Give
and Take
The Thorne Brothers #2
by
Lee Kilraine
Genre:
Contemporary Romance
Pub
Date: 9/18/2018
Six
Brothers Construction was built to reunite a family and heal a
painful past. So far it’s opened to rave reviews. But the youngest
sibling is about to discover that the right woman can shake even a
rock-solid foundation . . .
Wyatt Thorne was so
traumatized by his mother’s abandonment he didn’t speak until he
was six. At 26, he’s still the quiet type—strong and silent, most
comfortable with a hammer in his hand and work to do. But the
reassuring rhythm of his life is interrupted when his brother Beckett
decides to pay forward their unused office space to a needy start-up.
Enter Rhia Hollis, flighty, impulsive, and outspoken—everything
that drives Wyatt crazy. Only this time in the sexiest, most
irresistible way . . .
Rhia is determined to
disprove her reckless, party girl image by making her new company,
Seize the Day, the premier event planning firm in Raleigh. She has
big dreams, and the Thornes’ offer of a free command center is a
huge help. But Wyatt’s gruff, stubborn resistance to her presence
is an annoying hindrance. They’re as different as night and day,
yet when they begin to meet in the middle, the sparks fly hot. Is
this a case of opposites distract—or the beginning of a beautiful
long-term project? . . .
Chapter
1
Rhia
“Uh oh.”
“No. No ‘uh
oh.’ You swore on your stack of Scientific
Americans that this time your
experiment would be fine. You assured me this trial had zero chance of
failure.” Steph had also pulled the older sister guilt trip on me. Don’t be a baby, Rhia. Besides, you owe me
for helping you pass organic chem in college.
“Just because
you’re showing signs of anaphylaxis, doesn’t mean my experiment is a failure.”
She frowned as she examined my face.
“Anaphylaxis? Don’t forget we had a deal. I agreed
to help you if we swung by the Business Expo after. It closes in an hour, and I
need to go apply for the ‘Pay it Forward’ grant. Today’s the last day for
applications.”
“Why in the
world did you wait until the last day?” Of course, I got the older sister
eyebrow quirk from her. Because my sister, Steph, my whole family really, had
no idea what it was like to second guess yourself. They came into the world
with confidence, an agenda, and a to-do list.
“I wasn’t sure if I was ready to make that big of a
commitment.” That was a lie. I was so ready to jump at the next step in my new
business endeavor. What took so long was tackling my inner doubts first. And
getting past all the doubts of my family.
“I don’t
think you know what commitment is, Rhia. You only stuck out teaching English,
what? Two years?”
See what I mean? I taught for two long years. In
college, I’d kept my options open with a double major in business and English,
but I tried my hand at teaching first. Turned out I wasn’t made for teaching. I
fell for every excuse my students gave me. I was a sucker for a sob story. And
once the kids figured that out, I lost control of the classroom.
I didn’t let myself get discouraged, though. No,
ma’am. Instead of wallowing in my failure, I remembered I was the “go-to”
person in my sorority for planning all the parties and events. In fact, I was
the Event Planning Chair for two years running.
That’s how I came up with the idea of starting my
event planning business, Seize the Day. I felt good about it. Like maybe I’d
finally found something I could succeed at and feel passionate about. Just like
the rest of my family. I was excited and inspired. Until I ran the numbers.
“You should have majored in one of the sciences like
the rest of us,” Steph said while she jotted something down on her clipboard.
She set her paperwork aside and moved up close to peer into my eyes. “Your
pupils look normal. Maybe if you’d gone into a STEM program, you’d be employed
right now.”
Or maybe not. “You do remember those agonizing hours
of organic chem tutoring, don’t you?”
Steph winced at the memory. “Painfully so, but there
were science degrees that didn’t require organic chem. Plenty of less rigorous
programs even you could have managed.”
Even
you.
I only flinched a little at that. I knew my sister hadn’t meant it as an
insult. It was simply a fact in my family.
“Besides, I do so have a job. I’m self-employed.”
The
long-standing joke that I was adopted stopped being funny by middle school when
my average grades became a source of friction in the family. If only you’d apply yourself, Rhia. If only
you’d try harder, Rhia. Rhia, stop daydreaming and focus. Oh, I tried. But
my brain simply wasn’t wired like the rest of the Hollis clan.
So, no, I’d never really fit in with my brilliant
family. But that hadn’t stopped me from trying. I was tired of disappointing
everyone. Especially myself. That’s why I was determined to make my event
planning business a success.
“How’s your airway?” Steph placed her fingers on my
wrist and glanced at her watch. “Breathing feel okay?”
Was my
breathing okay? My family always told me I was overly dramatic, but I don’t
know, maybe my throat did feel a little closed up. I swallowed to check. No. My
throat felt fine. Must be that whole power of suggestion thing.
“I thing I’m
othay.” Wait, what? That didn’t come out right. Probably because my tongue
suddenly felt too big for my mouth.
“Uh oh. Open
your mouth and stick out your tongue.” My sister’s face slid into her serious
scientist expression, and she spoke into her mini handheld recorder. “Test
subject number one is showing signs of glossitis and uticaria—one-inch
diameter, bright red with a pale center.”
“Whath’s
glossithith and uthitharia?” Dammit.
My speech slurred even worse. And my head felt like it had last New Year’s Eve
when I’d imbibed too much champagne. A giggle escaped past my thick tongue. Ha!
Imbibed. “Imbibed ith a funny word, don’t you thinth?”
“Test subject
is showing signs of slurred speech. Possible intoxication.” She clicked off her
recorder and peered closer at my face. “Still breathing okay?”
“Yeth but I’m ithy.” I scratched a spot on my cheek
and then noticed the same feeling on my forearms. I held my arms out in front
of me to look. “Yithes! I’m going to thill you, Sthephanie. You promithed I’d
be fine thith time. Promithed!”
“Apparently,
I miscalculated on the formula. This is a great data set.” She spoke into her
recorder again with way too much excitement. “Decrease amylase dehydrate by
fifty percent for second set of trials.”
I narrowed my eyes at her. Except, I only had to
narrow one eye because the other was already half swollen shut. “Fixth thith.”
“Right.” She
searched through the drawer in her desk, coming up with a bottle of Benadryl.
After shaking two out, she slapped them in my hand and handed me a bottle of
water. “Take these. You’ll be back to normal in six to eight hours.”
Six to eight hours? I glared at her with my one good
eye. And I kept on glaring at her as I swallowed down the antihistamines. I
could kill my sister and hide the body somewhere here in her lab, but I needed
her to drive me to the expo, since I didn’t trust driving under the influence
of both whatever she tested on me and antihistamines. Plus, I loved her,
dammit.
I picked my purse up from the top of a stainless
steel storage bench with a sign Warning: Radioactive Waste Only and snatched
out my phone and car keys. I tossed the keys over to Steph, catching her by
surprise so that she juggled them before having them firmly in her grasp. Then
I texted her, since my tongue now felt incapable of forming any actual words.
We need to head to the expo. Now. Before
the Benadryl knocks me out.
“Or before you blow up like a polka-dotted puffer
fish.”
I texted an angry smiley face emoji to stress my
pissed off-ness in case my swollen eye and hives was disguising how upset I was
with her. Although I should have known better. It was only a few months ago
when the last trial she’d guilted me into had fried my taste buds. Everything
had tasted like cardboard for a week.
“Okay, let’s
go. And don’t give me that face.” She pointed at me as we exited the building.
“We’ll make it in plenty of time for you to fill out the application and make a
good impression.”
“A good
imprethon?” It was my turn to give her the raised eyebrow, because I sounded
like a drunk with a lisp. As soon as I let myself into the passenger seat and
buckled in, I flipped down the visor to look at the damage.
“Ack!” The face staring back at me had leprosy. Or
the plague. Or sadly and too true to be funny: I looked like I’d been created
in a lab by a mad scientist. Just like Frankenstein.
I sent a text to myself. Stop saying yes to family.
And then I pulled out my concealer and did the best
I could trying to cover the bright red hives on my face and neck. When we
parked at the Raleigh Convention Center, I made Steph trade shirts with me,
since hers was long-sleeved and covered the hives on my arms.
“I don’t like
putting on a strip show for any perv walking by, Rhia.” Steph grumbled but
complied, giving my shirt a disgusted loook before pulling it on. “Honestly,
your wardrobe looks like the result of a sheep mating with a box of neon
crayons.”
I might have rolled my eyes while I slipped on my
sister’s neutral beige blouse. First, because that didn’t even make sense.
Second, what was wrong with liking color? Bright colors made me happy. Except
of course these bright red hives. Those made me unhappy. And very, very itchy.
Okay, yes, this situation was less than ideal. I’d
done my research on Six Brothers Construction, the company offering the free
office space for a year, and had planned on talking with them for a few minutes
to highlight my passionate, goal-oriented, future-focused, tech-savvy
personality. (All qualities listed in the book, Entrepreneur to Mogul in 37 Easy Steps.)
“Let’s go,
Rhia. You have five minutes to fill out the application, and then we’re out of
here.” Steph slammed the door and beeped the locks behind us. “I’d like to get
out of here before someone sees me looking like My Little Pony threw up on my
shirt.”
Like the necessity for swapping shirts was my fault?
I seriously contemplated knocking my sister over the head and pushing her into
one of the display model Jacuzzis usually set up at these shows. I’d pick one
without water of course. The fact that I might need her to speak for me if they
asked any questions helped me stifle that impulse. Barely.
“Fine. Leth’s
do thith.” My eye was swollen shut, the full body hives itched like I was
wearing fabric woven from poison ivy, and my tongue was still unable to form
words discernable to a human ear. It was fair to say my confidence about
getting this grant had decreased by about a thousand percent in the last hour.
Steph grimaced, her eyes avoiding mine. “It’ll be
fine. Just fill out the form. I’ll do the talking if they have any questions.
What kind of business is it again?”
Wonderful.
Once inside the building, we rode the escalators up
to the exhibit space. It was packed with every trade in the building industry
pimping their wares like a modern-day bazaar. Rows upon rows, booths laid out
into a giant maze throughout the immense space. There were home builders,
interior decorators, garage door suppliers, roofers asking passersby how old
their shingles were and were they interested in a low-maintenance, metal roof.
I brought up the map of the business expo on my
phone to locate the SBC booth. Left side, halfway down over in the general
contractor section. Jerking my head to direct Steph to the left, I maneuvered
through the press of people in search of the lifeline I needed to secure my
future.
Give
It Up
The Thorne Brothers #1
Beckett.
Asher. Gray. Eli. Ryker. Wyatt. Five out of six very different
brothers reunited—and working to make their construction firm a
success. But oldest brother Beckett just found their major new
project becoming one hard and sexy challenge . . .
A rough childhood tore Beckett and his brothers apart. It took everything he had to track them down and establish Six Brothers Construction. He only trusts them—and his drive to win. Now if SBC can build a billionaire team owner’s much-hyped new mansion, it will put them on the map—and finally fulfill Beckett’s promise to take care of his siblings. Too bad he’ll have to collaborate with hot new rival Samantha Devine, who’s throwing him curves on-site, out-the-box . . . and between the sheets.
Sam knows from experience that arrogant good-ole-boy Beckett is long, strong, and built to go the distance. But this is her only shot to prove she and her fledgling design company can succeed on her own terms. She’ll match Beckett’s expertise by day—and reignite the explosive heat between them by night. But when passion threatens to become real love, will this competition separate them for good . . . or make the sizzling collaboration of a lifetime?
A rough childhood tore Beckett and his brothers apart. It took everything he had to track them down and establish Six Brothers Construction. He only trusts them—and his drive to win. Now if SBC can build a billionaire team owner’s much-hyped new mansion, it will put them on the map—and finally fulfill Beckett’s promise to take care of his siblings. Too bad he’ll have to collaborate with hot new rival Samantha Devine, who’s throwing him curves on-site, out-the-box . . . and between the sheets.
Sam knows from experience that arrogant good-ole-boy Beckett is long, strong, and built to go the distance. But this is her only shot to prove she and her fledgling design company can succeed on her own terms. She’ll match Beckett’s expertise by day—and reignite the explosive heat between them by night. But when passion threatens to become real love, will this competition separate them for good . . . or make the sizzling collaboration of a lifetime?
Samantha…
Talk about a dream job. For sure my face looked like I’d just walked through a clearance sale of Jimmie Choo shoes, my smile flagrantly wide as I walked through the French doors of the sunroom to greet Lila.
That was where my dream turned into a nightmare. Because my gaze landed on a man in the room. Landed with a thud.
For the record, I’m not a man hater. I’m not. But I do have a hit list.
Not men I want to have killed. No. My hit list contained the men I wanted to hit. Right over their thick skulls.
Here’s my list:
Dear old Dad
Stepbrother #1 (Todd the bod. He seriously called himself that.)
Stepbrother #2 (Justin the jerk. He did not call himself that, but he was.)
Beckett Thorne
But since I don’t believe in using violence to solve problems, I had to develop a different tactic. I called it “intelligent avoidance.” Margo said all I was doing was avoiding my problems. According to the twisting in my gut right now, I’d have to admit she was right again. I had some smart friends; if only I’d listen to them more often, then maybe I wouldn’t be standing here feeling flustered and hyper-aware of the boob sweat slicing down my cleavage and over my ribcage.
“There you are!” Lila walked to me, giving me cheek to cheek air kisses to not mess up her lipstick. My own Cherry Bomb lipstick was newly refreshed. Like extra armor before going into battle. “Sam, I think you already know Beckett Thorne.”
“Samantha.” He stood and reached out his hand, courteous and professional.
“Thorne.” I nodded, pretending I didn’t see his hand, bad-mannered and immature. His extended hand was a trick anyway. One I’d fallen for before. He tricked me into getting close enough to smell him. He smelled like cedar trees and hot sexy nights. It was subtle, but powerful. Like a breath-stealing punch that hit me right in the honey pot. Not kidding.
I’d learned to go into survival mode and protect myself around him. The problem was he was my sexual kryptonite. He could do things to my body with a simple look. And a touch…? I suppressed the shiver that wanted to rattle its way down my body with the thought of what his touch had done to me.
I’d met Beckett Thorne two years ago when I’d first moved to Raleigh. He’d come sauntering over at the Building and Design Expo, offering to show me around town. I’d been warned about him. Rumor was the offer to show me his bedroom would follow shortly after that. And then he’d show me the door even quicker.
I’m not saying it was easy to turn him down. In fact, I’m not saying that at all.
Because I didn’t. I couldn’t. Something about his blue eyes, his sexy smile, his work-hardened body, and his strong calloused hands had me saying yes. Only we skipped the tour around town.
That’s right. I’d taken my turn on the Beckett Thorne thrill ride. It was hot, mind-blowing, and everything a woman imagined when they looked at him. And more. Ride of a lifetime, but I was warned. Like most wild rides, a love affair with Beckett was said to be exhilarating but rumbled to an abrupt stop, before a woman could even catch her breath from the scream-inducing rush up and over the sky-high peaks. Nope. I’d had enough rejection from men in my life. My plan was to walk away after our one night together. And that’s what happened.
I’d one and done him.
Sort of.
That’s how I like to remember it went for the sake of my own dignity.
In reality, like an idiot, I’d waited for him to call all the next week. Not that he said he would. There was a vague mention of seeing me again, somewhere in the hot panting heat between round two and three. In my defense, I wasn’t exaggerating about the mind-blowing ride of a lifetime. Plus, I’m an optimist. And did I mention how amazing the sex was?
But when he didn’t call, I moved on. No big deal.
Luckily, even though the design world in Raleigh was small, we rarely ran into each other. Yet here we both were, and both, apparently, salivating for Lila’s job. Of course that was why I was salivating. Mr. Tall, Dark, and could-be-Bradley Cooper’s-stunt-double had absolutely nothing to do with it.
Nothing. Not his rugged looks, like a barely tamed tiger, almost too austere to call handsome. Not his dark blond hair, looking perpetually mussed like a woman had run her hands through it. Not the bump on his nose and jagged scar on his chin hinting at a wild past. And certainly not his electric blue eyes that gleamed with intelligence and cynicism. A dangerous combination.
So he could take his Southern manners and stick them where the—whoa, down girl. Sure our history was short—very short—but apparently it was seared into my memory. Possibly because I replayed that memory numerous times over the past two years. When I took a shower, or used my battery powered friend. Hey, those memories were mine fair and square. I was allowed to use them, especially when I was in the middle of a man-drought. It’s not my fault I hadn’t found a man I wanted to sleep with since my night with Thorne.
He stood staring across the room at me. God the man was too good looking for my own good. And far too cocky. I was just the woman to bring him down a peg.
What was he doing? Huh, what do you know… He was eye-fucking me. The man had some nerve. He couldn’t keep his gaze off my chest. I willed my nipples not to react. Don’t go perky. Don’t go perky. Don’t g—too late. Those damn eyes of his. Well, two can play at this game.
I let my gaze wander over his chest…and down. Down farther before dragging my gaze back up. His eyebrow quirked.
I quirked my eyebrow right back, making sure to roll my shoulders back, giving him an eyeful of my perky nipples. Both of his eyebrows rose.
That’s right, buddy. Suck it. I mean, no, there would be no sucking. None. Zero. No thinking about his lips at all. I had to exterminate that image from my brain before my pulse headed into defibrillation territory.
His eyebrows lowered from their sky-high perch on the ladder of cockiness. Looked like round one went to me. Ha!
“You’ve got a piece of lettuce on your…uh…top.” His face looked innocent but the laughter in his eyes was like a whipped cream pie to my face.
I looked down and sure enough a piece of lettuce clung to my chest like a bull’s-eye over my right nipple. Nice, Sam. Nothing said classy and professional like a lettuce leaf pastie!
I did what any crazy, trying-to-hold-on-to-her-dignity woman would do. I peeled off the lettuce and popped it into my mouth. I chewed and swallowed delicately. “One can never get enough fiber.”
A
former Air Force spouse, Lee Kilraine moved seven
times over eighteen years before finally settling with her husband in
the pine woods of North Carolina. She has worked as a physical
therapy aide, a cashier, a waitress, an English tutor, a ballet
teacher and a stay-at-home mom. Holding tight to her mother’s
motto, “There’s nothing you can’t do if you try hard enough,”
Lee returned to college as an adult and graduated from the University
of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Writing thirty-one papers in two years (she counted) rekindled her love of writing, and she set her sights on her other dream—writing romance. When she isn’t swinging on her front porch swing or watching another of their four young adult children leave the nest (she swears she isn’t pushing them out!), you can find her typing away on her computer with her golden retriever, Harley, destroying something at her feet. Lee is a 2014 Golden Heart® Finalist.
Writing thirty-one papers in two years (she counted) rekindled her love of writing, and she set her sights on her other dream—writing romance. When she isn’t swinging on her front porch swing or watching another of their four young adult children leave the nest (she swears she isn’t pushing them out!), you can find her typing away on her computer with her golden retriever, Harley, destroying something at her feet. Lee is a 2014 Golden Heart® Finalist.
Follow
the tour HERE
for exclusive content and a giveaway!
2 comments:
I love the cover. The hero is gorgeous l
My favorite cover is the one for Give and Take. It's a good looking cover and draws the eye. I would ask the author if she ever bases any of her characters on real people?
Post a Comment