From the New York Times bestselling author of Taking Chances, From Ashes, and Stealing Harper, comes the new unforgettable adult romance Molly McAdams’ fans have been waiting for—the sizzling story of a young woman who must place her trust in the one man who can break through her defenses.
A night they will always remember…a connection neither can deny…a secret that could destroy it all…
When Kennedy Ryan moves to California, she never expects to come face-to-face with Liam Taylor—the intriguing man who has haunted her thoughts for a year. A man who led her to breaking every one of her rules for a single night of passion that ended up meaning more than it was ever supposed to. Accustomed to disastrous experiences with men, Kennedy shields herself before he can break down more of the carefully built control she’s clung to for the last four years. But every time she sees Liam, she feels her resolve weakening.
Liam Taylor has been asked to help socialize his boss’s nieces. But what he thinks sounds more like a babysitting job ends up leading him to the only girl who ever slipped away before morning—a girl he thought he’d never find again. And now that she’s within reach, Liam’s determined to never let her go.
But when a secret from her past tests their relationship, will they be able to cling to the trust Liam has worked so hard to build?
Prologue
May 15
Kennedy
Cracking an eye open, I
immediately shut it against the harsh light coming into the room and bit back a
groan from the pounding in my head. Making another attempt—this time with both
eyes—I squinted at the unfamiliar hotel room and blinked a few times before
letting my eyes open all the way as I took in my surroundings. Well, as much of
them as I could without moving.
There was a heavy arm
draped uncomfortably over my waist, a forehead pressed to the back of my head,
a nose to the back of my neck, and an erection to my butt. What. The. Hell. I
was naked; he was naked. Why are we naked, and who is behind me? If I
wasn’t seconds from screaming for someone to help me, I might have snorted. The
why was obvious, there was a familiar ache between my legs, and my lips
felt puffy from kissing and where he’d bitten down on them.
I inhaled softly. He.
Him. Oh God.
Flashes from last night
took turns assaulting me with the pounding in my head. Impromptu trip to Vegas
with the girls after finals ended. Dancing. Club. Drinks. Arctic blue eyes
captivating me. More drinks and dancing. Him holding me close, and not
close enough. Lips against mine. Stumbling into a room. Hands searching. His
tall, hard body pressing mine against the bed—still not close enough.
My eyes immediately went
to my left hand, and I exhaled slowly in relief when I didn’t find a ring
there. Thank God, the last thing I need is a marriage as result of a drunken
night in Vegas. I rolled my eyes. The last thing I needed was a man in my
life, period. And if my family didn’t kill me for it, I would have died from
embarrassment if I had ended up with a ring on my finger after last night.
Because unlike what everyone loves to believe so they can feel better about
their dirty deeds while in Sin City, what happens in Vegas doesn’t always stay
in Vegas.
Trying not to wake him, I
slowly slid out from under his arm and off the bed to search for my clothes.
Once I was dressed, I told myself to just leave, but I couldn’t help it—I
turned to look at him in the light. I needed to be sure I hadn’t made him
up.
The images from last
night tore through my mind again when I saw the large, tattooed arm resting
where my body had just been. The muscles were well defined even relaxed, and
the face had a boyish charm now that he was asleep. Such a difference
from the predatory stare and knowing smirk I kept seeing in my mind. Before I
could stop myself, I gently ran my fingers through his dirty-blond hair that,
now in the sunlight, I could see had a red tint to it. And I knew if he opened
them, those arctic blue eyes would once again captivate me.
But I couldn’t risk that.
I’d already stayed too
long; I’d already made a mistake with him. Drunken one-night stands weren’t my
thing. Drunken one-night stands with strangers in Vegas were even worse.
Straightening, I turned
and walked quietly from the room.
Chapter 1
May 21 … One year later
Kennedy
“Why are you trying to
doing this to me?” Kira yelled as she stood from where she’d been sitting on
the couch.
I looked over at my
identical twin to see a look of horror on her face, and waited for the
freak-out that I knew was only seconds away. Shifting my attention back to our
parents, I mumbled, “Told you it wouldn’t go over well.”
“But—you can’t—Kennedy,
why—Zane’s in Florida,” Kira sputtered out, and I rolled my eyes at the same
time as my dad.
“Is that supposed to mean
something to me?” Dad asked as he crossed his large tattooed arms over his
chest.
Not willing to give Kira
time to respond to that kind of question, I started talking over Dad before he
could finish. “Did you ever think that maybe a little distance might be a good
thing for the two of you? And did you not hear Dad? These guys are out
of prison, Kira!” I shouted, punctuating the last few words in case she’d
missed the memo the first time around.
“Maybe Zane will go with
you,” Mom offered with a sympathetic look on her face that I knew was as well
practiced as it was a lie. The worry was still there in her eyes, as was the
eagerness to get us away from Florida … and it wasn’t exactly a secret that we
all wanted Kira to get space from Zane.
They’d been together
since we were fifteen, and the more time went on, the more Kira’s world
revolved around only him. It was annoying.
“And leave his job?” Kira
countered.
“Well, then maybe this
will be good for you, like Kennedy said. Get a break from Zane so you can see
other options. You girls are only twenty-two, you just graduated from college,
and you’re too young to be getting serious anyway, Kira, just ask Kennedy. You’ll
regret not enjoying life first.”
“Wow, thanks for that,
Mom. What’s that supposed to mean?”
Before she could respond
to me, my dad’s head jerked back and he sent Mom a look. “What the hell is
that supposed to mean? You were twenty-one when we got engaged.”
“Do I look like I’m not
enjoying life suddenly? What did I miss?” I asked Kira as Dad spoke, but she
didn’t make any indication that she’d even heard me.
“Seriously, Kash?” Mom
shot Dad a look that even I was impressed by. “That was different. We were
different. She’s only dated Zane.”
“Can we get back to the
more important discussion?” I cut in before Dad could respond, and looked back
to Kira. “I’m going to California. You’re going with me. Zane
can deal with it.”
“You can’t do this! I’m
not going!” Kira shrieked as the tears started.
“You act like I’m giving
either of you a choice. Both of you need to start accepting this.”
My eyes widened at my
dad’s dark tone, and I shot right back, “You act like you still have a say in
our lives. You haven’t for four years. And if you remember, I’m going along
with what you want without complaint. So don’t throw me into the same category
as Kira when she’s the only one fighting you on this.”
One dark eyebrow rose,
and I saw Kira sink back onto the couch from the look he was giving. Too bad I
was just like him: hardheaded and stubborn. I might be my sister’s mirror
image, but I was nothing like her. I raised one eyebrow back at him, and Mom
sighed.
“I don’t know how I put
up with you two sometimes,” she groaned, rubbing her hand over her forehead.
Looking at Kira, she said, “You’re going to California, no more discussion.
This is for your safety, why can’t you see that?”
“I’m not going!” Kira
sobbed. “Who cares if some guys Dad put away years ago are out of
prison?”
I snorted, but before I
could respond, Uncle Mason’s deep voice sounded directly behind us. “These men
do.”
I turned quickly to look
at him, and tried not to laugh when he gave Dad a questioning look and mouthed,
“Zane?” as he gestured to Kira.
“Is there any other
reason she would be freaking out like this?” I asked as I stood to go give him
a hug.
“Are you both packed?” he
asked.
“Packed?” Kira yelled
again. “They just told us! I haven’t even called Zane!”
“Oh my God, no one
cares.”
“Kennedy,” Mom chastised,
but I knew she was thinking the same thing.
As soon as Kira was out
of the room, I sighed and headed to my room to pack as much as I could. Kira
was already packing and sobbing into her phone when I passed her room, and I
somehow managed to hold back an eye roll. Never mind that our parents had just
told us that our family was being threatened by members of a gang our dad and
uncle Mason had put away over twenty years ago. A gang whose members had
kidnapped our mom before we were born and held her for over a month in an
attempt to free their main members from prison. Or that a chunk of them were
getting out of prison within the next handful of months. Or that Kira and I
were the main targets in their threats. Nope … none of that mattered to Kira
right now. What mattered was that we were going to be living in California for
the time being—close to our mom’s side of the family—and Zane wouldn’t be going
with us. No Zane meant devastation in Kira’s world. She couldn’t even get
dressed without telling everyone about a memory with Zane in that outfit, or
that it was one of his many favorites.
Snatching a hairband off
my desk, I pulled my thick, black hair into a messy bun on the top of my head
and started packing. I didn’t turn to face Kira when she came into my room ten
minutes later, but I knew she was there.
“How could you do this to
me?” she asked quietly, her words breaking with emotion. “You’re supposed to be
on my side, you’re always supposed to be on my side. And you went behind
my back and planned this with Mom and Dad without even warning me?”
I glanced over my
shoulder, my eyebrows rising at her assumption. “I didn’t plan shit, Kira. They
told me while you were talking to Zane right before they asked you to get off
the phone. They just wanted me to know because they thought you would freak out
and they needed me to be able to try to talk you into it calmly—rather than
hitting us both with the news at the same time. The only difference between you
and me is I have no problem with this move because I’m not stupid enough to
think that the gang won’t actually make good on their threats if we stay here.
Or try to.”
I went back to packing,
and there was a couple minutes of silence before she said, “I know why you’re
all really doing this. Don’t think for a second that I’m stupid enough not to
realize this is about Zane.”
I released a heavy breath
and shook my head. “Despite what you think, this has nothing to do with you and
your boyfriend. But I do think that this is something we need to do, and
I think it will be good for us.”
“I won’t forgive you for
this. You of all people should realize how much this is going to kill me.”
My breath caught, but I
didn’t reply. I knew I couldn’t without lashing out at her. Without another
word, she left my room. The only sounds were her soft cries and her feet on the
hardwood as she walked away.
“So now that you have us
on a private jet—which just makes this all the more weird, by the way—do you
mind telling us details about where we’ll be spending the next however long?” I
asked Uncle Mason a few hours later.
“Didn’t your mom and dad
tell you everything?”
I gave him a look that he
immediately laughed at.
“Okay, tell me what you
know, and I’ll fill in the blanks.”
“Basically, all I know is
that Juarez and a handful of others from his crew are up for probation within a
few months of each other starting next week. They’re somehow threatening us—but
more specifically, Kira and me—and Mom and Dad think it would be best if we
weren’t near Tampa. Since we just graduated and don’t have a reason to stay up
in Tallahassee anymore, the only other place to go is California near Mom’s
family, and we’ll be there for an undetermined amount of time.”
“I wasn’t told most of
that,” Kira muttered from where she was sulking across the aisle.
“You were told
that,” I shot back. “All of that. You just couldn’t get past the
California-equals-no-Zane part, and flipped while they told you the rest!”
Before we could start on
another war, Uncle Mason spoke up. “You’ll be just North of San Diego, near
your Uncle Eli. He’s already been looking into places for you to live, and your
parents are working something out with them for a car.”
“Lovely. Sounds like
everyone is already completely filled in,” Kira sneered.
Uncle Mason didn’t
respond for a long time, he just sat there staring at Kira with a somber
expression. It was so unlike him. “I don’t want you two to have to do this any
more than you do, trust me. Your dad and I know better than anyone what it’s
like to pick up and move at a moment’s notice and not be able to have a say in
it, so we know what you’re going through.”
Kira mumbled something
too low for me to hear, but it was obvious in her expression that she didn’t
agree with him.
After a subtle shake of
my head, I looked back at Uncle Mason and tapped his leg with my foot to get
his attention again. “Okay, so we’ve heard about Juarez’s gang and what
happened with Mom being taken. But here’s what I don’t understand and am having
a little bit of trouble with. Why after so much time has passed do you think
it’s them threatening us? Wouldn’t they be over it by now? I mean, couldn’t it
just as easily be someone you’ve arrested recently, and you’re just jumping
ahead and thinking its Juarez?”
Uncle Mason was already
shaking his head before I even finished asking my questions. “No. It may have
been twenty-three years ago, but we haven’t forgotten what happened, and we
know for a fact they haven’t and are still holding a grudge because there have
been letters delivered to your dad.”
“What did they say?”
“It doesn’t matter.”
“What did they say?” I
asked louder, and Kira leaned toward us in her seat to hear his response.
“I said it doesn’t—”
“We deserve to know!” I
snapped.
After a beat of silence,
he admitted, “They’ve said, ‘Can’t wait to meet the rest of your family’, or
‘How are those daughters of yours?’” Uncle Mason sighed heavily and looked out
the window for a few seconds.
“That’s it?” I asked when
he didn’t continue. “I mean, that’s really creepy but it doesn’t prove much of
anything.”
“It does, because at the
bottom it had the gang’s symbol. A symbol your dad and I used to have tattooed
on us when we were undercover. A symbol they left spray-painted on your
parents’ wall after kidnapping your mom.”
“Oh,” I breathed, and
Uncle Mason sent me a look.
“Yeah. ‘Oh.’”
May 27
Liam
Squeezing Cecily’s waist
once, I deepened the kiss for a few seconds before pulling away. A smirk
crossed my face when she tried to follow me. “I gotta go.”
“Just a little longer?”
she asked huskily as she pulled on my tie, bringing us closer together.
“I can’t. You know I have
to get to that meeting.” Grabbing her slender wrist in my hand, I took my tie
from her firm grip and sent her a look.
“Of course, the so-called
‘meeting’ that no one else in the office seems to know about.” Her full lips
pouted, and I exhaled slowly at the annoying look.
“You know about it.”
Cecily smacked my arm and
huffed. “Only because you told me.”
“That’s not my problem.
Besides, it might be a bad thing that I’m the only one. Who knows? You may get
your wish, I might be getting fired.”
She smiled wryly and
wrapped her arms around my neck before pressing her mouth to mine. “Now that
definitely sounds like a meeting I want to happen,” she murmured against my
lips.
“Power-hungry bitch,” I
growled, and kissed her hard once more before backing away.
“Manwhore.”
“Hasn’t stopped you.”
Her gaze raked over me as
I backed up toward the door before snapping up to my face. “No, it hasn’t.”
I grinned and nodded in
her direction. “Are you going to leave my office?”
She slid off the desk and
walked around to sit in my chair. “I don’t know, maybe I’ll sit in here a while
to get used to what my new office feels like.”
“I haven’t gotten fired
yet.” Not bothering to wait, I walked out of my office and left Cecily in
there. I looked behind me to watch the door shut as I fixed my tie, a soft
smile tugged at my lips as I thought about the girl in there.
There was no bullshit
when it came to Cecily and me. I didn’t like relationships, labels, or being
tied down to any one girl; and she liked guys who demanded control. It was the
complete opposite of who she was, but I wasn’t going to question it. She wasn’t
shy about her need to be at the top of everything—including a company—nor was
she shy about her willingness to step on any and everyone to get there.
She wanted my job, I’d
known that before we started sleeping together, but she couldn’t have it. And
despite our current status and her greed-filled eyes, she wasn’t one to sleep
her way to the top—we just happened to be a nice distraction for each other at
work.
I looked up just in time
to stop myself from running into the man standing in the hallway. He hadn’t
been moving; he was just standing there with his arms crossed over his chest,
one eyebrow raised as he studied me.
“Excuse me,” I said, and
moved to walk around him—he moved with me. My eyebrows slanted down, and I
looked up at him. Yeah. Up. I was six-two. To have to look up at someone was
saying something. “Can I help you?” I asked when I noticed his
mirrored-movement hadn’t been a mistake; he was still staring down at me with a
calculating expression.
The man didn’t move, and
he didn’t say anything. With a huff, I gave him a once over and smirked. My dad
owned a boxing gym, meaning I’d grown up around some of the leanest, deadliest
fighters, as well as some of the biggest meatheads. But this fucker was
massive. “If you don’t mind, I have somewhere to be. And lay off the steroids,
old man.”
When I went to move around
him this time, he let me pass; but when I looked over my shoulder, he was
turned around and glaring at me with that same expression before he glanced
behind him toward my office.
My footsteps faltered and
I racked my brain trying to think of any mention of another guy Cecily might be
seeing—one who would come looking for her at work—but I came up with nothing.
And somehow I knew in the way he was glaring at me again, that he wasn’t
looking at me like he was ready to fight. He looked like he was frustrated with
what he was seeing in me.
Shaking my head as if to
clear it, I looked ahead of me and continued down the halls to my boss’ office.
Before I got there, I stopped at his secretary’s desk. “Hey, call security.
There’s a guy in here I’ve never seen before, and I don’t think he’s supposed
to be here. Height is probably six-five. Weight is around two seventy or two
eighty. The guy is solid muscle, tan, Caucasian, black hair.” I watched as she
jotted everything down. “Got it?”
“Yeah,” she said as she
grabbed the phone, but I didn’t wait to hear the conversation.
Walking toward the office
beside her, I knocked on the door as I opened it, and flashed a smile at my
boss, Eli Jenkins.
“Hey, Liam, come in and
have a seat.”
I sat in one of the two
chairs on the other side of his desk, and waited for whatever he had to say as
he sat directly next to me. Despite what I’d told Cecily, I wasn’t worried
about losing my job. I knew Eli liked me and my work, and I was on the same
path he’d taken in this industry. But that didn’t mean he didn’t know about
Cecily and me, and our interoffice relationship wasn’t exactly allowed.
Before he could say
anything else, his eyes snapped up when the door to his office quickly opened.
“Two hundred and seventy,
to two hundred and eighty pounds? Hardly.”
I turned quickly at the
deep voice, and my eyes widened at the roided-out guy from the hall.
“Two hundred eighty five,
actually. I’m proud of those extra five pounds.”
“Who the fuck are you?” I
asked, standing up from the chair. Turning to look at Eli, I pointed at the
guy. “I had security called on him.”
“He called me, ‘old man’,
can you believe that?” The guy snorted. “At least you were right about the
height. Good one, kid.” He walked around to sit in Eli’s desk chair, and I
looked back and forth between him and where Eli was sitting next to me.
Eli rolled his eyes.
“Liam Taylor, it’s not exactly a pleasure to introduce you, but this is Mason
Gates. He’s a close friend of my sister and her husband.”
“You still don’t
like me?” Mason asked Eli. “It was twenty-three years ago.”
Eli shot him a hard look.
“She’s my sister. No, I still don’t like you.” Glancing over to me, Eli
explained, “He also dated my other sister.”
Mason snorted a laugh at
the word “dated”, but didn’t say anything else to piss off Eli. Nodding in my
direction, he said, “He’s good. Probably dumb as shit, but he’s funny, and he
was pretty spot-on about me. Minus the steroids.”
“I’m lost,” I whispered
to the room, and then looked at Mason. “What was your deal in the hall?”
“I already knew I wasn’t
going to like you. Any other questions?”
“Mason,” Eli barked, then
looked at me. “Act like he’s not here. For whatever reason, he felt the need to
be here when I talked with you.”
“Okay…” I said, drawing
out the word. “Talk to me about what?”
“Mason just brought my
nieces to California from Florida so they could get away from a situation going
on back home, and they’re not exactly happy about being here. They know they
need to be here, and that’s all that’s keeping them from going back to Florida,
but they need something to do to keep them busy. A job, friends … anything. And
I was hoping that you would be able to help with that.”
I waited to see if he
would add anything, and when he didn’t, I shrugged. “I—sure. I mean, I don’t
know how much I can do for them to find friends, but if they’re old enough for
the gym, I know my dad is looking for a few people.”
Mason cleared his throat,
and Eli gave him an annoyed look before saying, “We also need to make sure that
one of them, Kira, doesn’t try to run back home. She has a boyfriend and is
taking the separation harder than her sister. My sister and brother-in-law
trust my judgment to find someone who can do that. I trust you as much as I trust
my own son, and I think you and your connections will be exactly what they need
to settle in here.”
I laughed hesitantly and
looked at both of them for a few seconds. “Are you serious? I’m not a
babysitter, Eli; we work in advertising. Besides that, I’m twenty-four, what do
you expect me to do with these girls that will make it seem okay for me to even
act like their friend?”
“I knew I didn’t like
him,” Mason blurted out and stood. “Meeting over.”
“Sit down,” Eli ordered,
but didn’t look to make sure he did. “Liam, my nieces just turned twenty-two,
they’re close to your age. And no one is asking you to babysit them.”
“You want me to make sure
one of them doesn’t run back to her boyfriend! That sounds like babysitting,” I
argued.
“Still don’t like him,” Mason
chimed in, but Eli and I didn’t bother responding to him.
“I don’t need you to
watch her every move, I was just hoping that you could maybe include them in
whatever you and your friends are doing one or two times over the weekends. See
if the girls get along with you or your friends, try to get them to have a good
time so they won’t focus on how much they don’t want to be here. You don’t have
to give up your life for them, Liam. And if you aren’t willing to do that, and
if your dad does have space at the gym for them, that would be more than
enough. I won’t ask you for anything else.” When I just sat there staring at
him, Eli leaned closer. “Please. I’d have my son do this, but you know he’s
backpacking through Europe this summer with his friends.”
If it had been something
as simple as inviting his nieces to a party, I would do it in a heartbeat. But
with Mason there—whatever his real reasons—and with the part that still sounded
like I’d be babysitting them, I knew there was something else behind this than
the girls just needing to be introduced to a few people. The fact that there
was a “situation” back in Florida, and that they didn’t want to be here, only
confirmed that thought. But Eli was my mentor. I’d interned for him in college,
and he’d hired me on after the internship had ended. He’d continued helping me
throughout the last couple years of college, always pushing me to work harder
and be better, and then did the same so I would work my way up in his company
after I’d graduated. He’d done more than I could’ve ever asked for, and this
was the first thing he’d asked of me. No matter how odd it seemed, I knew I
couldn’t tell him no.
“Okay,” I finally agreed.
“I’ll call my dad. I know for a fact that he needs new people for the drink
station in the gym. I’ll see if he can interview them and let you know when.”
“Perfect,” Eli said on a
relieved sigh. “They’ve already been here a week, I know they need to get out
of their condo.”
I nodded and reluctantly
said, “And I’ll make sure whichever one you mentioned won’t go running back to
her boyfriend. I’m sure a bunch of us will end up at the beach this weekend, at
least. I’ll let you know when I do.”
“Still don’t like him,”
Mason said again. “I vote we find someone else.”
I rolled my eyes and
looked over at him. “Why did you even need to be here?”
“A question I’ve already
asked a few times,” Eli mumbled.
Mason’s teasing tone and
expression quickly left, leaving him looking at me the exact way he had been in
the hallway. “I’m here because someone needs to tell you that you aren’t to
touch either of them. Rachel and Kash may trust Eli’s choice in you
being the one to help them out, that doesn’t mean I do. No one chose you so you
would have another girl to fuck.”
“Mason,” Eli snapped, but
Mason’s gaze never left me.
One eyebrow rose, and a
short laugh burst from my chest. “Excuse me?”
“You didn’t try to hide
the girl who was in your office earlier, and that already makes me not like you
as much as I could. You see an opportunity in a girl, and you take it. Trust me,
I get it. I was the same way when I was your age, which is why Eli still hates
me. But those girls mean the world to Eli, to me, and to their parents. This is
me warning you now, if you touch one of those girls, you will have all three of
us on you. And their dad is the last person you want to piss off. Your job is
to be their friend. Nothing more.”
“Noted,” I huffed as I
stood to leave the office. “Anything else, Eli?”
He shook his head at
Mason, and sighed when he looked back at me. “Just remind Cecily that I don’t
want her in your office.”
The corner of my mouth
tilted up and I nodded as I turned to leave. “I’ll call my dad and let you know
what he says.”
“I appreciate it, Liam.
Really,” he called out as I reached the door.
Mason snorted. “Still
don’t like him.”
The feeling was mutual.
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