Authors: Judi Fennell
He kissed his way up to her breasts, loving them once more.
She opened her eyes when he sucked the second one into his mouth, his tongue making lazy swirls around her nipple.
“Like that, do you?” she mimicked, a soft smile curving her lips.
“Don't get too relaxed on me, baby. The night is young.” He reached for the condoms he'd dropped on the bed at her challenge and rolled onto his side to put a new one on. “Round two is just about to start.”
S
HE
lost count of how many rounds there'd been, but the number didn't really matter. What he'd made her feel, what he'd given her . . . How was it that one of the worst moments of her life had been the start of this? Of meeting Liam and getting to know him enough that she'd not only considered going to bed with him, but had? And wanted to stay there?
It was almost funny that Dad's eviction had given her this. This moment, this place, this man. If not for that one event, she and Liam would have been ships passing in her hallway, a polite “Hello, have a nice day” relationship.
She wanted
this
relationship. She wanted him.
Finding herself was the reason she'd wanted to leave her father's house; finding Liam was a gift she'd never dreamed of.
She curled closer to him, loving the feeling of him next to her. He hadn't let go; his arm was beneath her shoulders and he was rubbing a few strands of her hair between his thumb and index finger. The tug on her scalp felt good. Made her feel wanted. Desired.
“You're quiet,” he said.
“I thought I more than made up for it a few minutes ago.”
She felt his chuckle. “True.”
“Why? Is there something you want to talk about?” Suddenly, she was worried. He'd said they'd deal with the aftermath later. Was this that aftermath? Was he not feeling like she was?
“There is.” Liam shifted so that he was on his side, but still kept his arm around her and her hair in his hand.
She liked it there. Liked that he wanted to play with it. Liked that he didn't want to let go.
“What made you the way you are, Cassidy?”
That wasn't a question she'd expected. “What do you mean? I'm just me.”
He inhaled and tickled her cheek with her hair. “That's what I mean. You. How did you get to be you growing up with him?”
“Ah.” Now she got it. But wasn't so sure she wanted to answer it. Not truthfully anyway.
But she didn't want a relationship without honesty between them. If he didn't like the truth, she'd be better off knowing now.
“I wasn't always like this. I used to be caught up in the society life. I liked going to parties and buying clothes and vacationing at exclusive resorts. I mean, who wouldn't, right?”
“It sounds like a shallow existence.”
If she were still in that world, his words would hurt. Or maybe not since she'd been too shallow to care.
The fact that he felt that way, however, was encouraging. The first man to see through the BS and want her for her,
not
for her father's money.
You sure about that?
Cassidy shook off the thought. Liam wasn't like that. He was a stand-up guy. He was honest and hardworking and she'd bet he'd never take a handout from anyone. Liam was the kind of guy to make it on his own.
Unlike the woman she used to be.
“I'm not proud of who I was then, Liam. But that's how I was raised and it's how my world operated. Then I met Franklin.”
Liam stiffened against her. And not in a good way. “Franklin?”
She rubbed a hand over his chest. Felt his heart beating beneath her palm and she left her hand there. If he only knew how symbolic that was for her.
“Franklin was a thirteen-year-old boy with a lot of medical issues. Issues that could have made him mean and bitter and nasty to be around. I sat next to him at one of the hospital's charity dinners.”
“They wheeled him out to solicit donations?” Liam's jaw tightened.
“No. Nothing like that. It was one of Franklin's life wishes. That's what the foundation who'd sponsored him calls them instead of last wishes or dying wishes. They like to focus on what's left of someone's life rather than the approaching finality.” She pulled her hand from Liam's chest and curled it into her own. She had a hard time talking about Franklin without welling up.
“Franklin wanted to wear a tux and go to a fancy event before he died. The dinner fell at the perfect time and he came as a guest. Sat at my table. I knew everyone there except him, and I'd grown jaded. It was just another event to me where I presented my father's donation with a lot of fanfare and smiled and looked pretty for the cameras. I made small talk with Dad's cronies and his wannabe-associates.” Same old Tuesday night gala that happened too many times a year. And she'd had a new dress for each one.
“Then along came Franklin for whom everything was new and shiny and sparkly and happy. He was like Cinderella at the ball, seeing glamour in what we'd all grown so blasé about. Seeing him in his wheelchair, with his oxygen tank and his bald head that was such a contrast to his big smile and wide eyes, with his interest in everyone and everything . . . I couldn't
not
want to get to know him. But the others at our table couldn't have been bothered. He was an outsider and, even worse, underprivileged and sick. I was embarrassed for them. But the thing was, if he noticed, he didn't care. He was just happy to be there and in the moment. And that's what got to me. What made me open my eyes. To me, he wasn't a curiosity because of his medical condition, but because of his optimism and acceptance and sheer happiness at doing something I'd started taking for granted and even resenting.”
She sniffed as she remembered how his eyes had widened when the serving staff had brought out dessert. To her it'd been a piece of chocolate cake that would go straight to her hips, so she'd pushed it away. To Franklin, it'd been ambrosia. A bounty so sweet and so precious he'd had to fight himself not to gobble it up in one bite because he didn't want to miss tasting it.
She'd given him her piece and that'd sealed their friendship.
“Franklin had such an amazing outlook on life. And on death. He wasn't afraid of it. He obviously didn't want it, but when it finally came calling, he was ready to embrace it.”
She, however, hadn't been and it still choked her up to remember how he'd patted her hand and smiled as best he could with the little strength he'd had left. “He'd packed a lot of living into those months I knew him, and he taught me what was important in life. Not money, not things, not other people's awe and grudging acceptance because of what you have or what your last name is or who your father is. Even when his family abandoned him to live in the group home and let society pay for his treatment, Franklin wasn't bitter. He chose to focus on the positive.”
“They left him? Sick? Dying?”
She nodded. “But he didn't judge them and he taught me not to.” She exhaled. “It was hard not to.”
“Like when your mom left you.”
“You know about that?”
“There's not much about you that hasn't made the news over the years.”
She was torn between liking the fact that he'd been interested enough to pay attention and remember, and sad that he'd heard her dirty laundry.
He touched her cheek. “Hey, don't let your parents' actions define who you are. You're your own person. Stepping out on your own, right? You don't have to be who they are.”
It was the perfect thing to say. “Thank you.”
“My pleasure.”
Hers, too. One of the things she'd vowed when Franklin had died was to spread his message of acceptance and love and letting go of a bad past.
“Franklin was rich in friends if not family. And they became his family. Everyone loved him because he loved everyone. He accepted them as they were, even those who ignored him. He never had a mean thing to say about anyone and always had a joke or a compliment. Because, as he'd said, everyone he met was part of his journey, and since his journey wasn't going to be a long one, there was no sense focusing on the bad or dwelling on the mean. This was his one chance to experience happiness. For however many months he had left, he was going to enjoy every minute, everyone
,
and everything.”
Franklin had been all about paying it forward, about living the life he'd been given to the fullest, and he'd been her inspiration. Her catalyst for change. Her new world view of how little her life had meant until meeting him.
She swallowed, her throat clogging with the tears she was trying hard not to shed.
Smiles, not tears.
That's how he'd wanted her to remember him.
“He was thrilled when people started bringing him plants as gifts instead of flowers.” She'd never told Franklin it had been her idea because plants lasted longer than flowers. Nor that
she'd
stocked the gift shop with them and had enlisted the staff's help in having random visitors drop them off for Franklin. “We'd research every plant online and he'd decide where he wanted to plant it on the grounds. He wanted to know something would live on after him.”
She lost the battle with a couple of tears then, remembering how solemn he'd been when he'd figured out that the plants would go on after he was gone.
“Hang on.” Liam tilted her chin up. “Hospitals have landscape departments and boards of directors. He would have had to get approval for this, and that would have taken time. Not just anyone can plant whatever they want on hospital grounds.”
She exhaled. “They can if they're backed by a Davenport donation.”
“You used your father's position and money to help Franklin? Gotta love the perks that go with being a Davenport.”
She tensed. People always thought that. Always thought that money made problems disappear. It didn't. There were just different problems. Case in point: her father. And Burton. People wanting what they could get from her, wanting to use her for their own benefit.
That was the beauty of her relationship with Franklin; it had been predicated on her being there for him in spirit and friendship, not for what her money could bring him.
“It allowed me to make Franklin's dream happen. He was allowed to plant whatever he wanted wherever he wanted. When he died, I had plaques made for each tree, shrub, bush, and flower so everyone would know. So he'd never be forgotten.”
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
L
IAM
tried to breathe around the lump in his throat. He was right; she could never be like Rachel. He'd bet that, even before Franklin, Cassidy had had a heart and a soul she wouldn't admit to. It'd probably gone into hiding so it wouldn't be crushed by the shallow people who'd inhabited her world. “What'd your father say?”
“He . . . ah . . .” She nibbled her lip and glanced away.
“He doesn't know.”
“Oh he knows that I had plaques made. He even thinks the sizable donation I made to the hospital came from the corporate charitable-giving account.”
“It didn't?”
She shook her head. “It was from my bank account, not the company coffers. It was important to me that
I
do it, not the corporation, so it could be all about Franklin, not the donation. That's why the plaques don't say Davenport anywhere on them. Dad'll be mad when he finally takes the time to actually
look
at them.”
Her
money. That's why she didn't have any. Not because she'd spent it on fashion shows or parties or exotic locations.
Was it possible that Cassidy
was
the woman for him? That she hadâaside from her fatherâwhat he was looking for?
But there were still differences between them. Big ones. Glaring ones. Million-dollar ones.
Right now, things could be easy, since it was just the two of them, but once ol' Mitch got back into the pictureâand he would; the press would have a field day if this estrangement continuedâthe game would change.
He tilted her chin and the sheen of tears tugged at his heart. He didn't want it to change. He wanted her just like this. “So how do we do this, Cassidy? You a Davenport; me . . . not. I'm not from your world. Where do we go from here?”
The change that came over her shocked him. One minute she was all pliant and melting into his side, her arm slung peacefully across his abdomen, her fingers lightly stroking his side, and the next . . . She was scrambling off of him and not meeting his eyes.
“I'm thinking a shower and then some breakfast.” She got off the far side of the bed. “I'll see you in twenty.”
She practically ran out of his roomâin all her naked glory. But all he could see was that she was leaving him.
What'd he say? All he'd asked was what was next for them and she'd shot out of his bed as if she couldn't get away from him fast enough.
Shit. Had the disparities in their lives sunk in just now? Was that what this was? She realized that he would never be able to give her what men like Burton and her father could, so tonight became a one-shot deal?
Had he completely misjudged the situation
again
?