Harlequin Superromance May 2016 Box Set
Page 62
Shaking her head, Lacey smiled at him, taking another bite of her grilled turkey and tomato sandwich. “He thinks I’m nice,” she said. “You have no idea how much of a compliment that is to me, considering how we met. A lot of my kids hate the sight of me.”
Yet she obviously cared so much about them. She had about Levi. And he wondered again about her job. About her. How did she do it? Giving her all to people who didn’t want her around?
Why did she?
“It’s just the clothes,” he said and then wished he’d bitten his tongue instead. Literally. “You probably noticed that Tressa puts a lot of emphasis on fashion...”
“She told you I went to visit her?”
Right, because all he’d heard from Lacey after that was that the case had been dismissed. Jem had no idea what all Tressa might have told her, which was why his usual way—to tell the truth—just worked best.
“I was on the phone with her when you pulled up out front of her house.”
“Did you tell her who I was?”
“No.”
She took another bite of sandwich, seemingly unaffected by Levi’s unintentionally hurtful comment.
“Why not?”
He’d just reminded himself that he was a truthful guy. “Because I didn’t want her to freak out on the phone.” He popped a French fry into his mouth. The mushroom burger was good today. Talking to her was better, even if he was having to make up for his son. “The whole drama thing I told you about,” he continued as she chewed.
“And also because I figured that if she had been the one who called you, she’d already know who you were. I kind of wanted to see how she handled you coming to the door.”
“To see if you could figure out if she knew me?”
“Something like that.”
“What was your conclusion?”
“Tressa didn’t call you.”
He watched her carefully—very carefully—and still couldn’t discern if he’d hit on the truth. He was sure he had, but not because of any indication he’d gathered from her.
“So what do you think?” Lacey nodded toward Kacey’s half of the sandwich they’d shared.
“Really good,” Kacey answered. “You?”
It was as though something tangible passed across the table. Jem almost felt as though he was intruding as he sat there.
“Fine. Good. I’d order it again,” Lacey said. And Jem knew they weren’t talking about food.
Which meant what? That Kacey was asking her sister if she was okay?
He hoped so. Because based on Lacey’s answer, she wasn’t as bothered by Levi’s comment as he still was. But he was still rational enough to realize he was stretching things. She’d probably just liked the sandwich.
And really, what woman could take offense at someone saying her sister was beautiful when she was an identical twin?
Kacey and Lacey were still speaking. Silently. But it was palpable.
“So, I was thinking...” Kacey said, swinging her head from Lacey’s direction to his. “You said you’re in construction, right?”
This was in answer to a question she’d asked while they’d been waiting for their waitress to take their orders.
“Right.”
“Is that the bill?” Lacey asked, turning as their waitress approached. “I’ll get this.”
“I’ll get it,” Jem said, already reaching for his wallet. “A gentleman doesn’t invite pretty ladies to eat with him and let them pick up the tab. Even when he’s only four.”
Their waitress passed them by without stopping and Jem looked up from his wallet to see Lacey giving her sister a steely-eyed stare.
He had to admit, he was curious as hell. So he said directly to Kacey, “You were asking about my business...” Just because... Well, he wasn’t sure why.
“That’s right, I was,” Kacey said, turning so that she faced him completely. Body and all, giving her sister her right shoulder. “Our birthday’s coming up in another month and I’ve already decided what I want to give Lacey.”
“Kacey...” Lacey sounded pained now.
“What’s that?” he asked. Somehow the woman of his fantasies was getting hot about something. He had to pursue this.
“An enclosed sunroom and garden,” Kacey said. “She’s got this piece of land off the side of her house that’s virtually unusable. Wasted space. She’s always loved fountains and flowers and loves to read. And now that I’m going to be visiting on a regular basis, I’ll use it, too.”
“There’s no way in—” Lacey glanced at Levi “—no way you’re going to pay for an addition on my house.”
Kacey shrugged. “I can always just transfer the money into your account...”
“And it will sit there unspent.”
Chins were jutting. Jem sat back, fascinated. Even Levi, who’d been eating French fries and playing with the golf tee board, stopped to watch.
“I’ll call Dad and tell him—” Kacey started.
“Stop right there.” Lacey spoke sharply enough that once again their table got a few looks from patrons at other tables. “Seriously, I’m not going to let you do this, Kace.”
“You were just saying a couple of days ago that a sunroom would be the perfect use for that space.”
“I know, but I wasn’t being serious.”
“You don’t want a sunroom?” Jem did his part to keep the conversation going.
“No!” Lacey looked back at Kacey after a brief glance in his direction. “At least, well, yes, I’d love one, but you are not paying for it.” That last bit was directed at Kacey.
“Then I’m giving the car back to you,” Kacey said, and there was no doubting that she meant business.
“What car?” Jem asked, enjoying himself far too much.
“We did a shoot three years ago,” Lacey said, looking at Jem again briefly. “It was for a major car manufacturer. The commercials aired for a full quarter and they wanted us to be seen driving in the car.”
“A red convertible sports car,” Kacey told him. “Lacey said she couldn’t possibly drive to work in a car like that and my car had just been totaled, no fault of mine, so I ended up with the car. We were both in the commercial and people can’t tell us apart, anyway, so it didn’t really matter which one of us was driving it.”
“You did a car commercial when you were little, too,” Jem mused, fascinated by the turn the day had taken.
“That was for motor oil,” Lacey said. “And you are not giving me the car.”
“Then I’m giving you a sunroom with a garden. Or calling Dad.”
“You wouldn’t.”
“I think you know I would.”
Another stare-out ensued. Levi was playing with the tees, but Jem could tell his son was getting restless. Instead of putting the little wooden pegs in and out of the holes, he was lining one up and using another to kick the first one off the board. If they didn’t end this, tees could be flying soon...
“Let me get this right,” he jumped in, because a guy knew that when he had a possible opportunity at his door that he didn’t want to miss, he should reach out and grab it if he could. And a dad knew when he had to move quickly. “You want to pay me to build a room on Lacey’s house?”
“And a garden,” Kacey said, looking only at him now.
Out of the corner of his eye, Jem saw Lacey reach over and put all the pegs back in their holes, putting the board in front of Levi so that he could jump pegs again. Expecting his son to push the board away, he was surprised to see Levi turn back to his task.
“I think she means hire your company,” Lacey said. “And it’s not going to happen.”
Kacey reached for the small pouch she’d unclipped from her waistband and put on the table, pulling out a cell phone.
&nbs
p; She pushed a button. “Hey, Dad!” she said, her expression completely serious as she looked at her sister.
“Hang up.” Lacey’s words came out with a bite. And a look that he was pretty sure could mean that he’d just won himself an excuse to be around his fantasy woman for a good part of the summer.
Lacey filled Levi’s board again, this time leaving a different hole empty from which he had to start.
After a few minutes of chatting about the weather, the shopping she and Lacey had done, what they’d eaten and what they’d watched on television, Kacey asked after her mom and dad, talked about an ankle brace and the broccoli they’d left in the fridge at the cottage and rang off.
Levi took the pencil Lacey had pulled out of her purse and was pressing it to the napkin she’d put in front of him.
“So we’re agreed?” Kacey said in the same breath as “Bye, Dad.”
“Fine.”
“So.” Kacey turned to him. “I’m giving my sister a sunroom and a garden for her birthday...”
“Only a sunroom.”
Kacey stared for a minute. And then said, “Fine, only a sunroom.” She turned back to Jem. “Would you like the job?”
“His company,” Lacey said. “Jem’s the boss of foremen. Who are the bosses of the men who actually do the work.”
He didn’t see any point in arguing the point. He hadn’t always been the boss. He was fully licensed and proficient in every aspect of the framing, drywall and electrical work his men did. And occasionally, he kept a smaller job for himself. To keep himself sharp. Or because he wanted the excuse to spend more time with the first woman who’d captivated him in a very long time.
“I’m happy to come take a look,” Jem said, using his professional voice. “I’ll give you a quote and see what you think.”
“Good!” Kacey smiled.
Lacey’s face was completely straight.
Levi burped.
“On one condition,” Jem said, prolonging the high he was on for another second or two.
“What’s that?” Kacey didn’t look bothered. In spite of the hopeful rise of Lacey’s brow.
“Tell me why Lacey didn’t want you calling your dad.”
“Oh,” Lacey said, her tone dry. “I can answer that. Dad fancies himself a self-made do-it-yourselfer. He gets the jobs done, but there’s always something a little off about things. Like a floor that’s not quite level...”
“A door that doesn’t close right.”
“Trim with a bit of a gap in the corner.”
“Electrical outlets that aren’t live.”
“Switches that you have to turn up to turn off and down to turn on.”
Both girls were chuckling. Jem was grinning.
“Remember the time he put that sink out in the shed, and when Mom mentioned that it was dripping, he said he knew and it wasn’t a problem—they’d just keep a bucket under it?”
“And your mother’s okay with all of this?”
“Heck, no!” the women answered in unison. Same words. Same intonation. And he still heard Lacey’s voice. “Anytime Mom needs something done, she calls a professional before she tells Dad,” Lacey told him.
“He doesn’t take offense?”
“Probably. But he still putters, has his projects. He’s building a shed, complete with electric and plumbing, at their beach cottage in San Diego...”
Her parents had a beach cottage. So did his. A place for family to gather.
For some reason the thought bothered him.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
IF LACEY DIDN’T love her sister so much, she’d strangle her.
“Face it, Lacey, you’re glad I did what I did.”
She wanted to argue, but knew it was pointless. “Part of me is still angry with you.”
“I know, but that part of you needs an attitude adjustment.”
“Offering to take Levi to the park while Jem and I go over the plans was overkill.”
“To the contrary, it gets me out of here.”
“I don’t need you out of here, Kace. It’s okay. I’m not twenty anymore. You and I are connected at the hip, which means that any guy who likes me is going to see you, too. If I can’t trust him in that situation, then what’s the point in liking him?”
“So you admit it. You do like him?”
“No! I’m telling you that the things I said when Ramsey dumped me for you as soon as he met you...they were wrong. It wasn’t about you. Or me, either. It was him. That was more than ten years ago, and I can’t believe I brought it up last year. I am disgusted by and so sorry for the horrible and stupid and childish things I said.”
She’d hoped, at least, that the memory had faded with time. She wasn’t proud of herself for going off on her sister, her soul mate, when it was herself and the world’s reaction to her that had really had her upset.
“But you were right, too,” Kacey said. Her eyes clouded over as she tucked her heels up to her butt on the side of the hot tub, where they were ending their Saturday night with a glass of wine. They’d walked back to the beach. Watched a movie. And still hadn’t been ready to turn in.
Lacey’s next-door neighbor was out of town for the summer and, in exchange for her watching the house, she’d been granted unlimited use of the hot tub.
“I was the one who got to ride in the race car. Every single time we went on a job where they could only take one of us, I was the one who was chosen. There wasn’t one boy in high school who asked you out first. And when you brought your college boyfriend home to spend Christmas with the family, he met me and dumped you. It all happened, Lacey, just as you’d said. There were things that you left out, too. We walk into a room, people reach out to shake my hand. Not yours. I feel guilty as hell. I hate it. But I don’t know how to change it.”
“You aren’t going to change it,” Lacey told her. “You aren’t meant to. Your personality is just different from mine. More bold. You’re outgoing. I’d rather stand in a corner. You always know the right thing to say. I tell the truth even when it’s best to keep my mouth shut. You shine, Kace. I don’t.”
Silence fell for a time. They both sipped their wine. And then Lacey chuckled. “Remember the time you insisted that I put glitter all over my skin so that I’d stand out more than you would?”
“That was a disaster,” Kacey said. Lacey’s skin had had a reaction to the spray; she’d itched like crazy and had welts all over by the end of the evening.
“But it made senior prom memorable!” Lacey really could laugh about it now. She hadn’t liked the guy she’d been with any more than Kacey had liked her date. But they’d loved the chocolate ice cream their dad had gone out to get for them as a consolation prize. It had been waiting for them when Mom had finished rubbing the topical antibiotic all over Lacey’s welts after the twenty-minute shower she’d insisted Lacey take.
“Mom and Dad were going to ground me for that one,” Kacey said now.
“Which wasn’t fair. You were only trying to help.”
“And you ended up coming to my rescue. Like usual.”
Funny that Kacey would say that. Lacey had always felt like Kacey was the sister who solved their problems. But maybe she hadn’t been. Maybe Kacey’s bright light, her always coming in first to Lacey’s second, had blinded Lacey to a truth or two.
And maybe this new sunroom, this attempt of her sister’s to do something big for Lacey, was as important for Kacey as it could be for her.
“Anyway, it seemed like the decent thing to do, offering to take the little guy to the park, since Jem’s coming out on a Sunday to look at the project. It’s not like there’s a day care open or anything.”
It was all highly unusual. A contractor making a nonemergency house call on a Sunday. A woman buying her sister a room for her birt
hday.
Lacey being so obsessed with Jeremiah Bridges.
“Just make sure you don’t stay gone too long,” she said. And hoped she hadn’t just given her sister any more bad ideas.
* * *
JEM HAD NEVER been more energized giving a quote in his life. Nor had he cut his costs quite so much. He had one goal in mind—to make damned sure he got the bid. And he couldn’t even explain that.
He hardly knew the woman, had spent less than one full working day with her all told.
But she had a hold of him.
And he wasn’t fighting it.
It felt too damned good.
So good that his mood didn’t sour when Tressa called to tell him that she really wanted to quit her job. Even after he’d stuck his neck out for her. She didn’t think it was right that she’d had to apologize when she was the one who’d been slandered.
It also wasn’t right, according to the thirty-minute tirade he listened to, that she had to smile and be gracious when people were rude to her. It wasn’t fair. She’d been hired to make the bank money while keeping customer interests in mind. She was doing that. Brilliantly.
She felt underappreciated and that was no way for a person to have to feel every single day.
Plus Mick was watching over her too much now. She felt like she was on trial and the stress was getting to her.
He asked her what Amelia had to say about it all.
She said Amelia was her rock.
And then told him, again, that she wanted to quit her job.
He told her she needed to stick it out, reminded her that he’d put his reputation on the line at her request and added that her alimony was ending. It had to end, he told her.
At which point she surmised that he was having financial difficulties and rang off before he could tell her about them.
Or tell her she was wrong. Which he wouldn’t have done, even though she was wrong. The defensive tongue-lashing that would ensue wasn’t worth the satisfaction of pointing out the obvious.
Good news was, she no longer had the right to view any of his financial data.