Read Rewind & Go: A Blue-Collar Billionaire Romance (Sander's Valley Book 1) Online
Authors: Nancy Corrigan
“Kyle.” She moaned his name.
The sound fueled him. Made him crazed. He dragged his flattened tongue through her folds, over and over, until she rocked against him, fucking herself on his driving tongue. Her breaths shortened. The pinch of her nails in his scalp grew. The back and forth movement of her hips quickened. She took her pleasure from him. Used him. He loved every damn second of it. He wanted her hooked on him. Addicted to him. Begging him.
Loving him.
He wanted her to admit the truth to herself and him. She’d never find another lover that could make her soar the way he could. What they had right here was nothing short of heaven. It was…
Beauty—art—in its purest form.
She’d never find it elsewhere, not in a lover or a priceless painting.
Determination settled over him. He didn’t give a shit how long it took her to realize it. He’d help her accept the truth.
“Kyle, more. Make me come.”
That was his plan. He worked her body with flicks and nibbles. Kept up the teasing until her grip on his hair slackened. She trembled. He thrust his tongue inside her core and pressed his thumb to her clit. Her orgasm hit. She groaned his name, a raw and untamed sound he loved hearing. With quick strokes, he stretched her release until her whimpers turned from pleasured sounds to ones of discomfort.
He stood and took her mouth, sharing her arousal with her and reminding her of the intimacy they shared. She moaned for him and clutched his head tighter.
“This, Ronnie,” he said between kisses. “I won’t lose this. Won’t lose you.”
He shoved his pants down. His erection sprang forward. It slid along her wet lower lips, teasing him with heaven.
She titled her hips, trying to capture his head, but he eased back and broke their kiss.
“You love me.” He grabbed his length to stop it from twitching and brought it to the opening of her sex. “Say it.”
She glared at him. “Not now. Not like this.”
“Why, Ronnie?” He pushed the head of his dick past her lower lips. Her eyelashes fluttered, but she held them open. “You feel it. I know you do.”
“You don’t know what I’m feeling right now.”
She gripped his shoulders. He’d expected her to shove him away. She dug her blunt nails in and pulled him closer, wrapping her legs around his waist. The move opened her to him, giving him access to her body, inviting him to possess her.
His dick slipped farther into her hot center. He tensed his muscles to stop himself from ramming the rest of his length inside her.
“Tell me.”
She crossed her ankles at the back of his spine and tilted her hips, impaling herself on his rigid length. “You want me to admit my love, marry you, and move here. I don’t know if I can. I thought I could, but after the call—”
“Stop, Ronnie.” He panted and tried to get his lust and frustration under control before he said the wrong thing. “I want us to take one goddamn step at a time. Not marriage. Not any decision on where we’ll live. All I want from you is your love and a promise that we’ll keep seeing each other.”
Her nostrils flared on her quickened breaths. She opened her mouth but closed it without saying a thing.
He pulled his cock back. “Don’t do this to us.”
She squeezed her eyes closed, but not soon enough. He saw the tears brimming in her eyes.
“If I’m wrong and you don’t love me, I’ll let you go.” He cupped her face in his hands. “If I’m right, give us a chance.”
She dug her heels into his ass and drew him in. Her warmth and the welcoming arousal invited him home. He slipped deeper. Her body molded to him, hugging him close. He buried his face in her hair.
“Love you, doll.”
She hiccupped. “Love you too.”
Thank God.
He swallowed past the lump in his throat. With his arms banded around her, he held her close for a long moment and let her words sink in. Passion flared, though, pushing the softer emotion to the side. He had to move.
Slow, full strokes loosened her body. With her head buried against his shoulder, she rocked with him. Her tears wet the cotton of his T-shirt. He tried not to read into them. Fortunately the clenching of her muscles over his dick distracted him.
He gave himself over to the lust. The physical act, he could handle. Ronnie’s doubts, he couldn’t. They’d work it out. As long as she gave them a chance, everything would be fine. The thought faded as his balls drew up. He was ready to explode, needed to fill her up, but he craved her cries of completion first. The compulsion took hold.
With her back against the wall to hold her in place, he pounded into her. She matched his furious pace, adding a push to his drive. Their groins smacked. Her nails left scratches on his back, and their moans surrounded them. Faster, harder, he gave her everything he had.
She kissed her way up his neck to his ear. “I love you, Kyle Sander. Love you always.”
Her words pushed him over. He drove deep once more and let go. She followed him on a cry of passion that stripped him raw. He wanted to hear that sound every goddamn day of his life. Soon he would. He held the vow close and ignored the good-bye in her touch.
Ronnie wasn’t the only one who’d grown up during the years they’d been apart. So had he, and there was one very important thing he’d learned—persistence. No matter how much life had fucked with him, he’d gotten out of bed and faced his challenges. Ronnie’s stubbornness would be the biggest of all. And the most important.
Her life and the great Axel legacy depended on him to be the man she needed.
Kyle sat on his bed a few nights later and stared at the tiny diamond set in a white-gold band. It had taken him two years of working at the movie theater in the neighboring town to buy it. During the school year, he hadn’t minded spending his weekend nights there. It had given him something to do while his friends had gone on dates.
He’d had his whole life planned out. Ronnie had wiped it out with her disappearing act, and he’d had to reevaluate everything. The construction business had been a gamble, one that hadn’t panned out the way he’d hoped.
He glanced at the paper next to him, an offer from his part-time employee to buy out the company Kyle had started. His friend was convinced he could make it work where Kyle had failed. He was too nice, his buddy had said.
Maybe Kyle had given too many discounts, but he knew the families who’d hired him. Many could barely feed their kids. If they needed basic repairs, he made sure they got them, sometimes in exchange for favors instead of hard cash.
Earlier in the week, he’d been dead set against signing, despite his financial troubles. The families in and around Sander’s Valley relied on him to provide quality work at an affordable price. Besides, his plan to convert the garage and build custom cabinets would offset the discounts he sometimes gave. He was sure of it.
He’d already gotten calls from a couple of custom home builders, inquiring about his work. If he accepted their offers, he’d be busy for at least a year. The best part of those jobs was knowing the people ordering his cabinets could afford to pay him.
His friend had said to take a couple of weeks to think about the offer before outright refusing, no rush. As the days dragged on, it was looking more and more inviting. Persistence would get Kyle nowhere if Ronnie kept building walls between them. He’d be in the same boat he’d been in before she’d walked back into his life. Bitter, miserable, and lonely. Actually, he was well on his way. He missed Ronnie’s smile, her touch…her voice.
They’d talked for hours the first two days. The third she’d gotten off after fifteen minutes, complaining of a headache. Yesterday their phone call had lasted five. Today he’d gotten her voice mail.
She was busy. He got that. He just couldn’t help but read into it. She was avoiding him and the mystery surrounding her birth father. She still hadn’t opened the paternity test. She couldn’t deal with it, she’d said.
None of his attempts to convince her to get it over with had worked to change her mind. She’d had excuses for everything, including any of his ideas about their future. One day at a time, she’d said. Sure, and every damn day made it easier for her to forget about them. Out of sight, out of mind, as his mama would say.
He slid the small ring partially on his pinkie finger and dialed Ronnie’s number. He was done waiting. He’d lose her if he did. Not happening.
The phone rang several times before she picked up. “Hello?”
He heard the question in her voice—who was it? Guess he wasn’t special enough to get his own ringtone or his name added to her contact list. He bit back the annoyance. It wouldn’t do any good.
“It’s me, doll. I just wanted to let you know that I’m getting ready to leave.”
“Where are you going?”
He clenched his fist. The diamond dug into his palm. “I’m coming down to see you. Remember?”
She groaned. “I’m sorry. I didn’t realize it was Friday already. Look, I don’t think it’s a good idea if you come down this weekend.”
He tensed. “Why not?”
“I finally opened that letter. I’m still trying to deal with the fallout.”
And she hadn’t called him? Anger flared. He pushed it back. “What did it say?”
“That my life has been one big fat lie. My mom cheated on my dad…I mean her husband.” She laughed. The bitter sound cut at him. “You see? I can’t stop calling him my dad.”
“Oh, doll, I’m sorry. Whether his seed created you or not, you know Frank loved you like his daughter.”
“He thought I was his. Mom lied about the timing of her affair. After she got pregnant, he wanted them to move to Sander’s Valley permanently and demanded I be given his last name, saying it would break the curse.” The annoyance in her voice at the mention of the Axel curse was easy to hear. “They fought, separated, and the rest is history.”
Son of a bitch. He had his answer to why Ronnie’s mom hated the valley. He also couldn’t help but agree with Frank. The curse was tied to the Axel name or, more specifically, to the heir to the Axel fortune. None of Vivien’s aunts and great-uncles died violently. Only Vivien had met a tragic end.
And Ronnie was the only Axel left.
His throat tightened. He closed his eyes. No. Ronnie would marry him. Take
his
name. It would break the curse. Like Frank, Kyle knew it, deep in his soul, but he wouldn’t repeat the same mistake Frank made—allowing stubbornness to keep him from the woman he loved. If it meant Kyle would have to make some sacrifices, so be it.
He’d give up everything for Ronnie, even Sander’s Valley.
The decision eased the anxiety gripping him. He blew out a slow, controlled breath and asked, “Who’s your dad, then?”
“Gerald.”
The quaking in her voice cut at him. He wanted to gather her close and hold her. Dammit. He hated the distance between them. “Did you talk to his…other daughter?”
“Yes. Iona is flying in tonight to meet with me and go over some stuff. That’s why I think it’s better if you don’t come down.”
She’d probably meant her words to calm him so he didn’t think she was ditching him. They only made him angrier. Meeting her sister would be an emotional encounter. She should want his support. The thought faded as the rest of her statement clicked. “What does she need to discuss with you?”
“Gerald knew I was his too, but it would’ve caused a rift with his wife.” Her sigh sounded overly loud on the line. “I told Iona I didn’t care if anyone else found out about me. I only want to get to know her.”
“She doesn’t want that?”
“No, she does. She’s thrilled to have a sister. She’s also an only child.”
“And?” Because there had to be more.
“I’m older. By two months.” She cleared her throat. “And that means I’m entitled to his fortune.”
The pain in his chest stole his breath. He squeezed his eyes shut on the surge of a premonition he didn’t understand.
“I told her I didn’t want any of it,” Ronnie went on. “I have enough of my own, but Iona insisted, saying it wouldn’t be right. That someday my kids might want to claim their place in the family line. I finally agreed to half of it. Our lawyers are working on the legalities. She’s coming here to discuss his portfolio and see how we want to split things.”
“Iona seems very accepting of you.”
“Oh, she’s very nice. We really hit it off.” Ronnie chuckled. “You’d be surprised how many similarities we have. I think you’d like her.”
“Then I’ll come down and—”
“Kyle?”
“Yes?”
“I need to do this on my own. I’m trying to work through some things. Get my life in order and stuff.”
“I understand.” And he did. He just couldn’t shake the feeling that after she was done reevaluating her life, he wouldn’t have a place in it. That wasn’t going to work, but he had to plan his next move, exactly as he’d done with his construction business. The answer would show itself. He just had to figure out the details.
“How about I come up there next weekend? I still didn’t get the chance to hang those paintings.”
He spun the ring and rubbed the small stone with his thumb. “Sure. I’d like that.”
“Great. I’ll see you then.”
She ended the call before he got the chance to say good-bye.
Or I love you.