Forged of Steele Bundle

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Forged of Steele Bundle Page 14

by Jackson, Brenda


  “Some trouble I might like,” he murmured in a low voice leaden with exhaustion, before closing his eyes again.

  “And what if Marcus had that same attitude?”

  “When he gets to my age he’s welcome to it, but while he’s underage, I decide what he likes and doesn’t like. And stop comparing us to our kids, Kylie. Like I told you before, we’re adults. They aren’t.”

  “Sorry, I keep forgetting,” she said sarcastically.

  “It will behoove you to remember. The next time you forget it will cost you.”

  She lifted an eyebrow. “Cost me what?”

  “A kiss. Right then and there. Even if it’s in front of those two kids of ours.”

  She frowned and took a quick glance at him and saw that his eyes were opened and he was staring at her. His expression was serious. “You wouldn’t dare.”

  “I wouldn’t count on that if I were you.”

  And Kylie was smart enough to know not to. She pulled her car into the dealership, parked it and turned to him. “And just what would doing something like that prove?”

  “It would prove that our kids wouldn’t have a problem with anything developing between us.”

  “But I’d still have a problem with it. I won’t let any man use me to slake his sexual cravings.”

  In a flash Chance snapped the seatbelt off his body and before she could get out her next breath he loomed over her. Blatant anger was carved in his features. “This isn’t about me slaking any sexual cravings, Kylie. But you’re so out of practice with men that you wouldn’t know that, would you? Well, let me tell you something, not about men in general but about this man in particular,” he said pointing to himself. “I won’t ever use you just to slake any sexual cravings, so don’t try making my wanting you as anything sullied or dirty.

  “It’s the most natural thing in the world for a man to desire a woman and vice versa. I won’t apologize for it. When we do make love, Kylie, it will be a mutual thing. You’ll want it as much as I do, so don’t kid yourself into believing otherwise. And when it comes to me there’s something else you need to keep in mind.”

  “And what’s that?” she asked softly.

  “When there’s something I want, I won’t give up until I get it.”

  “When we do make love, Kylie, it will be a mutual thing. You’ll want it as much as I do, so don’t kid yourself into believing otherwise…”

  The words Chance had spoken earlier that day woke Kylie up more than once that night. This time she knew she had to deal with them before trying to go back to sleep.

  Taking the pillow from the other side of the bed, she wrapped her arms around it and hugged it to her chest, wondering how in the world one man could be so utterly self-confident, so damn arrogant. The nerve of him making such a statement as if it was a foregone conclusion they’d go to bed together. Well, she had news for him, she thought bitterly.

  After this camping trip was over she would put rules into place where their relationship was concerned. The only thing between them would be Marcus and Tiffany. As parents they would have some connection in order to keep their offspring on the right path, but that would be as far as things went. It wouldn’t bother her in the least if she never saw the infuriating man again.

  Turning over on her side, Kylie gazed despondently at the digital clock on the nightstand. It was almost midnight, way too late to be having this sort of conversation with herself. She should be resting peacefully in a sound sleep, but thanks to Chance she was wide awake.

  He had upset her so badly that afternoon that it had been a good ten minutes before she’d been able to pull herself together to drive away from that dealership. And twice during dinner Tiffany had asked her if anything was wrong.

  And to think she would be spending an entire weekend in Chance’s presence. If there were any way she could cancel their plans without disappointing Tiffany she would, but she knew better than anyone how much her daughter looked forward to this trip.

  The phone on her nightstand rang and not for the first time she wished that like the phone in the living room this one had caller ID. But somehow she knew it was Chance and reached out and picked it up. “Hello?”

  “I need to apologize, Kylie.”

  It was his deep, rich, husky voice, more than the words he had spoken, that sent a sensuous shiver through her. “Do you?”

  “Not for everything—just for getting upset with you. I won’t apologize for our kisses. But your words caught me off guard. Never in my wildest dream did I assume you’d think I would want to use you that way.”

  “Okay, Chance, maybe it was a bad choice of words, but what I was trying to say was that I’m being logical here. I don’t see things as you see them, and when it comes to a lot of man-woman stuff, you’re right, I’m way out of my league. You aren’t. So I have to protect myself.”

  “You’ll never have to protect yourself from me, Kylie. I’d never hurt you, take advantage of you or use you. I give you my word.”

  “Thank you.”

  “But I won’t give you my word that I’ll stop pursuing you, stop trying to make you want me as much as I want you, stop trying to—”

  “Get me in your bed?”

  “No, I won’t stop trying to get you in my bed, Kylie, because I think that’s where you belong. And once I get you there I intend to keep you there for a long time. But it will be for all the right reasons.”

  “When is an affair good for any reason?”

  “When the two individuals agree that it is. You and I have a long way to go, Kylie. We haven’t even gone on what I consider a real date. I want that but you don’t.”

  She sighed deeply. “It’s not that I don’t want it, Chance, it’s just that I don’t think it’s wise, considering the kids.”

  “So you prefer that we do things behind their backs?”

  “No, I prefer that we don’t do anything at all. Why is that so hard for you to understand?”

  “And just what is it that you’re afraid of?”

  She was taken aback by his question. “I’m not afraid of anything.”

  “I think you are.”

  “Then think whatever you want.”

  “I will, and right now I think it’s time that I show you something, Kylie Hagan.”

  She didn’t like the way that sounded. “Show me what?”

  “What this man-woman thing is all about. Like I said earlier today, you’ve been out of the game for so long you don’t know what’s acceptable between couples and what’s not. Maybe it’s time that I start teaching you a few things and—”

  “Teach me a few things?” she interrupted shortly.

  “Yes, then maybe you’ll realize that you’re not immune to me as you want to believe. Good night, Kylie.”

  The phone had already clicked in her ear before Kylie could recover her power of speech.

  “Mom, isn’t this place simply beautiful?” Tiffany asked in a high-pitched voice that was filled with enthusiasm and wonder.

  “Yes, it is,” Kylie replied, trying to direct her gaze out of the cabin window and not on Chance and Marcus as they brought in the items out of the truck.

  Especially on Chance.

  Instinctively, she took one hand and checked her pulse at her wrist, not surprised to find the strong beat racing beneath her fingertips. Already Chance was having an effect on her. He had shown up at her place wearing a pair of faded jeans and a T-shirt. The moment she’d seen him those wacky hormones of hers began soaring. She wished there was some type of injection she could take to build an immunity against him.

  “Mom, you don’t sound excited about being here. Are you okay?”

  Kylie turned to meet Tiffany’s concerned gaze and suddenly felt guilty. The last thing she wanted was her daughter worrying about her needlessly, which would place a damper on all the fun she’d planned for the weekend. “Yes, sweetheart, I’m fine, and it’s going to be a wonderful and fantastic weekend. Now let’s put this stuff down and go outside
to see if Marcus and Chance need our help.”

  Once they had stepped back outside, Kylie glanced around. The spacious log cabin that sat on the shore of a huge lake blended well with the surroundings. Trees of all kinds provided plenty of shade, as did a sprawling front porch that had several wooden rocking chairs and a rustic porch swing. Kylie had to agree with Tiffany’s earlier assessment. The place was beautiful.

  “The air is so crisp and clean here. I can’t wait until Marcus teaches me how to fish, and Mr. Steele said he would help. Isn’t that nice of him?”

  “Yes, that is nice of him.”

  They walked back toward the truck while Tiffany excitedly rambled on about what fun she planned to have and what a nice man Chance was.

  “Need us to help carry anything else inside?” Kylie asked Chance and Marcus when they reached them.

  “No, Dad and I can handle things, Ms. Hagan,” Marcus said, not giving Chance an opportunity to respond. “But remember we don’t use electricity, so you and Tiffany might want to unpack and get familiar with the inside of the cabin. Right, Dad?”

  Chance smiled. “Right.”

  Kylie could feel Chance’s eyes on her but she refused to look at him. She was beginning to feel ridiculous and out of sorts because a part of her was still upset about yesterday. He, however, was acting like their conversation never took place. To her chagrin, he was in the best of moods.

  “So what’s for dinner?” Tiffany would have to be the one to ask.

  “I thought it would be nice if we grilled something outside on the open fire,” Chance said. “Any ideas?”

  Kylie saw the opportunity to make peace and seized it. She glanced over at Chance. “Anything but hamburgers,” she said softly, as a tentative smile touched her lips.

  Chance met her gaze, immediately recognized their private joke and smiled back. “Okay, no hamburgers.”

  “What about a hot-dog roast?” was Tiffany’s suggestion.

  “That’s a great idea and we have plenty of hot-dog sticks to use,” Marcus chimed in.

  “Okay, all that sounds good,” Chance said, as an amused grin eased up the corner of his mouth. “But because I need something a little bit more filling, I’ll throw a couple of steaks on the grill, too.”

  He lifted the last box into his strong arms. “Come on, let’s go inside and get this show on the road.”

  Kylie inhaled a deep breath as she stepped out of the bedroom she and Tiffany were sharing. More than a dozen candles were strategically scattered about and a couple of huge lanterns blazed in the corners of the living room.

  She couldn’t help but smile, thinking of all the fun they’d had so far. Chance had given both her and Tiffany a quick lesson on camping and had shown them how to assemble a tent in case they ever needed to use one. Roasting hot dogs on the stick had been fun but she’d appreciated Chance’s idea of grilling the steaks when Marcus and Tiffany overcooked the weiners.

  And then later, before it had gotten dark, Chance had taken her out in a canoe to the other side of the lake. The scenery there had been just as breathtaking with numerous trees, flowering plants and a catfish-filled stream. Kylie smiled and thought that a person could get spoiled by so much of nature’s beauty.

  “Marcus is out like a light.”

  Kylie’s smile froze when she turned and saw Chance coming out the bedroom that he and Marcus were sharing. She thought he had turned in for the night.

  “So is Tiffany.” She gave him a curious look and said, “I thought you had gone to bed too.”

  “Not without first putting out the candles and lanterns. Fire hazards, you know.”

  She nodded. “I never realized there was so much to know about camping.”

  “There is but it’s an excellent way to get back to nature. My mom agreed up to a point, which is why my parents purchased this place. She didn’t mind getting back to nature but wanted all the comforts of home while doing so.”

  He grinned as he moved around the room to put out the candles and lanterns. “I hate to say this but we had more fun when we left her at home. Dad was too laid back to worry about us turning over in the canoe or eating berries off the bushes without washing them first. And the only reason we have hot and cold running water is because she refused to let us bathe in the lake. Good old Mom always came with a strict set of rules.”

  Kylie chuckled. “Haven’t you figured out yet that’s one of the things we’re best known for? Your mother sounds like my kind of woman. I would love meeting her one day.”

  And I intend for you to do just that, Chance thought as he glanced over at her. Mom would be happy to know that her oldest son has found love again.

  All the candles were out but one, and the luminescent glow from that one candle seemed to focus on Kylie, making her skin shine with an ethereal radiance. Her hair had been up in a ponytail earlier but now she’d taken it down, and the mass of braids fell in soft waves around her shoulders.

  “Well, I guess I’ll call it a night and—”

  “Will you sit on the porch with me for a while?” he asked.

  Kylie looked at him then shook her head. “I don’t think that’s a good idea.”

  The corner of his mouth tipped upward into a smile. “Has anyone ever told you that you think too much?”

  “Possibly,” she said slowly. “But I won’t absolutely admit to anything.”

  Chance chuckled. “I didn’t think you would.”

  “Now who’s thinking too much?”

  “Oh, that’s real rich,” Chance said, laughing. “Come on. I think you’ll get a kick out of watching the stars.” He reached out and offered her his hand and, only after hesitating briefly, she took it.

  Chance was right. She was getting a kick out of watching the stars. Sitting here on the porch and rocking in the chair made Kylie realize all the little things she’d hadn’t taken time to do before.

  “Sure you don’t want to come over here and share this swing with me?” Chance asked.

  She chuckled as she glanced over at him. “I’m positive.”

  “But you aren’t sitting close to me.”

  “I’m close enough, Chance.”

  “I beg to differ.”

  She shook her head grinning. “Tell me something. Are your brothers like you?”

  “No, I’m one of a kind.”

  “Thank God.”

  “Hey,” he said with affront. “What’s that supposed to mean?”

  “Let’s just say I’m glad after you were born that they broke the mold. I can’t imagine another one like you.”

  “I’ll take that as a compliment.”

  “You would.” After a brief moment of silence she said, “Tell me some more about your brothers.”

  “All right. Like I told you that day at the Racetrack Café, Bas is eighteen months younger than me and he’s the troubleshooter for the company.”

  “He’s also the one engaged to be married, right?”

  “So we hear.”

  She stopped rocking and looked over at him, studied his features from the glow of the moon. “Why do I have a feeling that it’s one of those ‘I’ll believe it when I see it’ deals?”

  “Because it is. Cassandra Tisdale and Bas are as different as day and night.”

  Kylie raised a brow. “Tisdale? As in Tisdale who owns a number of car dealerships around town? As well as those two restaurants?”

  “Yes, the dealerships belong to her father and the restaurants to her uncle. Same family.”

  “Why do you think Ms. Tisdale and your brother aren’t compatible?”

  “Because they aren’t.”

  “He evidently thinks they are.”

  “Remember you’re the one who thinks too much. In this case, I don’t believe Bas is thinking at all. But I have all the faith in the world that he’ll come to his senses before doing something stupid.”

  Kylie frowned. “You’re serious, aren’t you?”

  “Quite.” After a brief moment he said, “But onl
y because I know my brothers, and Bas in particular. All through his life he’s been known as the ‘not so stainless Steele.’”

  “Meaning?”

  Chance frowned at the memories. “He was considered the black sheep of the family because he used to get into so much trouble. I guess you can say he went through quite a rebellious stage while growing up. You name it, he probably did it. It was a good thing my father was good friends with Sheriff Bland-ford since Bas had a penchant for straying to the wrong side of the law. Most of the time it wasn’t him but the crowd he hung out with. But you know what they say about guilt by association.”

  Yes, she knew. “So when did his future change for the better?”

  “When he was about twenty. He dropped out of college after deciding he wanted to see the world. He was gone for a year without us knowing where he was most of the time. All we know is that when he returned he had a new outlook on life. He went back to college, graduated with honors and then came to work at the Steele Corporation, starting from the bottom. He was determined to learn everything he could. Now he’s a vital asset to the company. I depend on him to keep me in the know and to put out small fires.”

  “What about the other two?”

  “Morgan is Morgan. He has this thing about finding the perfect woman and until he does he won’t settle for less. Then there’s Donovan, who thinks he was born to have fun. He’s serious enough while at work but otherwise there’s really never a serious moment with him. My mother predicts he’ll probably be the one who lives the longest because he enjoys life too much to get stressed about anything.”

  “Does that also mean he’s having too much fun to settle down and get married?”

  “So he claims. He just hasn’t met the one woman to tame his game.”

  “Quite an interesting bunch.”

  “Yes, they didn’t refer to us as ‘Forged of Steele’ for nothing.”

  Kylie lifted a brow. “‘Forged of Steele’?”

  “Yes. We were known for our endurance. We thought we could outlast anything.”

 

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