Home > Bedding The Secret Heiress (The Hightower Affairs #2)(24)

Bedding The Secret Heiress (The Hightower Affairs #2)(24)
Author: Emilie Rose

The postsolo shirt-cutting ceremony was the highlight of her students’ lessons. Hers, too. Most of the shirttails hanging on the hangar walls of Falcon’s office had come from her students.

“Cool. Can’t wait.” The seventeen-year-old almost skipped away, leaving Lauren with a memory of having once been that carefree back in the day when she didn’t know about debts or her other family—one of which had decided to curse her with a visit.

Taking a bracing breath she pivoted to face her unwelcome relative. Gage stood beside the open cabin door. Gage. Not Trent. Her muscles seized. She couldn’t breathe, couldn’t move.

Dark sunglasses shielded his eyes, but that thick, glossy dark hair, perfectly shaped body and his purposeful stride were unmistakable. He wore his leather motorcycle jacket unzipped over a black T-shirt, jeans and his black biker boots. Her pulse got as wild as a Mardi Gras parade.

Why was he here? Dressed like that. And where was his obnoxious sidekick? She glanced past Gage to the plane but only saw one of HAMC’s pilots circling the aircraft doing his postflight. No sneering half brother waited in the plane’s open door.

Her gaze ricocheted back to Gage only thirty feet away and closing, his heels hitting the concrete with a brisk pace. Lauren’s heart hammered. Her mouth dried and her hands moistened. With colossal effort, she rallied her anger. His lack of trust had cut deeply. She’d given him her heart, and he’d given her the boot.

Hugging the clipboard to her chest, she wished she could come up with a snarky insult. But her brain refused to cough up any witty words, so she remained mute.

Gage stopped a yard away. “Hello, Lauren.”

His deep voice tugged at something buried inside her. She nodded. “Gage.”

“We need to talk.”

Right. So he could insult her some more? Tear another chunk out of her heart and crush it beneath his shoes? Nope. “I’m working.”

“Tell me a convenient time. I’ll come back.”

Wow. That didn’t sound like him. He was usually pushier. “Never sounds pretty good.”

He took a quick breath and ripped off his sunglasses. The pain and regret in his dark eyes made her gasp. “I’m prepared to camp on your ramp until you and I have talked.”

“Go home, Gage. You’re wasting your time.” She had to get away from him. The pollen was burning her eyes again. She turned toward the office.

“I have something for you.”

She stopped. He held out an envelope. She kept her arms folded over the clipboard.

“It’s from Trent.”

Probably her final paycheck. She wouldn’t have been surprised if her butt-headed half brother had refused to pay her, since she’d left HAMC without working out her two weeks’ notice. Since landing in Daytona she’d tried to work up a little guilt over that, but she’d failed. Trent had wanted her gone, and in her opinion, she’d done him a favor by granting his wish.

But hey, if he wanted to throw money at her to ease his conscience for being a prick, she’d take it and donate it to the local Bikers Against Drunk Driving fund. She plucked the envelope from Gage’s fingers, tore it open and pulled out the check inside.

A cashier’s check for two hundred thousand dollars shook in her hand. Her check. Uncashed. She shoved the paper back where it had come from and thrust the envelope back at Gage. “This isn’t mine.”

He made no move to take it. “Trent says it is. Either you use the money to pay off your new loan, or I’m to shred the check in front of you. Either way, Trent says to tell you he’s not cashing it.”

“He can’t do that.”

A smile twitched one corner of that delectable mouth. “Trent can do pretty much whatever he wants. Most of your Hightower siblings can. Get used to it. You’re one of them now.”

“I am not. So you’re acting as his delivery boy now?”

Gage’s lips compressed. “I offered to return your money, since I was coming down anyway.”

She scanned his clothing. “Bike week’s in March.”

“I’m not here for bike week. I’m here for you.”

Her lungs did that lockdown thing they usually did when he touched her—only this time he stood a yard away. “Too bad. Because I’m not available to you.”

She did an about-face and hustled toward the hangar. His footsteps followed, deliberate and firm. “Lauren, I made a mistake.”

“That’s not news,” she called over her shoulder without slowing.

“I’m here to help you save Falcon Air. And if I can’t come up with a revitalization strategy, then I’ll become a silent investor.”

Not knowing what to make of his declaration or whether to trust it, she slowly turned. “Thanks, but I no longer need your help. Dad’s life insurance paid up. Falcon is back in the black. Besides, you should know by now that I’m no one’s charity case. I pay my way.”

“Then maybe you’ll help me.”

What was he trying to pull? “With what?”

“I’m looking for property in the area, and I don’t know my way around.”

“A vacation home?”

“Two properties. The first is commercial. I’m relocating Faulkner Consulting to Daytona. The second is residential. I put my house on the market.”

Her mouth dried. Whatever game he was playing, she didn’t have time for it. She resumed her path to the office. He kept pace beside her. She glanced at him. “What’s the matter? Knoxville’s cold weather getting to you?”

A smile eased over his lips and the gold flecks in his eyes glittered with warmth. “No. I fell for a Harley-riding pilot chick. She lives here.”

Lauren tripped over the threshold and would have fallen flat on her face if Gage hadn’t caught her arm and hauled her back onto her feet. He swung her around.

“I’ve been miserable since she left me. Can’t eat. Can’t sleep. Can’t concentrate. Hell, I can’t even go home. I’ve been living on an airplane. My only option if I don’t want to go crazy is to chase her until she lets me catch her.”

Panic made her heart pound, and a surreal floating sensation took over. Crashing into reality was going to hurt. Bad. “If you think that’s funny, then you have a sick sense of humor, Faulkner.”

“There’s nothing funny about me being blind and not seeing what was right in front of my face. There’s nothing funny about hurting the woman I’d fallen in love with because I was too scared to face the truth.”

Dizziness swamped her. She clung to the door frame. “You fight dirty.”

His smile widened and his eyes glinted with mischief. “You haven’t seen anything yet. Give me a chance to regain your trust, Lauren. Let me prove I love you.”

She identified the weightless sensation as hope and tried without success to snuff it. “How are you going to do that?”

“I’m not sure, but if I keep trying new strategies for the next fifty years or so, I’m sure I’ll hit on a winning combination sooner or later.”

He cupped her cheek, stealing her breath and making her eyes sting. “I love you, Lauren. I love that you’re genuine and honest. You don’t pretend to be someone you’re not. I love that you appreciate the simple things instead of going for the bling. I love that you have enough pride to insist on earning what you have, and that you’re stubborn enough to stick to your guns when you know you’re right.

“But most of all, I love that you’re generous enough to share your gifts with me.”

Her cheeks burned. She swiped at them and found tears. Pilots don’t cry, damn it.

Gage caught her soggy hand in his. “We haven’t known each other long. We’ll take it as slow as you want. I want to learn everything there is to know about you. But I already know the important part. That I love you and want to spend the rest of my life with you. Promise me you’ll give me that chance.”

Emotion welled up in Lauren’s throat. She wanted to laugh. She wanted to cry. But more than anything she wanted to smack Gage for putting her through missing him.

She yanked her hand free and slugged him in the upper arm, not hard, but enough to show her frustration. “If you’d figured this out sooner, I wouldn’t have had to live through almost a month of hell.”

Gage’s laugh boomed out, echoing off the metal hangar walls. “I hope our kids are as spunky as you.”

“Kids? Getting ahead of yourself, aren’t you?” Then the smile she couldn’t contain burst free. “How many?”

“A hangar full.”

He yanked her into his arms and kissed her hard once and then his mouth opened over hers. Lauren opened to him, opened her mouth, opened her heart, opened her life. He tasted so good, so familiar, so welcome, and she couldn’t get enough of him.

Her clipboard clattered onto the concrete floor. She wound her arms around Gage’s neck, tangled her fingers in his hair and poured her love into the kiss.

When dizziness threatened to make her faint in his arms, she lifted her head and cupped his cheeks. “I love you, too. And nothing would make me happier than spending the rest of my life with you.”

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