His To Keep (His and Hers Book 4)

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His To Keep (His and Hers Book 4) Page 10

by Vivian Wood


  “This smells amazing,” she said as they carried the signature dogs back to the owner’s box. They’d stopped and picked up the red velvet chicken ‘n’ waffles for a touch of sweetness en route. “It almost makes up for my having to wear arguably the most racist shirt imaginable.”

  “Don’t say that in the suite,” he teased her. “You’re making nice with some very rich people with some very strong opinions on why ‘redskins’ is still a perfectly acceptable slur.”

  The investors descended on the stadium food with gusto. The waitstaff scurried to refill pints while the wives and girlfriends picked gingerly at the food.

  “You two look good together,” the older wife told both of them. “We saw you on the big screen.”

  He watched Sam blush and put his hand on her leg. “I’ve been told I make some pretty solid decisions,” he told the woman.

  “Yes, well, my husband is quite taken,” she said. “It’s refreshing to see some youth and vigor revitalize the company. I imagine that will be reflected in a gesture of his soon.”

  Sam smiled at him as the woman moved on to compliment one of the young girls on her dress that looked painfully tight. Although it was just the two of them for a moment, he didn’t move his hand from her thigh. She didn’t seem to mind. He could feel the heat of her body, even through the denim, and wondered what she would do if he started to inch his hand up higher. Nothing? Uncross her legs? Give him permission with her eyes?

  “Connor,” one of the investors said. It snapped him instantly out of his daydream. “What do you think of their first-down running average? Obviously it’s improved since the 2015 season, but I think…”

  He squeezed Sam’s leg, got up and moved to the investor to talk ball. But he felt her eyes follow him.

  When the game was over and all the hugs and kisses were exchanged around the suite, Connor left last. He held the door open for Sam and indulged in a show of her hips swinging in those tight jeans. The ball cap that topped her ponytail and flawless old-school Adidas in custom burgundy and gold stripes were an impressive touch by James.

  “Can I give you a ride home?” he asked.

  She turned and looked up from her phone. “I was just ordering an Uber—”

  He shook his head. “Don’t worry about that, it’ll take forever with the crowd. And premium parking is right here, so we can be out and I can have you home a lot faster than any Uber.”

  She bit her lip and looked at her phone again. “Well, if it’s not too much trouble…”

  “Not at all, come on,” he said.

  The attendant rushed to open their doors, and Connor got a kick out of watching what must have been a twenty-year-old kid ogle Sam as she slid into the car. “I didn’t know you high rollers even had your own parking garage,” she said. “And air conditioned, too.”

  “Only the best for people who spend thousands of dollars every year to sit in their tower above the field and barely watch the game,” he said with a laugh.

  “Not a huge fan, then?” she asked.

  He shrugged. “It’s alright. These things are just work for me, so it’s not like I can enjoy them even if I really wanted to.”

  “Work, huh?” she asked with a smile.

  He grinned at her and started toward the exit. “Yes, work. But who says you can’t have some fun while you’re at it?”

  She lowered her cap as he paused at the gate to open the convertible top.

  “Do you want to see my place?” he shouted to her over the wind. “We’ll be driving near it.”

  “Sure!” she said.

  He exited off I-395 and made his way to Lowell Street. Connor slowed in the familiar neighborhood. The last thing he needed was another complaint to the homeowner’s association about how he “didn’t drive like his kids lived here.” One of the neighbors, a crotchety older woman who constantly tended her roses, gave the requisite wave.

  “Is this your neighborhood?” Sam asked, almost in a whisper.

  “This is it,” he said. “And there’s my place,” he said as he pointed to the historic home which he’d had dramatically updated with touches of modern and mid-century modern flair.

  “Are you serious?” she asked, wide-eyed.

  “What, you don’t like it?” he asked.

  “It’s just not what I expected,” she said as she craned her head to watch it while they passed.

  “What did you expect? Pink plastic flamingoes in the yard?”

  “I don’t know. More of a bachelor pad, I guess. A loft in the city.”

  “I’m full of surprises,” he promised her.

  16

  Sam

  “Well, this is a change,” Connor said as he escorted her through the United States Botanic Garden. The setting sun was a swirl of pastel colors visible through the bubbled glass entry. “You’re taking me out as arm candy for once.”

  “Oh shush,” she said, but had to admit he was right. Her agency’s annual summer celebration wasn’t anything she’d looked forward to. However, when she’d realized Connor would be happy to use the opportunity for publicity, she started to look forward to it.

  “What kind of look are you going for?” James had asked her via email. It was the first time she’d had any kind of say in her ensemble.

  “Sleek, chic, but natural,” she’d told him.

  And he’d nailed it. She was draped in a knee-length yellow linen dress with artfully embroidered eyelets. It toed the line between sensual and feminine.

  Sam took one of the walking appetizers and encouraged Connor to do the same. “What do you think?” she asked him. He finished the smoked salmon and violet tea delicacy in one bite.

  “Delicious,” he admitted.

  She smiled. “That was my doing.”

  He raised a brow at her. “I’m impressed. Let’s see what else you can do.”

  Sam made her rounds and got a little thrill every time she introduced him as her fiancé. For awhile, she’d resisted bringing the charade into her own life, but it was futile. There was no way she could keep up with the lies and stories. It was simply easier to let the worlds collide. Otherwise, she was sure she’d mess up, given how often Connor pulled her away for luncheons. Plus, when she’d found out Jenny couldn’t make it, the situation became the perfect opportunity to show off.

  Besides, what would happen if his family or business partners dug into her background and found out nobody in her life knew she was “engaged?”

  “Sam, dear, your fiancé is a dream,” Mrs. Whiteworth told her. “Though the name is familiar—”

  “Everyone says that,” he said quickly. “My family hosts a lot of events, but primarily business and personal affairs. I’m sure my mother’s used your services before.”

  “That must be it,” Mrs. Whiteworth said as she finished her glass of Prosecco.

  Sam burned a bright red, touched his hand and scanned the crowd for an exit. “There are some clients I’d like to say hello to,” she said to Connor. “Do you mind?” she asked Mrs. Whiteworth, who waved her away.

  “I see you haven’t built a foolproof backstory at work on how we got together,” Connor said with a smile. “Is that frowned upon? Swooping in on heartbroken clients and snatching them up for yourself?”

  “I don’t recall anything about it in my contract,” she said as her heart started to slow down.

  “Hey, where are you actually taking me?” he asked as they left the crowd behind.

  “I don’t know.”

  The gardens seemed different at night, as the evening event lights worked their magic. The last time she’d been here, it was to survey the grounds and help plan this “little gathering” as her boss called it.

  They moved from the lawn terrace and rose garden past the butterfly garden and toward the amphitheater. “I don’t think I’ve been here since I was a kid,” he said.

  The two of them circled the empty amphitheater, drawn toward a hothouse. “Your mom used to bring you here?” she asked.

 
He laughed. “My mom? No. It was a school field trip. I don’t recall my parents taking me anywhere that didn’t serve them in some regard.”

  Connor tried the door of the greenhouse and looked at her with wide eyes when it opened.

  “Should we?” she asked, and looked around.

  “I think it’s a sign.”

  Dim lights automatically flickered on when they entered, but they were so slight it was like being draped in moonlight. She could swear she could almost hear the plants sigh in their sleep. Do plants dream? And if they do, what are we to them?

  She watched Connor explore the little nursery. He looked somehow both drastically out of place and just right in the tailored navy blue suit amidst all the greenery. “I used to come here quite often,” she said. Sam wandered down the narrow aisle opposite of him. He looked up and caught her gaze over the sprawling leaves and beautiful blossoms.

  “I can see that,” he said.

  “How so?”

  “I don’t know. It suits you. Being with all the flowers.”

  She blushed, grateful for the barely-there light. Here, in the greenhouse, it was like they’d built their own little world. Almost all of the sounds outside, including the chatter of the party, were silenced. Faintly, she could hear the jazz quartet as they played on.

  Suddenly, she was very aware of her heartbeat. “They say plants and flowers respond to the sounds of music,” she said.

  “Who are they?”

  “Who knows? Plant experts,” she said with a laugh.

  They each came to the end of their rows and faced one another. There was no longer a stretch of green to be used as a buffer. “I wish I’d come here more often,” Connor said. “It’s peaceful.”

  “It’s an escape,” she said.

  “Yeah. I could have used that. I could use that,” he said quietly.

  “How come?” Her heart hammered into her ribs harder.

  “Tough childhood,” he said with a smile. “Though I’m sure you could have guessed that.”

  She looked at her feet. Her toes peeked out from the strappy golden Brian Atwood heeled sandals. “Your father?” she asked.

  “Both of them. All of them. My mother isn’t just depressed for the hell of it. She’s an alcoholic—which, I’m guessing, is partially why my brother is, too. It started slowly, you know? I don’t… I don’t remember her drinking when I was very young. Or maybe I just didn’t realize. Maybe she was better at hiding it.”

  Sam mulled it over. “I don’t recall either of my parents ever drinking in front of me,” she said. “Oh, once! There was this big party at my house. I was in junior high, and it was their twentieth wedding anniversary. My mom was tipsy on champagne, my dad on beer, and one of his friends pushed him into the pool.” She laughed at the memory. “Somebody caught the perfect moment in a photo. The smile on his face was huge, even as he was inches from the water.”

  Connor smiled at her and moved closer. “I don’t have any memories like that,” he said. “I’m envious. My father—well, you know. The rageaholic, powerholic asshole. He was pissed as hell when I decided to enlist.”

  “I’m surprised he didn’t stop you,” she said. They walked side by side, slowly, around the greenhouse.

  “He couldn’t. I didn’t tell him until after I’d signed up.”

  Her mouth fell open. “You didn’t! I can’t even imagine his reaction.”

  “I was scared shitless driving to the recruitment office. And driving back to my parents’ house. I didn’t know which was going to be worse.”

  “What did he say?” she asked. They came to a little bench, likely used solely for employees to rest. It was barebones and simple, with cascading green all around. He gestured for her to sit.

  “My mother started bawling right away. My father, he didn’t believe me at first. Said I was just trying to get to him. I mean, he was right,” he said. “But he couldn’t fathom that I’d gone all the way.”

  She shook her head in awe. “So, why the Navy? Why the SEALs?”

  “I wish I had a more impressive or honorable answer for you,” he said. “But honestly? It was the first office to call me back. And I knew a friend’s older brother who was in the Navy, so that helped.”

  “Is that what you told the recruitment officer?” she asked with a smile.

  “Hell no! I don’t remember what bullshit excuse I came up with on the fly. Probably something about being a good swimmer.”

  “And is that true? That you’re a good swimmer?”

  “I am now,” he said with a wink. “But I think in some regards the whole thing backfired. Don’t get me wrong, I’m glad I served. And I’m thankful I was a SEAL. But it didn’t take my father long to turn everything around and use my service as a platform to boast to his friends, colleagues and investors.”

  “That’s terrible,” she said.

  “Honestly, I’m not even sure the extent of it. All I know is I left for basic, went all the way to SEAL training, made it through my first deployment—and when I got back, he’d gone full stars and stripes patriotic on me. Shit, you should have seen that first homecoming.”

  “What happened?”

  “I didn’t know what to expect. I’d been away from them for quite some time by then. I was a bit surprised he even allowed me back into the house, honestly. But when I walked in the door? It was like the flag had vomited all over the property and the place was stuffed with his friends. To this day, I don’t think I can eat another blueberry and strawberry whipped pie.”

  She couldn’t help but let out a little laugh.

  “What’s so funny?” he asked.

  “Nothing, sorry,” she said. “Your dad’s a piece of work, but you have to give him credit for taking advantage of absolutely any situation.”

  He laughed with her. “He worked it, alright. You know Trezor quadrupled the number of political clients because of my father using me as an example?”

  She eyed him closely in the soft light. “Do you feel a lot of pressure? Because of that?”

  He looked surprised. “I suppose so. I never really thought about it.”

  “I dated someone, very briefly, who was an up-and-coming politician. I mean, very low ranks. Very young, of course, for a politician, but I think he had promise. But already he knew the importance of security.”

  “Are you talking about Alex?” Connor asked.

  “How—how do you know about him?” she asked. “How do you know his name?”

  He smirked. “You think I didn’t do my homework? Although I have to admit, I was surprised to see someone without a background in modeling pop up in your dating history.”

  “You dug into my background?”

  “Don’t flatter yourself,” he said, but knocked his leg against hers to let her know he was teasing. “James did. There were quite a few who were strangers to the catwalk! But, admittedly, a very generous sprinkling of models, too.”

  She blushed. “I doubt you’re one to talk.”

  “I’m not denying that. Let’s see, there was Samuel the medical resident, Alejandro the entrepreneur who made it on the Forbes list. Brett, Hunter, Colin, Andre, Jalen and Sourav were models. Then there was—”

  “Okay, okay! I get it,” she said with a laugh. “I get around.”

  “Yeah, you do!”

  She flushed a darker shade and looked down. If he only knew, she thought to herself. What would he think? What would he say if he knew with all those guys, I hadn’t done a single thing with any of them? Would he be disappointed?

  Or would that turn him on?

  17

  Connor

  Connor sat on the family plane and waited for Sam. He had to give her credit for her response for his last-minute invitation to Monaco. She rolled with the punches a lot easier now. Sure, she may have secretly flipped out, but her reply was fast, smooth and professional.

  What do I need to bring? she’d asked.

  He peered out of the Cessna 680 and caught sight of her being escort
ed by James. She ran surprisingly well in heels while James carried her leather duffel bag and white roller bag. Sam wore white linen pants and a matching breezy shirt with heavy, colorful beading at the neckline and oversized sunglasses.

  She no longer looked like a hot girl he’d hired to play a certain part. Sam looked wholly natural.

  “Hey,” she said when she entered, just slightly flustered. “I made it!” She smiled warmly at him and pushed her sunglasses up and back to act as a headband.

  He appreciated that, her smile. Although he’d do the same if their roles were reversed, he realized. She didn’t have to, since there was nobody around who mattered. James tucked away her luggage and gave him a nod before he departed. The hired attendant briskly brought out a mimosa for her.

  “So, why the sudden getaway?” she asked as she sat next to him and clinked glasses.

  “Why not?” he asked. In reality, he figured he might as well make the most of the family plane before his rights to it were pulled. He still planned to leave the company. Connor just couldn’t deal with being made the model figurehead in lieu of an actual, relevant leader.

  But why bypass the perks while they were still within reach?

  As the plane took off, she gazed out the window at Reagan’s signature flight strip below. He felt the slightest pull at his chest. She looked like a kid in awe during her first flight. There was an innocence to her beauty he rarely noticed. Or maybe she’d just never let her guard down before. “You act like you’ve never been on a plane before,” he teased.

  She blushed and looked away. “I didn’t realize private planes use major airports,” she said, and sipped her morning cocktail.

  “Sometimes,” he said. “I prefer the services at major airports over the smaller ones. Even though, as you saw, even with the private parking facilities it can still be a bit of a pain to get here.”

  “It was fine,” she said with a shy smile. “I’ve never been to Monaco. What’s it like?”

  “It’s paradise,” he said simply. The sun was fully visible, and with its rise it felt like they floated through the incredible violet sky.

 

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