myself.”
“What happened?”
“Oh…poor choices and peer pressure. It was spring break my senior year and a bunch of us had gone to the beach at Galveston. I was driving my parents’ van. You know that cars are banned from the beach, and there was nowhere to park. Anywhere. The place was packed.”
Chase nodded. “I’ve done spring break in Galveston.”
“So you know how it is. Anyway, we finally went out to the tip of the island by some beach houses and just drove on past them onto the beach. We figured if anybody said anything to us, we could tell them we’d rented one of the houses. We had a great time, but a police cruiser caught us sneaking back onto the road that night. I was going to pull over but this guy I liked was with us and he kept telling me to keep driving.”
“You tried to outrun a police car?”
“It wasn’t like it was a high-speed chase or anything. We were dodging them between the houses. Everybody said I should kill the lights and just pull into one of the driveways until the police car left. So, I turned off the lights and…”
She could still hear Jason’s voice laughing and saying, “Way to go, Brooke!” and flinging his arm around her. She still remembered the tight curl of awareness that took over her insides and made her want to do anything to keep it there.
The rest of her friends started chanting, “Go, Brooke! Go, Brooke!”
She’d had a reputation as a goody-two-shoes, which was why her parents had let her drive in the first place. All her life she’d followed the rules and this one time when she hadn’t…
“I skidded in the sand, missed the driveway and hit the support beam of a beach house.”
“Were you all right?” Chase asked immediately.
“Oh, yeah. The airbags went off. The kids in the back weren’t wearing seat belts and got thrown forward. Still, we were all lucky—just bruised mostly.” She sighed. “The van was totaled, the beach house might as well have been. I think the repairs cost more than building it from scratch would have. Oh, and did I mention that the house was owned by a lawyer?”
“Ouch.” He gave her a sympathetic look.
“Yeah. I was completely at fault, we were sued, and there went my college fund, my parents’ savings, retirement, the whole bit.”
“And you’ve been beating yourself up about it ever since, right? You look the type.”
Brooke gave him a wry smile. Just a little while ago, her type had been compared to a madam in a brothel. “I made a mistake…a really stupid mistake. And I paid for it. I’m still paying for it, I suppose, but Courtney shouldn’t have to. My father took the job overseas because of the money he could make and because I told my parents I’d look after Courtney. They trusted me when they didn’t have to and I will do anything not to let them down again. So, Courtney is not getting married before she graduates from high school, and she is not blowing off college, either. That’s all there is to it.”
“Hey.” He reached out and covered the hand she’d fisted in her lap.
She watched as his fingers closed around hers in slow motion. She could feel every line in his palm. Warmth enveloped her hand and her wrist. It was well on the way to her elbow before he squeezed gently and released her hand.
“You aren’t in this alone anymore,” he said quietly, but with an underlying strength that made Brooke want to melt against him and let him carry all the problems on his substantial shoulders.
As she gazed into his dark eyes, Brooke realized that the melting part was still a distinct possibility.
How had she missed the fact that Jeff’s ex-relative was a total babe? Of course, his babeness had been hidden when he was in jerk mode and was now brilliantly illuminated by relief and the effects of sugar and caffeine.
She sighed, and the corner of his mouth rose.
“I feel the same way.”
Brooke doubted it, she really doubted it.
“So what now?” he asked.
“Now?”
“Jeff and Courtney—how do we cool their jets?”
“Not by telling them they can’t see each other.”
“You got that right.” Chase stood and cleared away her empty glass and his own, then snagged paper and pens from the desk and brought them back with him. “We have to be smart about this—use our heads, not react emotionally.”
“Right. Heads, not hormones.”
“Exactly.”
When he sat, he pulled the chair closer to hers so he could write at the table.
Heads, not hormones. Heads, not hormones.
Hormones were tricky little devils. Up until now, Brooke had simply had to put them in deep-freeze storage until it was safe to thaw them out. Actually, she was looking forward to the thawing—after Courtney left for school.
As Brooke picked up her pen, she couldn’t help noticing that Chase’s knee was a fraction of an inch away from her own. It was close enough that she could feel the heat from his leg. Heat. She swallowed. Heat could be bad.
“We need a plan.” He flashed her a grin. “Preferably the same one.”
“Yes, a plan,” she echoed brilliantly. But really, how was she supposed to think with him sitting so close and acting like a take-charge male?
She hadn’t even known she liked a take-charge kind of guy. She’d always thought there wasn’t a lot of difference between the take-charge type and a bully. “So have you got any ideas?” she asked hoping that he wouldn’t notice that she’d been staring at him.
“Bribery?”
“Chase, your brother drives a Porsche. What’s left for you to bribe him with?”
“Good point.” He starting tracing circles—perfect circles—on the paper.
Brooke watched his fingers and the way they held the brushed silver pen. He had nice hands. Nice fingers. Fingers that kept going around and around and around….
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