Read Along Came Trouble: A Loveswept Contemporary Romance Online

Authors: Ruthie Knox

Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #General

Along Came Trouble: A Loveswept Contemporary Romance (26 page)

BOOK: Along Came Trouble: A Loveswept Contemporary Romance
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He gave her half a smile and rolled his shoulders, then tilted his head from side to side to stretch his neck. “I’m pretty tired. I think I’ll crash.” He rose and retrieved his bag from beside the door.

“We’ll figure it out in the morning,” Ellen said, but Jamie didn’t acknowledge the reassurance.

“Nice to meet you,” he said to Caleb. “I guess I’ll be seeing you around.”

Ellen watched him go. “That’s Jamie,” she said when the guest-room door had closed behind him.

“Yep.” Even if he’d finished forming an opinion of Callahan, which he hadn’t, he knew
better than to offer it to Ellen. She might find some things about her brother frustrating, but she obviously adored him.

“So, Clark.” Her eyes narrowed as she leaned back in her chair and crossed her arms. “You’re my boyfriend?”

Damn
. “You heard that?”

“Uh-huh.”

“And you don’t approve.”

She frowned, rubbing her thumb over her bicep. “I told you I don’t want a relationship.”

“Yeah, but that was before we negotiated.”

“So?”

He leaned forward. “That was before I painted you with chocolate syrup and licked it off every delicious inch of you.”

Her pupils dilated, and he could swear the pulse at the base of her throat picked up, but she stayed in the defensive posture and shook her head. “I don’t see how that changes anything.”

It stung to hear her say it, though he knew it shouldn’t. He couldn’t expect great sex to change her whole worldview overnight, especially given what he’d learned about her marriage.

“Just think about it,” Caleb said. He stood and walked behind her to put his hands on her shoulders, then leaned down to kiss the top of her head. “Will you do that for me?”

She didn’t answer.

He raised her damp, cinnamon-smelling hair and kissed the nape of her neck, then blew gently. She shuddered. “I want to take you back to bed and make love to you again,” he said. “And in the morning, I want to wake up and find you pressed up against me, all sleepy and warm, and I want to touch you and kiss you until you’re making those whimpering, begging sounds that drive me crazy. Then I want to sink inside you, inch by inch, and I want to stay there for a very long time.”

“Caleb?” Her voice had gone all throaty the way it did when she was aroused.

“Yeah?”

“You’re not my boyfriend. And you can’t spend the night while Jamie’s here.”

He slid his hands down to her waist and kissed the spot where her neck met her shoulders. “I know I can’t, honey. Because now that Jamie’s here, I’m going to have to go in to the office and spend the next five or six hours getting ready for more people with cameras to show up.”

“Oh.”

He hoped he wasn’t imagining the disappointment in her voice.

Cupping her face in his hand, he turned her chin up toward him so he could kiss her soft
mouth. “Good night, Ellen Sydney Callahan.”

He’d see her in the morning. It wasn’t good enough, but he was a realist. It was as good as it was going to get for now.

Chapter Twenty

“Since when do you drink orange juice?” Jamie asked, rooting through his sister’s fridge for something to eat. All she had was beer, kid food, and vegetables. He’d sort of hoped she’d make him breakfast, but she was already working, and he knew better than to ask.

Maybe he could hire her a service like the one he had back in L.A. that delivered homemade meals directly to his fridge. That way, when he visited, he could just find the container labeled “frittata” or “quiche” or whatever and be done with it.

But Ellen probably wouldn’t approve. She seemed to like fending for herself. If she didn’t, she would have moved to California to live with him like he’d invited her and Henry to do a million times.

Shoving aside a box of baking soda and trying not to wonder why she kept it in the fridge, he found nothing behind it but a carton of eggs. Which he didn’t know how to fix.

He’d never seen the appeal of doing everything yourself when you could hire someone to do it for you. The way he figured it, people should do what they were good at. He was good at singing. Ellen was good at taking care of Henry and being an ass-kicking lawyer. There had to be somebody in Camelot who got his thrills making breakfast. That was the person they needed to locate.

On the other hand, if he knew how to fix eggs, he could be eating right now. He’d have to add it to his list of competencies to acquire, once he got Carly back.

“I don’t drink orange juice,” Ellen said from behind him. “Caleb brought it over.”

“Ah. So you’re at that stage.” He picked up a jar of pickles, then put it back. A man couldn’t have pickles for breakfast, no matter how desperate he was.

“What stage?”

“The stage where he brings you stuff, but he doesn’t know you well enough to know what to bring you. Then, later, he’ll know you better, but he’ll no longer have the impulse to wait on you hand and foot, so you’ll never get the peach juice you deserve.”

He hoped she’d volunteer details about her affair with Caleb, but no such luck. “I don’t like peach juice either,” she said absently. “That’s you.” He only had half her attention. The other half was focused on the fat contract she was reading at the table.

“Really?” He could have sworn Ellen loved peach juice. “What juice do you like, then?”

“I don’t like juice in the morning. It’s too sweet. I like coffee.” She picked up a red pen and made a vicious slash through one paragraph.

He gave up on the fridge and started rooting through the cabinets.

“There are doughnuts on top of the microwave,” she said.

Hallelujah
.

Of course, he wasn’t supposed to eat doughnuts. He was supposed to stay fit and attractive, lest he lose his appeal to the thirteen-to-thirty-five demographic. He grabbed the whole box and carried it over to the table.

“These are unreal,” he said after polishing off the second one. The orange juice wasn’t half bad, either.

“They’re just convenience-store doughnuts,” Ellen said, giving him a skeptical glance over the top of her reading glasses.

“Did you have one yet?”

“No.”

“Eat one, and then tell me it’s not the best thing you’ve ever tasted.”

Ellen picked a glazed chocolate doughnut out of the box and ate it, dropping crumbs onto her contract. Then she picked another one out of the box, and he had a third. “These are pretty damn good,” she conceded.

“Who’s the contract for?”

“Aimee Dawson.”

“You’re amazing.” He’d known he could count on Ellen to help the girl out. “What’s going on with you and Caleb?”

She looked up, and Jamie smiled. “See what I did there? Misdirection. You were supposed to just spit it out without thinking.”

“Spit what out?”

Shrugging, he said, “I don’t know. Whatever there is to spit.”

He was going for nonchalant, but the truth was he was intensely curious about the man he’d found in his sister’s kitchen last night. As far as he knew, Ellen hadn’t dated anyone since her divorce, and she’d never dated anyone in her life like this Caleb guy. If you did a lineup of every Y-chromosome Ellen had ever gone out with, Caleb would stick out like a chorus dancer with a limp—the one fella with a buzz cut, hard muscles, and testosterone to spare in a sea of skinny guys with too much hair, too much ego, and not nearly enough appreciation for Ellen.

She turned her attention back to the contract. “It’s a casual thing,” she said. “He’s fun.”

“Fun” wasn’t the first word that had come to mind when he’d laid eyes on Ellen’s bodyguard. The first word was probably “whoa.” He would hate to meet Caleb Clark in a dark alley. Other words that had suggested themselves included “intense,” “serious,” and “tall.” Also, “surprisingly comfortable wandering around half-naked in Ellen’s kitchen.”

Plus, Caleb hadn’t sucked up at all. Not a single
Jeez, it’s incredible to meet you
or
I have all your albums
or
I saw you play the Super Bowl halftime show
. Instead, he’d had the balls to chew Jamie out for the way he’d treated Carly.

A month ago, he might have resented that, but these days he saw the flip side. What had he ever done to earn Caleb’s respect? Nothing. So why should he get it?

He was learning to appreciate people who had no tolerance for celebrity bullshit—or any kind of bullshit, for that matter. People like Carly.

He reached for another doughnut. It was too early in the morning to start thinking about Carly. He’d been up half the night thinking about her. He’d thought about Carly every freaking waking moment since the day he left Camelot. In a few hours, he was going to have to go over there and face her, but until then he wanted to distract himself with his sister’s love life, which couldn’t possibly be as catastrophically screwed up as his own.

“You’re going to make yourself sick if you keep eating those,” Ellen said.

“Since when do you sleep with guys for fun?”

“Do you really want to talk about my sex life?”

She was giving him her ice princess look, challenging him to drop it. She did this whenever he poked too hard at something she considered personal—turned it into a thing he wouldn’t want to know about. Anytime he’d tried to get her to talk about what a complete jackass Richard was, she’d go all,
Jamie, you don’t want to hear about that. How was your concert?

Ellen liked to keep herself to herself. He’d always let her get away with it. But that was bullshit too, wasn’t it? And it seemed likely that the first step toward becoming a better man was to eliminate as much bullshit from his life as possible. Including Ellen bullshit. If she wanted to hold his hand and help him through his problems—which she most certainly did, seeing how fixing his problems was one of the great pleasures of her life—she had to tell him about hers, too. Fair was fair.

“Yeah, let’s talk about your sex life,” he said. “Is it any good?”

Her cheeks went hot pink in about three seconds. Wow. He hadn’t seen Ellen blush like that in a long, long time. Maybe not since she’d met Ricky Martin backstage when she was fifteen and spilled her drink all over his crotch.

He grinned. “I’ll take that as a yes. So do you like this guy, or is he just a plaything?”

“Jamie!”

“What? There’s nothing wrong with having a plaything. You’re all grown up, Ellen. You can have a boy toy if you want to.”

“What’s gotten into you?”

“What’s gotten into you?”
Besides Caleb Clark
.

He was crude enough to think it, but not to say it.

“Nothing.” She stuck out her bottom lip and blew air up her face, ruffling her hair. He hadn’t seen her do
that
in a long time, either. Ellen was reverting to adolescence. She had it bad for this guy.

“It’s
nothing
,” she insisted. “Carly says he’s a womanizer. A girl-in-every-port type, you know? I just wanted to be that girl for once in my life.”

As he chugged orange juice from the plastic bottle, he studied her. Her eyes kept darting around, first to the contract, then to her hands, to his face, out the window. Either Ellen was lying to him or she was lying to herself.

“You’re having totally awesome, totally meaningless sex with your bodyguard?”

“He’s not my
bodyguard
, Jamie. But yes. Yes, I am.” She folded her hands primly in her lap and sat up straight, as if her posture could somehow rescue her from the moral bankruptcy of this position.

“But you don’t care about him.”

Now she wouldn’t look at him at all. “I like him,” she told her fingers. “He’s a good guy.”

“Uh-huh. And he doesn’t care about you?”

“Carly says he goes through women like Chiclets, and she’s known him since they were kids.”

“Sometimes guys like that change,” he said. “When they meet the right woman.”

She did meet his eyes then, and he was stunned to see Ellen looking almost as scared as he felt. “Who are we talking about now?”

“Definitely me,” he admitted. “But maybe your boy toy, too. He seemed pretty taken with you.” In truth, the guy hadn’t had much to say on the subject of Ellen except “yeah.” But he’d called her his girlfriend, and from what Ellen was saying, that wasn’t a role she’d asked him to audition for. Plus, when his sister came into the room last night, Jamie had been talking to Caleb, and Caleb had made this face like someone had just smacked him in the forehead with a Louisville Slugger.

Jamie recognized that look. It was exactly how he’d felt the first time he laid eyes on Carly, and every single time she’d walked into a room since then. It wasn’t a dignified look. Kind of gobsmacked. But he had enjoyed seeing Caleb go to pieces over Ellen.

“No,” she said firmly. “He knows what this is.” She was using her lawyer voice. That don’t-mess-with-me tone worked with agents and record-company executives, but Jamie had been born three minutes before Ellen, and it never worked on him.

At least now he’d figured out who she was lying to. Definitely not her big brother. Ellen didn’t seem to have the slightest idea how deep a hole she’d already dug for herself.

Jamie knew, though. He’d been at the bottom of his own personal Love-struck Idiot in
Denial pit for long enough that the groundwater had seeped in and started to fill it. When he’d gotten Ellen’s message that Carly and the baby were in danger, the water level rose, and he’d been forced to start swimming. Today, he was going to get out of the damn pit, or he was going to drown.

“Tell you what,” he said with a smile. “Have another doughnut, and we can talk about my problems for a while.”

Chapter Twenty-one

By seven a.m., nearly everyone Caleb knew hated him.

With help from Katie, whom he’d dragged out of bed at around one o’clock, he’d called up every warm body he could find to work shifts on Burgess over the next twenty-four hours. They’d sent extra vehicles to both Ellen’s and Carly’s houses, posted sentries on the far back corner of each lot, and made a pair of guys start walking continuous loops around the perimeter.

The Camelot Police Department had reluctantly agreed to set up a roadblock at the stop sign a block from the cul-de-sac. After some persuading, he’d also managed to get an old friend who worked the airfield in Mount Pleasant to promise to keep him in the know about how many press planes were landing and when. Amber’s husband, Tony, had agreed to send a Mazzara Construction crew over by eight to hustle up a temporary fence around the perimeter of Ellen’s and Carly’s joined properties.

BOOK: Along Came Trouble: A Loveswept Contemporary Romance
7.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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