Christmas Seduction (The Bachelor Pact Book 4)

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Christmas Seduction (The Bachelor Pact Book 4) Page 11

by Jessica Lemmon


  “Yeah, one hour. We’re going to try to skate,” Tate called to his brother. Reid nodded his acknowledgment.

  Tate, bracketing Hayden’s hips with his hands, pulled her ass against his crotch. “Let’s see what you’re made of, gorgeous.”

  Snow machines blew flaked ice into the air as they laced up, Hayden unsure what she was getting herself into.

  “I’m sure it’s like riding a bike,” she’d famously said before falling onto her backside. They made their way clumsily around the rink once, and by round two, while they hadn’t exactly glided, they had swept across the ice in a way that was at least semicompetent.

  Skates off, boots on, she and Tate made their way to the closest booth that sold beverages and sat on a nearby bench with their drinks.

  “Thank God for my core strength,” she said with a laugh over her paper cup of wassail.

  “I enjoyed watching you wobbling across the ice.”

  She nudged him, careful not to spill his drink into his lap. “You actually did better than me. I’m impressed.” She poked him in the belly, and his abdomen clenched into a wall of muscle beneath her finger. Which reminded her of what he looked like without any clothes, and that in turn reminded her of what they did together best. “It’s kind of a turn-on.”

  “Ice skating turns you on?” Tate lifted a dubious eyebrow.

  “Pretty sure you doing anything turn me on.” She said it with an almost disappointed lilt. This fantasy of being fake engaged, the fairy tale of Christmas in London, was about to come to an end. She’d been tempering her reactions, trying to monitor the way she responded to him, but she wasn’t always able to keep her true feelings from surfacing.

  She issued a reminder that it was smart not to grow accustomed to flying business class to London at Christmas, or having a Hallmark-style scene on ice skates...

  Hayden had become independent out of necessity. Since the moment she’d invited Tate into her apartment—into her life—he’d been chipping away at the wall she safely hid behind. She felt a pull toward him that was simply undeniable.

  “I could say the same to you, Ms. Green.” She was rewarded with a kiss that reminded her of the wassail. Sweet, clovey, cinnamony...temporary.

  “You freak me out a little,” she admitted. “I’m not used to...so much lavish treatment.”

  “Excuse me? Lavish? We hopped on a plane. We’re at a park.”

  “You flew us to London in our own private pods! We’re at Hyde Park. You own an entire community, meanwhile I’m leasing my studio and my apartment.”

  “And my treating you to what you deserve is making you uncomfortable?”

  “I...” But her pending argument died on her tongue. She was stuck on the “deserve” part. Tate had no problem filling the silence.

  “You do deserve it, Hayden. The good life. It’s not reserved to people who were lucky enough to be born into it. Or adopted into it,” he added softly.

  “My grandmother’s an alcoholic,” she blurted out, as if the secret of her own parentage refused to be stuffed down any longer. “And my mother is a master of guilt. Both at absorbing it and doling it out.”

  Tate’s eyebrows knitted, but he stayed quiet. She hadn’t opened up to him about just how wide the gap was between his life and hers, and it seemed wrong not to share at this point. She knew his secrets.

  “When I moved out on my own for the first time, they didn’t let a day go by without reminding me that I was betraying them in the worst way possible. And when I moved to the refuge of Spright Island, they were jealous. Enormously jealous.” She rolled her eyes as she replayed her mother’s words about Hayden being too good for them. “I saved and saved and saved. And I work hard. I earned the right to live there. I made that decision on my own. It didn’t come without a price, though. I’m not sure I have what I deserve.”

  She smiled sadly as she remembered another conversation with her mom, this one before she left for London. Patti Green hadn’t been supportive of her daughter choosing to “flit around the globe” over spending time with family.

  “Sometimes the healthiest choice for you isn’t the popular one,” Tate said. “I love my adoptive parents but when I found out about the Singletons visiting them became hard. I drew boundary lines around them even though I knew it would hurt my mother’s feelings.”

  She heaved a sigh. “Adulting is hard.”

  “The worst,” he agreed, but his smile was light, and she felt the weight lift from her shoulders having admitted some family conflict of her own.

  “After the new year, life will return to normal,” she reminded both of them. “But getting lost in this—” she gestured to the gazebo with a decorated tree in the center and the many, many ropes of lights strung in every direction “—is worth it.”

  “Good.”

  “Thank you, Tate. I really appreciate you—this. You’ve been generous.”

  “Stop making this sound like goodbye.” A little lean forward would be all it took to kiss him. A tiny nudge all it would take for him to mean so, so much more to her.

  But it was Christmastime, and Tate smelled like wassail and leather, so Hayden lost herself in the heat of his mouth, and postponed worrying about the consequences for a little while longer.

  Eighteen

  Recovering from jet lag took a lot longer than Hayden anticipated.

  The flight back from London was unremarkable and a lot less comfortable than the flight there. Despite Tate’s insistence they change airlines to book first class or charter a private jet to go home, Hayden refused. She’d assured him that any seat was fine. He’d finally let her convince him and they’d ended up crammed in a middle aisle in a tight seat for the incredibly long flight home.

  She’d needed the reminder that life wasn’t all champagne and caviar. Halfway through the flight, however, as she was trying to stretch in the pitiful space between her seat and the one in front of her she realized she was being ridiculous. Why was it so hard for her to indulge?

  As part of her new year’s resolutions next year, she was just going to enjoy her damn self. Tate had been a good sport, sending her a weary “I told you so” glance, but never bothering with the sentiment. She’d ended up apologizing once they were back in SWC, but he’d only kissed her forehead and sent her up to her apartment before returning home himself.

  Now that she’d been home for a few days and was well rested, she was having what might be the most productive day of her life. She’d finished her laundry, planned her meals for the week, and finalized her class schedule for January as well as posting it on her website.

  A knock at her door came earlier than she expected. Tate had made dinner plans for them to eat at the Brass Pony. She was wearing one of two new dresses she’d purchased since she’d returned home. One in black for the New Year’s Eve party, which was much fancier than the red one she wore now.

  “You weren’t supposed to be here until six,” she said as she pulled open the door. He was dressed handsomely in a suit sans tie, the collar open on a crisp white shirt. But his face was drawn, his mouth downturned.

  “Wow. Rough day?”

  “You could say that.” He handed her a tall white cup from EterniTea. “They haven’t opened yet, but I know a guy. Thought you might like to try the green tea latte.”

  “Thanks.”

  He leaned in and kissed her, lingering over her lips as he pulled in a breath. “Ready to go?”

  “Are you sure you want to go?”

  “Of course.” He made a half-assed attempt at a smile but it didn’t reach his eyes.

  “Do you want to talk about it?” The second she asked her phone beeped—her mother’s ringtone, which was as dooming as Darth Vader’s theme song.

  She staunchly ignored it, sipping her tea instead. “This is delicious.”

  “Don’t you want to get that?” He fro
wned.

  “No.” Hayden had tried to call her mother to let her know she’d returned from London. She hadn’t heard back and had counted herself lucky. “It’s my mom.”

  “We have time.”

  “Trust me. Answering that call isn’t about time. My family’s...not like yours.”

  “British?” he teased.

  “Normal.”

  “No family is normal. Answer it. If you do and find it’s more drama with no real point, then mention we are headed to dinner and hang up. It’s just that easy.”

  “And if it’s an actual emergency?”

  “Then we’ll deal with it.”

  We.

  She realized upon hearing that word that she’d never had support when it came to her family. It’d always been more of an “us versus them” situation.

  “I’m sure your day was rough enough without dealing with—” the phone beeped again “—whatever this is.”

  Tate remained resolutely silent, even when the chime of her voice mail sounded.

  “Fine,” she told him, lifting her cell phone and turning on the speaker. “Here we go.”

  The recording started with a frantic “Oh, Hayden” that chilled her blood. Hayden’s mother spoke between nervous breaths.

  “Your grandmother is in the ER.” Her mother’s recorded voice shook. “This is worse than usual, Hayden. Much worse.” Patti went on dispensing one horrific detail after the last, which made Hayden worry all the more. Patti ended the call with the name of the hospital.

  Hayden crossed the living room to grab her keys and purse but was confronted by Tate, who plucked the keys from her hand.

  “I’ll drive.”

  Her head was already shaking. “I can’t ask you to do that.”

  “You didn’t ask. I told you we’d deal with it. Let’s deal with it.”

  After years of independence and relying on herself, Tate, even after hearing that voice mail, was willing to go with her. It was hard to accept.

  “Yes, but...”

  “You met my family.”

  As if that was the same? But then she thought about how he’d been brave enough to ask for her help. Was she brave enough to accept his?

  “Hayden.” He held her hand. That was all it took to convince her. She let him lead her to the door and the uncertainty that waited for them at Seattle Memorial Hospital.

  * * *

  A hard, bitter line was the best description of Hayden’s mouth as she navigated the hospital’s hallways. She was a woman on a mission, and reminded Tate more of a woman who was walking into a courtroom to hear a verdict than someone visiting her sick grandmother.

  He’d dealt with his own bullshit today in the form of Casey Huxley. Tate had spent an hour arguing with the jackass head contractor who was spearheading the new neighborhood in SWC—that “secret” project model Hayden had stumbled upon in Tate’s upstairs bedroom.

  Casey had been amenable to the design until recently. Now they were arguing over bulldozing more trees to expand. It wasn’t happening. Tate wouldn’t compromise nature simply because Casey was too lazy to find a workaround.

  At the nurse’s desk, they learned that Hayden’s grandmother had been downgraded from ICU to a room of her own, which only firmed the bitter line of Hayden’s lips, causing them to vanish altogether.

  He didn’t have a lot of experience with true dysfunction and had zero experience with alcoholism, but he knew stressful situations which was clearly what she was involved in here.

  “When’s the last time you took a deep breath?” he asked, catching her wrist before she could march in the direction of her grandmother’s room.

  Hayden glared up at him, unwilling to let go and let God.

  “Wouldn’t it be better to walk into that room calm and collected?” he tried again. Advice he could’ve taken from himself earlier when he’d been in a screaming match with Casey in the trailer at the worksite. Tate would have some backpedaling to do if he hoped to quell the gossip train. Destroying land was a hot button for him. He refused to compromise his integrity, or his island’s.

  She didn’t look happy about it, but Hayden took one breath, then another. “You don’t have to go in with me. My family is... They’re...” She shook her head, giving up.

  “Family,” he answered. “Not serial killers. Family. Messy, complicated, unpredictable.”

  “The student becomes the teacher.” Her smile was faint.

  “I’m a fast learner.”

  In the hospital room, there was an empty bed by the door and a frail, pale woman in a bed by the window. He guessed the woman at her side holding her hand to be Hayden’s mother. She had the same dark brown hair, but shot through with gray. She carried more weight than Hayden and her face was lined.

  A man in jeans and a long-sleeved sweater approached from the corridor, limping like he had a bum knee. He didn’t seem very old, but his beer belly and the dark circles beneath his eyes aged him.

  “Hayd. You made it.” His voice was bright, almost cheery. Odd considering the situation.

  “Hi, Dad.” Hayden’s smile was cautious as she held herself in check. No warm family greetings here.

  “Went to grab a coffee. Guess we’ll be here awhile.” He sipped from his cup before turning to Tate. “Hello.”

  “Dad, this is Tate Duncan. He drove me here. Tate, my father, Glenn.”

  “Nice to see you, Tate. Can I grab either of you a cup of coffee?”

  “No, thank you,” Hayden told him.

  Tate tried not to take her “he drove me here” comment personally, as if he was a chauffer and not the man who’d taken her to London over the holidays.

  “Okey-doke. Well, I’ll let you go in and visit, then. I’ll wander around.” In place of goodbye, he said, “Tate,” and then turned and walked away from them.

  “He’s mellow.” It might’ve been the strangest interaction Tate had ever had with a parent, and that was saying something.

  “It’s a coping mechanism,” she said.

  “Hayden? Oh, Hayden!” Her mother, having just noticed them at the threshold, frantically waved her deeper into the room. Hayden’s grandmother lifted her head, her eyelids narrowing. Tate could’ve sworn the temperature of the room went down a few degrees.

  “Hi, Mom.” Hayden gave her mother a side hug and then dipped her chin to acknowledge her grandmother. “Grandma Winnie. How are you feeling?”

  “Welllll, if it isn’t the princess from the high tower,” came Winnie’s barbed reply, her voice dripping with sarcasm. “So nice of you to deign to come visit us common folk.” She turned stony eyes on Tate and barked, “Who the hell are you?”

  Nineteen

  Here we go.

  Hayden shot Tate an apologetic smile, feeling instantly guilty that she hadn’t warned him. Anyone she’d dated as an adult had no reason to meet the fam, and the guys she dated when she was living at home weren’t exactly the kinds of guys to bring home to mom.

  “Mother, your heart,” Patti warned Winnie.

  “Don’t worry about my heart,” Winnie snapped. “Worry about smuggling in a cocktail. It’s long past five o’clock. Keeping an old woman from one of her only pleasures in life is criminal.”

  What’s her other pleasure in life? Bossing around my mother? Hayden wisely kept the snide thought to herself.

  “Well?” Winnie speared Tate with a glare. “Introduce yourself.”

  “Tate Duncan,” he replied coolly, hands tucked into his pants pockets. “I’m also Wesley Singleton, but that’s a long, complicated story.”

  Hayden gaped at him before turning back to her grandmother.

  “Never heard of you.” Winnie’s frown pulled the corners of her mouth lower.

  Hayden looked up to tell Tate they could leave—no one should be subjected to her grandmother’s abu
se, but he chuckled good-naturedly.

  “I’m not surprised,” he said. “My reality show airs late at night, and I keep my celebrity appearances to a minimum.”

  “Smart-ass.” But Winnie’s mouth curled at the edge. Was it possible that Tate was winning over the world’s biggest critic? It’d been a long while since Hayden’s grandmother had regarded anyone with respect, so the experience was unique.

  Patti, meanwhile, didn’t catch the joke. “You have a reality television show?”

  “Not yet,” Tate’s smile remained. Amazing.

  Hayden gestured toward the hallway. “Can I talk to you in private, Mom?”

  “What’s wrong with in here?” Winnie demanded.

  “Nothing’s wrong, ma’am,” Tate answered for them.

  “Ma’am,” Winnie barked, amused.

  Had Hayden ever heard that sound come from her most embittered family member?

  “I’ll be right back, Mother,” Patti told Winnie as she walked for the corridor. Winnie’s call of “and bring me a cocktail on your way back!” followed her out and then the volume on the television skyrocketed.

  “She’s really very sweet,” Hayden’s mother explained to Tate once they were outside of the room.

  Hayden barely banked an eye roll.

  “No judgment from me,” he said easily. When Hayden looked up at him she was surprised to see the sincerity on his face. He meant it. He wasn’t standing in judgment of her or her family tonight.

  Hand around her waist, he tucked her close, and Patti didn’t miss it.

  “You two seem close. Hayden and I used to be that close.” She sent a woe-is-me look at her only daughter. “I’m glad for her though.”

  Hayden hated that she was skeptical, but her mother had accused her of “flitting” to London instead of spending time with her family.

  “Are you the one who took her to London?”

  “Mom—”

  “Yes. To meet my birth parents.”

  “Oh.” Patti’s ears pricked at the barest whiff of gossip. But then she faced Hayden, guns blazing. “You met his parents. And this is how you choose to introduce him to us?”

 

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