Free Read Novels Online Home

On the Edge (Blue Spruce Lodge Book 1) by Dani Collins (11)

Chapter Eleven

Spring had finally arrived. Not a brilliant spring day. Clouds kept scudding across the sun, threatening to gather into something more ominous. The breeze was cool and she could still see her breath when she stood in the shadows, but in those short bursts of sunshine, the joy of rebirth beckoned. Birds twittered and green was poking through the brown stalks and leaves that had been revealed as the snow melted.

Winter, Glory decided, was over. Cabin fever was upon her and she went outside.

Despite rumors to the contrary, she didn’t hate the outdoors. That was her father’s impression based on the fact he had too often surprised her with a frog-march into the wilderness to be eaten alive by insects and lie awake in wet sleeping bags, convinced the howls of coyotes were getting closer and the snap of a twig was a serial killer escaped from a nearby prison that didn’t exist.

Glory had wanted to like camping, but had way too vivid an imagination for it. So did her father because he believed he was good at it when he was actually horrible. Something vital was always left at home, like matches or toilet paper.

When she packed herself a protein bar and a water bottle, however, and smeared herself with sunscreen and bug repellant, and only went out for half a day, she had a fairly high tolerance for the outdoors. If she could also take pretty photos and post them on her mother’s page, so she didn’t have to think of fresh content, hashtag winning.

That bear video had been gold. She wasn’t hoping to stumble upon another one, not on foot, but a minute or two of that goofy dog, Murphy, chasing a stick might be almost as good. Who didn’t love photos of a dog rolling in wildflowers? Evil-doers. That’s who.

She took him with her, hoping he would save her if she did come upon a bear. Or a cougar. One of the guys in the dining room had said the other morning that he’d spotted a mountain lion near the washout. She hadn’t been able to tell if he was pulling her leg, but there were enough locals in the room who treated such a sighting as normal that she believed it was a true account.

She didn’t let trepidation stop her. She wasn’t going to tromp into the bush anyway. She was just going to wander up the trail on the far side of the pond, the one skiers would take when returning for the day. A crew had freshly cleared it last week for some of Gerald’s surveyors.

It wasn’t even a quarter of a mile, but it was all uphill and she couldn’t even call the dog when she got up there. She stood with her hands on her hips, trying to catch her breath with lungs aching from the cold air she was gasping. Her jaw hurt and spit gathered in her mouth.

When she looked back, however, the effort was worth it. From this distance, the stains on the siding and the disrepair weren’t visible. Blue Spruce Lodge looked charming, situated next to the glassy pond that held a mirror finish under the flat gray sky. Leaves on the surrounding shrubs were starting to bud, smudging pastel greens over the dull granites and charcoals of winter. With smoke puffing out of the chimney, it looked like a dollhouse. Like the kind of place a little girl dreamed of living.

She did live there. How surreal.

She took a photo, not sure when she would post it. She had begun working on a website for the lodge, but she wanted to wait until it was renovated and open before making an announcement to her mother’s fans. Partly it was a branding issue. She didn’t want to attach her mother’s name to something that might fail. The other side of it was a fear of success. Her mother’s fans were an enthusiastic lot. It wouldn’t surprise Glory a bit if people showed up simply because it was owned by Kathleen Cormer’s husband. She had even started thinking about retreats and other events she could host to exploit that excitement and help ensure the viability of her father’s dream.

A sharp whistle pierced the air, making her whimper. That wasn’t a Sweet-you whistle Trigg might toss her way as a tease. Nope, it was the command to heel that Rolf used on Murphy.

Brilliant.

She turned, hands still on her hips, lungs still working to chew the thin air.

Rolf was near the old lift line, judging by the mangled metal pole bent like a broken flower stalk beside him. He had his camera in his hand and leaned to scrub the dog’s ear before starting toward her.

It took way too long, making her heart begin hammering for a new reason. His jeans were faded down the thighs from hugging the muscles of his long-legged stride. He wore a hard hat and a safety vest along with a radio like Nate always had. He stomped over in heavy, no-nonsense boots that probably had steel toes. He was not looking happy.

“What’s wrong?” he said as soon as he was close enough to be heard over the drone of the machinery down below. An excavator was digging a big hole next to a white tent. A blue outhouse was set off to the side. Trigg and Nate were shoulders deep beneath the hood of Trigg’s recently purchased, well-used, off-road pick-up truck. He was super proud of it, mostly—Glory suspected—because the purchase irritated his brother.

“Nothing. I felt like a walk. I didn’t realize the dog would be in the way.” Now she felt like an idiot. “That you would be working.”

It was Saturday, but of course they were working. She’d seen him and Trigg leave this morning in their work gear. She and her dad worked weekends. Even Devon’s crew worked half days on the weekends. They were all under the gun to get this place making money instead of eating it. She should be working on the lodge’s website right now, not playing Hansel and Gretel up here.

“He’s fine up here. And he knows to stay in the tent when he’s down there.”

“Oh. Okay. Good.” She looked for a way to get out of this scintillating conversation. Was the sky clearing? Or getting worse? “Busy down there,” she said, because stating the obvious was always fascinating.

Trucks had been carrying twisted metal out of here all week. Rolf, Nate, and Trigg were spending most of their days there, rather than returning to the lodge for chunks of the morning and afternoon.

She was not missing them. Maybe Rolf had been almost nice, giving her a lift from Haven and letting her post that video from the other day, but she didn’t read much into it.

“Did Trigg say he’d take you to the top?” Rolf frowned at the little point-and-shoot in her hand.

“No, I just felt like a walk. But I was curious about the lookout. How far is it?” She looked up at where the avalanche had come down. The swath was peppered with a couple of shallow holes where the old lift towers might have stood. Tracks had been carved around them by ATVs.

“I’ll take you.”

“What? Oh, no. You don’t have to.”

“You shouldn’t go alone.”

“You’re up here alone.”

“I have this.” He touched the radio mic clipped to his shoulder.

She didn’t know whether to argue that it looked like rain or say she had changed her mind.

He didn’t give her a chance to say anything, telling Murphy, “Find your stick,” before he walked back to where he’d been standing, snagging a camera bag off the ground and shouldering it. The dog took off ahead of him and she had no choice but to follow.

Her thighs began screaming almost immediately. Rolf set a hard pace, eating up the climb like it was flat ground. Just when she was about to vomit or beg, he paused and looked back, catching her glaring at him for trying to kill her.

The corner of his mouth quirked. “Less yoga, more cardio,” he suggested.

She was about to tell him what he could do with his advice when Murphy ran up with his stick. She absently reached to pry it from his mouth, realizing at the last second—“Oh my gawd. That’s not a stick, you insane animal.”

It was the leg bone of a deer or some other long-gone creature. It was clean and dry, at least, picked clean by birds and weathered by winter, but disgusting all the same.

“Drop it,” she said.

The dog did, then looked at her, waiting for her to pick it up and throw it.

She hesitated, able to see how that would turn out.

She thought she heard Rolf snicker.

“You deal with it.” She started up the track ahead of him.

A moment later, something landed off to her right. The dog ran up to get it. It was a real stick. Smart aleck.

Rolf came up behind her, adding pressure as she grittily set one foot in front of the other. Rain began to spit and her brain said, Fuck this shit with every step, but she made herself keep climbing. She was committed now.

“Oh, dear God,” she gasped as they arrived at a rundown hut on stilts standing guard over a small plateau. She leaned her hands on her knees, trying to catch her breath. Her chest was going to explode and she willed the pain in her legs to fade along with the stitch in her side.

Rolf glanced at his watch. “Not my best time.” The usual hardness in his expression was absent as he gazed out over the view.

He was having fun with her. Him. Mr. Mean Jeans. He was teasing her for being out of breath.

“It’s the elevation.”

He threw the stick for the dog.

She stood and took in the panorama. Even with the darkening clouds, it was stunning. Actually, it was better because of the clouds. She loved sunny days and blue skies and flowers, but there was something exhilarating in signs of a coming storm. Mother nature in all her magnificence.

The wind was kicking up, carrying both warm and cold layers. She wanted to smile, liking the energy that gathered around her.

They both took several photos, then lowered their cameras.

“It’s even better up there,” he said, pointing further up the slope toward a copse of trees that had survived above the track of the old avalanche.

“Forget that.”

He shrugged and clicked off his camera, squinted at the sky, then stowed the camera in its bag. “Gonna rain soon anyway.”

“How far?” she asked.

“Five minutes.”

She narrowed her eyes. “Your legs or mine?”

His mouth slid sideways. “Mine. Ten minutes,” he allowed with a pithy blink at her jeans and dirty sneakers.

Ugh. She’d come this far.

“Fine.” She jerked her chin, waiting until he was ahead of her before she let her mouth twitch. This wasn’t supposed to be fun, but for some reason it was.

She followed him into the trees. A more determined rain began to patter through the branches to hit the forest floor around them. She zipped her jacket to its limit under her chin and pulled her hood over her hair, thankful she was working so hard because the temperature was dropping.

A few minutes later, they arrived at a boulder taller than Rolf. It might have been rolled there by the avalanche or some other slide. It was surrounded by smaller ones they had to climb, which was not her most athletic moment, but when she stood on the big one, her stomach did a flip-flop at the height. They were on top of the world.

“Wow.” She could see where the avalanche had started on a slope off to her right, cut alongside the trees they had walked through, then swept the hill clean to the bottom. Way down at the base, the backhoe worked in silence, looking like a toy. The lodge was off to the left and way, way in the distance, Haven was nestled next to the glinting expanse of Clearwater Lake.

All around them, the peaks of the Rockies stood guard, jagged and eternal.

The wind was trying to cut her in half. Her hood wouldn’t stay on and her hair wouldn’t stay off her face. Her camera was getting wet from the fat drops being thrown sideways at her, but she didn’t care. The moment was elemental and thrilling, urging her to capture it. Savor it.

She took several shots, then lowered her camera, breathing in earth’s majesty before her. She felt small, yet alive. Ruled by nature and empowered by it at the same time. Insignificant, but a part of the whole.

She was glad she’d made the effort to come up here and breathe the fragrance of pine and new life and wet earth. It was kind of sexy.

Oh gads. This wasn’t cabin fever. It was spring fever.

She glanced at Rolf, hoping like hell he hadn’t noticed—

He was staring right at her, expression inscrutable.

Her heart lurched. “What?” She blushed and glanced down, expecting to see a coffee stain in the middle of her chest. Had she picked up a spider? Moss? Bird poop?

“Nothing. I’m glad you like it.” He waited a beat, just long enough for her blush to deepen under his unwavering study. “Especially since you worked so hard to get here.” His mouth twitched and his gaze moved to track restlessly over the peaks.

“Having fun?” She refused to laugh, even though she discovered she wanted to, mostly with relief. It felt good to take a step away from being adversaries.

“Always.”

With his face relaxed like that, she thought he might be telling the truth, at least in the moment.

“Is this, like, your jam? Seeing the world from the top of mountains?” She imagined him in his ski gear, all whipcord strength and British spy resourcefulness.

“Yes,” he said dryly. “It’s my ‘jam.’”

Okay, she couldn’t hold back her chuckle that time. He was so derisive.

“I meant, is this why you like to ski?”

He scratched beneath his chin. “Speed was my jam. Winning. Being on top is definitely my preferred position.”

Slam. His gaze nearly knocked her off the rock.

“Mostly I liked it because I couldn’t think about anything else when I was skiing. Not if I wanted to survive. So it was a way to dodge crap that otherwise might have had me doing drugs or getting into scraps.” He did a little zigzag with his hand, indicating a slalom, then shrugged that off. “Appreciating the view came later.”

She was surprised by his honesty. Kind of flattered at his confiding something that seemed so personal, then embarrassed she considered it significant. He seemed like someone who didn’t bother talking unless he wanted to, but she’d let down her guard once and been stung by him.

She hugged herself, seeing herself as pretty tough, but she wasn’t up for another set-down from him. Just thinking about the day with the coffee dragged at her enjoyment of this one.

Murphy barked from below and it was starting to rain in earnest.

Rolf easily stepped his long legs down, once, twice, then leapt to the ground, making the dismount look easy. He turned to watch her.

Really? He couldn’t let her make a fool of herself in private? Ugh. This was the kind of leap that required faith and commitment, but she was a complete chicken. She was going down on her ass and would very likely land on her hands and knees.

She crouched to keep her center of gravity low, set the heels of her hands into the wet moss on either side of her hips, and searched for the first rocky step.

Rolf’s hand guided her foot to it, then tugged at her other one, which was not helpful.

“Get out of the way,” she said, trying to keep her balance as she slid forward and down toward a jump that was not going to earn her ten points for sticking the landing.

He grabbed her. He freaking reached out, wrapped his arms around her thighs so her butt sat on his forearms. He plucked her off the rocks. She slapped her dirty, wet hands on his shoulders for balance and said, “Oof,” ever so indelicately. Her boob went into his ear.

He pivoted and slid her to the ground, letting her go in the same motion, agile as Patrick effing Swayze in Dirty Dancing. Her knees didn’t want to work and he quickly grasped her upper arm, keeping her from making a complete fool of herself and crumpling to the ground.

Why Colonel, I do declare, I’m overcome.

He pointed at the sky. “That’s hail. We need to hurry.”

A blurred cloud of locusts appeared to be heading across the mountaintops straight toward them. She realized that noise like a freight train wasn’t the excavator and it was growing louder.

“The one day I decide to go for a walk,” she muttered, jogging after him into the trees. Her jacket was damp through now. The wind sapped the heat from her skin and running didn’t counter it. It was getting really cold!

Under the thick boughs of the evergreens, she could barely see the ground because the sky was growing so dark. It was creepy and became even more worrisome when hail started to pock through the trees, sounding sharp and unforgiving.

“We’re not going to make it down.”

“Nope,” he agreed, catching her arm as they reached the edge of the trees. He raced her across the clearing toward the weathered stairs of the rickety hut, keeping her from tripping on the uneven ground.

Murphy was right on their heels, trying to knock them off the stairs and get through the door at the top, as anxious as they were to get out of the peppering hail.

Rolf slammed the door and the hut rocked on its stilts.

“Is this thing even going to stay upright?” she asked, wide-eyed and bracing herself on the wall.

Rolf shrugged.

The hut was tiny, maybe eight by eight with a second door that led onto a platform that had accessed the lift where it had once terminated. Inside, a big chunk of space was taken up by a shelf-desk built out from one wall. The desk was covered in initials and graffiti. The wear on the floor suggested a chair or stool had stood in front of it for a long time.

That left a limited space for her and Rolf to stand—about the size of an average elevator. It would help if the dog went under the table, but being in the way was kind of Murphy’s M.O. He stood between them, thwap-thwapping their legs with his tail as he silently asked, What now?

At least the hut had windows, which gave the illusion of space, even if one was smashed and the wind was howling through it as an announcement that the storm was arriving overhead. A hundred thousand golf balls landed on the roof. Then a hundred thousand more.

She held Rolf’s gaze with wide eyes, never having heard anything like it. His gaze rolled upward, but he didn’t look nearly as scared as she was.

The dog whined and turned in a circle. She reminded herself that this hut had survived the avalanche and more than a decade of storms, but that only made her think today was even more likely to be the day it collapsed under the stress.

Rolf’s radio cracked.

“Dude, where are you?” It sounded like Trigg.

“Lift hut.”

“On my way.”

“Won’t the hail dent his truck?” Glory asked.

“Could only be an improvement on that piece of shit.”

Okay.

Glory looked out at the torrent of ice chunks and heavy rain. A stream of white ice balls had formed uphill and was cutting a line under the hut, making her nervous that the ground would be washed away beneath it. “Why is this built on stilts?”

“Snow.”

Duh. Of course. She shifted, trying to get away from the gale-force wind and spatters of moisture blowing through the hole in the window and the draft coming through the door on her side. Somehow, the drumming on the roof grew even louder.

She folded her arms and tried to act brave while her feet curled in her sneakers and she had to consciously remember not to bite through her lip.

“Your mom wrote a lot of books.”

“What?” Her heart leapt into her throat.

“Her website says you helped.”

A sick heat rose from her belly to the place behind her sternum. Talking about this made her nervous when it was a fan who adored her mother’s stories. Strangers—men—who were notoriously judgmental about romance even before she threw in her own hang-ups about having her work read, stressed her right out. Fortunately, she had had to make explanations enough times her pat response rolled off her tongue.

“Her earliest books were published in the nineties. When she got her rights back, they needed to be modernized before she could reissue them. Her characters didn’t have smart phones, didn’t text. I helped with those little plot fixes. Mostly I ran the business side.”

“The fan club?”

“The business,” she asserted with a frown. She might downplay her role in the rewrites, but the rest was hardcore entrepreneurship. Plus, she was always quick to defend the legitimacy of a career in writing romance. It was one of the few genres where a lot of authors made a really good living. “When I say she reissued her early titles, I meant as an independent publisher. That means taking care of all the production details, covers, formatting, then loading them to the online vendors, setting up ads and other marketing programs, tracking sales, maintaining the website… Running a publishing business. Interacting with fans is icing. The fun part.”

“Are her books still generating an income? You still run that business?”

“Yes.”

“Is it a decent income? Enough to support you?”

“I take a wage, but the bulk of the royalties go to Dad. Why?”

“You didn’t inherit it, even though you’re the one who runs it?”

“Does Trigg’s mom get an income from Wikinger, even though you run it?” She only threw that at him because she found his quizzing uncomfortable. All of this was uncomfortable. He was taking up all the space, leaning on the wall so his boots stuck out toward her soggy sneakers, stepping all over extremely sensitive topics while making her confront his piercing gaze.

And she couldn’t get away. The machine-gun staccato on the roof wailed away.

“She owns shares, but Trigg and I own the majority. Wikinger is publicly traded. It’s different.”

“Well, mom was primary stakeholder and did what she wanted. I still have some money in the college fund she set up for me, but she wanted Dad to have the bulk of her proceeds. If he had been the one to make all the money, it wouldn’t sound weird that he left his fortune to his wife.”

He accepted that with a tilt of his head. “Did you go to college? Or start working for her before that?”

“I have a degree in communications. I was going to become a librarian, but—” She cut herself off as the corner of his mouth dug in. “What?”

“Nothing.”

“You think it’s funny that I wanted to be a librarian?” He wasn’t the first.

“I don’t see it. Well, I do, but not in the way you probably mean it.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“Nothing. You wanted to be a librarian, but changed your mind? Why?”

“Why are you asking me all these questions?”

“Because I don’t understand why you’re here.”

“You and me both.” She scowled out the window. Where the heck was Trigg?

Rolf took off his vest and offered it.

“I’m fine,” she lied, but she was crossing her arms so hard, she was going to split the back of her hoodie. Her muscles were aching under the violence of her shivers.

“Your lips are turning blue.” He unclipped the radio and kept it, but hooked the armholes of the vest over her shoulders so it hung off her front like a smock. The warmth from his body radiated from the quilted lining onto her arms. It smelled like spice and cedar. Him.

She was cold enough to give in. She pulled the vest around her back and shrugged her arms in, then folded the front across her wet jacket and hunched into it, drawing one lapel up to cover the bottom of her chin. “Thanks.”

Was the drum on the roof easing?

“So that’s how your father had the money to buy the lodge? Your mother earned it with her books?”

“Yes.”

He might have been mildly impressed. Or suppressing gas. She couldn’t tell.

“You’re mad about it, though. You don’t want to be here.”

“I told you why I was mad that day,” she muttered. Was that noise the truck, spinning its wheels in the muck? Or still the hail and wind? She looked out the window again.

“You’re worried he can’t do this without you.”

She wasn’t sure if she should cop to that. There might be ramifications. What if he decided he didn’t trust her father to get the lodge running and pulled the rug on the lease or something?

“Is that why you’re here?” she challenged lightly. “You didn’t think your brother could pull this off?”

“My brother can’t get a truck up a hill.”

Okay, she had to smirk at that one. She looked for said truck and didn’t see it.

“I know what’s involved in running a business,” she said, trying to downplay her lack of confidence in her father. “It makes sense that I help Dad set up. And I feel guilty,” she admitted. “When I was younger, Mom was on deadline a lot. Dad was the involved parent and we were really close. Then puberty hit and I didn’t want to go fishing or camping anymore.” Even Pike Place Market had earned an upturned nose.

Her withdrawal had had as much to do with the hell of high school as anything else, but withdraw she had.

“I was still at college when Mom was diagnosed. I moved home and started helping out, stuffing bookmarks in envelopes, that kind of thing. Her treatment dragged on and she kept adding to my role. I decided not to pursue a masters because I wanted to spend time with her. I think Dad feels like I chose her, though. Or abandoned him or something. He wants the lodge to be ‘our’ thing. Parents are mortal so even though this lodge isn’t my dream job, that’s why I’m here.”

Judge away, Judgey McJudgerson.

“When I was nine, my mother dropped me for ski practice. She got out of the car and tried to come around to kiss me. I wouldn’t let her. She died in a car crash a few hours later.”

Glory’s heart jerked and sank like a stone. “There’s no way you could have known that would happen. You were a kid.”

His rock-hard shoulders twitched in the tiniest of shrugs beneath his snug pullover, dismissing her attempt to help him forgive himself. “I’m just saying, you’re smart to spend time with him while you can, even though it’s not strictly on your terms.”

Both his parents were gone, she recalled.

“Did you… Were you close with your dad? I mean, is that why you’re here? Because this was his dream?”

“Oh, fuck no. I was angry with him. Still am. No, I’m here because Trigg was going to do this with or without me and can’t get a truck up a hill. I don’t want him spinning Wikinger’s wheels into muck while he tries.”

The hail had definitely turned to rain. It was still coming down in torrents, but the roar had dulled and that was definitely the sound of an engine beneath the hard, steady patter on the roof. They both leaned to see the nose of the red truck trying to crest the hill while mud sprayed out behind it. It actually slid backward out of sight as they watched.

Rolf huffed a disgusted laugh. “I said ‘Get something useful.’ He had to buy that thing.”

“This might not be my place, but…” she scratched her upper lip “…you could view this as an opportunity to get closer to your brother.”

He flicked her a chilling glare that made her want to shrink into a ball.

“What?” She lifted her chin. “You got all up in my business.” How would he feel if he lost his brother and he’d been stuck up and angry all this time?

His cheek ticked, then he looked out and sighed tiredly.

*

Rolf was regretting revealing so much and couldn’t deny Glory might have a point, but Jesus Christ. Look what he was dealing with.

The genius who wanted to build a world-class training facility had finally arrived and was tearing up the place with his monster truck, drawing donuts around the stilts of the hut, sliding the back end in a wide circle to spray out huge washes of muddy water. After three or four revolutions that were pure jack-assery, he skidded to a stop at the bottom of the stairs and laid on the horn.

Rolf opened the door of the hut. Murphy stood in the opening, staring at the curtain of rain pouring off the lip of the hut roof. At the bottom of the stairs, Nate threw open the passenger door and shouted, “Murphy! Come.”

The dog looked back at Rolf and Glory the way a rat left a sinking ship. So long, suckers. He shot through the wall of water, down the stairs, and leapt into the truck.

Rolf motioned Glory to leave ahead of him and slammed the door on his way out, catching a run of icy rainwater down the back of his neck as he ducked through it.

The truck had a bench seat and Murphy was already stamping his dirty feet all over Nate’s thighs as Nate tried to corral him with his arms.

Glory tried to mash herself into Nate’s side so there would be room for Rolf, but they were three big men. Rolf scooped her onto his lap as he came in behind her, shoving his ass onto the seat and slamming the door on the storm. She squeaked and scrambled to find her balance on his thighs.

“Where the hell did you come from?” Trigg asked her.

“Stork,” she shot back, sitting up so straight she was nothing but bony ass and obstruction. “You said the view up here was great. You lied.”

The wipers slapped at their highest speed and weren’t keeping up.

“Be nicer to the guy who rescues you,” Trigg suggested, shooting a look at Rolf that was full of suspicion. “You should have asked me to bring you up if you wanted to come. I would have brought you in style.” He took off and the truck immediately skidded sideways, throwing them all to the right. “Slippery as goose shit out here.”

So much style.

“Yeah, we saw you were having trouble getting it up,” Glory said.

“Flirt.” Trigg kept two hands on the wheel as he started down the steep crest of the hill. The truck immediately went into a forward slide. He threw the wheel, swinging the back end in a wide fishtail, throwing them all this way and that.

Nate swore through his laughter. “Shit. Sorry, Glory. Shit! We thought it was just Rolf up here or I would have hung out in the excavator. No, Murph—Oh, shit! Watch out for that—”

Murphy barked and wriggled. Nate held on to him and Trigg hooted as their back end nearly caught up to the front.

“Oh my God.” Glory braced one hand on the dash and grabbed the holy-shit handle with the other. “We’re going to roll over. Trigg!”

“It’s fine,” Rolf told her. His brother played hard, but he wasn’t worried. “This is nothing.”

“Easy for you to say! You’re wearing a seat belt.”

He wasn’t, but he wrapped his arm around her, pulling her deeper into his lap. “We’re fine.”

The truck went back and forth, jostling her ass where Rolf felt it most. She jammed her foot on the door pocket. Her other leg sandwiched Rolf’s thigh between her own. She was trying to stabilize herself, but in a way that was so erotic, he started thinking about how it would feel to get his hand into the heat of her crotch. He could feel the heat of her against his thigh and it was really distracting.

“Are you doing this on purpose?” Glory accused Trigg.

“No. But it doesn’t mean I’m not enjoying it.”

So was he, Rolf thought with a small, internal wince. In a second, she was going to notice—

Glory’s head shot around and she glared at him.

What? Did she think every man didn’t wish he could control when Jack decided to pop? Her breasts were rubbing his arm and her hair was in his face smelling like dewy strawberries, spring rain, and forest. If they were naked and fucking, they wouldn’t be rubbing and grinding more thoroughly.

Damn. Now he was thinking about being naked with her, fucking her. He was going to come in his pants if this ride didn’t end soon.

They arrived at the base with a final smear of tires through mud. Nate’s truck with the king cab was gone, likely taken by the backhoe operator and the other men who’d been working down here before the storm hit.

“If you tear up my new road, I’m going to use you to fill the holes,” Rolf warned as Trigg started down the track to the lodge, making Glory bounce against the straining wood in his shorts.

“Dude, you tempt me like that, what do you think I’m gonna do?” He kept his speed down, though. The gravel was covered in melted hail and washing out in a few small sections, but Trigg didn’t do any deliberate damage.

Glory relaxed marginally, but stayed pointedly facing forward, cheeks bright red. The moment Trigg pulled up at the lodge, she leapt out of the truck and raced out of the rain and in the front doors. Murphy scrambled after her, the suck.

Rolf moved with more care, hearing, “Dude,” as his feet hit the ground.

He never revealed how much that word grated. Trigg would use it even more than he already did. He glanced back to see Trigg had his arm hooked over the steering wheel. He was sending him his most competitive stare.

“What was that?”

Rolf didn’t play dumb. “I couldn’t let her go alone. Safety first,” he said with an ironic tap of his radio.

Nate was pretending he didn’t exist, staring at the windshield wipers, cheeks hollow.

“Game on, then.”

The rain had lightened up, but was still soaking through Rolf’s shirt. He reached for the hard hat he had discarded on the floor and set it on his head, then met his brother’s stare again.

“I’m not playing.” Trigg could take that however the hell he wanted. Rolf left the door open for Nate and headed into the lodge.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

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

Random Novels

Monsters, Book One: The Good, The Bad, The Cursed by Heather Killough-Walden

Wanna Puck? - A MFM Bad Boy Hockey Star Menage (Share Me Book 1) by Layla Valentine, Ana Sparks

Perfect Fit by Juliana Conners

Fallen: A Paranormal Romance Novel (Shadows Of Regia Book 1) by Tenaya Jayne

Wanting More (Dangerous Love Book 3) by Elle Keating

Paragon (Vertex Book 3) by Soren Summers

I Like You, I Love Her: A Novel by J. R. Rogue

All Worked Up (Purely Pleasure Book 1) by Skylar Hill

Dakota's Delight: A SEALs of Honor World Novel (Heroes for Hire Book 9) by Dale Mayer

Untouchable: A Billionaire on the Run Romance by Kira Blakely

Wrist Shot (Puck Battle Book 3) by Kristen Echo

The Unacceptables Series Box Set Two: Books Five through Nine with Exclusive Bonus Chapters by Mazzola, Kristen Hope

Love by the Rules (Harbor Point Book 3) by Heather Young-Nichols

Caught On Tape: A Billionaire Bad Boy Romance by Natalie Knight, Daphne Dawn

Genie's Awakening (A Reverie Resort Vacation Book 2) by Jewel Quinlan

Amy's Wish (Wish Series Book 1) by Kay Harris

First Touch: My Best Friend's Little Sister by Lauren Wood

Rumors: Justine & Devon by Rachael Brownell

Braxton: Rebel Guardians MC by Liberty Parker, Darlene Tallman

drdaddy by Sullivan, Piper