The Best Bride

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The Best Bride Page 28

by Susan Mallery


  “It’s going pretty fast,” Kyle said, dipping the roller into the tray. “Whose room is this going to be?”

  Lindsay moved close to him and fluttered her eyelashes. Obviously she hadn’t gotten over her crush. “Mine.”

  He was sorry he’d asked. Still, he didn’t say anything to her. He didn’t want to hurt her feelings. He, of all people, knew what it was like to be dismissed by the object of his affection. Yet he didn’t want to encourage her, either. The situation made him damn uncomfortable.

  Lindsay crossed the room to the window. “We’re going to put up a wallpaper border.”

  “That’ll look real nice.”

  “You think so?”

  She stared at him earnestly, as if his answer mattered more than anything. Kyle finished the wall opposite the window and nodded. “Yeah, sure it will. Did you come up to see how I was doing, or did you want something specific?”

  “Oh, Mom’s ordering sandwiches for lunch. What would you like?”

  “Lean roast beef with everything.”

  She wrinkled her nose. At that moment, she looked just like her mother. Kyle grinned. “You don’t approve?”

  “I hate onions.”

  “Then I won’t make you eat any.”

  Lindsay laughed. Kyle couldn’t figure out if he was making it better or worse. Before he had a chance to decide, Travis poked his head into the room.

  “Lindsay, your mom’s looking for you,” he said.

  “Okay.” She glanced at Kyle. “I’ve got to give her the orders. You can come downstairs if you’d like. Everyone is taking a break.”

  “Thanks. I’ll do that.” He waited until she left, then grimaced at his brother. “What am I going to do about her?”

  Travis came into the room and laughed. “I can’t help you, little brother. Lindsay is way out of my league.”

  “Thanks for nothing.” Kyle slipped the roller into the tray, then turned toward the last unpainted wall. “When you were first dating Elizabeth, did you have any problems with her daughter, Mandy?”

  “Mandy was six at the time. She only ever saw me as a substitute father. Can’t you just tell Lindsay you’re too old for her?”

  “Sure. But then I’ll hurt her feelings and humiliate her.”

  “I wish I had something better to tell you.”

  Kyle shrugged. “Me, too.” He raised his arms and moved the roller up and down above the closet door. “I’ll think of something.”

  Travis grinned. “I don’t understand why there’s a problem in the first place. You’re usually so good with kids.”

  “It’s different this time.”

  “Why?”

  Because I think I care about Sandy. Except he didn’t want to admit to that. Not yet. Just thinking about it was enough to make him break out in a cold sweat. He knew better than to care. It was dangerous. If his brothers, father and uncles had taught him one thing, it was that Haynes men didn’t make good husbands and fathers. They’d been failing at it for several generations. He frowned. Except for Travis. His brother had been married for over two years. He and Elizabeth had had a daughter. They were happy. So Travis had escaped the Haynes family curse. That didn’t mean Kyle was also going to get lucky.

  “Maybe you should think about settling down,” Travis told him.

  “I’m not the type. My relationships don’t last.”

  “That’s because you leave the women before they can leave you.”

  “What am I supposed to do about it? Stay, and let them leave me?”

  “How about trusting they might want to stay?”

  Kyle put down the roller and stared at his brother. They were about the same height, with the same dark hair and eyes. Travis was four years older. His marriage had softened his hard edges and made him a happy man.

  “What if they don’t stay?” Kyle asked.

  Travis’s smile faded. “What if they do? It seems to me you’re already changing things.”

  “What does that mean?”

  “We’re here.” He moved his arm out to indicate the room, then the house beyond. “You’ve never involved your family with one of your women before.”

  “Sandy’s not one of my women. She’s—”

  Travis waited, his eyebrows raised.

  “Forget it,” Kyle mumbled and turned back to the painting. He concentrated on moving the roller down the narrow strip of wall between the closet and the corner. “Don’t you have work to do?” he asked.

  “Not really. We’re taking a break until the deli delivers the sandwiches. You could come down and join us. Or you could continue to hide up here.”

  Kyle grunted. “I’ll be down when I’m done.”

  “Sure.” Travis started out the door.

  “And I’m not hiding,” he called.

  Travis laughed.

  * * *

  Kyle knew he hadn’t been hiding, but Sandy was still sure avoiding him. All through lunch, she sat at the far end of the living room. Sunlight streamed through the bare windows. Someone had swept the hardwood floor, then mopped it until it gleamed. With no furniture in the large house, they’d each pulled up a piece of floor when the meal had arrived. Nichole had passed out sodas, then taken a seat near Austin. The gray-eyed pirate always had a way with the ladies, Kyle thought, watching Nichole charm the quiet man. Mercifully, Lindsay had stayed near her mother. Instead, it had been Blake who’d sat near Kyle. The boy hadn’t said anything, despite Kyle’s attempt to bring him into the conversation. In the end, Kyle had given up and instead, had watched Sandy not look at him.

  He studied her, trying to figure out what it was exactly that got to him. In denim shorts and a red tank shirt, she was hardly dressing to be seductive. If he took her features apart, there wasn’t anything special about her. Wide green eyes drew his gaze. He liked the way she wore mascara and no other makeup. Her nose was straight, her mouth turned up slightly at the corners, her chin was pointed, but not too pointed. Her body was well proportioned for her height, her breasts neither too large nor too small, her hips rounded, but not obvious. So why did she drive him crazy? Was it hormonal? Was it the result of too much reminiscing and not enough sleep?

  Austin stood and stretched. “Back to work, everyone. We should be able to finish the painting today if we get going now.”

  Sandy scrambled to her feet. “I’ll clean up,” she said.

  “I’ll help.” Kyle grabbed the wrapping from his sandwich, then picked up Blake’s. The boy gave him a quick smile. The curve of the child’s lips and flash of white teeth reminded him of Sandy. For a moment, he stared at the boy, wondering what it must be like to have a child of one’s own. A fierce longing swept through him, shocking him with its intensity. He shook his head slightly, then continued to collect trash.

  Everyone stood up and slowly left the room. At last, he and Sandy were alone.

  “I can handle this,” she said, not looking at him.

  “I don’t mind helping.”

  “I don’t want to keep you from your painting.”

  “Are you afraid I’m not working hard enough?” he teased.

  She’d bent over to pick up Nichole’s half-eaten sandwich. Now she turned her head and looked at him. Her loose, shoulder-length hair shielded part of her face. “Not at all. I know everyone is doing a lot for me, and I really appreciate it.” She tucked her hair behind her ear as she straightened. “We all do.”

  “I know.” He walked toward her. “I was just kidding. I’ll help you clean up here, then I’ll go back upstairs and paint. Fair enough?”

  She nodded. He wanted to think she was staring at his mouth, but he figured it was just wishful thinking on his part. No doubt about it, the lady turned him on. Unfortunately, he doubted his feelings were returned.

  She continued to stare at him, then flushed slightly and looked away as if she’d just realized what she was doing. He watched the color climb up her cheeks to her hairline. The house was quiet, despite the number of people inside. He couldn’t
hear anything except his heart pounding in his chest and the faint whisper of Sandy’s rapid breathing. At least he told himself it was rapid.

  She twisted her fingers together. A paper napkin drifted from the trash she held and fluttered to the ground. He bent and grabbed it, then thrust it toward her. His fingers brushed her arm. She jumped.

  “Kyle, I don’t think—”

  “Good,” he said, cutting her off. “I know you’re upset about last night.”

  She swallowed and stared at the center of his chest. “Last night should never have happened.”

  “Which part? The pizza? You and your kids eating at my house? Or what happened later?”

  “What happened later.”

  Her voice was soft and low. He had to lean forward to hear her. She continued to stare at his chest. He wondered if she was afraid to look him in the eye because of what she would see or because of what she would reveal? He wanted it to be the latter.

  “What exactly did happen?” he asked, deliberately taunting her.

  She raised her gaze. He saw something hungry flash through her eyes, then she blinked and it was gone. “Nothing. Nothing at all. And I want to make sure nothing happens again.”

  Nothing except he’d almost kissed her and she’d almost let him. She wanted to make sure it happened again? Did she mean nothing or did she mean the kiss? “Are you sure?” he asked and moved closer.

  “Yes.” Her voice was a mere whisper. She trembled.

  He touched her bare arm, just above the elbow. She pulled back. “I mean it, Kyle. I don’t want there to be anything between us. I’m not interested.”

  He’d once played football with a sprained ankle and never let on until the game was over. He’d been cut pretty bad breaking up a fight and had finished his shift before going to the hospital. He’d been dumped once, a long time ago in college, and never told a soul. So it wasn’t hard to continue to stare at her and not let her know what he was thinking. But inside, he reeled from the blow. As simple as that. She wasn’t interested. Thanks but no thanks.

  “No problem,” he said, shoving his hands into his pockets.

  She sighed. “I don’t mean to be cruel or rude. I appreciate everything you’ve done for me. Bringing Travis and Austin to help, working around here, all of that. It’s been great. But you and I have nothing in common. It would be best if we were just neighbors.”

  “Sandy, I understand. You don’t have to give me a reason.”

  “But I want to. I want you to know it’s not personal.”

  It felt pretty damn personal to him. She was calling the game on account of rain and he hadn’t even got to bat.

  She walked over to the trash bag by the entrance to the foyer and dumped the deli papers inside. “I’m not your type, and you’re not mine,” she told him.

  What was her type? Someone like her late husband? Thomas, the philosophy professor. Someone intellectual. Someone who preferred opera to football, thick nonfiction books with footnotes to the latest spy thriller. Someone steady and dependable. Someone not like him.

  “I hate for you to feel responsible for us. You don’t have to keep coming over here and taking care of things. I’m really okay on my own.”

  In other words, get lost.

  “I think you’re right,” he said.

  “You do?” She looked doubtful.

  “Sure. We’ll be neighbors. Friends. We can look out for each other, but pretty much stay out of each other’s lives. It’s a good plan.”

  “Great.” She smiled.

  He thought his heart might start bleeding right then and there, but he didn’t let on. Instead, he headed for the stairs. Friends. Neighbors. He’d sure lost his touch. He’d been thinking romance and she’d been putting him in the same class as the neighborhood golden retriever. Friends. What would Sandy say if she knew he’d been thinking, as well as friends they could also be lovers?

  Chapter Five

  He kept his word. Once the house was painted, Kyle disappeared from their lives as completely as if he’d never been there in the first place. He took his ready smiles, his quick wit and that way he had of looking at her that made her feel as if her bones were melting.

  Sandy told herself she was pleased. It would be easier for both of them if they didn’t risk getting involved. As she’d told him three days ago, he wasn’t her type, she wasn’t his. So what if she went up in flames every time she was near him? She would get over it. And she had. Which didn’t explain why the house seemed so quiet without him and his brothers around helping.

  Sandy stood at the bottom of the stairs and looked around. Her kids has been so good about helping—despite a few complaints—she’d given them a break and called in a service to clean the windows. Sunlight shone brightly through the freshly washed glass. All the rooms had been painted, the bathrooms scrubbed. Nichole and Blake had even weeded the rose garden out back. All they needed now was for their furniture to arrive.

  She walked into the kitchen, then through the utility room and out the back door. Her kids were sitting on the back porch drinking sodas. They were much too quiet.

  “What’s wrong?” she asked.

  Lindsay studied the toe of her right athletic shoe. “Nothing. We finished papering the kitchen cupboards.”

  “Thanks.”

  Sandy took a seat next to her oldest. With Kyle no longer a daily fixture in their lives, Lindsay hadn’t bothered to wear her nicest summer clothing. Today she’d pulled on a torn pair of shorts that had once been light blue but that had faded to a sort of institutional gray. Her T-shirt wasn’t much better. There was a juice stain over the pocket, and one sleeve was coming off at the shoulder. Even her brown hair seemed limp, just lying on her back instead of bouncing with each step.

  As usual, Blake sat off by himself, over in a corner of the porch with his back pressed against the house. Her son was playing with one of his hand-held video games for the first time since they’d moved. As she watched, his fingers moved nimbly over the buttons, destroying electronic bad guys and making his private world safe once again. His glasses slipped down his nose. Absently, he pushed them into place, then took a sip of his drink before returning his attention to his computer game.

  Nichole scooted over to lean against her. “I’m hot, Mommy,” her youngest told her. “Can we go swimming?”

  Sandy shook her head. “We have to wait for the movers, honey. They called and said they would be here later today.”

  “If they don’t break down again,” Lindsay said.

  “You’re grumpy all of a sudden. What’s going on?”

  “I hate this place,” Lindsay told her. “There’s nothing to do. There are no kids my age, or anything. I can’t believe you moved us here.”

  Mutinous brown eyes glared at her. Lindsay had Thomas’s eyes. She had her father’s sense of adventure. Unfortunately, she had her mother’s temper. Sandy recognized a lot of the unfocused adolescent rage from her own youth in her daughter. Her little girl was growing up fast.

  “You didn’t seem to mind it too much a few days ago.”

  “A few days ago, something was going on around here.”

  Yeah, Kyle had been a part of their lives. Okay, so they all missed him. They would get over it. After all, they’d only known him a few days.

  Sandy wished she could make her kids believe it was going to be all right. They would make friends and settle into a routine soon enough. She reminded herself change was never easy, but it was often for the best.

  A loud rumbling broke the stillness of the afternoon. Lindsay straightened, even Blake looked up from his game.

  “The truck’s here!” Nichole crowed. She grinned at her mother.

  Sandy reached out and ruffled the little girl’s red curls. “I think you’re right. Let’s go see.”

  Nichole took Sandy’s hand and skipped down the stairs next to her. Lindsay and Blake followed more slowly. As they rounded the house, Sandy saw a large moving van backing up down the long driveway. The
driver checked his mirror, then glanced at someone waving him in from the porch. Sandy looked at the man who was standing there as if he owned the place.

  Her heart told her who it was even before she recognized the tall, lean body and the short dark hair. Her knees quivered slightly and her breath caught in her throat. He hadn’t gone away. She was a fool, from the top of her head down to her toes. A fool and glad he was there.

  “Kyle!” Lindsay called as soon as she saw him. “What are you doing here?”

  “Helping.” He gave her a smile, but his gaze met Sandy’s. “I saw the truck and figured you’d need some.”

  “Thanks,” Sandy said, climbing up the side stairs to the wide, wooden porch. When she got close to him, she felt awkward. “You didn’t have to.”

  “I wanted to,” he said. “Just being neighborly.”

  The trunk jerked to a halt with the back end a few feet from the porch. Two men jumped out of the cab, then the driver, Al, climbed down. She recognized him from when he’d come to pick up her belongings in Los Angeles.

  “Ms. Walker,” the older man said, “we finally got here. Sorry about the delay.”

  Nichole rushed to the edge of the stairs. “Can we do my room first?”

  Al grinned. “We sure can try, little lady. Come on, boys, let’s get this stuff unloaded.”

  The back doors of the truck came off completely. The men stretched them across to the porch, eliminating the need to go up and down the stairs with the furniture. Al opened a side door to the truck. While his men were unstrapping the furniture, he walked toward her.

  “If you could show me the layout of the house, we’ll put everything where it’s supposed to go. I didn’t see any writing on your boxes. How are you going to know where they’re going?”

  Lindsay rolled her eyes. “Don’t even ask. Mom has a system for everything. Wait until you see it.”

  “My room’s pink,” Nichole said.

  “Pink?” Al asked.

  “There are colored dots on all the boxes,” Sandy said. “Come with me and I’ll show you.”

  She’d tacked a big poster up in the foyer. Different colored dots lined the left side of the white cardboard. Next to each dot was the place those boxes went. “Red dots go in the kitchen, pink is for Nichole, dark blue for Blake and so on.”

 

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