Free Read Novels Online Home

Texas-Sized Trouble by Delores Fossen (12)

CHAPTER TWELVE

FOR JUST A split second, Tessie thought that maybe she’d stepped onto a set where Eve Cooper and another actor were playing out a scene. But nope. There were no cameras, no lighting. No crew. Only the strange thing she’d just witnessed.

Her mom kissing a cowboy in a dark alley outside a bar.

It was a first. Even when guys had taken her mother to studio parties and such, there hadn’t been any kissing in front of her. And neither the paparazzi nor the hornies had managed to snap any lip-lock photos like that. Of course, there must have been some kind of kissing going on the night her mom had gotten pregnant with Aiden, but again, Tessie hadn’t been around to see that—thank God.

“Tessie,” her mother said.

It wasn’t exactly a squeal of delight, but one quickly followed, and she ran to Tessie and dragged her into her arms. She didn’t hug her long though. Probably because her mom felt her go stiff.

Tessie hadn’t meant to react like that, but all the hurt came. Feelings that her mother probably understood—from her own way of seeing things, that is. Her mom almost certainly knew that the lie she’d told her for so long had cut at her in a way that would never heal. At least that’s how Tessie felt about it.

Somehow, though, despite Tessie’s stiffness, her mom was still smiling when she pulled back and looked at her. “You came,” she said, but then she shook her head. “How’d you know I’d be here?”

“Your sitter. I went by your new house at the Heavenly Pastures Ranch, and she said Cassidy and you were here at the Longhorn. She gave me the address and directions. I was about to go in and ask for you, but then I saw you. With him.” Tessie tipped her head to him. “Who is he?”

But it wasn’t necessary for her mother to answer. That’s because at that exact moment, the cowboy stepped from the shadows, and Tessie got a good look at his face.

Oh, shit.

It was Lawson Granger.

He came closer, and for a second it seemed as if he was going to shake her hand or introduce himself. No intro, though, when he looked at her. His mouth dropped open for a couple of seconds, but like her mom’s hug, it didn’t last. His breathing became a little noisy, and his eyes narrowed.

Tessie mentally repeated her oh, shit and added some more curse words.

She hadn’t exactly looked her best when he’d come to the sorority house in Austin because she’d been falling-down drunk and slumped in the middle of two puking classmates. Lawson hadn’t known who she was that day, but he certainly knew who she was now since Eve had blurted out her name.

Tessie had avoided Eve discovering the drunk-thing that day because once she’d heard her mom in the foyer of the building, she’d stayed at the top of the stairs to talk to her. No chance of Eve sniffing her breath that way. Then Tessie had lied through her teeth by saying she had the stomach flu. Even with that, her mom had wanted to come up and see her, but Tessie had put down her foot and said no.

Good thing Tessie hadn’t actually had to put down her foot, or she might have toppled down the stairs. During the entire forty-five-second conversation, she’d had to steady herself by gripping the railing.

Lawson’s mouth moved a little, and while he didn’t actually say any words, his body language let Tessie know what he was thinking.

He was so going to rat her out.

That would add a nasty layer of crap to her already crap-coated relationship with her mother. She hadn’t come to Wrangler’s Creek to bury the hatchet with her mom—not exactly, anyway—but after prodding from Cassidy, Tessie had thought it was a good time to start trying to work things out. Obviously, her timing for that sucked though, and her mom might be thinking the same thing since she’d seemed pretty wrapped up in that kiss.

A kiss from the very man who could make this much worse than it already was.

“Oh,” her mom said, volleying glances at both Lawson and her. Uneasy glances. Great. Eve was probably picking up on the tension. “I haven’t introduced you. Tessie, this is Lawson Granger. Lawson, this is my daughter.”

Tessie certainly wasn’t going to be the first to say anything and step in something she was trying to step around. But Lawson didn’t exactly jump to chat, either.

“Tessie and I spoke on the phone earlier,” he growled.

“Yes, he just told me that you’d called him.” Her mom sounded relieved and on edge at the same time.

Tessie knew exactly how she felt. The cowboy wasn’t blurting out anything. That was the good news. The bad news was that he probably didn’t have amnesia, so he might just be keeping his mouth shut to try to figure out a way to break the news to her mother.

“It’s nice to meet you,” Tessie said to Lawson. It wasn’t, but she had no idea what else to say to him. However, she did know what to tell her mother. “I need to be going. I just wanted to stop by and say hello.”

“Going?” Eve repeated, making it sound as if Tessie had just told her she was about to elope to Vegas. “You just got here. And it’s dark. You don’t want to drive back to Austin in the dark. You can stay the night at my house—our house,” she corrected herself. “I have a room fixed up for you.”

Tessie could have predicted all of that word for word, but as she’d done on the stairs that day in Austin, she shook her head. This time, it didn’t cause a severe dizzy spell because she hadn’t had a drop to drink.

“Let’s just take this in baby steps,” Tessie told her.

“It was good to meet you,” she repeated to Lawson, and she headed out of the alley.

Of course, her mother came after her, and she fell in step alongside Tessie as she walked to her car. “Maybe before you go, we can just pop by the diner and have a cup of coffee,” Eve suggested.

“I really do need to get back.” That was partly true. She didn’t need to stand around there even though it seemed as if the cowboy was going to keep his mouth shut. That was a surprise. He really did have cop’s eyes.

Her mom tried again. “Please, let’s just go somewhere and talk.” She glanced back at the cowboy who was making his way toward them. “There’s something important I need to tell you,” she added in a whisper.

Tessie knew where this was going. Her mom wanted to apologize, again. But she wasn’t in the mood to hear it. It’d been a huge mistake coming here, and now she needed to cut her losses and get going.

She threw open her car door as soon as she reached it and got inside. Thankfully, her mom didn’t try to get in with her. With the cowboy behind her staring holes in Tessie, Eve stayed put on the sidewalk and looked ready to launch into some more moping and crying. After what her mom had done with the lying, Tessie didn’t want to feel bad about that.

But she did.

Tessie felt like crap.

Despite what’d happened, Eve was her mom, and Tessie loved her. Still, it was going to take a little more time for her to get to a point where her stomach didn’t twist into a knot at the thought of that lie. A lie that hadn’t been for Tessie’s benefit, either, but for her own. Eve hadn’t wanted her hornies fans to know that she’d gotten knocked up because it would have ruined her kick-ass, perfect image.

Tessie started the car and looked at the front doorway of the bar. There was another guy in jeans and a cowboy hat, and he was watching them. She hadn’t wanted to start any gossip for her mom, but this would probably do it. The effed-up daughter had returned to eff-up things even more.

The glaring cowboy behind her mom would see it that way.

She shifted her attention back to Eve. She’d seen her a couple of times since learning the truth that she was her real mother. And just like those other times, Tessie tried to pick through the features of her face to see if she could see any part of herself there.

She couldn’t.

Her mom with her blond hair and green eyes, and there she was with brown hair and blue eyes. That was why Tessie had never once suspected that they shared any DNA.

But...

The cowboy was a different story. Dark brown hair. Like hers. But then, lots of people had hair that color.

He came closer, and the streetlights caught his eyes just right so she could see the color. Blue. Again, like hers. But again, lots of people had blue eyes.

How many of those blue-eyed, brown-haired men, though, had she ever seen kissing her mother?

Just this one.

Tessie got that knot in her stomach again and was ready to hit the accelerator and get out of there. However, when she went to shut the car door, the cowboy caught onto it as if to help her.

“If you don’t tell your mom, I will,” he whispered just loud enough so that only Tessie would hear it.

She didn’t have to guess what he meant. He was talking about her getting drunk. And while Tessie was indeed concerned about that, she had a new concern. A new knot in her stomach. Because she glanced at both her mom and him.

And that’s when Tessie knew her mother had yet one more truth she needed to come clean about.

* * *

WHEN LAWSON CAME out of the barn, he saw Cassidy and his mom on the back porch of the Granger house. Cassidy had the baby in one of those front-facing pouch carriers, and with Aiden’s little arms and legs flailing around, it made it look as if she had a turtle strapped to her.

Seeing them was a surprise since the porch had been empty about fifteen minutes earlier. That’s when Lawson had left the office inside the house to go to the barn to have a chat with one of the horse trainers.

What was especially bad was that Cassidy and his mom appeared to be waiting for him.

When he first spotted them, both were looking down at the baby and grinning, but that stopped when their eyes landed on him.

“Is there a fire inside?” he asked, only half joking. “Is that why you’re out here?”

“No fire,” his mother jumped to answer. “I was on my way to the barn to find you. I didn’t know Cassidy was coming, too, but we’re here to talk to you.”

Lawson sighed. “Is this about Eve, Darby or that stain you found on your red silk dress when I was seven?”

Regina had already opened her mouth to answer until he threw in that last one. She did indeed want to know about the stain that he had denied many times over the years, but obviously, she wasn’t going to let that distract her.

“Eve,” his mom said.

Cassidy made a sound of agreement. Aiden just belched and then giggled about it. Lawson thought maybe the kid had the right reaction. There was nothing he could do to stop whatever lecture he was about to get, so maybe belching was the answer. He tried it and got a laugh from Aiden. His mom and Cassidy weren’t as easily amused though.

Since it was hot and he didn’t want the baby outside for too long, Lawson walked past them and into the sunroom so they would follow him.

They did.

Lawson turned to meet head-on whatever his mother’s beef was. “Okay, hit me with what you got, but do it one at a time and do it fast because I’ve got a mountain of paperwork on my desk.”

Regina apparently thought she had first dibs because she started. “It’s all over town about you kissing Eve outside the Longhorn last night.”

He was about to ask how the heck that had gotten around. To the best of his knowledge, no one other than Tessie had seen them kissing, and he doubted that she’d blabbed. The other couple making out likely hadn’t looked away from each other long enough to draw breath, much less see what had gone on. But in Wrangler’s Creek, the gossips seemed to have mind-reading skills to assist them.

“You know I hate to interfere with your life,” Regina went on, “but I feel I have to say something.”

It was true for the most part. Regina didn’t interfere because she was rarely around. But when she did show up, yes, interference for at least one of her kids was on the agenda.

“Are you telling me not to get involved with Eve again?” Lawson came out and asked.

Regina nodded. “But not for the reason you think. I’ve given up on Darby and you. I can see that it’s just not going to work. But Eve’s in a vulnerable place right now. She just had that precious baby, and she’s upset about her breakup with Kellan Carver. It’s all over the tabloids that she’s falling apart over losing him.”

Cassidy rolled her eyes, verifying what Lawson already knew from personal knowledge. Eve was indeed upset, but it had nothing to do with the horn-boy. It was all because of Tessie. And maybe because the kissing that Lawson and she had been doing was confusing her some. It was certainly confusing him.

“Anyway, I’m here to ask you to give Eve some time to work out her feelings. You’d be just a Band-Aid now to her broken heart, which means you could end up getting hurt again, too.”

Part of that was true. He could end up getting hurt. But he could have argued about Eve’s broken heart since she’d been the one to leave him. If he did that though, it would only lengthen the lecture, and that was the last thing he wanted to do since it appeared his mom was winding down.

She smiled, kissed Aiden on the top of his head and turned to Cassidy. “Make sure you come by so I can introduce you to Lucian.” Regina winked at Cassidy.

Lawson hoped that unholy intro didn’t happen, but Cassidy was a grown woman, and he didn’t want to interfere—as his mom had just done. And as Cassidy was likely about to do.

“And you come by the house, too,” Regina added to Lawson. He also got a kiss on the cheek before his mom headed out back.

One down, one to go. He took a deep breath to steel himself for the next round, which might have more bite to it than motherly concern.

Cassidy put her hands over Aiden’s ears. “Don’t dick around with Eve’s feelings. Got that?” And with the shortest lecture in recent history, she would have just walked out if Lawson hadn’t stepped in front of Cassidy to stop her.

“Did Eve say something to you about me?” he asked.

She looked at him as if he’d sprouted an extra nose. “For nearly every minute of the eighteen years that I’ve known Eve, she’s talked about you. Or Tessie. Or Brett. She has nightmares about Brett, you know? She cries about Tessie. But you’re the one who can send her into a tailspin. She’s my best friend, and I’d like to avoid future tailspinning.”

Yeah, so would he, but it almost seemed inevitable when it came to Eve.

He kept vowing to keep his distance from her, kept vowing to not kiss her, and then that plan would go to hell in a handbasket the moment he laid eyes on her. He had to do better. Because Cassidy was right. Eve wasn’t in a good place to have her feelings dicked with.

“Eve kept that dress, you know,” Cassidy went on a moment later. “The one she bought with all her babysitting money.”

Lawson had been following this conversation just fine. Until now. “What dress?”

“The pink strapless one she was going to wear to the Sadie Hawkins dance your senior year. She was going to wear it and tell you...something important.”

Well, hell. Now he was really interested. “Tell me what?”

But Cassidy immediately waved that off. “I’m not sure, but I know that dress meant a lot to her. When she took it out of the Lawson, etc. box, she got misty-eyed.”

At least he wasn’t clueless about the box because he’d seen it at her house, but cluelessness was plentiful on the rest of this. “Why would a dress make her misty-eyed? Especially a dress she never even wor—”

He stopped. Because he got it then. She’d bought the dress when they were still together, and it was probably a reminder that she’d broken off things with him and moved before she could wear it.

Lawson was still a little confused, though, on the misty-eyed part.

“Are you saying that Eve regrets breaking up with me?” Lawson asked, but then he decided it was best not to hear the answer. He gave his own take on it. “I didn’t end that relationship. She did.”

Cassidy acknowledged that with a nod. “But that doesn’t mean she can’t be all sad about something she’d planned and fantasized about for months. She kept that dress, so that means it was very important to her.”

“Fantasized?” he questioned.

“Not that kind of fantasy,” Cassidy scolded. “She wanted you to dance with her while she was wearing that dress. It’s a metaphor for lost youth, innocence and all that shit.” She covered Aiden’s ears for the last word.

Now they were talking metaphors. Well, Lawson knew some things about lost innocence and other shit. And that dance was going to be an important night for him, too.

Not the dancing part though.

No way had he ever intended to do that.

But Lawson had planned on going and giving Eve the gift he’d bought her over Christmas break. He hadn’t given it to her at Christmas because the timing hadn’t felt right. But instead he’d saved it for the night of Sadie Hawkins. A night that had never come because Eve had already moved to California by then.

“Why are you telling me all of this?” he asked.

Cassidy got in his face, which meant Aiden was right there, too. The kid smiled and kicked his feet, his toes landing against Lawson’s stomach. “I’m telling you because Eve is still hanging on to a lot more than just that dress and the Lawson, etc. box. Remember what I said about not dicking around with her feelings.” She didn’t cover Aiden’s ears that time, but she only mouthed the word dicking.

Lawson had already gotten the point without the dress story. That didn’t mean though that he wouldn’t screw up again. Especially since there was a big reason he might get pulled right back in. A reason that didn’t have anything to do with lust, dresses or dances that he would have never danced.

“Did Eve tell you that Tessie came to the Longhorn last night?” Lawson asked.

Cassidy nodded, sighed and moved back out of his face. “Tears were involved. Lots of them. Despite Eve’s crying, I see it as a good start that Tessie came here. Any idea why Tessie left so suddenly after driving all this way to see Eve?”

Lawson knew all right. It was because Tessie had probably been scared that he was going to tell on her. And he would if the girl hadn’t come clean with Eve. But he didn’t intend to get into that with Cassidy.

“Tessie saw Eve and me kissing,” Lawson admitted. “That might have upset her.”

“Maybe,” Cassidy said as if giving that some thought. But dismissed whatever she was thinking with a head shake. “When all of us were still in California, Tessie was always trying to get Eve to go out on dates, so I doubt that would have bothered her.”

Cassidy looked him straight in the eyes as if waiting for him to tell her the truth, but Lawson didn’t spill anything. He gave Aiden’s toes another jiggle and changed the subject. “How’s this little man doing?”

Cassidy’s long stare continued a moment longer before she dragged in a long breath. “He’s a crappy sleeper, is frequently gassy, as you heard, and he will pinch any part of your body that he can reach when you’re feeding him a bottle. Not soft pinching, either. He gets a good grip.” She kissed Aiden and grinned at him. “But he owns every bit of my heart, and the little shit knows it.” She covered Aiden’s ears for the shit word.

Aiden laughed.

Lawson could see how this kid could manage some heart-claiming. Of course, maybe he felt that way because he’d been the one to bring him into the world.

“It won’t be long before he’ll be ready to go out riding.” Lawson hadn’t intended to say that out loud. It made him seem too, well, involved. And that’s when he knew it was time to skedaddle.

“I’ll watch my step with Eve,” he added.

Lawson said goodbye and headed toward his office. He nearly made it, too, but then he saw Nicky coming out of the kitchen. Like Cassidy, she was also carrying a baby. Her six-month-old son, Ben. The kid was sacked out with his head dropped down on Nicky’s shoulder.

Since Nicky and Garrett lived here now, it wasn’t a surprise to see her there, but then he saw the serious look on her face. Not a frown exactly but close. Which meant Lawson was probably about to get another round of lecturing. If Cassidy and his mom had heard about the kissing going on between Eve and him, then Nicky almost certainly had heard, as well.

First, he put his hands over Ben’s ears even though there was little chance the sleeping kid could hear it. “Don’t worry. I’m not going to dick around with Eve,” Lawson volunteered.

Nicky blinked, clearly surprised by that confession. “Oh. Okay.” She tipped her head toward the hall just off the kitchen. “Might be a good thing since she just arrived and is waiting for you in your office.”

Lawson blinked, too. “Eve’s here?”

Nicky used her free hand to pat his arm. “Maybe it’s a good time for you to clear up that no dicking around. First, though, you should probably try to convince yourself that it isn’t going to happen again.”

And with that wise but smart-ass advice, Nicky smiled and strolled away.

Lawson didn’t stroll. He made a beeline to his office, walking faster than he usually would, but he stopped in the hall when he caught sight of Eve. She was standing and looking at something on his desk.

It wasn’t something he’d planned to do, but he took a moment to admire the view.

She was wearing a blue dress that hit a couple of inches above her knees. It was just short enough for him to see plenty of her legs. Her butt, too, when she leaned farther across his desk. The motion caused the dress to slide and cling in all the best places.

Speaking of the best places, she turned to the side, giving him a nice view of her breasts. Again, the fabric cooperated, and it was almost as if he could see her without her clothes. And he suddenly wished he could do just that.

Of course, this wasn’t helping him convince himself about that no-dicking-around promise.

Thankfully, she didn’t notice him ogling her. She kept her attention on his desk, but she was moving back and forth the way a person would if they were trying to look at something from a different angle or in a different light. Since he had payroll reports, orders for worming meds and a memo to the hands about the lousy job they’d done mucking horseshit from the west barn, he couldn’t imagine what she found so riveting.

Maybe she sensed he was there because she whirled around. Her eyes widened as if she’d been caught doing something wrong. Lawson felt that way, too. Except he was betting his “something wrong” upped hers. He’d been undressing her with his eyes while she’d just been reading paperwork.

“I hope this isn’t a bad time for a visit,” she said. “As I was pulling into the driveway, I saw Cassidy leaving out on the side road and figured she’d come here to talk to you.” Her breath was unsteady, and it was causing her chest to heave a little. Just what he didn’t need if he wanted to keep his attention off her breasts.

He went in but didn’t close the door. Best not to add the temptation of privacy to this mix. “Cassidy’s worried about you, that’s all. Are you okay? I mean because of Tessie,” he added when she just stared at him.

“Yes.” She stuttered on that word. “I mean, I was upset when she drove off like that last night, and that’s why I had to leave, too, and go home.”

Yeah, Lawson had gotten that. He hadn’t been in much of a mood to stick around, either. He was about to ask her if she’d talked to Tessie since then, but when he went closer, he saw what she’d been looking at on his desk. Not mucking memos or deworming orders. But rather those damn tabloid magazines with Eve’s picture on the cover.

“Tate’s girlfriend brought them over,” Lawson said as fast as he could manage.

She nodded. “Sophie mentioned it. I’ll sign them for her before I leave.”

Good. Then he could get them off his desk and not have daily visual reminders of one of the worst times of his life. Of course, he had no good explanation for why they were on his desk and not tucked away in a drawer where he couldn’t see them. He had tried to do that, but it hadn’t lasted more than a couple of minutes.

“Was something wrong with them?” he asked. “You were looking at them pretty hard when I came in.”

There was the traditional deer-in-the-headlights look, and then there was a deer-in-the-headlights look on steroids. Eve had the second one.

“I, uh, just thought I saw fingerprints or something on the covers,” she muttered.

On the surface that seemed a dumb thing to say. The magazines were old, had glossy finishes and had been handled by plenty of people. But then he remembered Sophie had seen him looking at, and touching, one of the covers.

Hell.

Had Sophie actually spilled the beans about it? Judging from Eve’s expression, Sophie had indeed done that, and he was going to take it up with Miss Tattletale the next time he saw her.

Since Lawson wasn’t about to confess to picture fondling, he moved on to an even more uncomfortable topic. “Did Tessie call you after she saw us last night?”

She shook her head. “You mean to talk about us kissing.” Eve didn’t wait for him to say no, that his question wasn’t about that. “Honestly, I was surprised, but she must have been upset to run off like that.”

Lawson took a deep breath because he knew he was going to need it. He didn’t like applying the tattletale label here because this wasn’t something that should stay a secret. Still, it was going to feel pretty crappy to do this.

He took Eve by the hand and led her to the sofa across from his desk. That alone let her know that something bad was up, but Lawson suspected he had a grim look on his face, too.

“Remember when I went to Austin to try to talk to Tessie?” That was all he managed to say before the color drained from her face.

“Oh, God.” And she repeated that a couple of times. “You saw her. And she saw you.” There went another round of the repeated Oh, God, and Lawson didn’t think it was part of some prayer, either.

Lawson hated that she was having this kind of reaction when he hadn’t even gotten to the bad stuff yet, but there was no easy way to soften the blow.

“Tessie was drunk when I got there. I stopped her two puking friends from taking her out of the building and then handed her off to her roommate when she came down the stairs. Her sober roommate,” he said, clarifying his last statement.

Eve’s mouth dropped open, and while he was expecting it, Eve quit Oh, God-ing. In fact, she seemed a little relieved. For a few seconds, anyway.

“Tessie was drunk?” she asked.

“Yeah. Staggering, falling-down-on-her-ass drunk.” And he gave her a moment to absorb that.

Eve didn’t absorb it well.

Her mouth stayed open, tears sprang to her eyes, and she made a sound that only a really pissed-off mother could make. He knew about that sound because he’d heard his own mom make it a time or two.

“What the heck was she thinking?” Eve blurted out. “Why would she do something that stupid?”

That was just the start of Eve’s questions that he couldn’t answer, and he was feeling pissed off and emotional about it, too. Because it had indeed been a stupid thing for Tessie to do. Along with being downright dangerous, it had brought back the memories of Brett. Hell, it was still bringing them back.

Eve continued asking a few more angry questions before she got to the one he’d been expecting. “Why didn’t you tell me this sooner?”

He didn’t have to answer because he saw the light bulb go on in her eyes. “You didn’t know it was Tessie until last night.” And she filled in the rest of the blanks. “That’s why she drove off like that, because she was afraid you were going to tell me what happened.”

The tears filled her eyes again, and this time they spilled down her cheeks. Lawson couldn’t do much to soothe this, but he pulled her into his arms and let her cry it out.

“She knows how I feel about someone her age drinking,” Eve went on.

Yes, and that might have been the reason Tessie had done it. Maybe this had been her way of getting back at her mom, or he could be just overthinking it. She could just have the wrong friends.

“God, what am I going to do?” Eve sobbed. “She’s barely talking to me.” She lifted her head off his shoulder, and Lawson saw she’d moved past the shock and gone back to being pissed off. “Well, she’ll talk to me because I’m going up to Austin to have it out with her.”

While Lawson thought that talking could be a good thing, he had to stop Eve from bolting for the door. “Best to think this through, and then if you still want to go, I’ll take you. We can even talk to her together if you want.”

That put a new emotion in her eyes. Not so much anger but something else. Regret, maybe. Yeah, he had plenty of that, too.

“Just take a deep breath,” he instructed. And he waited until she’d taken a couple of them. “If you go up there this mad, it’s only going to drive you two further apart. Plus, she’s in college, not exactly a kid.”

In fact, now that he thought about it, Tessie might not even be underage. Still, she had done something stupid. Getting drunk and then leaving to go God knew where with God knew who. She could have gotten in a car accident or been a victim of date rape.

Lawson put a stop to those thoughts because he was getting riled again. And he was thinking too much like a parent and not a “friend” of someone who was one—Eve. He took some deep breaths of his own before he continued.

“Because of what happened to Brett, we automatically think the worst in situations like this,” he went on. He tried to keep his voice level. “We’ve got that holding us back from drinking too much. At least it’s held me back.”

She nodded. “Yes, I just cry it out when things start to get to me. It’s hard to be drunk when you’re a mom.”

True. And Eve had adopted Tessie around the time she’d been of actual legal drinking age, so there probably hadn’t been a lot of opportunities for that sort of thing.

“Tessie was sort of your anchor,” he said.

She looked up at him, opened her mouth again and then closed it as if she’d changed her mind about what she had been about to say. “You didn’t have an anchor.”

That was true, as well. By the time Brett died, Lawson’s folks had long been divorced, and with both of them more in than out of Wrangler’s Creek, the housekeepers and Lucian had ended up raising him.

Which meant there wasn’t much raising going on.

It was the same for his brothers, Dylan and Reed. At least Lawson had had Garrett. Not exactly an anchor since they were close to the same age, but Garrett had kicked his butt when it needed kicking. Something he’d needed quite often.

“What am I going to do?” Eve repeated, still looking up at him.

“You’ll talk to Tessie once you’ve finished your cry.”

But she seemed to have already finished that. And he wasn’t entirely sure she was just talking about Tessie here. Judging from the look in her eyes, he was part of that million-dollar question, too.

Lawson knew it was a mistake for the long look she was giving him to continue. Especially since he was in the long-looking mode, too. However, he gathered up every ounce of willpower he had to make sure he didn’t kiss her. Apparently though, Eve hadn’t done any such gathering because she leaned in and kissed him.

It was a struggle, but he didn’t take hold of her and pull her to him. Didn’t deepen the kiss, either. He just sat there while she pressed her lips to his and while he felt that willpower burning to ash.

She lingered a little while with the kiss. Long enough for him to pick up her taste and scent. And plenty long enough for him to want a whole lot more.

“What are we doing?” she whispered when she eased back and met his gaze.

“To hell if I know.” He tipped his head to his desk. “See those reports and memo? They follow a thread of logic. Shit needs to be removed, so I assign the task and it gets done. All this kissing we’re doing isn’t logical.”

It did make sense though. Well, it did if he accepted lust as a sensible reason. Since they were no longer teenagers, that probably wasn’t an acceptable excuse.

That didn’t stop him.

Without any willpower to help him out, Lawson slid his hand around the back of her head and kissed her. And this time, there was indeed some deepening involved.

It was as if he snapped. As if Eve snapped, too. All the lust and hunger hit them both like a scorcher heat wave that raced right through them. Not good. Because deep kisses led to jockeying for position so they could get closer to each other.

Lawson fixed that problem by hauling Eve onto his lap.

Since this was their third set of kissing as adults, Lawson couldn’t fix the problem of dismissing it. Nope. It seemed stupid not to admit that this attraction just wasn’t going away, and since it wasn’t, Lawson made the most of the kissing. And of his favorite part, the touching. Even though he knew this was going to lead to something much more that they’d likely end up regretting.

Regrets aside for now, his hand ended up between them, which, all in all, was a good place for it to be, and she slid his hand around her back. Then to her butt. It not only gave him some premium touching, but it allowed him to align their lower bodies just right.

Again, he was thankful for that blue dress because it just slid right up on her thighs, making room for the front of her panties to land against the front of his zipper.

Definitely some premium touching now.

And it would have continued if he hadn’t heard the sound of someone saying, “Am I interrupting anything, Baby-Cakes?”

At this point, Lawson wouldn’t have wanted to hear anything other than Eve’s continuing purr, but this voice was one that was especially unwelcome.

Because it was Kellan Carver’s. And the asshole was standing in the doorway, grinning at them.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Lexy Timms, Alexa Riley, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Jenika Snow, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Dale Mayer, Bella Forrest, Sloane Meyers, Amelia Jade, Zoey Parker,

Random Novels

INSATIABLE BREATH OF DARKNESS by Candice Stauffer

Everything We Give: A Novel (The Everything Series Book 3) by Kerry Lonsdale

Free at last - Box Set by Annie Stone

Never Tell a Lie by Lexy Timms

The Barren (Kelderan Runic Warriors Book 2) by Jessie Donovan

Her Duke at Daybreak Mythic Dukes Trilogy by Wendy LaCapra

Zion: A Doctor Shifter Romance (Bradford Bears Book 2) by Terra Wolf

The Red Fury (d'Vant Bloodlines Book 2) by Kathryn Le Veque

Cougarlicious by Lily Ryan

Shane (The Mallick Brothers Book 1) by Jessica Gadziala

The Beta's Love Song (Hobson Hills Omegas) by C.W. Gray

Shadow of Thorns (Midnight's Crown Book 2) by Ripley Proserpina

by Lacey Carter Andersen

Hollywood Heartbreak by C.J. Duggan

Eight Cozy Nights (The Sublime Book 6) by Julia Wolf

The Queen's Dance: Book 3 of The Emerging Queens Series by Jamie K. Schmidt

Christmas Crush (Holiday Studs Book 3) by Jewel Killian

The Reluctant Socialite by L.M. Halloran

Shifter Mate Magic: Ice Age Shifters Book 1 by Carol Van Natta

Hired Bear (Bears of Pinerock County Book 5) by Zoe Chant