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Authors: Miranda Liasson

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Contemporary Women

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BOOK: This Thing Called Love
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“I admit I went to that class to be an opportunist. Because Annabelle is the only part of Kevin we have left now and I . . . guess I was ready to fight dirty to keep her here. I love that little girl as much as I loved my brother, and I’d protect her tooth and nail.”

“So would I,” she said.

“I came away understanding how hard you’re trying to make this work. Because God knows you’re giving this your all. Like you’ve done for everything for as long as I’ve known you. You’re going to be a great mother to that baby. I’m sorry. For everything.”

“What?” she gasped, her eyes full of surprise.

“You heard me, but so help me I’m not saying it again.” He raked a hand through his hair. “Okay, dammit, I will.
I’m sorry
.”

She frowned. “Undermining me was wrong. But I understand how important family is to you.”

He looked straight at her. Emotion sparked in her big brown eyes, setting off little flecks of gold and hazel he never noticed before. “I came over the other night to apologize. What happened after that just . . . happened. I wasn’t trying to prey on you. It’s just . . .”

“It’s just . . . what?” she whispered.

They were so close he could see the tiny smattering of freckles on her nose. He wanted to kiss every one. “This connection we have is about more than just hormones, and it’s time you knew it.”

There. He’d said it. He saw the moment his comment registered. Watched the blush creep up her cheeks. He’d just curved his lips into a satisfied smile when she jumped up and pressed her soft pink lips to his, curled her hand around his neck and pulled him down for a kiss.

Her tongue slid around his, wet and hot, instantly torching his desire. He laced his fingers through her hair, pulled her closer and fused his lips over hers. Their tongues tangled in hungry desperation. Every part of him wanted to mark her, claim her, this woman who smelled like citrus and berry and a hint of baby powder. Who was as familiar as his past and yet not familiar at all.

He pressed himself against her, wanted her to feel his hard, raging erection, the evidence of how crazy she made him. “God, I want you,” he half whispered, half moaned as he dragged his mouth along her jaw to nip at her ear.

“Brad,” she managed.

“What is it?”

“You’re forgiven.”

His smile curved against the soft skin of her neck. Brad lifted his head to kiss her on the mouth again when he met her gaze.

The look in her eyes stopped him cold. Trusting. Honest. True.

It reminded him of when they were eighteen and he would have done anything, anything to ensure her happiness.

God help him, he felt like that now.

But they weren’t teenagers anymore. Life had grown impossibly complicated. They were different people now. Olivia was responsible for Annabelle and he had finally, after all these years, wrested free of all his child-raising responsibilities.

Olivia needed someone to stand by her, and that meant someone to father Annabelle as much as it did to love her.

He thought of all those years where he worried and fretted endlessly over his siblings. When he didn’t have a clue if he was doing the right thing. How Samantha still resented him for curtailing her dreams of being an artist because he was making her get a practical degree for fear she’d end up homeless. How could he take the chance of messing up his brother’s child?

He remembered the pain of breaking up with Olivia. How they couldn’t seem to connect their lives. Weren’t they in the same position now? How could he go through that again when his baby niece was involved?

Olivia was frowning at him. “Is something wrong?”

He opened his mouth to speak, just as a voice sounded behind them.

“I want you to stay away from my daughter.”

Frank Marks stood steps away, his bushy brows knit together, his big arms crossed.

Olivia broke away, shaking a little, touching her lips with her fingers. Brad stood in front of her and faced her father. “Dad,” she said, “it’s all right.”

“I’m sorry, honey, I can’t help it,” Frank said. “I overheard Alex talking to Tom. Heard she walked in on some monkey business yesterday.”

Silence crackled like a hotwire. “It’s not what you—” Olivia started to speak but her father continued.

“I know your type.” Mr. Marks waggled a finger at Brad. “Good-looking, successful, arrogant. She doesn’t need you coming around again complicating her life.”

Pain stung Brad’s chest. For the flash of a second, he was that hometown hick left behind, while Olivia took off for NYU.

Not good enough for her. He was never good enough in her daddy’s eyes.

And never would be.

No.
Brad had an MBA now, but more importantly, he was successful. He’d worked hard to educate himself and
become
something.

“Look, Mr. Rushford, we’ve all been through a lot these last couple weeks. And maybe Olivia’s been through most of all.”

“Damn right. That makes my daughter vulnerable. And she doesn’t need a womanizer like you trying to get in her pants.”

“Dad! Please.” Olivia clamped a hand on her father’s arm.

Frank faced Brad nose-to-nose with his thinning hair and little pooch belly. Brad could easily take the older man down with one quick stroke.

What was he supposed to say?
I’m not trying to get in her pants
, when clearly he had been. She still held that same undeniable pull that drew him from the moment he first noticed her so long ago, sitting with her girlfriends in their usual Friday night booth at the diner.

He thought of the teenage punk who’d wanted to date his sister Samantha last year. Motorcycle, black leather kind of dude, tattooed arms. He spelled sex and Brad had practically threatened to break his arms if he so much as touched her. He’d forbidden her to see him.

But she had anyway.

He knew where Olivia’s father was coming from.

“Mr. Marks, I care for your daughter. I’d never take advantage of her.” She stood tight and tense, her arms crossed rigidly. Tom started to enter the kitchen, but saw what was going on and backed out quickly.

Olivia pressed between the two of them. “Are you both done discussing me? Because I’d like to say something. First, Brad, shame on you for doing
anything
to make my life more hell. But I accept your apology. And Dad, I’m almost thirty years old. I appreciate your looking out for me, but I can protect myself.”

“Um, okay,” Alex said, poking her head through the door. “Time to eat. Everyone grab something off that table.”

“Let’s go before the food gets cold,” Olivia said firmly, and left to help Alex carry out the side dishes.

“I’ll let this go,” Frank dropped his voice so only Brad could hear. “Only because your grandmother is the most kindhearted woman in Mirror Lake, and I respect her greatly. But if I find out you’ve used my daughter like those other bimbos of yours, I swear I’ll castrate you like a county-fair hog.”

Brad stared at the older man and saw the same fury he felt fathering Samantha. “Understood.”

Frank Marks was right. He wasn’t good enough for his daughter. Not because he’d gone to a local university instead of a prestigious one or the fact that he’d stayed in their same small town his whole life instead of settling somewhere else more sophisticated and worldly.

Olivia needed a man willing to settle down and raise a family and he wasn’t ready to commit to anybody. Most of his siblings had turned out okay in spite of all the mistakes he made, but Samantha was the wildcard and God only knew what would happen to her. And he was nowhere near ready to go through all that agony again.

Regardless of the same fierce attraction between them that made him want to rip all her clothes off and sink deep inside her sweet soft body.

It had to be doused.

Because it was just that. Attraction in the midst of a whole lot of chaos. Everything else about them was at complete odds. Their jobs, their ways of life.

And he had to keep his hands off.

CHAPTER 11

“You can’t make me stay. You can’t!”

Olivia froze on her porch swing, the last bottle of the day inches away from Annabelle’s eagerly awaiting mouth, just as the voice of a woman hurled through Brad’s open door, packed with outrage and vinegar.

What in the world?
He wasn’t the type to force a woman. Maybe some unusual sexual activity was going on, like role-playing?
Ew
. She started to gather her things to go back into the house, but Brad’s voice from next door halted her.

“You’ll do as you’re told, or I’ll ship your hiney right back to college.”
Oh, oh
. No kinky sex games. He was speaking—okay,
yelling
—at his sister, Samantha.

“You can’t do that. The dorms are closed for summer.”

“Then I’ll ship you to a summer camp somewhere. You can be a counselor.”

“Brad, you know the plan. Buzz already has me signed up for shifts at the diner. I’m staying in town.”

“Then you’ll stay here.”

“I’m not living in your bachelor pad. That’s disgusting. And I’m not staying with Tom and Alex, either. Spike says there’s plenty of room in his apartment above the auto shop garage.”

“I didn’t raise you to come home and parade the fact that you’re moving in with some tattooed biker in front of the whole town. What will Effie say?”

“She loves me. Unlike you!”

The screen slammed, making Olivia jump. Annabelle startled. “It’s okay,” Olivia soothed. “Just those noisy Rushfords going at it as they’re apt to do. Let’s hope you got your temperament genes from
our
side of the family.”

A slender young woman with an athletic build stalked across the yards and came to stand, arms crossed, on the side of Olivia’s porch.

“My brother’s impossible.”

Olivia smiled.
Can’t argue with that.

“I’m not going back there.”

“I have brownies and leftover picnic food. Come on up.” Olivia did not want to entangle herself with any more problems involving Brad. God knew she was already in neck-deep. But she understood firsthand how stubborn and opinionated he could be and couldn’t help but reach out.

Her visitor scaled the porch stairs in a few graceful jumps and plopped into a wicker chair. She brushed tears from her eyes and pulled a hair elastic from her wrist, twisting a dark mass of spirally curled hair on top of her head in a few quick movements.

“Samantha Rushford, all grown up and so beautiful. Come here and give me a hug.”

Samantha complied, and kissed Annabelle on the forehead.

“Everything sucks so bad. My brother is riding me about
everything
. He doesn’t even know I didn’t start my summer class. Or that stupid research project I’m supposed to be doing. And my professors all gave me incompletes on my spring semester work and I have to retake every single one of my exams. I went back after the funeral but I-I just couldn’t . . .”

Olivia reached over and squeezed her hand, doing her best not to disturb Annabelle as the baby finished her bottle and nodded off to sleep. “Oh, honey. It’s okay to take some time to heal. We all need it.”

“I just needed to come home, you know? But he won’t even
talk
to me. When he heard me say I wanted to stay with Spike, he blew a gasket. Spike is the only one who
gets
me. He doesn’t bottle up his feelings like my dumb brother does.”

Olivia hesitated a second, knowing there was a fine line between kindness and interference. “You can stay here for a while. I could use a little company. If you don’t mind hearing Annie cry during the night.”
Brad. Was. Going. To. Kill. Her.

On the other hand, he just might be grateful Samantha was staying with her and not Spike.

“To be honest, I’d probably sleep right through it.” Samantha got up and hugged Olivia again. “Thank you. But he’ll never let me.”

“Let me talk with him.” As if that had helped anything so far. After that embarrassing incident with her dad earlier today, he’d probably never speak to her again.

On the other hand, he did owe her big-time for that little baby class stunt he’d pulled.

“Oh, would you?” Samantha pressed her hands together in a little clap. “I’d be really grateful.”

“Why don’t you go in and take a shower. There are some clean T-shirts and shorts in a pile on my bed.”

“A shower? But I—”

Olivia lifted Annabelle on her shoulder for a burp and stole a glance at Brad’s house. “Whether you need one or not. Because here he comes now.”

After Olivia deposited Annabelle in her bed, she found Brad standing outside, all lean and sexy attitude with big arms crossed and one leg propped up on the porch step. Except he looked madder than a bull with his balls tied off. And hotter than ever in a white T-shirt, shorts, and flip-flops.

The geraniums were finally taking off, thanks to her obsessive watering schedule. Realizing she hadn’t done it yet today, she took her glass of iced tea from a wicker table and dumped it in one of the barrels before she sat down. Anything to delay the confrontation.

“I know she’s in there,” he said. “Don’t deny it.”

“You make it sound like I’m harboring a fugitive.”

“There’s a penalty for that.” But he said it with a look that brought very
un
punishing images to mind. Involving lips and tongues and lots of skin-to-skin contact. Her internal temp gauge overloaded to midday Saudi Arabia instead of cool Connecticut evening, so she took a deep breath of night air to force some sense into her head. “Does it really matter if she stays here? It would give both of you a chance to calm down.”

“You’re meddling in my parenting skills.”

She lifted a brow. “As you did with mine.”

“Touché.”

“In this case, somebody had to since they’re clearly not working.” Olivia jumped up from the swing, leaving it creaking gently as she ran into the house.

“Where are you going?” he called, irritation cutting his voice. She came out a few minutes later, carrying a sweater.

Olivia told herself she was doing this for Samantha’s sake. To help everyone cool off. But breaking free from the house and all her responsibilities to spend an hour doing something fun with Brad made her positively giddy.

She wouldn’t even mention the tension between him and his sister. It wasn’t her business, and she shouldn’t get involved.

“This way.” She pushed her cell phone into the pocket of her jean capris and tugged his arm.

He stood his ground, frowning.

A slight smile escaped her lips. He was still as fiercely stubborn as a nor’easter blowing in off the coast. “There’s music in the park. Plus I want ice cream. Want to come?”

“It’s late.”

Olivia placed her hands on her hips. “Bradley Paul Rushford, Samantha is nineteen years old and you know as well as I do that not a thing is going to be solved tonight. She has studying to do and she said she’ll watch Annabelle. Now,
come on
.” This time he moved—feet dragging—as she pulled him along. A little faster than a kid about to get a butt-full of shots in the doctor’s office. “Fresh air will do us both some good.”

“What’s the band?” he asked reluctantly.

“It’s a group that sings old sea chanteys and drinking songs. They do unusual stuff with a mandolin and guitar.”

His expression softened microscopically, but at least he kept walking forward.

They made their way down the old tree-lined street, with sidewalks as bumpy and lopsided as crooked teeth from years of tree roots protesting against the concrete. Streetlamps lit their way past old turn-of-the-century homes, most cared for and loved, with tidy lawns and flower beds and signs of children’s toys scattered in the yards, abandoned after the fine long day.

After a minute, Brad took her hand, the most simple of gestures. She looked his way, but he was surveying the neighborhood as casually as if he wasn’t having a sudden heart attack and his pulse wasn’t pumping off the charts like hers.

His hand was warm, his grip firm. Simple hand-holding, but it sent a thunderous wall of heat rushing through her. An unwelcome realization shook her to the core. She wanted those fine hands all over her body, roaming, exploring, making her moan.

“Um,” she said, lifting up their joined hands.

A wicked sparkle flashed in his eyes. God, he was sexy and dangerous-looking when angry but gorgeous beyond words when he smiled.

Maybe this was a bad idea. She wasn’t sure how much longer she could resist him.

“Um, what?” he asked innocently.

“Um, I wasn’t sure you’d be talking to me after the picnic?”

He chuckled, a warm sound that soothed her agitated insides. “Your dad is just looking out for you. I’d feel the same way about Samantha. But I didn’t think you’d be talking to me, either.”

“Why not?”

He stopped walking and pinned her with his dark, intense gaze. A gaze that made her go gooey as melted caramel on the inside. “You know. After the way I tried to undermine you.”

He could undermine her any time he liked if he looked at her like that, as if he was about to lick her like an ice cream cone and devour her in one bite.

“I’ve been thinking you’re right about one thing. I have to figure out how to change my life for Annabelle’s benefit. I asked my boss if I could reduce my hours and do more work from home.”

“When do you hear back?” Did he sound hopeful? Pleased? Why did she care?

“She’s working on it. Any day now.”

“That’s great. I’m sure you’ll make it work, no matter what happens.”

They continued on in silence as the quaint residential neighborhood gave way to larger, older homes that once belonged to town founders and mayors and even a Gilded Age shipping baron or two. One had been converted into the B and B, which glowed with welcoming lights and overflowing flower baskets. Brad paused to chat with a young couple pushing a stroller and walking with two toddlers carrying raspberry-red balloons, out enjoying the perfect spring evening.

“I’ve forgotten how friendly everyone is,” Olivia said as they moved on to downtown.

Brad shrugged. “It’s who we are. Suppose that’s what happens when everybody knows everybody.”

“It’s different with my neighbors in New York. Mrs. Bertolini occasionally says ‘hi’ when forced, and the reclusive author down the hall comes out once or twice a year for air and groceries.” People were more unguarded here, and that was nice. Before she could get sentimental about it, Olivia reminded herself how quickly that quality could veer into buttinsky range.

They walked in silence for a while, passing Pie in the Sky and Mona’s. Across the street, in the park, a crowd gathered around the gazebo and the strains of a fiddle and mandolin drifted toward them. Call her crazy, but she decided to bite the bullet. For Samantha’s sake. “Funny that both of us were suddenly thrust into parenthood.”

Brad smiled. “With intensive on-the-job training.”

“You’ve done a great job with your siblings.”

“The boys I handled, somehow. It’s the girl who’s the thorn in my side.”

“I remember when she was around eight, you were her champion. You taught her how to stand up to that mean girl who kept stealing her lunch.”

He laughed. “We packed two lunches and she hid one in her book bag. The bologna sandwich she put in plain view in her locker had hot sauce on it. That solved the problem pretty quickly.”

“And remember how you tossed her a softball over and over until she learned to catch so she wouldn’t be the last one to be picked for a team?”

“Yeah, well, the issues are more complicated now. I’m not her hero any longer.”

“You might be surprised.” He looked unconvinced. “She’ll be all right. You both will be.” She touched his arm to second that. When he slowed his pace and glanced at her, struggle and worry shadowed his eyes. Why would he feel so much pain about a child who was kindhearted and good and clearly not a failure in any sense of the word?

“She does things just to get under my skin. And she thinks she’s in love with some deadbeat punk with a jewel in his nose. Who will use her then dump her. And I won’t have my sister taken advantage of like that.”

“It’s called a nose piercing. And she wouldn’t be home if she didn’t love you. She’s just hurting, like all of us.”

“It didn’t start with Kevin’s death. Samantha has always been the one who’s been the best at pushing the splinter further under my thumb. First it was skipping classes to protest animal cruelty. Then it was taking off on a whim to drive cross-country with a friend because she wanted to see the Grand Canyon. She wanted to take a year off before college and I wouldn’t let her. Now she’s talking about art school.
Art
school. What kind of job is she going to get from that?”

“Artists can do quite well. I have a friend—”

“Don’t, Olivia.” Brad blew out a frustrated breath. “I’ve heard it all. The point is, I’m responsible for her until she’s an adult. I have to make sure she turns out okay. And so far I’ve failed miserably. I begged her to study for the SAT. Do you know what she did? Got an extra job just to spite me—so she could say she had no time to study.”

BOOK: This Thing Called Love
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