The Best Bride

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The Best Bride Page 37

by Susan Mallery


  But he didn’t want to think about that now. Not with the soft summer-afternoon breeze blowing in his face and Sandy plastering herself against him.

  She laughed again. “Everything looks different from the back of the bike,” she called. “It’s as if I’m seeing Glenwood for the first time.”

  “Do you like it?”

  “I love it! Don’t turn, okay?”

  Before he could answer or ask why, she released him and raised her arms in the air.

  “Look at me!” she called.

  “Damn it, Sandy, hang on. You could hurt yourself.”

  “I’m fine.”

  “I mean it,” he growled. He didn’t dare turn around and look at her. He didn’t want to jiggle the bike at all and upset her balance.

  “You’re a stick-in-the-mud,” she said, leaning close to him again and wrapping her arms around his waist.

  “And you’re crazy.”

  “Maybe.” She rested her chin on his shoulder. “I like this a lot. I might get a bike.”

  “Sure. It’s real practical with three kids.”

  She chuckled. “Now you sound like me.”

  Up ahead he saw the park. At one end were several brick barbecues and rest rooms. He drove past those to the small duck pond surrounded by grass and trees. Several picnic tables had been put in place. He slowed the bike, then stopped it. After standing up, he moved forward on the seat.

  “You can slide off now,” he told her.

  “Okay.” Sandy grabbed his shoulder as she swung her leg over the seat, then she stepped away. While he set the kickstand, she pulled off her helmet.

  Her cheeks were flushed, her eyes bright with excitement. “That was terrific. I can’t wait to do it again. Can I drive home?”

  He looked at her. This was not the Sensible Sandy he remembered, but he liked this adventurous woman. “No. It’s not as easy as it looks.”

  “Kyle.” She actually pouted at him. She stuck out her lower lip and tilted her head to the side. “Are you sure?”

  He fought against the need to pull her hard against him and kiss her into forgetfulness. “I’ll teach you to ride the bike, but not here. The parking lot is too small and it wouldn’t be safe.”

  “But you will teach me.”

  “Yes, I said so.”

  “Good.”

  While he took off his helmet, she walked toward the small pond. A family of ducks were taking their nap on the grassy slope. She walked close to them, stopping only when one of the large birds opened its eyes and glared at her.

  “I won’t hurt you,” she promised, bending toward the ducks. “It’s okay.”

  Her red shorts pulled tight across her derriere. As Kyle walked toward her, his palms itched to cup those curves and pull her against his arousal. He was so hard, it hurt. He welcomed the pain. He liked that Sandy turned him on. In a strange way, he liked knowing they couldn’t make love today. The anticipation would make the consummation sweeter.

  He placed his hand on the small of her back. She straightened and smiled at him. A headband held her light brown hair off her face. It had grown in the last few weeks and now fell about an inch below her shoulders. He liked the way her hair moved easily and caught the light. Hell, he liked everything about her.

  He gazed into her eyes. “You’re very beautiful,” he said quietly.

  “Kyle, I thought we agreed no lines.”

  “It’s not a line.”

  He continued to stare at her, memorizing her features, grateful she hadn’t changed much in the time she’d been gone. For a moment, he thought about confessing his sixteen-year-old crush, but he decided against it. He didn’t want her to think this was only about the adolescent desires of a fourteen-year-old boy.

  Slowly, so she could pull away at any time, he slipped his hand down her back, over the curve of her derriere to her hip, where he captured her fingers in his. Her gaze never left his. She didn’t move at all, except to tremble slightly and catch her breath.

  “Come on,” he said, tugging her hand.

  They walked over to the picnic tables and straddled them, facing each other. With his legs spread apart, it was impossible to hide his physical reaction to her closeness and his own erotic thoughts. He wasn’t sure if he wanted her to notice or not. He liked the idea of her knowing she turned him on, but only if it didn’t embarrass her too much. He wanted to get to know the adult Sandy and that wouldn’t happen if he scared her away.

  She raised her chin slightly and stared at the trees above them. “It’s lovely here. I’m surprised the park is empty.”

  He motioned to the open field across the road and the wooded area behind the pond. “There isn’t anything around here, and most people don’t want to make the drive. At night we have to patrol the area though. Teenagers come here to park.”

  “Oh? I never did.” She raised her eyebrows. “But I’m sure you were a regular.”

  “Every weekend.” He grinned at the memories. “I had my first encounter with paradise right here in the back of a ’68 Ford Mustang.” He rubbed his lower back. “There wasn’t a lot of room to maneuver. Of course, I was pretty inexperienced, but very enthusiastic. The first time.”

  “How many times were there?”

  “That night? About five. I was just getting the hang of it when it was time to go home.”

  She leaned one elbow on the tabletop. “There is something to be said for the enthusiasm of youth.”

  “I prefer the skill of experience.”

  She straightened and folded her hands in her lap. “Yes, there is that, too. Well, now that we’re here, what do you want to talk about? Is there a specific type of conversation when one is having fun?”

  Why had she changed the subject? If he didn’t know better, he would think she was suddenly nervous. But at what? It couldn’t be the fact that they were alone. Maybe he shouldn’t talk about his sexual past. It was probably not the smartest thing to do. Although he doubted she’d been threatened by his romantic escapades at the age of seventeen.

  “We don’t have to talk about anything if you don’t want to,” he said. “The point was to break out of the regular routine. I see you convinced Lindsay to go to camp.”

  Sandy wrinkled her nose. “She agreed to try it for a day. If it’s horrible, I promised she doesn’t have to go back. I realized the other day that she hasn’t had a chance to make any friends since we moved. Nichole has Mandy, and Blake is hanging out with Robby. Lindsay is pretty much stuck around the house.”

  “Or haunting me,” he said grimly.

  “Oh, Kyle, she’s just a little girl.”

  “She’s a barracuda. The only good thing about your being mad at me was that I didn’t have to worry about an ambush every time I left the house. She was always waiting for me, wanting to do things.”

  “Do you want me to tell her to leave you alone?”

  “No.” He scooted forward until their knees were touching, then he stretched back on the bench and rested his head on his hands. “That would mean explaining why I’d like her to lay off and I still want to avoid hurting her feelings if I can.”

  “You’re being very nice about this.”

  “Never tell a man he’s nice. It doesn’t do a thing for our egos. Look, that cloud looks like a dragon.”

  He stared at the sky because looking at Sandy was driving him crazy. Her breasts seemed to thrust forward in invitation and he couldn’t stop wishing her nipples would get hard. He was horny and disgusting, but mentally beating himself up wasn’t doing anything about reducing his state of arousal. Maybe if he stared at something other than her, he could calm down.

  “It’s not a dragon, it’s a teapot.”

  “No way. That part sticking out at the back is the tail,” he told her.

  “It’s the handle. See.” She leaned forward and pressed her right hand on his thigh. With her left hand, she pointed up. He swallowed hard. Her nipples were getting hard, dammit. He could see the faint outline of them through her T-shir
t. And she was burning him, the heat of her fingers searing through his jeans to his skin. If she moved her hand a little higher and touched him, he would explode.

  He had to change the subject and fast. Talk about something nonsexual, he told himself. Something that would make her stop touching him.

  “I never knew your mother was an alcoholic,” he said.

  His statement got the desired result. Sandy pulled back and straightened. “I didn’t talk about it much.”

  “Do you want to now?”

  “There isn’t anything to say.”

  He continued to stare at the sky and let the silence of the peaceful afternoon surround them. “That one looks like a race car,” he said, pointing. He glanced at Sandy. She stared at the picnic tabletop.

  “I don’t remember much about her,” she said, tracing initials that someone had carved in the wood. “I suppose I’ve blocked it all out. I was pretty young when I figured out something was wrong. Sometimes she would be fine, but other times she would be asleep and I couldn’t wake her up. I remember one time, crying for her to cook dinner. I must have been about five. She had passed out on the sofa. Finally, I made myself a peanut-butter sandwich. The next morning, she was sorry and promised it would never happen again. It did, of course. It never stopped.”

  Kyle sat up. Sandy turned toward the tabletop, swinging her outside leg over the bench and pressing her knees together.

  “She dried out a few times. At first, I kept hoping it would work, but after a while I didn’t expect anything to change. While she was gone, I stayed with friends. I spent the summer here, once, with my aunt, before I moved in with her permanently. I suppose that’s where the control thing started. I remember being so afraid all the time. I couldn’t count on her to take care of me, so I had to take care of myself. I know that’s why I need to be in control now.”

  “You never saw your dad?”

  “He didn’t care about us.” She looked at him, then away. “At least that’s what my mom told me. I’m not sure I believe that anymore, but I never wanted to look for him or anything. There wasn’t any point.”

  Kyle wanted to pull her close and comfort her. Not the adult Sandy. That woman didn’t want to admit weakness. Instead, he ached for the child who had been left alone and abandoned by an alcoholic mother. He wanted to comfort the five-year-old who didn’t have any dinner, and the second-grader who would have wanted someone to see her in the school play, but who probably hadn’t told her mother about the event in case she showed up drunk.

  “And then Thomas let you down,” he said.

  “I don’t blame him for disappointing me,” she said. “I’m beginning to see I was the one with the illusions. I wanted more than he could give. It’s not his fault he wasn’t responsible and together.”

  “But it is his fault he hurt his son.”

  She glanced at him. “How much did Blake tell you?”

  “Enough for me to put the pieces together. Remember, I had a jerk for a father, too. I know what it’s like.”

  “I worry about Blake. He seems to be doing better here, though. I’m glad he’s friends with Robby. And I’m glad you’ve been there for him.”

  The praise made him proud and uncomfortable all at the same time. “Yeah, well, he’s a good kid. They all are.”

  “Even Lindsay?” she teased.

  “It’s not that I don’t like her.”

  “I know,” she said. She angled toward him. “She’s confused. I’m sure this is a phase that will pass. Right now, she’s caught between being a child and being a teenager. She doesn’t fit in either world. She’s terrified of moving forward, but she’s too grown-up to return to the past. Plus, Lindsay misses her dad a lot.”

  “She mentioned they did a lot of stuff together.”

  Sandy smiled sadly. “Lindsay always had spirit. Thomas admired that. I probably shouldn’t have let him favor her, but I didn’t know how to stop it. Nichole was the baby and had me, so she didn’t really notice, but I know it bothered Blake.”

  She rested her left arm on the tabletop. He placed his hand on top of hers. “If your marriage was so unhappy, why did you stay?”

  “I used to ask myself the same question. I still don’t have an answer. Partly it was for the children. I remembered what it was like having only one parent, and not a very good one at that. I wanted more for them. Maybe it was also that I didn’t want to admit failure.” She sighed. “I guess the truth is, I was afraid. If I left, I would be on my own. I didn’t want to risk it.”

  “You’re alone now,” he said. “I think you’re doing a hell of a good job.”

  “Thanks. Some days I think it’s going to be fine. Other days I don’t think I can make it. Then I remember I don’t get a choice. They’re depending on me. I have to make it.”

  He brushed his thumb against the back of her hand. Her skin was soft and smooth. He turned her hand over and rested his fingertips on her palm.

  “You could get married again,” he said, staring at the shape of her wrist and the clasp of her watchband. “It’s not as if you’re mourning the love of your life.”

  “I’ve already made one mistake. I don’t want to make another one.”

  “What makes you think it would be a mistake?”

  “The odds are not in my favor.”

  He glanced at her. Her eyes were wide and flickering with emotion. He thought he might have seen a spark of desire there, as well, but he wasn’t sure. Or maybe he was sure, but he wasn’t ready to act.

  “What’s the worst that could happen?” he asked.

  “I’d end up with another child. And I’m not talking about an infant. Actually, I wouldn’t mind another baby.” Her expression became dreamy. “I like babies.”

  “Me, too.”

  She blinked and looked away. “I wouldn’t want another Thomas. Someone who only pretended to be grown-up. If I ever get involved again, it’s going to be with someone responsible, who understands life is serious business and we don’t always get to have our way. I want a partner, not a playmate.”

  He chose not to take offense at her words, mostly because he knew she wasn’t directing them specifically at him. She’d recited her list of requirements as if she’d spoken them before. They were, he realized, a talisman to keep away all that she was afraid of.

  “You’re putting up barriers to keep people from getting close to you,” he said, “and calling those barriers ‘responsibility.’ I suspect that if you found a responsible man who was everything you wanted him to be, you’d get so scared, you’d take off running in the opposite direction.”

  “That’s not true at all.”

  She tried to pull her hand free, but he wouldn’t let her. “I also think that you’d come up with another list of excuses to keep from getting close. You don’t trust what you can’t control, and you can’t control love. Or passion. You blame your failed marriage on Thomas, but how much of it was your fault?”

  “Mine? He’s the one who was always gone.”

  “You let him go. It takes two to fight, Sandy. You let him leave because you were afraid.”

  “You don’t know what you’re talking about.”

  “Don’t I? You’re still afraid. Look at me and tell me the thought of making love with me doesn’t make you tremble with fear.”

  She stared at him, then, and he saw her confusion. “I’m not afraid,” she whispered.

  “Then why are you shaking?”

  Because she always reacted that way when she was close to him, Sandy thought. Because he made her think of things she wanted to forget. She didn’t want her problems with Thomas to be her fault. She’d been a good wife. He was the one who—

  She shook off the memories. She didn’t want to remember any of this now. “I thought we were supposed to be having fun,” she said.

  His dark eyes flared with the fire of arousal. “Be careful what you ask for,” he warned.

  She looked at him and allowed the flames to burn away her doubts. She sw
ayed closer to him. She could feel tremors racing up her legs and arms, and the fluttering of her heart, the sharp cadence of her breathing. She could lose herself in him, in the passion.

  He swore under his breath and moved close to her. Before she could react or say anything, he gathered her in his arms and kissed her.

  His mouth was hot and firm, the taste of his lips wonderfully familiar. She clung to him, angling her body toward him, trying to get closer and closer still, as if she could dissolve into him. He moved one arm to her shoulders, supporting her upper body, then scooted her nearer, so her hip nestled between his thighs. His free hand rested on her belly.

  Even as she parted her lips to urge him inside, she willed his hand to move higher. Since she’d ridden on the back of his motorcycle, she’d been in a state of arousal. He’d been hard and unyielding to her curves, steady to her shaking. All male, designed with the sole purpose of making her forget herself. And around him, she did forget. Her responsibilities and sensibilities disappeared, until there was nothing but sensation—a world of heat and desire, where she at last understood the true beauty in the differences between male and female.

  His mouth angled over hers as his tongue plunged inside. He swept around and over, searching out her secrets, making her tingle and gasp, making her clutch at him and no longer need to breathe.

  She raised her hands to his head, tracing the shape of his ears, burying her fingers in his short hair. She wiggled her butt slightly and felt the hardness of him surge against her hip. In her mind’s eye, she saw him popping open the buttons of his fly one by one. She saw him springing free, then imagined herself touching his silky length. Her fingers curled toward her palm in anticipation and she whimpered.

  His free hand slipped up her midsection. Yes, her mind screamed. She arched forward, thrusting her chest toward him. His palm moved over her breasts, circling against her nipples. Electricity raced to her female place. She tightened her thighs together, but it did nothing to alleviate the tension there.

  Around and around he moved, teasing her through the layers of clothing. She wanted more. She wanted to touch flesh.

  She moved her hand down his shoulder toward his waistband. Without stopping to think or let herself get scared, she tugged his T-shirt free of his jeans, then pressed her hand against his bare belly. His muscles jumped at the contact. Curly hair tickled her palm.

 

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