Bear Treble (Highland Brothers 4)

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Bear Treble (Highland Brothers 4) Page 2

by Meredith Clarke


  “Are you going to show me around?” she asked from the foyer.

  Dylan heaved her loaded suitcases over the threshold. “Do you usually pack this much?”

  “I never know what I’m going to need.”

  “So you pack up your entire apartment?”

  She spun on her heels. “Do you always talk to artists like this?”

  “Do you always invite yourself into other people’s houses?” He felt the shuddering under his chest. He could barely steady his bear. It was a battle of wills beneath his skin.

  He’d seen pictures of Layla before, probably hundreds if he was honest. And hell, he’d always thought she was a pretty woman, but standing in front of her he was thrown by how gorgeous she was in person. Her hair was layered in thick auburn waves, and though he wasn’t much for makeup, her skin was flawless. The lines around her eyes made the green stand out. She had the most lush, kissable lips he’d ever seen.

  She was known for her powerful voice. For her heart-wrenching ballads that spoke to people’s souls. She had been called the voice of the century. Her songs had enough rock to keep her on the pop charts, and so much soul you’d never forget them. But all he could think about was how fucking sexy she looked standing in the foyer. She was killing him with her curves.

  “I’m only here to make sure this album is perfect.” Her hands sank at her hips. He suppressed an immediate growl.

  “I don’t work with other writers. I do things on my own.” He dropped the bags in front of the staircase.

  “Doesn’t seem to be working for you.” She smirked.

  He knew he could kiss that look right off her face. He could make her head spin. But he closed his eyes instead.

  “You know this won’t work.” His dark brown eyes met her gaze.

  “Of course it will. We’ve already worked together, just not in the same place at the same time.”

  Dylan rolled his eyes. “I wrote songs. You recorded them. That’s not exactly the definition of a working relationship.”

  He watched as she struggled to pull her first suitcase up the stairs. It was obvious she never carried her own luggage.

  “Hold on. Give me that.” He took the bag from her grasp, and his breath caught when he felt the softness of her hand.

  Layla moved to the side of the staircase. “Thank you. They are a little heavy I guess.”

  “I’ll leave them at the top of the stairs.”

  He left her waiting while he delivered the bags to the upper landing. He couldn’t believe this was happening.

  Layla smiled up at him. “You made that look easy.”

  He shook his head. “Nah. I life weights, that’s all.” He hesitated. “I was about to make something to eat for dinner. Are you hungry?”

  Her shoulders relaxed. “Actually, yeah. I’d love to eat.”

  “That’s something we can agree on. Come on. Kitchen’s this way.”

  She followed him through the house.

  “Wow. This place is impressive.” She gawked at the chef’s kitchen Dylan’s cousins had designed.

  “My cousin Crawford did most of the remodel work.” He opened the fridge, trying to think of something he could fix them to eat.

  “I should have him look at my beach house. It needs some help.”

  His eyebrows rose. “What beach?”

  “It’s on the East Coast.”

  “Not California?” He pulled bacon from one of the trays.

  She shook her head, her curls dusting over her shoulders. “I’m not an LA girl.”

  “Shocking,” he murmured.

  “Hey, I’m not all Hollywood. Just because you think you know who I am, doesn’t mean you do.” Her eyes set on him in determination.

  He raised his hands. “You’re right. Sorry.” He pulled a frying pan from the cabinet. “Looks like BLTs for dinner. That alright?”

  “Mmm. Sounds better than the stupid cardboard my trainer makes me eat.” She slumped into one of the barstools, kicking her high heels to the floor.

  “Don’t tell me you’re on one of those stupid celebrity diets.” He turned the gas on low.

  “You and I both know there’s no one else in the music business with my shape.”

  He jerked around. “Or your voice.”

  She smiled. “Right. The voice. Well, I’m supposed to have the body to go with the voice. Thus, the trainer.”

  Dylan layered the bacon on the bottom of the pan. “Don’t listen to them. You’re beautiful.” He froze, his hand mid-air with a piece of bacon dangling from his fingers. What in the hell did he just say? He tried to think of something to cover it up. Something that would make her forget he just called her beautiful, but he thought about it too long.

  “You think I’m beautiful?” she taunted.

  He closed his eyes tightly, trying to drown out the sounds his bear was making. He needed to quiet him, rope him back in to a dark corner. Layla wasn’t for him.

  “Everyone thinks you’re pretty. You’re Layla Love.” He tried to chuckle, but there was no way he could pull it off. His heart was splitting open, his bear tearing at him to look at his mate. To comfort her. To tell her everything she needed to hear.

  She sighed. “Oh, yeah. Everyone.” She hopped off the stool. “I’m going to go change. I’ll be down in a few.”

  “Sounds good.” He didn’t want to turn around and see her. He could feel the way the air had changed after his blunder.

  “Is any room ok?” she asked.

  He focused on the bacon sizzling in the pan. “Yeah. Help yourself. The back wing upstairs is mainly for guests. Take your pick. Go to the end of the hall and hang a left.”

  “Thanks.”

  He turned around to see Layla pick her high heels off the floor. She walked out of the kitchen holding them in her right hand.

  Damn it. In less than an hour that woman had completely gotten under his skin.

  6

  Layla

  She pulled the suitcases behind her, ducking her head in each room. Dylan wasn’t kidding. There were tons of empty guestrooms on the second floor.

  By now she thought she would be used to the wealth and money that came with her success, but standing in Highland House she knew her money wasn’t like this. Hers came to her fast and furious after one breakout album.

  Sure people loved to write articles about her rags to riches success. But no one really liked to think about it. How she grew up with nothing. How there was only one pair of shoes. Only one pair of jeans. And if she was lucky, she got a new summer outfit, not her sister’s hand-me-downs.

  She thought about that girl as she walked along the corridor of the guest wing. It made her feel small, just like that girl she used to be. If this was the life Dylan grew up in, they didn’t have much in common. That didn’t matter. She only needed him to give her a song now that would keep her on top.

  Every time she walked in the studio she was terrified the new music wouldn’t live up to the old albums. It would be judged and ridiculed for being too artistically indulgent, or too close to the trend. It kept her up at night. It kept her up all day. It was the only reason she had allowed Billy to sign Dylan Highland. She had to have the best to keep her at the top.

  She settled on a room near the end of the hall. There was a fireplace and a four-poster bed. Almost quaint, but big enough she could spread out all the suitcases.

  The smell of dinner floated up from the first floor.

  For a moment in the kitchen she thought Dylan was hitting on her. It was brief, but there was something in the way he called her beautiful that tugged at her. Just as unexpectedly as it came, it vanished. She shook her head. He was a moody songwriter. Brilliant, famous, and even called an artistic genius, but it didn’t take five minutes with the guy to realize he was also cocky, arrogant, and rude. He didn’t want her there, but she wasn’t leaving until she had what she wanted.

  Layla unzipped the first bag and began to arrange her cosmetics on the bathroom counter. It wasn’t l
ike she needed his attention or his approval. She dabbed a bit of her lotion against her wrists and rubbed them together. She loved the way the white rain smelled on her skin. It was almost as good as taking a shower. She had bought the bottle on her last trip to Paris.

  She shrugged off her leather jacket, and pulled out her new tartan shirt. It had been $400 at a boutique. She fastened the buttons and looked at her reflection. Dylan had studied her body—she saw his eyes coast over her hips. A slight rush ran up her throat. She swallowed. That was stupid. He wasn’t checking her out. He was annoyed she had crashed his songwriting retreat.

  She turned off the light as she walked out of the room. It didn’t matter what kind of broody artist he was. She wasn’t leaving until she had the perfect set of songs for her new album. And as far as she was concerned Dylan was the only man that could give her what she wanted.

  7

  Dylan

  He arranged the sandwiches on the plates with a side of fruit. He debated on whether to break into Hudson’s wine collection, but decided if he was hosting one of the world’s greatest voices, his cousin wouldn’t care about a bottle or two. He returned from the cellar with a pinot noir and cracked it open just as Layla walked into the kitchen.

  “Took a gamble you might like red.” He pointed to the open bottle.

  “Good bet.” She smiled. “I don’t drink much though.”

  “Oh?”

  “Yeah. I have to protect my vocal chords. Alcohol can weaken them.”

  He immediately regretted opening the bottle and shoved the cork back on top.

  “No, no. Don’t do that,” she urged. “I want it. Believe me.” She grinned.

  His nose caught something in the air. She smelled amazing like new rain in the forest. He felt the hammering against his chest to finally grab her in his arms and pull her pouty lips to his mouth. He groaned. Not happening.

  He handed her a glass. “Here you go.”

  “Thanks. I think we should toast.” She held her glass forward.

  “Toast?”

  “To writing six number one songs.” She clanged the glass against his.

  He took a gulp, hoping the wine was a strong one that would knock his bear out. “You really think you can have six more number ones?” He sat next to her.

  “Why not? It’s not worth recording the song if I don’t think it can be a hit.” She placed her glass on the counter.

  “Hmph,” he grumbled.

  “Is there something wrong with that?” she asked.

  “Yeah, I think so. I write for the song. For the lyrics. For the power of the music. I don’t write for where it might land on the charts.”

  She laughed. “This coming from a guy with too many hits to count. Easy for you to say.”

  “That’s not why I write.” He felt his defenses going up. “I don’t give a damn if any of these songs make it on the top one hundred.”

  Her eyes widened. “You have got to be kidding me. You know exactly what it means to write a hit, and to write a bomb.”

  “That doesn’t matter to me.”

  She scoffed at him. “You’d give back your Grammy Awards?”

  “Yeah, I would.” He whipped his head to face her.

  “Well I wouldn’t,” she stated. “I earned every single one.”

  “Let me guess—they’re on your mantle?”

  “In my awards room, actually.” She looked proud of the announcement.

  He shook his head. He couldn’t take it anymore. Maybe she wasn’t any different than what he had always thought. All she cared about was making money and landing at the top. She didn’t even value a good song.

  “You have everyone fooled, don’t you?” He tossed his sandwich on the plate.

  Her green eyes fired. “Fooled? Why? Because I want to maintain my success? I don’t think that’s any different than any other artist out there.” She grabbed the wine goblet and Dylan noticed how her knuckles turned white under the strain.

  “Artists? If all you’re doing is plucking popular songs I don’t see how you can call yourself that.” He pushed back from the bar and tossed his plate in the trash.

  “Where are you going?”

  “I’ve lost my appetite.”

  “Dylan, come back.”

  He turned on his heels. “You’re in my house, Layla Love. And as long as you’re here you don’t get to tell me what to do.” He walked out of the kitchen, and headed for the front door.

  He slammed it behind him, feeling the cold gust of air wash over his face. He inhaled, trying to submerge the rage bubbling in his blood. Damn it. She was a self-absorbed diva. He gripped the railing. How was he supposed to work with her?

  He picked up the guitar and the pad that he had dropped.

  And then it hit him. He knew exactly what to write.

  8

  Layla

  She sat at the bar in the kitchen alone. She couldn’t believe Dylan had walked out. Not only did he walk out in the middle of their conversation, but he also barked out some kind of weird house decree. Who in the hell did he think he was? He couldn’t tell her what to do. She ran a multi-million dollar company. She had over a hundred employees. She had platinum records. She had an international tour that started in three months. She was Layla Love.

  She swallowed another sip of wine and jumped from the stool. This wasn’t over. She was going to talk to him and make him understand how critical this was. Of course she was an artist. Of course she knew there was merit in the songs. But she had a brand and a label to protect. People counted on her for their livelihood—he needed to understand that too.

  She headed in the direction Dylan had left and stopped at the door. It was low at first, but then she heard his voice over the guitar. The notes were strong against his words. She cracked the door enough to hear every note clearly. She closed her eyes as the words came spilling from him.

  He wasn’t aware she was there. She could hear it in his voice—he was lost in the music. Belting out the lyrics as if he were pouring out the secrets of his soul. She froze, needing the door to brace her. It was powerful and raw.

  When the song ended, she stepped on to the porch.

  Dylan turned to face her. “That was beautiful,” she whispered.

  He looked confused. His eyes darted back and forth. She could see the same anguish in his eyes she felt in the song. “You heard it?” he whispered.

  She nodded, as a tear slipped down her cheek. She rushed to wipe it away. “When did you write it?”

  His eyes dropped to the floor. “Now.”

  “That happened just now?” She inched closer. His chest was heaving. The guitar was strapped to his giant shoulders.

  He looked up. “I need to get it down.” He sat in the chair and started jotting down the notes and words.

  “It’s for me isn’t it?” She wanted to reach out and touch him. She needed something to connect to the song that just came from this man.

  “Yes.” He continued to write.

  “What’s it called?”

  His voice was low. “Crave.”

  The way he said it almost had the same effect as hearing him sing. She wanted to clutch at her chest to stop the feelings ripping through her.

  “I want to release it first. The very first one off the album. It has to be.”

  And then he shot her a look that she knew if looks could kill, she’d be dead on this front porch.

  She walked backward before turning for the house. Dylan had written other songs for her. But nothing had shaken her like that song. It rattled in her bones. It filled spaces in her heart. It made it hard to breathe. There was music. And then there was what Dylan had created.

  And she had ruined the moment. Taken the precious gift he had created and reminded him why everyone thought she was a diva, devoid of human emotion. She wanted to take it back. Say something that mattered. Say anything but what she said about turning the song into a hit, but it was too late. The only thing to do was leave him alone.

&
nbsp; She climbed the stairs to the second floor, leaving him to finish a song that lit a torch in her soul.

  9

  Dylan

  After he finished Crave, he worked on another song. It was close to four when he finally rubbed his eyes and realized he needed to get some sleep. He carried his guitar and notepad in the house and locked the front door behind him.

  He didn’t know what happened, but suddenly there was a flood of music ready to spring from his fingertips. He couldn’t get the notes and words down fast enough. He could see and feel it everywhere.

  His bear growled as he took the steps. His mate was up there, sleeping in one of the many guestrooms. He shook his head. He would finish the album for Layla because he had to. He didn’t want to be blacklisted for breaking a contract. He didn’t want to ruin the professional relationship he had built with Billy. And he knew deep down he didn’t want to disappoint his mate.

  But as soon as the album was finished, Layla would leave. She could ride off on her world tour. She could sing her songs to millions of people and rake in all the money she wanted. Because like it or not, that’s all she cared about.

  He stopped in front of one of the closed doors. He didn’t have to open it to know she was sleeping on the other side. The ache pulsed under his ribs. His bear still wanted her. His bear didn’t care about her fame, or whether she was a high maintenance nightmare. He only wanted what he thought was his.

  Dylan forced himself down the hall to his room. There were many times when he fought against his animal nature, but never more than this. His bear was wrong. Completely and utterly wrong. Layla wasn’t the mate for him.

  He knew what it meant to have a fated mate. To have the one woman meant only for him. An attraction so strong, he wouldn’t be able to resist her. He scowled over his shoulder at her door. To hell with fated mates. He was in control, not his bear.

 

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