“AUSTIN! I… Dallas and I are getting married!” she blurted out, although he almost certainly knew.
“Congratulations. Or is it best wishes to the bride?”
“What are you doing here?”
He smiled.
She hadn’t seen Austin smile like that before. Then again, a naked woman had just flung herself into his arms and planted a wet one on him. He was entitled.
And about that… How was she supposed to extricate herself and get back up the stairs? She didn’t have the guts to loosen her grip, turn around and nonchalantly walk back up the stairs knowing he was watching her. What a view. Not exactly her best. And running up the stairs with everything jiggling would just be pathetic.
“I’m picking up the tickets Dal left for me,” Austin explained. “I have a key.”
“Oh. He didn’t mention that.”
“He probably didn’t think of it, since we do this all the time. He leaves tickets on the fireplace mantel and I stop by during lunch and pick them up. I’m setting you down now,” he added in the same conversational tone.
Releasing her, he quickly shrugged out of his suit jacket and draped it over her shoulders.
Relief at his thoughtfulness made her knees shake. “Thank you.”
“Thank you.” And he grinned.
Austin Varnell grinned. He never grinned. Or he didn’t used to. The old Austin would have awkwardly looked away. The old Austin wouldn’t have kissed her that way. Or any way.
Clutching the jacket closed, Cara walked to the stairs quickly—but not in a way anyone could describe as a panicked retreat—and headed up the stairs, all jiggling safely hidden.
IN THE FITTING ROOM at Tuxedo Park, Austin was also reliving that day. He remembered every detail of the moments she’d spent in his arms. He remembered how her skin felt, her warmth, how she tasted, her lips, and especially the tiny sound she’d made when his tongue had met hers.
He remembered watching her climb the stairs until she was out of sight.
Cara Brantley, the love of his life.
And she was getting married to his brother.
She had no idea she was the love of his life, and neither did Dallas. Actually, Austin was stunned to discover it himself. All it had taken was her flinging herself naked into his arms and kissing him as though she couldn’t let go.
Back when they were studying calculus together, he’d fantasized a really close scenario to what occurred that day. The surprise of it actually happening, years later, had exposed feelings he’d thought were gone.
No. Not gone. Hibernating. And now awake.
How very inconvenient.
Dallas hadn’t stolen Cara away from him, or anything as dramatic as that. Dallas had gotten the girl simply by being himself.
Austin remembered the excruciating gatherings that neither he nor Cara had enjoyed. She’d been so much happier with Dallas. They’d suited each other then and obviously suited each other now.
Austin had been fine with that. At least he knew his future sister-in-law had a brain. Even better, she mitigated the worst of Dal’s impulses because she recognized them and wasn’t fooled by a wink and a smile. Cara was exactly who he needed.
But Cara was who Austin wanted.
He wouldn’t have known if he hadn’t stopped by for the tickets last month.
One look at Cara—and it had been a very long, naked look—and Austin had gone from being pleased at his brother’s choice of wife to insanely covetous. He’d gone from feeling a brotherly fondness toward Cara to pure, but not so simple, lust.
Austin had only himself to blame. If there had been a single thing he’d learned with the Wildcatter team, it had been to go for it. Take risks. The only true failure was not making the attempt. And all the other motivational sayings that papered the offices.
Back in college, Austin should have pursued Cara instead of assuming that any woman who had a choice would choose Dallas. But he’d made no effort whatsoever because that way, he wouldn’t get rejected. In effect, he’d rejected her first.
He should have accepted that Dal had a knack with women and he, Austin, would have to work at it more. It was just one of their differences, like Austin finding it easier to study than Dallas did.
But that was in the past.
After Cara had gone upstairs, Austin remembered walking over to the mantel, picking up the envelope holding the tickets and thinking that he needed to deal with his feelings for Cara, spend a few days wallowing in self-pity and then set those feelings aside. And he needed to accomplish this without climbing the stairs, knocking on the bedroom door and asking for closure sex.
Not a risk likely to result in a good return on investment.
He didn’t climb the stairs. He opened the envelope, checked the dates on the tickets and grouped the consecutively numbered seats. He was aware when Cara came down the stairs but didn’t look up.
“Here’s your jacket,” she said. “I appreciate your decency.”
“No prob.” Austin draped the jacket over his arm. “You’re going to be my sister-in-law.” And I’ve seen you naked.
“And you’ve seen me naked.” She uncannily echoed his thoughts.
And the kiss? What about that hot, incredibly sexy kiss they’d shared? Maybe it hadn’t been so incredible for her. “If you think about it, you’ve seen Dallas naked, so you know what I look like.”
“Nice theory.” She stepped closer to him and studied his face. “But you two don’t look as much alike as you used to.”
“Really?” He raised an eyebrow and she gave him a chastising look.
“From a distance, sure, you look alike, and certainly to those who don’t know you well.”
“Then what’s different?”
“Your eyes most of all. Dal has crinkles around his from smiling so much. He’s been in the sun more and it shows. I try to get him to wear sunscreen, but he forgets.”
“He doesn’t like the smell.”
“Who does? Now you, you’ve got a tiny little frown line between your eyebrows.”
He rubbed at it before he could stop himself.
“Also, now that I’ve seen you, I have to say that all the salty party snacks and the irregular eating and sleeping schedule are beginning to catch up with Dal.”
She was talking about his twin. He shouldn’t feel so smug.
“Anyway.” Cara crossed her arms and stared at her shoes. “I’m completely mortified by what happened. I know that someday Dal and I will laugh about it.”
“But not yet.”
“No.”
He liked that she assumed he knew when to be discreet without begging him not to tell Dallas. “How about us? Are we ever going to laugh about it?”
She looked up at him. “We are never going to talk about it again.”
“No.” But that didn’t mean he wasn’t going to think about the way she’d felt in his arms and the fact that she’d kissed him back. She’d kissed him back. And at that point, she must have known she wasn’t kissing Dallas.
She’d kissed him back.
“We will act as though it never happened.”
She’d kissed him back. “If you wish.”
“I wish.”
He tapped the ticket envelope against his palm. “In that case, see you around, Cara.”
SHE’D KISSED HIM. She’d known it was Austin and not Dallas as soon as their lips touched, but she’d kissed him anyway. It was time to acknowledge it.
For weeks, Cara had convinced herself that, because it was so uncharacteristic of Austin to take advantage, she’d been surprised into immobility.
Immobile if she didn’t count her lips. They sure hadn’t been immobile.
As long as she put the incident out of her mind and didn’t think about it, she might not remember her tongue finding its way into his mouth. And…there might have been the tiniest little moan on her part, but the thought was too horrible to contemplate.
Cara propped her elbows on her knees and covered her face with her palms. All around her were the sounds of happy brides choosing their wedding gowns, plastic bags dragging across the carpet and, from the fitting room on the other side, a couple of bridesmaids whining about their dresses.
Here in the dressing room at the end, Cara had found an oasis of calm. She could just sit and breathe, at least until the bride whose dressing room this was returned.
Unfortunately, along with the sitting and breathing came the thinking. And what she was thinking about was this: if she truly loved Dallas, how could she so enjoy kissing Austin?
She thought she loved Dallas; she wouldn’t have agreed to marry him otherwise. She loved being with him. She loved the way he made her feel in and out of bed. She missed him when he wasn’t with her. Life was brighter and better with him.
But.
Did she make his life brighter and better? What did she bring to the table? Why had Dallas proposed to her, Cara?
Why didn’t she know?
Anytime she protested that they never spent much time alone, they usually ended up in bed. Afterward, when they lay cocooned in each other’s arms, Cara could hear a faint sound that she knew was his cell phone vibrating against whatever counter he’d left it on as messages, e-mails and texts streamed in.
He could tune it out, but she couldn’t, and the buzz always triggered a low-level anxiety that she didn’t understand. It was his job. He was busy. She put out her fair share of fires from suppliers, contractors and clients at all hours, too.
The longer their engagement, the more Cara felt as though she was fighting for any little piece of Dallas she could get.
She’d tell him how she felt, she decided. And she’d make him discuss it with her and not cajole her into thinking she was being clingy and insecure.
Ugh. She sat up. She was being clingy and insecure. She hated clingy women. Lately, all she ever did was complain and criticize him or bring up wedding details. Maybe if she weren’t such a Debbie Downer, he’d stick around longer. And if she were more fun to be around, he’d seek her out for a change.
The revelation was so simple, it was embarrassing. This was boy-girl 101.
Someone came into the men’s fitting room. She heard rustling and then the sound of a zipper being zipped or unzipped.
“Hey, Dal?” she heard. “Where are you? The guy out there wants to know what color of white shirt we’re supposed to wear. Oh, hey.” The voice had arrived at the door of the dressing room. “Do you know what color shirt we’re supposed to wear?”
“White?” Dal answered.
“Man, they got five different colors of white. There’s diamond white and eggshell and candle something and a couple more.”
“I have no idea,” Dal said.
Not surprising since Cara hadn’t even known about the white choices.
“Just get measured and we’ll ask Cara later.”
“Gotcha.” She heard whoever it was slap the side of the door and leave.
Listening a few moments more, she decided that Dal was alone.
She leaned against the wall. “Hey, sailor. Lookin’ for a good time?”
“Cara?”
“If that’s what you want to call me,” she answered suggestively.
“What are you doing?” There was uncertain laughter in his voice.
Good. She wanted to keep him surprised. “I got me an itch and I’m lookin’ to get it scratched.” It was a miracle she didn’t crack up.
“I’ve heard they have creams for that.”
Cara pressed her lips together until she could control her voice. “Oooh, creams. I love creams. They’re so…creamy.” She made a face in the mirror. Come on. She could do better than that. “I love spreading them all over my skin. And I do mean all over. They leave everything nice and slick.”
“I thought creams just softened.”
Cara rolled her eyes. Get with the program, already!
“For slick, nothing beats oil,” he said.
“Really?” she prompted. “Tell me why.” And if he answered “higher viscosity,” she was going to give up.
“You can get much longer strokes.”
That might be sexy. Unless he was discussing car pistons or something. He needed to work the voice a little more, though. Maybe he was worried about his buddies hearing him. “Oooooh,” she said, mostly to fill the silence. “Would you like to stroke me?” Honestly, she sounded like a bad Marilyn Monroe impersonator.
“Yes.”
Ah. His voice had warmed up. “Tell me all about it.”
She heard him move and guessed he’d sat down.
“You’re lying naked on the bed.”
“Well, of course.”
“On your stomach. I pour oil on my palms and rub them together to warm it.”
Cara leaned her head back, imagining Dal doing the same on his side. “What does it smell like?”
“Oil.”
She smiled, waiting.
“Scented with…musk. But not the cheap hippie musk. The good stuff.”
Cara rolled her eyes. Dal obviously did better in front of an audience where he could gauge their reaction. An interesting insight. “The stuff that smells like sex,” she said because she just thought of it.
“Oh, yeah. That would be the stuff.”
“So your hands are all slick and slippery. What are you going to do with them?”
As she spoke, Cara noticed that several veils were clipped to hangers on one of the hooks above her. Surely the other bride wouldn’t mind if she just took a look at them.
She reached for one when Dal began to speak.
“I’m going to start at the small of your back and move my thumbs over the base of your spine right on the spot that gets tight when you sit for too long.”
Cara blinked. That was pretty specific. He must be getting into this. She started to reply, but he continued without prompting.
“I’m going to rub harder and faster so the warmth will melt all the knots. When, and only when I hear you purr, I’ll pour a tiny pool of oil into the hollow of your back.”
Purr? Cara didn’t remember ever purring. Dal had never given her a massage like that, though.
“Then I’ll smear the oil around at your waist and stroke all the way up to your shoulders.”
“A very long stroke.” Cara saw a chapel-length veil that was only a single layer of tulle and completely unadorned. Her dress was so heavily beaded that an elaborate veil would fight with it. Maybe that was what the problem had been.
She unclipped it from the hanger.
“Many long strokes. As your muscles relax and warm, I’ll press deeper and slower. I’ll enjoy the feel of your warm, slick skin beneath my fingers. You’ll stretch and sigh. I’ll pour oil on your shoulders and work out the kinks and knots.”
“That feels wonderful.” Cara realized she’d been staring at the veil without really seeing it. She could deal with veils later. “Don’t stop.”
“I’m just getting started. Now I pour a different oil into my palm. This one warms and sensitizes. It might tingle. Are there places you want to tingle?”
“Oooh.” Marilyn again. “Some places are already tingling.” And it wasn’t a lie.
“What places?”
“Neglected places.”
“Tell me.”
He’d lobbed back to her. All right then. “Here’s poor little me, lying on the bed all naked and you’ve completely ignored my rump. So I arch my back and give a little wiggle to attract your attention.”
“And it works. I look down your back and see two globes just begging for me to touch them.”
Globes? He said globes?
“And I do, spreading my fingers and the oil all over. All. Over. But this is the oil that heats and you aren’t expecting that. You gasp and raise yourself to look over your shoulder at me. You’re so beautiful. Your back glistens. Your hair falls over one shoulder and you’re unaware that you’ve revealed the side of your breast.”
Her eyes widened as he painted the image in her mind.
“You see my hands on your bottom, kneading and heating. The tingling begins and you stare into my eyes. You know what you want and I know it, too.”
Cara dropped the veil.
It broke the trance Dal’s words had put her in, which was a good thing. Once he’d caught on, he’d caught on. Her heart was going like gangbusters and she’d been taking quick, shallow breaths.
“But you can’t have what you want until you ask for it,” he continued, his voice rough. “And you want it. You’re desperate for it.”
“Yes!”
“Ask me, Cara. Ask me for what you want.”
“I want to know why you love me.” She hadn’t been going to say that at all. But it was what she truly wanted. “Tell me. Please.”
There was silence. Yeah, she was changing gears from fantasy to reality, but maybe they’d created a mood that would make it easier for Dal to tap into his deeper emotions.
Cara held her breath. She was asking for more than his usual “I love you, babe.” Or “You know I’m crazy about you.” Or even, “You’re the best thing that’s ever happened to me.”
Why? Why was she the best thing that had ever happened to him? Specifics, she wanted specifics.
And then he spoke. “You complete me.”
Cara nearly screamed. She’d wanted deep emotion and he’d given her a movie cliché? “That’s been said. A lot.”
“But it’s true.”
Cara wanted to cry. Actually, she wanted not to cry, but figured it was inevitable. “I—I was hoping for more.”
And then the words poured out of him. “You not only make me want to be a better man, you make me understand why I need to be a better man. I want to be worthy of you, of being your life partner. I want to be your strength when you need it and your support when you don’t. I want to hold you when you need holding and I want to be held when I feel weak. And I want to know that I can depend on you to get my back and be there even if I fail. I want to know that no matter how bad the day was, you’ll be there when I come home at night. And I want to do the same for you. And to do that, I have to be the best man I can be. Cara, meeting you expanded my world. I see life not just through my eyes, but yours, too. I think more. I think differently. I feel more. I am more.”
Now the tears were okay. This was the connection she’d been missing. The lack had been the source of her unease. She simply needed to bond on a deeper level than Dallas did. Like most men, he’d assumed she knew how he felt. He didn’t have to talk it to death. He probably hadn’t analyzed it until now. He just knew the feelings were there and that was enough. For pity’s sake, he was marrying her. What more proof did she need?
Cara smiled through her tears as she imagined him thinking exactly that to himself. “Thank you for telling me. I needed to hear that.”
His voice was so quiet she almost missed his next words. “I needed to say it. I love you, Cara. I always will.”
“Hello?” Someone knocked on the door before opening it. “Is anyone… Oh, good. You’re still here.” Lia, the assistant manager, stood in the doorway. “They had a question about the shirts next door. It’ll just take a second.”
Cara quickly dabbed at her eyes.
“Having a meltdown?” Lia smiled sympathetically. “Don’t worry. Sooner or later every bride has one. It only means you need a break. Come with me.”
Rather than explain, Cara followed her.
“We’ve got peach iced tea brewed today. I’m going to get you a glass. You can relax in a comfy chair and if you’re up to it, pick which shade of white you want the groomsmen to wear. If you’re not up to it, I can pick.”
“I can’t believe it matters that much,” Cara said. Not compared to having just heard her fiancé’s deepest feelings.
It had been the most emotionally moving moment of her life. Who cared about shades of white?
“It’s mostly for the photos.” Lia chattered away. “We find that when a bride wears an off-white dress, or has a lot of embellishment that makes it appear off-white from a distance, white shirts will make the dress look dirty. They also seem to skew the rest of the colors.”
“Oh.”
“It’s an easy fix.” They emerged into the main salon. “And this very helpful gentleman brought all five shirts over so you can hold them up to your dress and pick the one you like.”
“Hey, babe,” said a grinning Dallas.