by Anne Marsh
She sighed and knocked back more coffee. He’d seen a SEAL attack a cold beer with less enthusiasm. “You don’t know much about pregnancy, do you?”
He’d seen the health class movie. He’d pass. “Since it’s not happening to me, no. No, I don’t.”
“Morning sickness is a first trimester thing. I’m in my second trimester.”
“Good to know you won’t be puking on the fish.”
“I’m not going fishing with you.”
Pointing out the obvious was fun and guaranteed to get a rise out of her, which made it win-win for him. “It sure looks like you are.”
She tightened her fingers on her cup. “This is an obscene time of day to be awake, and I haven’t given consent, which means you’re committing felony kidnapping.”
Now she was splitting hairs with him. “Do you see the sheriff’s office chasing me?”
She huffed out a breath, a cute little sound of exasperation. If he had a dictionary of Girl, he’d bet it translated into “God, he’s such a man.” Reaching over, he tucked an errant strand of hair behind her ear, then removed his fingers quickly before she could bite him or otherwise extract vengeance. Abbie was definitely more get even than cry over it. Will must have had his hands full.
“Why?” Her feet tapped an impatient rhythm on the floorboard.
He patted the steering wheel. “Because you stole my truck, and I needed to get it back?”
She glared at him from her side of the truck. “It was a joke. You used to be able to take a joke.”
“You’re mean.” And he didn’t mind. He definitely needed his head examined, although the military’s doctors had crawled all over him after Khost before clearing him to return to normal life.
“You’d be an expert in that.” She laughed though, even as she reached out and swapped her coffee cup for his. He’d filled them both with decaf, so he settled for raising a brow and enjoying her laugh.
For a while, they rode in silence, the dark forest flashing past outside the windows. Sunrise was still a good half hour away, and they’d be out on the lake before the sun got all the way up in the sky.
“Was it bad?” She set his now-empty cup back in the cup holder while he wondered where she’d put all that coffee and if she knew that bathroom at the lake meant bush with a water view.
“Was what bad?” He guided the truck off the highway and onto a dirt access road.
“Khost,” she said simply.
“It wasn’t a tropical vacation.” That usually shut people up.
Of course, Abbie had to be difficult. Different. Dangerous, his head supplied. Because, yeah, she was definitely that. She curled up on his front seat and watched him from eyes that held plenty of her own pain. “I know that,” she said, a snap in her voice.
“You want details?” He could hear the buzz of anger in his own voice. He wasn’t some kind of roadside accident to looky-loo at. If he was honest with himself, he didn’t think that was why Abbie had asked. He also didn’t want to burden her with those kinds of details.
Three months as the insurgents’ house guest had beaten that shit out of him. Literally. The blast had caused the injury to his leg. Everything else... he wasn’t thinking about. What didn’t kill him, made him stronger, right? He ought to be made of Teflon or some kind of Ironman super-suit stuff, because his captors had done their best to kill him. The only reason why they hadn’t finished him with a knife to the throat, he suspected, had been because they were saving him. Either to trade for one of their own in US custody or for one of those gruesome beheading videos that rocked YouTube and the world.
“I want to know you’re okay,” she said quietly. “The same way you want to hear I’m okay. That everything’s safe and fixed and that nothing bad is going to happen again.”
“Are you okay?”
She looked at him. “I will be.”
“Me too,” he said, and for the first time, he meant it.
She nodded and returned to staring out the window. The sky was turning a paler shade of charcoal somewhere over the mountains, the lake a flat, dark sheet of water. The sun would come up fast now, and there was no better place to watch the sunrise than from a boat.
Throwing the truck into park, he gestured toward the rocky strip of sand. “Voilà.”
“What is it with you and French stuff?”
He could hear the smile in her voice, though, as she shrugged off her blanket and fumbled for the door. He didn’t bother answering, even though the answer was probably Because it makes you smile. She was already out and walking toward the boat pulled up on the shore. Her interest was a great start, but her bare feet were a problem. He needed to work on that.
“Is this our ride?” She looked over at him and tapped on the aluminum hull of the boat. “She looks even more beat to hell than she did in high school.”
Everybody was a critic. “She has a name. Whosurdaddy. And some of us are showing even more wear and tear than the boat.”
He slapped his knee. Yeah. He had even more scars than the boat and he was even uglier than Whosurdaddy.
“I’d forgotten how awful your taste in rides is.” She started unfastening the boat cover.
It was true that his boat had seen better days. Plus he’d named it when he’d been fourteen and still learning how to drive, which explained at least half the dents in the boat.
“People who jeer don’t get sandwiches.” He peered in the cooler in the back of his truck. “Or Oreos or muffins. They might get carrot sticks if their host takes pity on them.”
She had a nice laugh, warm and slightly rueful. She might do yoga, but she’d never been one for warm carrot sticks. “Give me a muffin. You made me miss breakfast, so you can make it up to me now.”
He gave her a muffin and his gym bag. “Clothing. In case we didn’t grab enough stuff from your place. They’re clean.”
She took a ginormous bite of muffin and looked into the bag. “You need to spend more time at Nordstrom’s. Trust me.”
She didn’t look like she minded too much though. Rolling up her sweatpants, she shoved her feet into the rubber waders he handed her. “How well did you plan this kidnapping?”
He tossed her the toothbrush he’d snagged from her place. “Exhibit A. You get to practice oral hygiene.”
~*~
“A-plus for you,” she said.
Kade smiled at her, a slow, lazy smile that did dangerous things to her insides. Friend, she reminded herself. Ex-boyfriend. Not dessert. He was being nice to her because he felt sorry for the widow and Katie had asked him. She had no doubt that he loved Katie in his own manly, wouldn’t-ever-admit-it way.
“We’re launching in ten minutes,” he said and tossed her a bottle of water. “Your five-star, en suite bathroom awaits.”
“Next time, we field trip to the Four Seasons.” She waddled toward a low strip of bushes to pee and primp. The man’s feet were positively ginormous. His waders swam on her. When she came back, teeth brushed and bladder emptied, he passed her a tube of sunscreen and the ugliest fishing hat she’d ever seen. “Really?”
He grinned at her and added an equally ugly orange life jacket to the stack. The thing was bulkier than her sofa and sported a suspicious smear on the front. His previous fishing companion had gotten a little too close to the catch of the day.
“Safety first. No sunburning the baby. No drowning. Not on my watch.”
“Did you bring the Bubble Wrap?” She pulled the life vest on though, because there was a look in his eyes that said he wasn’t negotiating. Fine by her if they didn’t go fishing, except... now that he’d got her out here, she was kind of curious to see what happened next. Kade definitely wasn’t boring, even if he was more safety conscious than a ninety-year-old man.
“I’m saving that for later,” he said agreeably, and then he proceeded to check her straps. The safety check brought him into close proximity with her, his hands moving perilously close to her breasts and other parts. He paused when he got to th
e bottom buckle, apparently not sure if he should tighten it or if he’d squash Will Junior. Since she enjoyed watching him squirm, she didn’t help him out.
“All aboard,” he said finally, gesturing toward the boat. “You ride. I’ll push.”
Since she was the pregnant one, she climbed into the boat and kicked off the boots. As the nonreproducing member of this fishing party, he could be the one with wet feet and get them launched. Whistling, he waded in and pushed them off, then vaulted into the boat. The boat rocked and then settled lower into the water.
“One of us weighs too much,” she pointed out.
“Hah. Pot. Kettle.” He turned the motor on, guiding the boat out toward the middle of the lake.
“You did not just call a pregnant woman fat.” She flicked water at him.
“You called me fat,” he pointed out.
“Good to know you’re an eye for an eye kind of guy.”
Yes. He was. He turned the motor on low and putted them out toward the middle of the lake at a sedate two miles an hour.
“I swim faster than this,” she pointed out.
He shook his head. “You’re a speed demon.”
When they got farther from shore, he killed the motor, gliding them toward some unseen target.
“Secret ninja stealth approach? Do fish even have ears?”
“They can feel the vibrations from the motor. Shut up,” he said agreeably, reaching out to twitch her hat lower. His own hat was a monstrosity, rainbow-colored camouflage with a dozen equally neon fishing lures. He’d blind any fish stupid enough to surface near the boat.
She considered saying something, or possibly singing the ABC song at the top of her lungs, just to be contrary, but it was strangely peaceful out there on the lake. Or maybe she was still in a stupor from her dark o’clock wake-up.
“Aye, aye, Captain,” she mouthed and trailed her hand over the edge of the boat, hoping his wonder fish weren’t light sleepers. She hadn’t planned on fishing, but she didn’t actually want to ruin his day, and Kade seemed really, really into fishing.
She took the rod he handed her and cast off, watching the red float bob along the surface of the lake. He didn’t seem to feel the need to fill up the silence, and that worked for her.
The fish were biting, which probably meant he’d be all I told you so when they got back to shore. For the first hour, she concentrated on her reel, but Kade was the one pulling in one trout after another. Since he had the fish covered, she set her reel down and settled for looking at him.
In addition to a ragged pair of cargo shorts, the battered fishing hat, and a fire department T-shirt, Kade sported a pair of hiking boots on his feet. Either the boots were waterproof or he had no problem with wet socks. His arms flexed as he expertly worked the reel.
The baby moved, waking up, and she rubbed her hand over her stomach. It was kind of nice to have him there. She felt another pang for Will, but at least she had this, and really, it would have been Will’s idea of a joke to send a surly, badass SEAL with a shared past to look out for her.
She was lonely. Kade was right there, his butt planted on a seat a foot from hers. He wanted to help, so...
Why not kiss him?
Chapter Five
Maybe it was Christmas. His birthday. Ode to Returning SEAL Day. Fuck if Kade understood the reason, but he suddenly had a lapful of woman. Ordinarily, that was a good thing, but this was Abbie.
Apparently her hate was selective, and it was less at the moment.
A lot less.
She wriggled her butt against his front, sending a hundred erotic possibilities rampaging through his mind, and she yanked his head toward her. “No talking,” she ordered. “Kissing only.”
That was an order he could get behind. “Abbie—”
“Breaking the rules,” she muttered and sealed her mouth to his. He had no idea if her words were an order or a complaint or just a simple statement of fact, and he didn’t care. He’d had more than one fantasy about kissing Abbie, but the reality was better than any dream. Her lips were soft and determined, as sweet as the woman herself. The rough groan was his, almost drowning out her soft whimper. She held onto him, her fingers digging into his shoulders like she thought he might try to get away. Not a chance in hell. He threaded his fingers through her hair—he did like to make things even—and returned her kiss.
And she more than met him halfway, no hesitation, no holding back. She took his mouth, and if she wasn’t practicing self-restraint, why should he? She tasted like all his favorite things, which right now were Abbie, Abbie, and more Abbie. She set him on fire, swept away his resistance and his mental list of all the reasons why kissing was off-limits. He’d been thinking about this for days. Weeks.
Forever.
She whimpered again and swung herself up and over his lap, planting her knees on either side of him. The move settled her right over his erection, making him a very happy man. She wiggled, and he pressed up. He deepened the kiss, opening his mouth wider as his tongue made forays into her mouth, and she rewarded him with another husky moan. He hoped desperately that was shorthand for more please. Because, yeah, right now he had zero interest in breaking their kiss.
The boat rocked, Abbie shrieked, and the world turned upside down.
He wrapped his arms around her, pulling her into his chest as they hit the water. A dark cocoon of water and space surrounded them. He shot up, panicking at the lack of space, the too-familiar sense of being closed in sweeping over him. The top of his head hit something hard. Wood. Had his captors put him back in the hole? Would they take him out this time?
His shoulder struck the edge of the boat. Not Khost. Just cold California lake water. Abbie popped up beside him. “Oh, shit,” she giggled.
“Deep breath,” he ordered, more to himself than her. He felt her nod, heard her sharp inhalation, and then he dove, wrapping his arms around her and taking her down and away from the boat.
Jesus. Could she swim? He hadn’t asked, and life jackets didn’t prevent every boating drowning. The lake wasn’t much more than twelve feet deep in the center, but that was six and a half feet she didn’t have. One more hard kick, and they punched through the surface.
“Oh my God.” She threw her arms around his neck, laughing, and let her head fall back. Fine his heart beat out. She’s fine, fine, fine. He, on the other hand, was about two breaths away from a heart attack. “We capsized the boat.”
Stan paddled toward them, barking happily. Crazy mutt.
“You capsized the boat,” he said, feeling the smile growing on his face. “I’m the innocent party here.”
“How do you figure that?” She wrapped her legs around his middle, months of Baby between them.
“I was sitting there, minding my own business. You sat on me.”
“I’m doing it again,” she pointed out, plastering her body up against his. Thank God for cold lake water, because he liked everything about their current situation.
“Do I need to apologize?” He rested his forehead against hers. She was recently widowed. He wouldn’t be a dick and make her feel uncomfortable, even if they had been intimate once upon a time. Fairy-tale language, he mocked internally, but those months had been fucking special and he wouldn’t lie about it.
“I’m the one who rocked the boat,” she admitted.
“I’m not complaining,” he said. “But—”
~*~
“I’m lonely.” There. She’d said it.
He stared at her, incomprehension written all over his handsome face. “You have friends. The smoke jumpers.” He patted her belly. “You’ve got Baby twenty-four seven. How can you be lonely?”
“I’m lonely, not alone.”
He grunted something, probably male for rescue me. Now. At least he wasn’t stroking for shore.
So she wanted Will back. She wanted her life back. The baby and the new home had been their dream, but now it was just her. Not that she’d give up Baby, but the peanut didn’t seem real. Ev
en when it somersaulted and poked her stomach out with its teeny tiny butt and fists, she felt disconnected. It was something that was happening to her, the same way the fire had happened. Death had happened. The smoke-jumping and hotshot teams had happened. She heard a whole lot of passive verbs when she started describing her life and that needed to change.
“I’m in charge of my life.” She braced herself on Kade’s shoulders and kicked, pushing her body up and out of the water until she looked down on him. She wasn’t entirely sure how taking charge of her life had ended up with her capsizing a boat and going for a swim in a lake that was slightly warmer than a glass of ice water, but she’d work with it.
“Okay.” He braced his hands around her waist, supporting her as he treaded water. Since he was a trained SEAL, she figured her odds of accidentally drowning him were slim to none. “Can we discuss this on shore?”
“I kissed you because I wanted to kiss someone,” she said, not letting go of his shoulders. Partly because he was so warm and partly just to make her point. “You were there. I wanted to do it. I did it.”
“Shore,” he repeated. “Now. Then you can talk at me all you want. My balls are freezing, and Baby must be a Popsicle.”
He lowered her down into the water. The lake wasn’t big, and it was only five minutes until her feet touched bottom. Unfortunately, she’d lost his boots when they’d flipped, which meant her feet curled in the mud, disgusting things squishing between her toes. The water was also dark and less than warm.
“Next time you take me fishing, make it Bora Bora or the Bahamas. Someplace with white sand and turquoise water.”
“Consider the murky water a bonus in this particular situation. You might not want to see what you’re standing on.” He waded toward the beach, towing her behind him.
“That bad?”