Lori Wilde - There Goes The Bride (25 page)

BOOK: Lori Wilde - There Goes The Bride
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“Really.”

Her announcement to Honey that she wasn’t going to the symphony turned out to be amazingly anticlimactic. Her mother seemed very distracted about something, and while she expressed displeasure over Delaney’s absence from the program, she didn’t badger her the way she’d expected. So it was with a light heart Delaney arrived at the Galveston Island house at midmorning on the Fourth. But when she got out of the car and headed up the sidewalk, arms laden with grocery sacks filled with offerings for the barbecue, her legs started to quiver.

She spied Gina and her husband, Chuck—partially hidden by an overgrowth of bougainvillea along the fence—kissing like teenagers. Chuck’s hand tenderly cupped Gina’s bottom, and her arms were entwined around his neck.

The sense of jealousy-tinged sadness that swept over Delaney was so intense it almost brought her to her knees. Would Evan be pulling her in the bushes for a passionate kiss after they’d been married for ten years?

He doesn’t do that now, why would he do it in a decade?
muttered Skylar’s annoying voice again.

Mentally, Delaney shook herself and tore her gaze from the amorous couple. What was the matter with her?

“Need a hand with that?”

And then there he was, coming up the sidewalk behind her, the source of all her internal distress.

Nick Vinetti.

Looking as if he was the answer to all her most subversive fantasies, in his tight white T-shirt and black shorts.

He’d replaced his knee brace with an Ace wrap and his limp was barely discernible. He looked very strong and incredibly handsome, and Delaney was feeling as if she possessed the moral resolve of a jellyfish.

Suddenly she wished like hell she hadn’t come.

“Here.” Nick reached out and plucked the two heaviest plastic bags from her hands. His fingertips brushed against her skin and heat rushed her cheeks.

She was achingly aware of every nuance between them. His manly nutmegy scent collided with the delicate lavender of her own perfume, producing an intoxicating clash of woodsy and floral. The sharp differences in their bodies—his sinewy muscles versus her supple softness. The emotional vastness of the very short distance between them—the tips of her sandals almost touching the toes of his sneakers.

“Where’s your brace?” Delaney asked, fixing her gaze on his knee so she wouldn’t have to meet his eyes and find out if he shared the same awareness of her that she did of him. She didn’t know which thought scared her more. That he felt it too, or the possibility that he didn’t.

“I don’t need it any longer.”

Helplessly, her gaze was drawn up past his hard-muscled thigh, to his narrow hips, to the flat of his belly barely hidden by his thin cotton T-shirt.

She raised her lashes and slanted a coy glance at his face and was caught in the trance of his bemused smile.

He lowered his head.

He’s going to kiss me!

The thought set off a fire alarm in her head.
No!

Please let him kiss me.

She lifted her chin, held her breath, eyes locked with Nick’s, and waited. “Don’t you dare kiss me, you scoundrel,” she said, sounding exactly like a woman who desperately needed to be kissed.

From behind her, she heard Gina and Chuck giggle, and thankfully that broke the spell.

Delaney sucked in air and held up the remaining sack in her hand. “Meat. For the barbecue. Needs refrigerating.”

Oh, gosh, how pathetic. He’d so rattled her that she couldn’t even speak in complete sentences.

With that, she hurried past him, grateful that she was almost finished with the house and would soon be far away from the temptation of Lucia’s maddeningly mesmerizing grandson.

Nick would have kissed Delaney and broken all the promises he’d made to her, if Gina and Chuck hadn’t come strolling from the bougainvillea bushes with self-satisfied smirks on their faces.

It was a good thing they were there, he told himself as he frowned at his sister and her husband lounging against the fence, arm in arm. Otherwise, there was no telling what he might have done.

Then, unable to keep himself from watching her, Nick turned his head and enjoyed the view of Delaney’s hips swaying as she hurried toward the house.

He thought about how her cheeks had turned red when he’d touched her while reaching for the grocery sacks. He grinned. Aw, Rosy. She disappeared around the side of the house, headed for the back door that the family used, and his grin widened.

Delaney was astute. He was a scoundrel. And he wasn’t proud of it. But he wasn’t ashamed of it either. Okay, he was a little ashamed, but only because she was engaged to his doctor.

But what if she wasn’t engaged to Evan Van Zandt?

She is, so stop thinking about it,
he rebuked himself.

It was easy to say, but not so damn easy to do. Because ever since he’d kissed her, Nick hadn’t been able to think of anything else.

By midafternoon the food was ready and everyone had assembled. The backyard picnic table was laden with food. Barbecued chicken, grilled Italian sausages, and hamburger patties. There was potato salad, cole slaw, corn on the cob, and baked beans, along with cold macaroni salad, an assortment of cheeses, antipasto, and tomato bruschetta. Dessert was a bountiful selection of fresh fruits, homemade brownies, and tiramisu. Two ice- cream freezers churned batches of homemade peach ice cream. There was lemonade for the children and iced tea or cold beer or chilled white wine for the adults.

Nick, Delaney noticed, was in rare form. Playing with the kids, charming his sisters-in-law, guy-talking with his brothers, his cousins, his father, and Chuck. He surprised her. She thought he’d be gloomy today, on this last Vinetti family holiday in Lucia’s house where they’d all shared so many memories.

The food was delicious, the company even more so. They lingered long over the meal, until the kids started begging to go swimming. Everyone pitched in to get ready—the women putting away leftovers and cleaning the kitchen while the men packed up the cars with coolers and blankets, fireworks, lawn chairs, beach towels, and a boom box. Even Trudie and Lucia went along for the trek to the secluded beach outside the Galveston city limits that only the locals knew about.

Delaney soon found herself—toes dug into the sand—sitting under a big beach umbrella. She watched the kids shriek gleefully as they ran through the surf, chased by Nick, Chuck, and Nick’s brothers Richie and Johnny. Vincent was manning the boom box. Causing the teenagers, who were too cool to play in the ocean with the younger kids, to roll their eyes and groan when he put in a CD of the Beach Boys.

Then, for absolutely no reason at all, a lump rose to Delaney’s throat, forcing her to swallow back the salty taste. She was happy. Why the sudden urge to cry?

From childhood, she’d been trained to control her emotions, to repress her feelings, deny her impulses. She’d been taught that appearances were paramount, and she should conduct herself based on what others thought of her.

Growing up rich and privileged, Delaney realized, was like living on an island with other people who were exactly like you. The lifestyle imposed upon children of the wealthy and powerful entailed certain duties and conditions unknown to the rest of the population. In high society there was no blending into an anonymous background—which was one of the reasons Honey had been so strict with her. Delaney had been required to watch every step. No one trod easily on the emotions of others where money and manners mingled. This need for caution, this intricate caretaking, resulted in an inbreeding of the spirit. Too much held in. Too much regret. Too much silent brooding.

And she wanted out.

But she wasn’t going to get out if she married Evan. He was too much like her.

The thought twisted her stomach.

Is this really about Evan?
she had to ask herself.
Or your attraction to Nick?

Her gaze tracked back to the man frolicking in the surf with his nieces and nephews, and it was her heart’s turn to twist. His shirt was off and he was silhouetted against the backdrop of ocean and sunset, aglow in the ending day. Orange rays of light licked his body. Every muscle was ripped, rock hard, and clearly defined.

One look at him and she could feel the simmering chemistry. In her lungs. In her throat. Tight around her wrists like shackles. Light as a breath. Thick as blood.

He must have felt the heat of her gaze, because he turned his head and like a proud, regal wolf stared at her.

Delaney squeezed her eyes shut, and in that pop of difference between the setting sun on the horizon and the darkness behind her lids, she experienced the strangest sensation of falling down a long, black, empty tunnel. Her eyes flew open and she curled her fingers around the arms of the lawn chair to ground herself. Blinking, she glanced around. Vincent was lighting tiki torches, and his brother, Phil, was starting a campfire. Somebody’s mom was dishing out mosquito repellent. But no matter how hard she tried to find something else to look at, time and again she found her eyes drawn back to Nick.

Honestly, even if she weren’t engaged to Evan, she and Nick didn’t stand a chance as a couple. They were simply too different. He was rugged and streetwise; she was pampered and polished. He valued directness and honesty, and she’d spent her life putting a perfect spin on reality. Gingerly, she reached up to finger the bridge of her nose—living a lie, pretending to be a beauty when she was not. Face it, she was insecure and he was self-confident. He was bold and she was timid. She could not view Nick as a way out of her circumstances. He couldn’t rescue her. He was just a guy with problems of his own. Like it or not, she was engaged to another man.

Don’t fill your head with dreams of him,
she warned herself.

Nick’s brother Johnny’s wife pulled up a lawn chair beside Delaney. Her name was Brittany, Delaney remembered, and she was holding her new baby daughter in her arms. She was a slender woman about Delaney’s age, with an elfin face and long dark hair she kept pinned back with a thick barrette. “Mind the company?”

“Not at all.” Delaney shook her head.

Brittany tossed a receiving blanket over her shoulder and modestly began nursing her daughter. Delaney’s attention drifted back to the shoreline, her eyes hooked on Nick.

“Gorgeous, huh?” Brittany said.

“What?”

“The Vinetti men.”

She couldn’t deny that. “Yes.”

For a minute the only sounds were the rush of the surf, the Beach Boys singing about their little Deuce coupe, and the baby suckling.

“You’re engaged to be married, right?” Brittany said after a long moment.

“Uh-huh.” Delaney glanced over to find Brittany studying her speculatively.

“So how come you’re not with your fiancé today? Wait, that was rude; you don’t have to answer that.”

Delaney smiled. “It’s okay. Evan is in Guatemala.” She told Brittany about Evan’s medical mission to Central America.

“He sounds like a great guy.”

“He is.”

“Nick knows you’re engaged, right?”

“Yes. Why do you ask?”

“We’re all crazy about him, you know. He’s a great uncle and a terrific cop and an all-around good guy. After what Amber did to him . . .” Brittany paused a moment to reposition her baby. “Well, we’re pretty protective. The last thing we want is for Nick to get hurt again. He’s been through a lot, what with his knee and being forced off the job and everything else that’s happened.”

“I understand.”

“Do you? Do you really?”

Delaney met Brittany’s gaze. “What are you trying to say?”

“The way Nick looks at you when you’re not looking at him . . .” She trailed off again.

“What way is that?” Delaney felt her body tense, and she curled her fingernails into her palms.

She shrugged. “I dunno, sort of wistful and sad. It worries me and Johnny.”

“I can assure you, Brittany, I have no designs on Nick.”

“And Nick knows that?”

“Yes, he does.”

Brittany blew out a breath. “Okay. Just wanted to make sure. Because we all really like you, but Nick, you know, he’s family. Nothing is more important than family loyalty. Right?”

“Right,” Delaney echoed, suddenly feeling incredibly out of place. It was time she said good-bye and left the Vinettis to their celebration. She looked around and realized she was going to have to ask someone to drive her back to her car. Why hadn’t she driven herself?

At that moment, Brittany’s five-year-old son, Logan, came running up, soaking wet and grinning. “Mama, can we shoot off some Black Cats now?”

“Only if your daddy or Uncle Nick or Uncle Richie or Uncle Chuck helps you with them.”

Logan zoomed over to Vincent, who was sitting on the tailgate of Nick’s pickup truck with Lucia and Trudie, changing the Beach Boys to Ira Gershwin.

Nick came trotting up after Logan. Droplets of water caught in his dark, curling chest hairs glistened in the waning sunlight. Delaney looked up at him and he looked down at her, and immediately she understood why Brittany had come over to warn her off. The look in Nick’s eyes was undeniably hungry.

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