Authors: Leslie Parrish
she’d suggested it last night. Yes, she needed someone to give her a ride
home from the coroner’s office, because she wouldn’t be able to drive
afterward. If today were like every other time, she’d be in a bad way, needing
to curl up in a dark room, cry for a while, then sleep off the horror. She’d
intended to take a cab, but he had insisted on driving her.
Problem was, she had this brunch, and the timing was tight. They had to be
at the coroner’s at noon, yet she couldn’t bow out of this gathering, not just
because it was for Brooke but because Richard would feel slighted. Her
cousin was rarely in Georgia, spending most of his time in D.C., so the August
recess was usual y fil ed with Richard-centric events.
Yippee
.
When Gabe had found out she had an engagement she couldn’t avoid that
would make it impossible for her to get home in time for him to pick her up
there, he’d agreed to come with her to her father’s estate just outside of
Savannah. Having him come as her guest was a lot easier than trying to
explain why she’d needed a cop to drive her when she left here.
The thing was, she hadn’t had a date in a long time. And she hadn’t brought
a man around her family for at least two years. So what had sounded like a
good idea last night after a glass of wine seemed crazy today, not least of
which because, for a few minutes last night, she’d found it al too easy to think
about being involved in some kind of personal relationship with the man.
Especial y when he looked at her with that slight smile, laughed that sexy,
husky laugh, drawled her name in that honey-smooth Southern voice or
brushed up against her with that wickedly powerful body.
God, what was happening to her? She was rapidly growing addicted to a
man she’d met less than a week ago. The simple truth was, she wanted him.
Wanted to be in his arms.
Last night he’d held her for comfort, and that had been nice. But he’d
continued to hold her in response to sudden, thick sexual tension and, for a
little while at least, that had been nicer.
He’d let her go out of necessity. That hadn’t been nice at al . In fact, it had
left her wondering later that night when she was alone in her bed what might
have happened if she hadn’t climbed off his lap.
Olivia didn’t usual y fal hard and fast, having been burned by enough men to
be wary of ever letting her guard down around one too soon. Yet this rough-
edged detective already had her wishing this were a real date. Preferably
their fourth or fifth date, so it could end with them in her bedroom.
Admit it, you already want to go to bed with this man, whether you ever go
on a real date with him or not.
It was true. And no matter how much of a proper Southern lady her
grandmother had hoped she’d be, she couldn’t muster up much
embarrassment about that fact. Olivia was a woman, she liked sex, and she
was incredibly attracted to the man standing next to her. What else was there
to say?
“Everybody’s okay with us having to cut out early?” he asked.
“So they say.” Olivia had told them she and Gabe had to leave early for
another event.
“Good.” He gazed around the living room, where everyone had gathered to
socialize after the sumptuous buffet in the dining room. “Nice place your dad
has.”
“I guess.” Her father’s live-in girlfriend had recently redecorated the entire
downstairs. The minute her mother had walked into the house, she’d sneered,
disdainful of the beachy theme, with the pale blue wal s and lightweight sand-
colored wicker furniture.
Personal y, Olivia agreed with her. The place looked like it wanted to be a
Hol ister store. Then again, the girlfriend was nicknamed Sunni, so maybe it
was appropriate.
The nickname irritated her mother to no end. The fact that her mother had
been the one to hire Sunni as a live-in housekeeper and au pair many years
ago made the situation even worse. Mom had never quite come to terms with
the fact that the young woman she’d liked and welcomed into her home had
ended up replacing her after she’d left. “I don’t know why he holds on to it,” she
admitted. The tiny pessimist inside her suspected it was because he knew it
drove her mother crazy that another woman was playing hostess in her old
house. But the much bigger optimist said it was because he stil held out
some hope, deep within, that this whole awful situation could be fixed, and he
could reclaim the life he’d once had here with his family.
She sometimes wondered how Sunni felt about it. The woman was either
truly the sunniest-dispositioned person in the world, or she was one heck of
an actress. Because despite an occasional edge to her tone and hardness in
her eyes, for the most part, she always maintained that smile, acting like she
real y didn’t care that her longtime boyfriend refused to divorce his wife and
marry her. But Sunni had to know El iott Wainwright wel enough to know that if
she pushed him to do it, he never—ever—would. Her father was a stubborn
one. So she seemed patient enough to wait, content with the house, the cars,
the jewelry and the lifestyle.
“Did you grow up here?”
“Uh-huh.”
He sipped his drink—a virgin mary—then asked, “And, uh, your parents?”
“No, they’re not divorced, and, yes, they’re always like this.”
“That’s a little . . .”
“Dysfunctional?”
“I was gonna say ‘unusual.’ But that works, too.”
“Neither wants to be accused of being the one responsible for ending the
marriage.”
He gave a pointed look at Sunni, who clung to Olivia’s father’s arm, and
then at Carl, a tal , balding man hovering over her petite mother like a
kindergartner guarding his juice box.
“Yeah. I know.” Sipping her club soda and cranberry, she added, “It’s ended
in every way except on paper. Everything just sort of fel apart after what
happened to me.”
“It’s a shame, but that happens in a lot of kidnapping or child murder cases.
It’s a marriage kil er.” He edged closer, just the tiniest bit, but enough for her to
feel his body’s warmth against her arm, bared by her sleeveless top. Her heart
fluttered a little, startling her. She suddenly remembered her dream from last
night, surprised she hadn’t recal ed it when she first woke up. Probably she’d
just been glad there were no night terrors.
Definitely nothing terrifying. Something rather lovely instead. She’d
dreamed about going to sleep in Gabe Cooper’s arms, in the chair in the den,
as if he’d never let her go after he’d pul ed her onto his lap. It had been a nice
dream, not at al sexual but incredibly intimate. Just like that actual moment
had been.
“So, do you think it was real y your kidnapping that caused them to break
up, or was that the excuse?”
She blinked, trying to refocus. “It was a catalyst. Things were already tense
because she didn’t like the way they lived. She was uncomfortable with the
Wainwright family’s never-ending quest for more money, and she loathed the
politics. She was a front desk clerk at one of my father’s hotels when they
met.”
Her father’s family had made their fortune off the high-end travel industry. It
seemed the überrich stil traveled a lot, even in a down economy, and
business was booming. As far as she knew, there was enough money to keep
several generations of Wainwrights comfortable.
Except her. She real y didn’t want anything to do with it, having enough of
her mother’s independent spirit to demand to go her own way. She’d gotten
the house, and that was enough.
“My grandfather had died that March, and the governor wanted to appoint
my father to his seat to finish his term. My mom hated the idea. Then I was
kidnapped, and she
really
hated it.”
“Why?”
“She thought it would make us more of a target.” Glancing out the windows,
she gestured toward a black limo parked by the detached garage on the other
side of the lawn. Two large, black-clad men stood there, one leaning on the
car, the other against the building. “Despite how my cousin lives, Mom had no
interest in drivers and bodyguards. She wanted a normal life.”
“Hate to break it to ya, but this place ain’t exactly middle class.”
“No kidding. That’s why she took Brooke and me to Tucson and told my
Dad if he wanted to stay married to her, he’d turn the governor down and
come join us.”
“And?”
“Wel , he did turn the governor down,” she said. “It wasn’t a huge sacrifice.
Dad had never wanted to go into politics; he liked running the business. His
older brother was the political genius, but he died fifteen years ago. So when
the time came, Dad deferred to Richard, my late uncle’s son, who was an
attorney, already a state representative, and who wanted the job.”
Gabe glanced at her cousin. “Musta been pretty young.”
“Only thirty. He just squeaked by on the age requirement. Crisis averted:
God forbid there not be a Wainwright in Congress.”
“Lemme guess. Your dad didn’t go to Tucson, right?”
She shook her head. “Nope. Too proud, I think. And Sunni, our housekeeper
and former babysitter, stayed here to take care of him.”
“Guess she did the job a little too wel .”
“You could say that.”
“Yet you stil get along with her?”
Olivia shrugged. “I’ve known her since I was a kid. At first I felt a little
betrayed. But Mom
was
the one who left. She practical y issued an invitation to
Sunni to take her place.”
“Your Dad was probably pretty lonely and vulnerable without you al .”
“Exactly, and Sunni was here to keep him company. Time passed; neither of
my parents would make the first move either to get back together or to end it
for good. He stayed here, she stayed there, until Brooke and I moved back
after col ege. Then she came back, too, with Carl in tow.”
Gabe nodded, looking thoughtful, glancing again toward her parents, who
stood with their significant others in a far corner of the room, examining some
piece of brightly colored art Sunni had bought. Olivia felt sure her mother
hated it on principle.
“That’s pretty sad, actual y,” he mused.
Yes, it was sad. How funny that he’d said that rather than cracking a joke or
pointing out how bizarre the whole thing was.
So much to like in this man.
As if knowing the subject pained her, he quickly moved on. He shot her that
grin, which took ten years off his face, made his green eyes sparkle and
made her heart thud. “Are your mother and Sunni going to wrestle over who
gets the mother-of-the-bride spot in the church?”
“Are you kidding? Mom would lock Sunni in a closet first.”
“Nice that they’re al so
friendly
. That’l be an interesting wedding.” His
sarcasm was obvious. The mood in here was not friendly; it was hard, edgy
and sharp as glass.
“I told Brooke she should elope.” Then she laughed. “I should have told her
to run.”
“You’re against marriage?”
“Just the being married part.”
Especially to a man like Drew
.
“I guess I can see why.”
Maybe. But he didn’t know al of it. It wasn’t just because of her parents’
situation or her dislike of the groom. She’d seen women murdered by their
husbands—literal y. Feeling what an abused woman had felt while her
husband stabbed her, screaming with every plunge of the knife that she’d
promised to love and obey him, she couldn’t say much for the whole institution.
Suddenly, a voice intruded. “So, Gabe, I hear you’re with the police
department? Good for you, young man. We appreciate your public service.”
Good lord, could her cousin Richard be any more of a dick? Not only was
he incredibly patronizing, being only a dozen or so years older than Gabe, but
he was just such a damned politician. He was always on, always glad-handing
for votes, even at a family gathering.
“Thank you, Senator,” Gabe said smoothly, not thrown by the
condescending greeting any more than he’d been thrown by her father’s
questions about where he lived, her mother’s about his past relationships, or
her sister’s about his plans for Valentine’s Day. Her wedding day.
“How did you two meet?” asked Richard’s wife, Tess, with that smal ,
pasted-on smile she always wore. With the perfect hair and perfect face, she
was the perfect politician’s wife. “Did you pul her over for speeding? Our
Olivia has an awful lead foot.”
Our Olivia
. Cheers to the second-most patronizing person in the room.
As if he could feel her rising tension, Gabe reached over and pressed a
slightly possessive hand to the smal of her back. It was a simple, casual
gesture, but it rocked her hard. She almost found herself quivering, sensation