by Lauren Layne
“Sam, let me introduce you to my date.”
Sam fished another beer out of the cooler, rolling his shoulders in hopes of summoning up indifference.
He turned around.
Making eye contact with Riley for the first time since she’d suggested they hump like a couple of casual rabbits did something non-family-friendly to the front of his jeans, so instead he took in her date.
That cooled him down.
The man looked like he belonged in a cologne commercial. He had those exotic looks that send women into a tizzy. Bronzed skin, slick, dark hair, and eyes that were looking at Riley as though he couldn’t wait to get her alone.
Asshole.
“Brent, this is Sam Compton. Longtime family friend. He’s practically like another brother to me.”
Except one doesn’t sexually proposition a brother, he thought irritably.
“Nice to meet you,” Brent said, all white smile and smooth handshake.
Sam gave the universal male chin tilt in acknowledgment. “So, how long you guys been dating?”
His eyes never left Riley’s as he asked, and although her eyes were all innocence, her small cat smile revealed her game.
He let his own gaze answer back. Don’t even bother. I’m not playing.
But he wanted to. Badly. The thought of this guy taking his place in her bed …
Except Sam had said no. He’d had to say no. Even if it’s all he’d been able to think about since she’d left his place on Friday.
“Brent and I have known each other for years,” she replied smoothly.
Sam refused to let his eyes linger on the spot where Riley’s fingers touched Brent’s arm, and he scrunched his face up in an expression of mock confusion. “Have you mentioned him before?”
Riley’s eyes narrowed, but Brent gave an easy laugh. “Probably not. I’ve been trying to get her to go out with me for years, but she’s always been seeing someone else.”
“Oh, is that what the kids are calling sex these days. Seeing someone?”
You’re being a jerk. Didn’t you just walk out on your own mother for making those same inferences about Riley?
Unperturbed, Riley gave him a sympathetic smile before turning her attention to Brent. “Sam here’s a bit of a … oh, what’s the polite word … recluse? You know, I don’t think he’s actually seen a woman’s breast up close and personal since the Reagan administration.”
Brent gave a nervous laugh as Sam choked on his beer.
Recovering quickly, Sam turned back to Riley’s new “boyfriend.” “So, how’d she talk you into coming to her nephew’s First Communion party? A little tame for a first date, isn’t it?”
Riley opened her mouth, but Brent beat her to it. “Tame is fine with me. Especially since I have no intention of letting the first date be the last.”
Really? Because I have every intention of ensuring that this is your last date.
It was a damn good thing that this was a kid-centric party, because the appearance of Riley’s niece in a puffy purple dress was just about the only thing that would have stopped Sam from forcefully escorting Brent to the nearest train home.
“Uncle Sam, do you want to see my new Barbie car?”
He tore his eyes away from Riley to glance down at the little girl who looked just like her. Big blue eyes blinked up at him, and he couldn’t resist. This one had him wrapped around her finger.
Just like her aunt.
“A new Barbie car, huh? Did you have a birthday I missed?” he asked, setting his beer aside and scooping her up even though she was about a year too old for it. She squealed in delight and looped her skinny arms around his neck.
“Not my birthday, but my daddy bought it for me because I was good when I went to the hardware store with him.”
“Your daddy’s a sucker, and you can tell him I said that,” Sam said. Although he had to hand it to Brian. Bribing your daughter with Barbie crap so you could get your Home Depot fix was genius.
“Let’s go see this car, then. What kind of engine are we talking about on this thing?”
Lily laughed a little-girl laugh. “It’s pink!”
“Of course it is,” he said, edging by Brent and Riley.
He felt Riley’s eyes on him, but he didn’t look back as he listened to Lily ramble about how Barbie was a better driver than Ken.
Twenty minutes later, Megan came to coax Lily into eating something besides cake, and Sam was able to escape the makeshift playroom Erin and Josh had set up for their grandchildren and rejoin the adult party.
“Where’d you disappear to?” Liam asked, never taking his eyes off the football game.
Sam flopped down next to Liam and Brian. “Barbie and Ken were getting married.”
Brian shifted his sleeping infant son to his other shoulder. “Lily got to you, huh?”
“I didn’t mind.”
Liam’s dad entered, plopping into the ancient recliner that his wife hated but that was as much a part of the house as the man himself. Sam could still remember the first time he’d stepped into the McKenna home. The warm, motherly welcome from Liam’s mom practically had him reeling, to say nothing of the jolt to his hormones delivered by his first look at Riley. Then Liam had led him into the living room, where Josh was sitting in that very chair, looking completely unruffled by Sam’s most recent tattoo and surly smirk.
“Whisky?” Josh had asked.
“Joshua, he’s a minor,” said Riley’s mother.
Sam jumped in. “I’ve had whisky before.”
“Good enough for me.” Josh had poured them a couple of fingers of Jameson’s. Liam, being several months younger than Sam, had been offered lemonade. Sam had never admitted it to anyone, but he often wondered if his seemingly spontaneous decision to start a whisky distillery hadn’t been born out of that long-ago moment when Josh McKenna had taken a fatherless kid under his wing, no questions asked.
“Where have you been?” Josh asked Sam, jerking him back to the present. “You missed cake.”
“He was playing dolls. Brought his own Barbie wardrobe and everything,” Liam said, dodging a halfhearted kick from Sam.
Josh grunted. “My granddaughter got the McKenna female wiles. She’s every bit as manipulative as her grandmother. And her mother. And her aunts.”
“Kate’s not like that,” Brian said, patiently mopping baby spit from his shoulder.
“That’s because that baby girl doesn’t know how to lie,” Josh said. “She’d tell you you’re ugly to your face if the thought popped into her head. Manipulation doesn’t pop into her head.”
“Neither do manners,” Liam muttered.
Sam wisely stayed out of the familiar argument. All of the McKenna sisters were stunning and likable in their way. Megan had the sort of sturdy, bossy competence that came with being the oldest, just as Kate had the oblivious, semi-self-absorbed air of the baby of the family. Then there was Riley. And speaking of …
All four men turned to see Riley and the douche bag Brent standing in the doorway. “Brent’s leaving,” Riley said, looking around the room expectantly.
She was met with vacant stares. Sam knew the other men’s thoughts echoed his own. And?
Riley’s eyes narrowed. “Don’t you want to say goodbye? Dad?”
“Bye,” Josh grunted.
Her eyes narrowed further. “Liam.”
Her brother squirmed slightly at her tone. “See ya,” he said, with a quick nod at Brent.
“Nice to meet you all,” Brent said with a polite smile. “I hope to see you again soon.”
“Sure,” Liam muttered.
Sam kept his eyes carefully focused on the television even though he didn’t have a clue who was playing. Not for the first time, he wished it could have been the more direct, younger McKenna he’d fallen for. There’d be none of these games with Kate. Kate wouldn’t have thought to flaunt another man in his face to show him what he was missing. To make him visualize Brent’s hands on her tiny waist, his mouth …
&n
bsp; Damn it.
Against his will, his eyes went to Riley and Brent, but they’d disappeared. He forced himself to stay put, even though his heart started pounding. He felt restless. Antsy. He felt … jealous.
Where was that coming from? Why now? He’d spent years reminding himself that Riley wasn’t his. That he had no right to resent her relationships. But the burning sensation in his neck and the knot in his stomach was definitely jealousy.
Goddamn, this room was suffocating.
“Be right back,” he muttered, setting his beer on a coaster so Erin wouldn’t tan his ass if he marked up the furniture, and headed out of the living room. Riley had said only that Brent was leaving, not that they were leaving, which meant that she might still be here. Maybe they could talk …
No, he didn’t want to talk. He wanted to do a hell of a lot more than talk.
Needing fresh air, he started toward the back door, only to see a congregation of women hovering. No thanks. He reversed, heading toward the front door.
And came to a halt when he saw Riley and Brent standing in the foyer. Brent’s arm was sliding around Riley’s back, his head tilting down as Riley’s arms lifted, preparing to lock around the man’s neck.
Oh hell no.
“Riley, you got a minute?” Sam blurted out.
Fuck.
She spun around, and he braced himself for surprise and annoyance. Instead he saw something else. Victory.
Double fuck.
She’d planned this. And he’d walked right into it, like a horny bull.
And he wasn’t even sure he cared. “Ri?” Sam prompted.
She turned back to Brent with a sheepish smile. “I’ll call you later?”
“Sure,” he said giving her an understanding look.
The look he gave Sam was much less tender, but Sam didn’t bother to look apologetic. He lifted his hand and gave an annoying little finger wiggle at the other man. See ya.
Riley turned back around to face Sam once Brent was gone, and he realized he’d been wrong. She may have planned for this, but it didn’t mean she wasn’t a little pissed. Okay, a lot pissed, he amended as he took in the fire in her eyes.
“Okay, you’ve got your minute,” she said, emphasizing the last word.
Translation: Make it fast.
Don’t worry. He would.
He jerked his head toward her father’s rarely used study, and her expression went slightly wary before she rolled her eyes and marched her tight ass into the little space at the front of the house.
After a quick glance confirmed they were alone, Sam followed.
“There’s no room in here,” she muttered.
Sure enough, Josh’s “office” was more of a Christmas storage/unused furniture/abandoned craft-supply storeroom.
He nudged her in anyway, shutting the door so it was just the two of them in the crowded space. The late-afternoon sunshine caught on her dangling earrings, and Sam focused on that. It was a hell of a lot easier than focusing on her face.
“What do you want, Sam?” she asked, her voice bored, her eyes uninterested.
He searched her features. Had he been wrong? Had Brent been something more than a tool to make him jealous? His gut said no, but his heart wasn’t sure he wanted the risk.
And his body … hell. Maybe privacy hadn’t been what he and Riley needed right now. In fact, as he watched her chest rise and fall beneath her low-cut red sweater, he was suddenly sure that privacy was the last thing they needed.
“What’s the mute caveman thing?” she asked, lifting her eyebrows. “I told my mom I’d help do the dishes, and then I need to get back to the city to do my edits due tomorrow—”
Dishes? She was seriously thinking about dishes right now? He was ready to explode, and she was talking about goddamned chores?
Well, he had something else in mind. Something a whole lot more pressing than dishes.
Don’t do this, man, he ordered himself. He’d promised Liam. He’d promised himself.
He was no good for her, and one of them was going to get hurt.
“Right. Okay then,” she muttered, trying to edge around him, her hand going for the doorknob.
Let her go.
He couldn’t.
Sam’s hand found her wrist before she could turn the knob, and they both froze, their breath coming fast and heavy.
His thumb moved over her palm, and she gasped at the touch. He knew what she was feeling. They’d done a damn good job of avoiding physical contact over the years, and this was why.
“Sam—”
He moved then, pressing her into the door, his eyes locking on hers for a split second before his hand went around the back of her neck and he lowered his head.
And then he kissed her.
Holy hell, he was kissing Riley McKenna.
It was wrong, and a mistake and every kind of fucked up, and yet all he could think was finally.
She let out a shaky little breath, and his tongue swept in as he tilted her head back, lips twisting, tongues tangling as he moved against her, pinning her more firmly against the door.
Her hands moved to his shoulders, and for a heart-wrenching moment he thought she’d push him away. But then her fingers dug into his shirt, tugging him closer.
It was like he was a teenager all over again, finally getting his hands on the hottest girl in school.
Only the hottest girl in school was his best friend’s baby sister, and he was sure to fail at this, just like he failed at everything.
He pulled back just enough to search her face.
Both of them were gasping, and her hand went to his face, her fingers lightly brushing his lower lip. “It’s about time.”
He closed his eyes briefly. “You know this is insane.”
Instead of responding, she gazed back at him smugly, looking a lot more sure about this—about them—than he was. “Well, Brent’s probably just now getting to the train station. I bet I can catch him.”
Sam growled and kissed her again, hard and fast.
She kissed him back, just as hot, before her hand went to his chest and pushed. “So you’re going to be the guy? You’re going to help me with my article? I’m not in a serious relationship, and I can’t just write about any old guy and make it personal …”
No.
Yes.
Just … hell.
“Why can’t you be a kindergarten teacher or something? Why do you have to be a goddamned sex writer?”
She smiled, her fingers lightly scratching his bare arms. He was more than a little tempted to take her right here and right now. But they were in a room with her father’s old radio and her mother’s nativity scene, and there was a fake Christmas tree one wrong move from digging into his ass.
“Riley—”
“Say yes, Sam,” she said, interrupting him. “Don’t make me do this with another guy.”
He closed his eyes and rested his forehead on hers.
“Please,” she whispered. “I want it to be you.”
Shit.
It was one thing to deny himself all these years. It was no more or less than he deserved.
But to deny Riley?
He couldn’t. Had never been able to.
“We’re going to regret this,” he said when he opened his eyes and gazed at her.
Her eyes lit up at the implicit acquiescence in his words.
“Maybe,” she said softly. “But we’re going to have a lot of fun doing it.”
Chapter Eight
Normally a first date with a new guy called for girl talk.
For years, Riley had been counting on Julie and Grace to tell her if her emerald silk dress with the plunging neckline was too trampy for a first date (yes), or if her new boot-cut jeans were too casual for a fancy dinner at Per Se (also yes).
Julie and Grace, and more recently Emma, were her dating mentors.
But tonight she was on her own.
Because there was no good way to tell even your best friends that you we
re about to end a ridiculously long sexual hiatus with …
Well, whatever Sam was to her. Friend seemed inadequate.
Especially after that kiss at her parents’ house.
Turned out no amount of daydreaming could prepare one for the real thing, because Riley had definitely not been ready for whatever it was she felt when he backed her against that door.
It had been planned, of course. She’d known that Brent would try to kiss her. And she’d been pretty sure that Sam would follow them into the foyer at her parents’ house. Right on both counts.
But she’d only meant to goad Sam into reconsidering her offer. Stiletto had taught her enough about machismo and male possessiveness to know that even if Sam wasn’t entirely sure that he wanted her, he wouldn’t want Brent to have her.
She’d been right.
Too right.
Because no part of her had been prepared for how one kiss would make her want to end her sexual hiatus right there in her parents’ makeshift storage room. In the span of two minutes, Riley felt what she’d been waiting years to feel with other guys—that uncontrollable, take-me-now surge of want.
She got it now. She understood what it felt like to need another person.
Trouble was, she didn’t know what would happen after this. If the kiss had had that kind of effect, the next step just might kill her.
Because Riley was scared to death that just one night with Sam Compton wouldn’t be enough. That the longing she needed to put to rest would only be ignited when she slept with him, and she’d spend the rest of her life comparing every other man to him.
She understood now what Julie felt for Mitchell, and what Grace felt for Jake, and if her intuition was right, what Emma felt for Alex Cassidy underneath that layer of southern frost.
She just wished she knew how to shut it off.
Also on her list of Riley’s being an idiot?
Agreeing to let him take her out. There was to be no greeting him at the door wearing nothing but a negligee and a smile, with maybe a wee bit of wine to help with the nerves.
Oh no.
No, no, Sam Compton apparently had a gentlemanly core beneath those sexy rough edges, because he’d insisted on a date.
And she still didn’t even understand why, because all he’d done was grumble, something something, not a goddamned booty call.