I wanted to celebrate the one-year anniversary of WHEN YOU ARE MINE releasing with a glimpse into the life Walsh and Kerris Bennett are living now. Before we dive in, I wanted to say a few things. There were several scenes I cut from the first two books for the sake of space that focused on Walsh in the realm of business. Walsh constantly lives with the dichotomy of the values his mother instilled in him, and the ruthlessness of his father’s DNA. In business, we see a much more calculating, shrewd side of Walsh. Part of this scene focuses on that aspect of his character. Some of the friends I shared this with early were a little taken aback that he was more harsh. This is a part of his character that I don’t back off from. I also wanted to deal realistically with the life/work tension Walsh will always have to negotiate. He is an incredibly driven man, who has to manage devotion to his family with towering ambition. So…cut him some slack!
And, yes, I’ll write something for Cam and Jo soon! đ
***Fan-made edit courtesy of The Reading Ruth***
DO NOT READ IF YOU HAVE NOT READ THE FIRST TWO BOOKS IN THE BENNETT series, WHEN YOU ARE MINE & LOVING YOU ALWAYS!!!
âVisiting the sins of the father upon the sonsâŠâ
Walsh Bennett had to wonder if it was tattooed on his head. For all intents and purposes, it felt like all his fatherâs transgressions, enemies and mistakes were visiting him today. The deal he had been working on for six months was disintegrating before his eyes because of something his father did decades ago, and he wasnât sure he could save it. He had one Ace up his sleeve, and it would probably prove to be an uncooperative one.
He pressed the button on the phone that connected him to his assistant, God bless her.
âKarma, could you get Ernest Baston on the line for me, please? I need to talk with him about the Hamilton takeover immediately. Iâd prefer in person if he can come up.â
âYes, sir.â Karmaâs crisp British accent sliced into the quiet of Walshâs office. âAnd Trevor Bishop and Harold Smith confirmed for dinner tonight.â
âDoes that have to be tonight?â Walsh frowned. He hadnât been home for dinner once this week.
âYour father and Mr. Baston want to pursue Deutimus Corp aggressively, and Bishop and Smith fly to Nigeria tomorrow for the next month. They have meetings set up with other companies while abroad, so we could lose the upper hand.â
âShit. Okay. Just tell me where to be and have the car ready.â
âI thought so, and your wife called.â
âKerris?â Walsh searched the now-cluttered desk for his cell phone. âWhy didnât she just call my cell?â
âApparently you left it at home.â
âThatâs been my day.â
âExcuse me, sir, what was that?â
âNothing. When did she call?â
Instead of responding by intercom, Karma walked through the connecting door into his office, dark hair pulled up and away to show off her flawless bone structure. The genes from her Irish mother and Ethiopian father blended beautifully on a face the color of cocoa, but Walsh barely noticed.
âSorry,â Karma said. âThat intercom just begins to feel uncivilized. We may as well be using cups and strings.â
âWhen did she call, Karma?
Walsh held on tight to his patience because it had been slipping all day. Heâd already made the receptionist cry, seen one temp quit and a board member threaten to resign. And it wasnât even noon.
âShe called when you were in with your father.â
âAt nine oâ clock this morning?â Despite his good intentions, Walshâs voice escalated with his irritation. âMy wife called three hours ago and youâre just now telling me? Does that make sense to you?â
âYou asked not to be disturbed.â
âMy wife isnât everâŠnever mind. Close the door behind you.â Walsh dialed home. âThis should be fun.â
The phone rang three times, which probably meant Kerris was chasing the girls, who had just started walking and were into everything.
âSeriously, Walsh,â Kerris answered, sounding winded. âThree hours later?â
âBaby, Iâm sorry. I left my cellââ
âOn the counter, I know. â A high-pitched scream pierced the air from Kerrisâ end. âHarlim, stop it! Sheâs going to rip all of Brooklinâs hair out before theyâre three.â
The first smile of the morning cracked Walshâs face. Heâd only left them this morning, but he missed his girls so badly. All three of them. Kerris had been huddled under the covers when heâd slipped out of their bedroom at four oâclock this morning. The girls, too, across the hall. The sight of the twins, so identically beautiful in their cribs always gripped his heart. How had he managed to make something so perfect, so sweet, not once, but two times over? And at the same time?
âHarlim is a tyrant.â Kerrisâ tired words and weary sigh over the phone drew Walsh back into the conversation. âAnd every time I turn around Brooklin is in the freaking toilet.â
Walsh smothered a laugh, envisioning his little dark-haired cherub splashing in the toilet, to her germophobe motherâs disgust.
âDid you just laugh?â Kerris demanded, voice low and bordering on outraged.
âSorry. I justâŠIâd love to see that.â
The silence on the other end grew into more than Walsh had anticipated.
âKerris?â
âThereâs a lot Iâd love for you to see,â Kerris said quietly. âA lot that youâre missing.â
âKer, I canât take the guilt today. I know itâs a lot, and I havenât been around. Shit here at the office is just Defcon One right now.â
âWhen is it not?â
âI didnât ask my dad to have a heart attack.â Walsh fought to rein the frustration that had been steadily building, not just today, but for weeks, for months, over the last year. Fought to not take it out on his wife, when the promise of returning home to her was the only thing that got him through some days. âI didnât ask for all this responsibility so soon.â
âBut you certainly wonât turn it down. This just accelerated the plan. Wasnât this the end game all along? To run Bennett Enterprises when your father retired?â
âHeâs semi-retired, but itâs still more than I thought Iâd have at this stage.â
âItâs more than I thought youâd have, too.â
âYou knew who you were marrying, Kerris.â Walsh kept his voice even and level and frank. âI wasnât ever the guy whoâd be home every night watching the game with a beer and tucking the kids in by seven.â
âMissing tucking the girls in is your loss.â
âYeah, it is.â
âAnd your choice.â
âWhat the absolute fuck do you want me to do about it, Ker?â The explosion startled even Walsh. Tucking the emotion away was like pushing lava back into a volcano, but he managed to do it. âIâm sorry. I just…I need you to recognize that Iâm in a tough position.â
âI do recognize that, but I love you too much to let you become your father, Walsh Bennett.â Determination stiffened Kerrisâ soft voice. âYou know I love your father, but he wasnât there when you were growing up. He abandoned your mother emotionally and in every way that counted. And he missed out on what an amazing man you are until it was almost too late. If you think Iâll sit back and let that happen to us, then youâve forgotten who you married.â
âKerris, to be fair, my father has learned his lesson.
âI know he has, but have you?â
Before Walsh could respond, Karma poked her head in the doorway.
âSorry,â she whispered. âBut you wanted to see Mr. Baston, and he has a tiny window of time. Heâs here right now and not too happy that he has to wait forââ
âGive me two minutes and then send him in,â Walsh interrupted, half glad to have an escape from the phone conversation with Kerris. It was hitting too close to home. Too close to the things heâd been thinking himself lately.
âKerris, I gotta ago.â
âI love you, Walsh.â
Thatâs all it took. Ever. Those words from Kerris, and the truth behind them, wiped every slate clean every time.
âI know Iâm an asshole, Kerris, butââ
âBut youâre my asshole.â Her voice on the other end dropped to a whisper like the rest of the world might be listening. âI miss you, Walsh. All the time, all day, every day. Itâs not just the girls. I need you so much. Not just for them. For me.â
âKerris, I donât have a life without you. You know that. You and the girls are everything. I just have to figure this all out. How to do what needs to be done here and at home and for you.â
âI know, baby. I know.â She paused, drawing a quick breath. â Youâll be home tonight on time, though, right?â
âProbably not. Karma just scheduled this dinner with Trevor Bishop and his partner. Remember I told you about them? They start businesses in third world countries. Itâs really a brilliant strategy thatââ
âYouâre joking, right?â
âNo, Bishop even has a Ted talk. I can send you the link. If Bennett can buy their companyââ
âWalsh, tonight is the launch party for my new jewelry line.â Disappointment and frustration jockeyed for position in Kerrisâ voice. âYou promised youâd be there. Trish is coming over to watch the girls. Jo and Cam are even flying in.â
How did this happen? He distinctly remembered asking Karma to put this on his calendar so he wouldnât schedule a conflict. How did the most important things slide down and through the cracks, and the things that, in the long run, didnât mean shit, end up front and center?
âBaby, I donât know how this happened. Iâll figure it out.â
âOr donât.â
The line went dead. Walsh dropped his head into his hands, pulling at his hair and growling in frustration. He pounded the intercom button on his phone.
âKarma!â
âYes, sir. Ready for Mr. Baston?â
âNo, he can wait.â
âHeâs sitting right here. He can hear you,â Karma whispered back.
âI donât give a fuck. Hi, Ernest. Karma, did you or did you not have my wifeâs jewelry launch on my personal calendar for tonight?â
âSir, Iââ
âAnd did you or did you not graduate cum laude from Brown?â
âYes, but Iââ
âWhich would lead me to believe that something as simple as calendaring should not fall beyond your considerable Ivy League capabilities.â
âWell, of course not, butââ
âAnd did I or did I not make it perfectly clear from day damn one what my first priority would be? My family. Therefore your first priority?â
Silence.
âIâm sorry. Is this contraption too uncivilized for you, Karma?â Walsh snapped. âShould we instead revert to cups and strings or do you copy?â
âYes, sir, Iââ
âYou and your Brown diploma will be out on your ass if you canât do the one thing I told you was the most important. Now if you want to keep your job, and Iâm pretty sure you will, because who else will pay you six figures for what you do, youâll figure out how I can meet Trevor Bishop before he goes to Nigeria without missing my wifeâs launch tonight.â
Silence.
âYou will know where I need to be. What time I should be there. Arrange transportation. Have the proper clothes delivered here to the office. Why do I have to tell you this, Karma?â
âYou donât, sir.â
âApparently I do since I just got off the phone with my wife and looked like the prick who forgot her jewelry launch is tonight.â
âIâm sorry, sir. Iâll make the arrangements.â
âYou do that. Now you can come in, Ernest.â Walsh tempered his tone only slightly. âThanks for your patience.â
Walsh opened his laptop, maneuvering through the labyrinth of files for the Hamilton takeover. Ernest walked in, red already crawling up his cheeks and into the mix of blonde and gray at his hairline.
His fatherâs best friend. The man Walsh had grown up calling uncle. Now a peer and colleague. You blink and the years have whizzed by and everything has changed. When Walsh and Sofie were kids, dashing through these offices and hiding under their fathersâ desks, Walsh never would have imagined heâd be in this position; basically leading Uncle Ernest. Certainly not this soon. Some days stepping into his fatherâs role felt like an ill-fitting jacket. But most days it felt tailor-made.
âErnest, we need to talk about the Hamilton deal.â
âYes, well youâll have to figure something out, Walsh. Theyâre about to walk.â
âYou say I have to?â Walsh lifted just one brow, begging the question. âHow so?â
âYou have to salvage the deal.â Ernest loosened the middle button on his suit jacket, settling into the seat across from Walsh. âThe board expects it. Gerald Hamiltonâs being unreasonable, but Iâm sure youâll figure out what he wants.â
Walsh nodded and flipped the hourglass his father had given him, watching the sands and wondering how many would have to fall before Ernest reached the part Walsh was waiting for.
âI bet itâs totally personal,â Ernest continued. âYour father and I did some business with Hamiltonâs dad, William, back in the nineties, and thatâs why heâs being so difficult.â
âAnd by âdid some businessâ you mean crushed him until he had nothing.â Walsh rested his elbows on the desk, and his chin on his folded hands. âI did a little digging into the past, Ernest.â
âYou always do,â Ernest said under his breath.
Walsh knew he had a reputation for thoroughness. He needed every advantage when half the board assumed he was only here by nepotism, and that his only qualification to lead this company was Bennett blood.
âYes, I always do,â Walsh agreed. âBecause sometimes the answers to our current problems lie in the past. And I think thatâs the case here.â
âHow so?â Ernest frowned, crossing one ankle over his knee.
âIn your heyday, you and my father didnât feel it was enough to just steal a manâs company from him, but you took special pleasure in crushing his will.â
âWe would from time to time send a certain message, yes.â Ernestâs chest swelled with pride.
âWell, William Hamilton, Geraldâs father, received one of those messages loud and clear. He was one of your victims.â
âVictim is a strong word.â
âThe man attempted suicide.â Walsh leveled the words across the desk at Ernest, anger pulling his brows down over his eyes. âDid you know that?â
âI heard something to the effect, but this business isnât for the weak.â Ernest flicked a disparaging glance at Walsh. âYou might want to remember that if you think to take your fatherâs place some day.â
âI know all about strength, Ernest.â Walsh tilted his head, lifting one brow. âYou know what my mother taught me about strength?â
âWhat?â Ernest narrowed his eyes at the mention of Walshâs deceased mother.
âThe greatest strength is found when we humble ourselves.â Walsh pulled his lips into a facsimile of a smile. âYouâll get to be so strong today, Ernest.â
âWhat are you talking about?â
âYou will drive out to the Hamptons, where I just happened to know William Hamilton is today, and you will apologize for how you handled things back then.â
âThe hell I am. That was business.â
âAnd so is this. I donât really give a ratâs ass if youâd do it again the exact same way and twice on Sunday if given the opportunity. You will drive your Ashton Martin up to the Hamptons and you will ask William Hamilton for forgiveness. And you will save this deal because it was your recklessness and ruthless cruelty that almost wrecked it.â
âYour father was just as much a part of that as I was.â
âYes, but heâs semi-retired and still recovering from a heart attack.â Walsh gave a pseudo-apologetic smile. âSo looks like youâll have to do the honors.â
âYouâre crazy if you think Iâll do that. Besides, itâs ridiculous.â
âThe board thought it was an excellent strategy.â
Ernest went perfectly still in his seat.
âYouâve mentioned this to the board? When? There hasnât been a meeting.â
âMeetings can be soâŠâ Walsh expelled a breath, pretending to search for the right word. âTiresome, yeah? I mean getting all those guys in one room.â
âYou went behind my back.â
âI like to think of it more as giving each and every board member my personal, undivided attention.â Walsh sharpened and hardened the look he gave the man whoâd been like a second father to him. âI think they need that from their future leader, Uncle Ernest.â
Did Ernest think Walsh didnât know on some level he resented that, at not even thirty-five years old, Walsh was basically running the company Ernest helped his father build from the ground up? Walsh knew it was in many ways unfair, but blood wasnât always fair. And there was no doubt in his mind that he, not Ernest, was the future of Bennett Enterprises. Making a new way forward, starting with making some of the past wrongs right.
âI told them you were prepared to approach William Hamilton about the past misunderstandings personally,â Walsh said. âThey called you brilliant and humble.â
âI wonât do it.â
âIâm not finished.â Walsh laid brick into his next words. âI then met with my father this morning and asked him to personally reach out to William Hamilton, which he has already done. He, of course, was delighted to hear about your forthcoming drive up to the Hamptons, and agrees that it should go a long way to making things right.â
âAnd if it doesnât?â
âIf it doesnât, then the board will have you to blame, wonât it?â
âI know what youâre doing, boy.â Ernest narrowed his green eyes, so like Sofieâs, but even harder and colder. âYou want me to feel obsolete.â
âNo, I want you to know your place.â Walsh leaned forward, elbows on the desk, meeting the frigid Ernestâs frigid stare head on. âAnd Iâm not, nor have I ever been, your boy.â
Eyes locked in combat for a few more tense moments, they reached a silent dĂ©tente, sealing it with a small, false smile. Walsh wasnât sure how long it would hold. He and Ernest would butt heads again before it was all over.
âWell, I guess I should get started if Iâm going to the Hamptons.â Ernest rose to his feet, re-buttoning his suit coat. âSince Iâm doing you a favor, maybe you could do one for me.â
Walsh wouldnât exactly call what had just passed between them a favor, but this man did teach him to drive a stick, so he owed him something.
âWhat can I do you for?â Walsh asked.
âSofie.â Ernest shook his head, exasperation all over his face.
âWhat about her?â Walsh wasnât sure how he could help on that score. Other than Walsh Foundation functions and the occasional social engagement here in New York, he hadnât seen Sofie much.
âOh, you havenât heard?â Ernest turned wide eyes to Walsh. âSheâs gone and posed for Playboy!â
Walsh laughed out loud before he could stop himself. The scandalized look on Ernestâs face advised him to cough the last of his humor into his fist.
âWow. Playboy, huh?â Walsh patted Ernest on the back, subtly walking him to the door. If he was going to be able to make Kerrisâ launch tonight, he still had a shit ton of work to barrel through. âWhat exactly did you want me to, uh, do about that?â
âHelp me get her under control.â
âControl?â Walsh stopped in his tracks, raising his brows at Ernest. âSofie? Are we talking about your daughter Sofie? Since when has anyone been able to control her?â
âShe actually cares about her position as celebrity ambassador for the Walsh Foundation.â
âYeah, she loves it,â Walsh admitted, as surprised as anyone by Sofieâs involvement. She had committed years ago, and had remained involved ever since. âShe just got back from Haiti.â
âSee.â Ernest pointed a victorious finger at Walsh. âHaiti! Whoâd go there if it wasnât important to them?â
âErnest, how do you see me helping?â
âThreaten to have her removed as celebrity ambassador if she doesnât stop pulling stunts like this.â
âWhy would I do that?â
âIsnât there a morality clause or something you could hold over her head?â
Walsh had felt sorry for Sofie more than once, sometimes because of things he himself had done. Sometimes because of the messes she made. He knew things most people didnât about her past, but this was what he understood; what he identified with more than anything else. Theyâd both been raised by ruthless men. His father had done the same thing to him growing up; tried to control him through the things he knew were important to Walsh, mostly his approval and affection. Walsh had seen Ernest do the same thing to Sofie since they were children. Sometimes it worked, but he wouldnât be a part of it.
âYouâll have to handle that yourself, Ernest, âWalsh said quietly, opening the door. âGood luck and drive safely.â
*****
âHeâll be here, Kerris.â
Kerris looked up at Cam, searching eyes the color of storm clouds to see if he actually believed Walsh was coming.
âI donât know, Cam.â She smoothed trembling hands over her small baby bump in the black tunic, dotted with pink wildflowers. âHeâs been soâŠbusy. Things have exploded at Bennett. Even with Martin officially back, since the heart attack heâs turned more and more responsibility over to Walsh.â
âAnd Walsh loves it, right?â Jo twisted her wide, scarlet-hued mouth into a wry grin. âEven though he has to pretend itâs such a hardship.â
âExactly!â Kerris turned to Walshâs cousin to commiserate. Jo knew Walsh better than anyone else; knew all the dark passages of his character. âAnd I just want him to be honest about it, and to put us first. He canât follow the path his father took. Why canât he see that?â
âAunt Kris would beat him with a stick for missing tonight.â A frown pinched between Joâs thick, sleek brows.
âHeâll be here,â Cam cut in. âGive the guy a break. Itâs not every day youâre thrust into leading a multi-billion dollar corporation overnight. Heâs adjusting, and Iâm not gonna let you guys bust his balls over it all night.â
Cam shifted his son on his shoulder, stroking the dark head of curls.
âJo, does he need to eat? And itâs kind of drafty in here. Do you have another blanket?â
âOh, my freaking God, Cam.â Jo rolled her eyes. âI just fed him. Youâd drain every mammary gland in my body if you could. And, no, it is not drafty. Youâre paranoid. We really could have left him in North Carolina with Mama Jess.â
âYouâre breast feeding,â Cam said, eyes wide, voice elevated.
âLouder, please.â Jo glanced around the crowded industrial space hosting Kerrisâ jewelry line launch. âNot sure they heard you in Queens. It was one night. I could have pumped. I have milk in the refrigerator. You just didnât want to be away from Kingston even one night. Admit it.â
Cam kissed his sonâs downy head, pulling the blanket a little higher, shrugging.
âWhatever, Jo.â He eyes rested with affection on his wife, mouth collapsing into a smile after a few seconds. He hooked his elbow around Joâs neck and dragged her closer to him to burrow into the shoulder his son wasnât occupying.
Kerris watched them, happy for her friends, so obviously content, but with her own heart heavy. She loved Walsh no less, and there was no doubt in her mind he loved her as fiercely as he always had. The Bennett drive and ambition coursed through his veins as sure as blood, though, and it was the only thing that could ever take him from her. Lately, sheâd worried that it would.
Tonight would tell her a lot. That he would forget such a big night, said a lot. She didnât ask for much. Just this one thing, and for him to put business over the one thing sheâd asked of him would break her heart. Something Walsh had been careful never to do before.
âKerris, weâre about to get started.â Tanya, the proprieter of SoWhat, the SoHo shop that would carry her new jewelry line, said. âAre you ready?â
Kerris looked to the entrance of the loft space, eyes straining for any sign of Walshâs height and broad shoulders, the dark hair and the green eyes that had fascinated her from that first night in that hotel ballroom.
âKerris?â Tanya asked again.
âYeah. Sorry. I was hopingâŠIâm ready.â
A slim hand on her shoulder stopped her as she was heading to the front of the room where her jewelry was displayed under glass. She turned to meet the concern in Joâs silvery eyes.
âHeâll make it, Kerris.â She smiled, looking so much like Kristene Bennett it squeezed at Kerrisâ heart a little. âIf he doesnât Iâll bust his balls for you since youâre preggers.â
Joâs kindness pulled a trigger on the tears Kerris had been holding back. She bit at her lip, blinked, clenched her fists; used every trick she could think of not to humiliate herself with tears. No one would understand. She was married to one of the most powerful businessmen in New York. Maybe in the world. Her two beautiful little girls slept safely in a gorgeous TriBeCa townhome, and soon she and Walsh would add to their young family. Tonight launched her exclusive line of jewelry designs. What did she have to cry about?
Except all of it felt hollow and empty without Walsh. Like an echo of some perfect song she couldnât hear clearly unless he was by her side.
âSoWhat is honored to collaborate with a rising artisan on the cityâs horizon.â Tanya wrapped her arm around Kerrisâ shoulder as they faced the crowd of well-dressed New Yorkers, most of whom Kerris had never seen in her life.
She still felt like a sojourner sometimes in this city. Everyone she truly trusted still lived in Rivermont, North Carolina, but her life was here with Walsh. Wherever he was. The need to be with him outweighed everything else. She could visit friends, but she couldnât be without him. To think she might be less vital to him than he was to her cracked something inside. She was cracking in a roomful of strangers with a practiced smile and shiny hair and a brand new dress sheâd had delivered to the house because itâs impossible to shop with twins. Falling apart in front of everyone, and they had no idea.
âKerris, did you have anything to say?â Tanya smiled at her, an expectant look on her face.
Kerris looked out over the crowd, searching her mind for anything intelligent. She wasnât like Jo, sharp and polished and witty. She wasnât like Sofie, who everyone in this room would recognize on sight. Glamorous and worldly, always quick with something that would have everyone laughing and quoting her in the paper tomorrow. She was a simple girl from a river town who found herself in the center of the world tonight, alone.
âUm, wow. Iâm so humbled to partner with you, Tanya and the SoWhat team.â Kerris twisted her wedding ring around her finger, a generations-old gift from one of Walshâs ancestors. âThank you all for coming tonight andââ
A hurried movement at the door distracted her. A dark-headed figure, tall and commanding enough to draw a few stares even though she was the one speaking. Commanding enough to draw her attention, too.
He always had been.
Kerris hoped everyone got to experience this at least once. To lock eyes with someone across a room and have everyone else disappear. To feel this soul-deep charge, and to know with certainty, no person, no circumstance, no business, no argument would ever truly separate the two of you. It was easy to forget.
And only took one look to remember.
âUm, thank you again.â Kerris recovered, pulling her eyes away from Walsh and spreading a smile around the room. âI hope you enjoy the pieces. I made them with love. The line is dedicated to my family. To my girls.â
She found Walsh again, at the back of the crowd, eyes trained on her.
âAnd to my husband.â
A few minutes later, Kerris tried to focus on the buyer Tanya wanted her to meet, but all she could think about was finding Walsh again in the dense crowd. She should have known he would find her.
Walsh stepped into the small circle of conversation, taking Kerrisâ hand into his and pulling her to his side.
âTanya, youâll have to excuse us. I got here late, and havenât gotten to congratulate my wife. So sorry to interrupt.â
âYouâre not sorry, Walsh Bennett.â Tanya gave him a knowing grin.
âNo, Iâm not.â Walsh assaulted her with his charm. âBut youâll have to excuse us anyway, wonât you?â
Walsh led Kerris away. They didnât exchange words, offering short nods and small smiles to everyone they passed. The air between them buzzed with need, and Kerris wasnât sure where they were going, but she hoped it was somewhere private. Somewhere to ease the primal ache that began when he walked in the room and throbbed harder and hotter the longer she had to wait for him.
Walsh walked them past a tiny room serving as a kitchen of sorts, loaded with appetizers and into a closet crowded with coats and wraps. She hadnât drawn one breath before Walsh had her against the wall. Heat fused their mouths together tightly, tongues meshed, sucking greedily at one another. Walshâs hands slid under Kerrisâ dress, cupping her butt, caressing her slim back, palming her high, full breasts, the nipples tightening under his twisting fingers. And finally resting on the small swell of her belly holding his baby.
âThis is all that matters to me, Kerris,â Walsh said against her lips. âThis baby. You. The girls. I know it doesnât seem that wayââ
âUh huh. I know.â She shoved her fingers into his hair, biting his bottom lip.
âAnd I know I canât be like my father. Just give me space toââ
âShut up.â Kerris dragged his lips back, licking into his mouth, stroking the roof, drawing on his tongue. âJust shut up.â
He laughed, pulling back to stare at her, pressing a finger against her throbbing lips.
âI have this whole apology planned out.â
âSave it.â Kerris fumbled at his zipper. âTheyâll be looking for us soon.â
âWeâre not doing this. Though your eagerness is flattering.â Walsh put his hand over hers at the bulge in his pants, a huge grin overtaking his handsome face. Green eyes bright with answering desire. âThis is your big night. We are going back out there. You will meet people. People will meet you. We will have dinner with Cam and Jo.â
Disappointment and lust pooled in Kerrisâ belly. She drew in a steadying breath. She could do this. She could wait to have her husband when they got home. The kids would be asleep. They would have until morning to devour one another.
He leaned down to breathe into her ear, setting fires all over her body.
âAnd then weâll fuck in the back seat all the way home.â
The night just got perfect.
Donât miss Sofie and Trevorâs story coming in February 2016!