Read His Sister's Wedding Online

Authors: Carol Rose

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BOOK: His Sister's Wedding
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Faster and harder, they moved together till Lillie cried out her ecstasy, pleasure
shattering her. She heard Luke's hoarse cry, felt him stiffen in her arms in total
completion.

CHAPTER TEN

Luke held her against him for several long moments, the thudding of their hearts the
only sound in Lillie's ears. As the sensual clamoring in her body receded, she became
conscious of him drawing back.

Could he make love to her like that if he felt nothing for her? The question sounded
in Lillie's brain like a discordant chord. She tried to shrug it off, wanting to savor
the moment. But after their conversation in the kitchen, the query couldn't be dismissed.

Maybe it's just lust after all, an inner voice suggested, the words sharp through
her sensual fog. Her stomach tightened in protest.

She licked dry lips. Did he care for her at all? The questions burned in her brain.
It had to be said. She had to know.

"Do you feel anything for me?" Her voice sounded breathless and scared to her own
ears.

Luke turned toward her, his face guarded and ironic in the dim light. "Honey, you're
too smart to ask that question after what we've just shared."

"I don't mean...sex." She ducked her head, feeling tremendously exposed. "Do I matter
to you? Effect your life? Do you feel any love for me at all?"

Luke's silence drew her gaze up.

He looked at her, his face serious. "Lillie, I can't change who I am. If you want
poetry and declarations of undying devotion, you're talking to the wrong man."

His words slammed into her brain like a freight train on full throttle. He might just
as well have said this is it, take it or leave it.

Fabulous, earth-shattering desire. No emotion.

Lillie straightened, her gaze searching his face. She saw sadness there, lingering
desire and something that looked like regret.

"I've told you what I think about all that hearts and flowers stuff," he continued.
"It's something the greeting card folks dreamed up to sell their wares. If you would
just let go of the fantasy, we could make this work."

He raised a hand to her face, nestling her cheek in his calloused palm. It took everything
Lillie had not to turn into his caress in spite of the lump of desperation building
up in her stomach. How could fate have delivered her Prince Charming and neglected
to give him the ability to love her?

"Lillie," he said, her name soft on his lips, "there's something powerful between
us. Stronger than I've ever felt with a woman. We laugh together, we respect each
other...and I could be happy making love with you for the next thirty years. That's
more than most marriages start with."

She felt herself go cold, as if a North Dakota wind blew into the open space.

"I want...a family, a home, someone to make love to," Lillie whispered, "but I need
more. I need to know you think of me when you wake up in the morning and when you
go to bed at night. I need to be the most important person in your life. I need you
to love me."

He met her gaze, his face almost grim, and he said nothing.

"I guess that's my answer," Lillie whispered, struggling to keep the catch out of
her voice.

Scooting off the bed, she reached for her robe, tying the belt tight around her waist,
feeling her heart crack inside her.

"I think you should leave," she whispered.

"Don't do this," he said, his voice low.

But he didn't plead, not even a little. Lillie searched his face for some sign that
her rejection would cause him pain. The last thing she wanted to do was hurt Luke.
But it seemed that dilemma wouldn't arise. If he didn't care, how could he be hurt?

Lillie felt like a fool. Despite knowing from the first that Luke wasn't Mr. Right,
she'd fallen in love with him anyway.

"Please leave," she said as a piece of her died inside.

*   *   *

"Why are men such pigs?" The disgust in Melanie's voice should have sent vibrations
through the telephone.

Luke leaned against his desk and positioned the receiver more comfortably against
his ear. "Well, good morning to you, too."

"I thought Scott was different," Melanie wailed.

"Different from what?" he couldn't resist asking.

"From those men who don't care about anything but sports and sex," his sister said,
her voice frustrated.

"Whoa, Mel. I'm still getting over you spending the night with him in a motel. I really
don't want to talk about your sex life."

"This isn't about sex," Melanie retorted. "It's about a fiancé who breaks a date with
the woman he loves just to go to a football game."

"Ahhhh." The light was dawning, Luke thought with a grin.

"We were going to write our vows," Mel sniffled. "How could he just up and leave?"

"Ummm. Who was playing?" he asked seriously.

"What does that matter?" she said, her voice indignant.

"It doesn't, I guess," Luke backpeddled, realizing this wasn't the moment for complete
honesty. "At least, it doesn't matter if you're not a sports fan, which you're not."

"This isn't about sports either," Melanie declared. "Scott changed his plans without
even consulting me. We were going to have a quiet dinner and sit down together to
write our vows."

"He didn't even let you know he was going to the game?" Luke glanced at his watch,
mentally gauging how long it would take him to drive out to the new work site. Even
if he had to be late, there was no way he would cut Melanie off in the middle of her
crisis. It had been too long since she'd felt comfortable to confide in him.

Thanksgiving had been a big set-back.

The thought brought a sudden mental picture of Lillie slamming into his brain. Lillie
as she'd kicked him out of her bed and her life.

Luke grimly dragged his focus back to the conversation with his sister.

"Oh, Scott told me he was going," she said waspishly. "But nothing I said made any
difference. He went anyway."

"Ahhhh."

"What do you mean by that?" she asked suspiciously.

"Nothing. So you two had an argument?" he concluded, wondering why he didn't feel
more excited at the prospect of disharmony in romance land.

"Yes, we argued," his sister admitted woefully. "The morning after the big game. And
then he left without telling me where he was going."

"Well, sis, the guy's your fiancé. The role doesn't require a leash," Luke found himself
saying, unwillingly sympathizing with another male in the dog house.

"I know that," Mel retorted. "But is it too much to ask for a little consideration?"

"No, but he could probably say the same." Luke hesitated when she didn't respond.
"I mean it's not like he does this frequently, is it? Change plans on you at the last
minute? Always putting other things first?"

"I can't believe you're defending him," his sister declared. "You don't even like
Scott."

"I never said I didn't like the guy," Luke denied. "I just said you're too young to
make this big a commitment."

"And that you don't believe in love," Melanie said nastily. "But now you're sounding
like a relationship expert for the male point-of-view."

"I do have some qualifications along that line," he reminded her, refusing to think
about his situation with Lillie.

"I'm sure," she shot back. "Scott would certainly agree with everything you've said."

"Look, sis." Luke sat down in the desk chair. "What do you want me to say? That Scott
is a jerk and you should break off the engagement?"

Three months ago he'd have said it in a heartbeat, but lately he'd began to realize
that things weren't always so simple between a man and a woman. Things with Lillie
grew more complicated by the day.

Just the thought of her coming apart at the seams in his arms the other night made
his temperature rise ten degrees. And drop another twenty when he remembered what
she was demanding of him.

"No, I don't want you to say that," Melanie said, goaded. "I guess I hoped you'd be
a little more understanding, but that's obviously too much to ask for, since you are
a man."

"Mel," he said gently. "You're in a witch of a mood. I can't say anything right here,
can I?"

"Probably not," his sister agreed irritably. "I'll let you get back to work now. Goodbye."

Luke stared at the receiver as the line went dead. Melanie's temper had always been
quick. Fortunately, she tended to regain her equilibrium equally fast. In a day or
two, she'd call back and apologize for being irritable.

Still, Luke couldn't help but wonder how Scott felt about their fight. If the boy
was anything like Luke, he hadn't slept well the last few days.

Ever since Lillie had thrown Luke out of her bedroom, visions of her tear-filled eyes
had haunted him. He found himself pacing his bedroom at night, unable to resolve the
mess between them.

She made love like a siren, like a tempting witch capable of stealing a man's soul.
And she hated him now.

You'd think the woman would give him some credit for being honest. When she'd thrown
that statement at him--that she wanted to be the most important person in his life--he'd
found himself frozen. She was important to him, damned important. But he couldn't
help holding back. So much went with that kind of emotional commitment.

Hell, their lovemaking left him feeling shaky for days. The woman did things to him
he couldn't begin to explain.

What if he'd agreed, told her that he didn't think he could go on much longer without
her? That all he could think about lately was convincing her to give them a shot at
a future. Then she'd expect things from him that he wasn't sure he could provide.

Certainly his father hadn't been able to please his mother. In the dim recesses of
memory, Luke held an image of his father standing helpless while his mother threw
herself on their bed and cried. Maybe there was nothing an ordinary man could do to
completely satisfy a woman's romantic fantasies.

Between his mind-blowing weeks with Lillie and coping with uncharacteristic guilt
over his mother, Luke'd been having a hellacious time of it. When he wasn't thinking
about Lillie, he couldn't forget the look on Janet's face at the Thanksgiving dinner
table.

It would have been easier if his mother had contacted him, nagged at him, kept pushing
herself on him. Then he could tell himself that she cared more for her own redemption
than for his feelings. But she hadn't approached him again, hadn't called or in any
way invaded his life. She'd disappeared, just like he'd said he wanted.

He knew Melanie had been in contact with her since the holiday. His sister had mentioned
his mother making a weekend trip to the college. But she hadn't darkened his doorway
again.

He'd probably have to find some way to make peace with the woman. After all this time,
his anger had begun to feel mean-spirited, like holding a grudge against someone who
couldn't do any better.

Maybe Lillie was right about that anyway. Maybe he should give his mother another
chance.

Leaning back in his office chair, Luke pondered the effect Lillie was having on him.
He didn't understand the connection between them, having never experienced anything
like it in his life. Not even with Angie, back when he'd been stupid enough to promise
things he couldn't give.

Everything was definitely different with Lillie. In the space of four months, he had
gone from out-right opposition of Melanie's marriage to siding with her groom in their
biggest fight. Now he was actually contemplating forgiving his mother for her abandonment
of the family.

Luke remembered well Lillie's long ago declaration about not seeing him after the
wedding. Would she keep her word on that? Surely what had happened between them meant
something. She couldn't deny their fantastic chemistry.

Still, he knew if he wanted to keep her in his life, he had to act quickly.

Somehow, he had to find some way to make her give them a chance while still accepting
him for who he was. And he had to do it soon.

*   *   *

"Hey, sis."

"Hi, Scott. How are you?" Lillie tucked the telephone receiver against her shoulder
and went back to doggedly checking the invitation proof sheet for accuracy.

"Terrific," her brother pronounced enthusiastically.

"Good," she said, dropping the invitation to rub her neck tiredly. "Finals going okay?"

"Yeah, great," Scott said.

"Listen," Lillie said, her overloaded, depressed brain suddenly remembering a detail.
"You are going to both make it here for the shower that Melanie's aunt is giving?"

"Yeah," he agreed. "But I don't know why I have to be there. Bridal showers are women
things."

"What century are you living in? People have couples showers all the time and if Melanie's
aunt wants to do a family shower, who are you to complain?"

BOOK: His Sister's Wedding
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