Authors: Mari Carr
Lauren had to admit the food looked delicious and the table setting was gorgeous.
Sean had even lit a candle. “Are we celebrating something?” she asked.
Sean nodded and lifted his glass, waiting until they followed suit. “Here’s to one
month of happy, relatively peaceful cohabitation.”
They clinked glasses and laughed. Dinner passed quickly as they polished off the
first bottle of wine and a good part of a second, the conversation light and lively. The three of them cleaned the kitchen together—Chad washing the dishes, Lauren drying
and Sean putting them away.
After dinner, they watched a movie in the living room. Chad relaxed in the recliner
while she and Sean cuddled on the couch. Lauren tried to remember when she’d spent a
more peaceful evening and realized there’d been a hundred nights just as perfect—all of them spent like this, with Sean and Chad.
“Guess I should head to bed. I have an early class tomorrow,” she said, standing
and stretching.
Sean yawned. “Yeah, I won’t be too far behind you. I’m helping K at the
construction site early tomorrow then I’m covering the lunch shift for Ewan while he
takes Natalie to the baby doctor. And tomorrow night is my night to man the bar at the pub. I’m tired just thinking about it.”
Lauren knew Sean’s grumbling was all for show. She’d never known a man more
devoted to his family. There was, quite simply, nothing he wouldn’t do for his pop or his brothers and sisters. She wished she had a similarly close relationship with her
brother. Though she loved him dearly, they rarely saw each other as real life constantly seemed to get in the way.
20
Any Given Sunday
“Jeez,” Chad said, still reclining. “I don’t know how the hell you keep all those
nieces and nephews straight.”
Sean laughed. “There are only five rugrats, six if you count Ewan’s soon-to-be-here
baby.”
“Six,” Chad repeated, shaking his head as if trying to wrap his mind around the
large number.
“I think you’re forgetting Sean is one of seven,” Lauren added. “The Collins family
is used to lots of kids and noise and activity. You and I are products of the boring two-kid family concept.”
“My mom always said she’d had one boy and one girl and there wasn’t anything
else to go for so she was done.” Chad put his hands behind his head.
Sean laughed. “She could’ve tried for twins.”
Chad shuddered. “Twins is no joke. I’m not sure how your brother Tristan manages
with those two rowdy toddlers of his.”
Sean shrugged. “Tris was a twin. Believe me, besides Killian, there’s no one else in
my family better suited to raise twin hellions than him.”
“I think you could do it,” Lauren said, imagining Sean as a father. He was good-
natured, fun, easygoing and she had no doubt he’d be an amazing dad.
“I’m looking forward to getting the chance.”
Though the two of them had talked often about their future together, they’d never
discussed the idea of having kids. Right now she was too focused on her career plans to see beyond getting a degree and opening a practice.
Then she realized Sean’s comment made sense. His future was settled. He had
earned his four-year degree and he had a job he loved. Sean had gone to college simply to appease his sister Keira and his pop. They’d both wanted him to get a degree.
However, Sean had known from the time he was a kid his dream was to work at the
pub. He’d told Lauren more than once the pub was as close to heaven on earth as he’d
ever found and he didn’t intend to leave it until they carried him out in a box.
Now Sean had bought this house with her, the two of them moving that much
closer to forever. Once again, she felt a slight sense of unease. For the most part, their future
had
begun, so they should be thinking about the next step—marriage and family.
Chad groaned. “Twins? You gotta be kidding me. The idea of one kid terrifies me.”
“Really?” Sean asked. “Why?”
Lauren perched on the end of the coffee table, all thoughts of bed gone as she
waited for Chad’s answer.
Chad studied Sean’s face for a long time before responding, the two of them sharing
a look Lauren couldn’t begin to understand. “I can’t even sort out my own fucked-up
life. How could I expect to raise a kid with any level of success?”
Lauren was confused by his answer. “Your life isn’t fucked-up.”
21
Mari Carr
Chad snorted. “Sure it is.”
Lauren looked at Sean, expecting him to jump into the conversation, offer her some
help in refuting Chad’s words, but he fell silent. Once again, she sensed some
underlying current she wasn’t privy to. This wasn’t the first time she’d gotten a feeling Sean knew something about Chad that he wasn’t sharing. In the past, she’d let it slide.
Tonight, it was rubbing against the grain.
Sean stood hastily. “Doesn’t matter anyway. Not like any of us are having kids
right away. I’m heading up for the night. You coming, Lauren?”
She nodded slowly, trying to decide if it was smart to let the conversation end. She
looked toward the recliner just in time to see the briefest flash of pain cross Chad’s face before it disappeared once again. He’d shut down and she knew he wouldn’t discuss
his unusual comment any further.
“How about you?” she asked. “You have an early class too.”
Chad closed his eyes. “I’m gonna hang out down here for a little while. I’ll see you
guys in the morning.”
She silently followed Sean upstairs. Maybe tonight hadn’t been as perfect as she’d
thought.
22
Any Given Sunday
Chad finished nailing the last piece of drywall, then stepped back to survey his
work. He ran the back of his forearm along his sweaty forehead, trying to capture his perspiration before it rolled into his eyes. He could hear Sean cutting another two-by-four behind him. It was Sunday—the only day they had to work on his basement
apartment. Between Chad’s classes and grading papers for the course he was teaching
to help pay for tuition, and Sean working two jobs, they’d be lucky to finish this damn apartment by the year 2050. They’d been hard at work since dawn and it was just about time to break for lunch.
He glanced around the space that would eventually be his temporary home—and
felt the same dull ache in his gut that hit whenever he remembered the fact Sean and
Lauren would be building a future in this house without him.
He pictured Lauren’s face as she’d looked earlier this week in the office. She’d
seemed so sad, he’d felt compelled to kiss her. If Sean hadn’t walked in when he did, he would have.
He’d nearly kissed his best friend’s girl. The guilt he’d suffered since that near miss returned full-force. Worst part was, the guilt wasn’t based on the fact he’d tried to kiss her so much as on the fact he really,
really
wanted to try again. He licked his lips and imagined placing his mouth on Lauren’s.
He was going straight to hell. He felt like the loser in that old Rick Springfield song, constantly wishing for Jessie’s girl—or in his case, Sean’s.
Of course, he couldn’t blame Lauren for choosing Sean over him. Sean was a
natural with women. He’d inherited his good looks and large build from his father,
sharing the same dark hair and eyes the other Collins brothers possessed. He had a
personality people flocked to—quick-witted, easygoing, the perfect combination of
cynical and nice.
What did Chad have to offer Lauren in return? He was too serious, too boring. He
barely topped six feet, and while Sean was a natural at the social scene, Chad preferred being alone or, at the most, alone with just Sean and Lauren. He hated crowds, hated
making small talk and, as he glanced at Sean’s smug morning-after face, he realized he hated listening to Sean make love to
his
dream girl.
“Shit,” Sean muttered, working out a kink in his neck as he stood. “Didn’t realize
this project was gonna take so fucking long.”
“Can’t make much progress when the two of us only have time to work on it on
Sundays.”
23
Mari Carr
Sean put his hands on his hips and looked at what they’d accomplished that
morning. He’d taken his shirt off an hour earlier and Chad couldn’t help but admire his friend’s physique. Sean was a man’s man, like the rest of his crazy brothers. They
worked with their hands as well as their minds and it showed. Since taking on the part-time construction job with his older brother Killian, Sean’s form had hardened, become more defined, his skin turning a golden tan.
He stared at his best friend’s muscular body and felt his cock stir slightly.
Fuck! As if it wasn’t bad enough he was lusting over Sean’s girlfriend, now he was
getting a hard-on looking at
Sean
. Chad forced the thought away, something he’d gotten very adept at over the years. There was no way in hell he was going down that road.
He quickly averted his gaze, looking down at his own body. Chad felt like a
middle-aged accountant whenever he stood next to Sean. He spent too much time
indoors. While he was trim, no one would call him built. He certainly wasn’t sporting a six-pack. Shit. He’d be lucky to find just one in his pack and his skin was too pale from lack of sun.
“Jeez. We’ve still got a shitload of work to do down here,” Sean muttered, running
a hand through his hair, leaving a few pieces of sawdust clinging in its wake.
Chad nodded. “Yeah. We do. Is that a problem? I could always rent a room
somewhere if you want me out of your way upstairs.” Chad tried not to look too
hopeful, but Sean giving him the boot sure would make his life a lot easier. He hadn’t been sleeping well lately, his hot fantasies keeping him up well after lights out.
“Are you kidding me? Hell no, man. Things are working out great.”
Chad nodded slowly. Great wasn’t a word he’d use to describe the current hell he
was residing in, but he wasn’t about to burst Sean’s bubble. His best friend had a habit of focusing on the positive and ignoring the negative. In the past, Chad had viewed that personality trait as either admirable or annoying as fuck, depending on the day. Today, it was irritating him worse than a rock in his shoe. His hand was calloused and his dick was chafed from whacking off so much lately. He needed to find a girlfriend…soon.
Unfortunately, every woman he dated ended up being compared to Lauren. Every
one of them came up lacking and he usually went home alone.
“You guys ready for some lunch?”
Chad glanced up and found Lauren coming down the stairs with a plate full of
sandwiches and a bag of chips under her arm. She was wearing her Sunday outfit, a
comfy pair of lounge pants and a loose tee. Her auburn hair was pulled up in a ponytail again. His fingers itched to pull her hair down. He wanted to run his fingers through it and catch a whiff of the scent of her coconut shampoo. That scent alone never failed to drive his arousal up an extra notch, the smell his favorite part of carpooling with her to early morning classes. Of course, he then spent the rides trying to shield an erection.
Jesus. He needed psychological help and the words “Physician, heal thyself” floated
through his mind.
24
Any Given Sunday
“Hot damn, baby. You showed up just in the nick of time,” Sean said, grabbing the
plate and setting it down on a board lying atop two sawhorses. “I’m starving.”
Lauren laughed and pointed at the plate. “Two peanut butter and banana ones for
you,” she said to Sean. “I keep waiting for the day you’ll outgrow that, you know.”
Sean shook his head. “Never gonna happen. They’re my Sunday specials.”
Chad grinned at the remark. Sean’s mother, Sunday, had packed the sandwiches in
Sean’s lunch every single day when they were in elementary school. Chad recalled the
lump he’d gotten in his throat the first day Sean returned to school after Sunday’s death from cancer. They’d been in fourth grade. For the first time in his life, Sean stood in line to buy the cafeteria lunch. The next day, Sean’s sister Keira had picked up the routine and Sean was back to peanut butter and banana sandwiches, but Chad remembered
realizing at that moment exactly how much his best friend had lost.
“And there’s tuna on rye for you, Chad.”
Chad grinned, pleased that she knew his favorite sandwich as well.
“I’ll go back up and grab the sodas,” Lauren said. “Couldn’t get it all down here in
one trip.”
“No worries,” Sean said, passing her before she made it to the bottom step. “I need
to wash my hands and grab a couple more tools from the garage. I’ll bring them down
with me.”
“Cool,” Lauren said and they watched as Sean took the stairs two at a time,
reaching the top in record speed.
“Never seen anyone who always lives life in fast forward. Guy runs everywhere.”
Chad’s observation was meant to be a joke but Lauren nodded, picking up the subject
as a serious one.
“I know. I’ve always wondered about that. Sometimes I think he’s just impatient,
but it doesn’t fit. Of course, neither does the alternative.”
“The alternative?” Chad asked.
“Maybe he’s trying to outrun something.”
Chad considered her comment, unsure how to respond. Until she’d mentioned it,
he’d never really thought much about Sean’s need for perpetual motion. Now he
thought maybe she was right. He tried to pinpoint when Sean had become a whirlwind
of activity. Chad knew for a fact he hadn’t always been that way. In high school, Sean was laid-back, a slow-and-steady kind of guy.
No, the change had definitely occurred in college. He’d begun to take on more