He grinned. Sassy as ever. He took her hand, armed with this information, and backed her against the brick wall. “You love me?”
With a smile curling at the edges of her lips, she gazed up at him. “Yes. These past two weeks, I’ve been doing a lot of thinking about what I want in my life. And somehow, you ended up at the top of that list.”
He lowered his head. “It’s because your subconscious finds my subconscious irresistible,” he said huskily.
“I have no clue what that means,” she murmured against his mouth.
“For starters, it means I’m going to kiss you.”
And that’s exactly what he did.
They kissed for a long time in that alley, the rest of the world bustling by on the sidewalks and streets just a few feet away, but for that moment, pressed against the bricks, it was just the two of them. Nothing else mattered.
Afterward, they walked the five blocks to Brooke’s apartment, where Cade told her about his conversation with Noah.
“Do you want to see him again?” she asked, putting a Band-Aid on his split knuckle.
“No.” Cade sighed, and then nodded. “Yes.”
Later, they lay wrapped around each other on the couch, and Brooke told him about her trip to Charlotte and her subsequent discussion with Ian.
“Afterward, when I was celebrating with Ford, I kept thinking that you should’ve been there, too.” She shifted, sitting up halfway so that she could look him in the eyes. “I missed you these past two weeks. So much.”
It was the heartfelt way she said it, the way her voice turned throaty with emotion. As much as he loved the quips and the inside jokes, it was this moment, when her walls were down and he saw her softer, vulnerable side, when she just melted him.
He reached up and touched her cheek. “Let’s not do that again.”
“Be apart for two weeks?” She slid her arms around his neck. “I agree.”
Well, yes. But he was talking about something more than that. “No, I mean what got us to that point.” He held her gaze. “No more tough-girl or tough-guy routines. At least, not between us. I want to be in the inner circle, Brooke.” He realized what that meant—that he’d be letting her in, too.
And as he lay there with her, he knew there was nothing he’d ever wanted more.
In answer, she took his hand and placed it on her chest. Right over her heart. “You’re in, Cade Morgan. Only you.”
Yep, that pretty much made it official.
When it came to Brooke Parker of Sterling Restaurants, he was a goner.
Thirty-five
Three weeks later
“SO, UNFORTUNATELY, THE concession stand did not have beef tenderloin, shrimp kabobs, or that fancy Sterling Restaurants dessert cart. But, fret not, because I was able to snag you . . .” With a flourish, Cade pulled two things out from behind his back. “This lukewarm, rubbery hot dog and this Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup—the twin pack. How’s that for fine dining?”
“Yes on the twin pack,” Brooke said. “No on the bun-wrapped trip to the emergency room to get my stomach pumped.”
“My, somebody’s quite a hot-dog snob.”
“An occupational hazard when one is part owner of a premiere restaurant company with a rapidly expanding and increasingly lucrative sports and entertainment division,” Brooke said, with a proud flick of her ponytail.
“Still subtly slipping that in there, I see.”
“You betcha.” She was in a particularly good mood tonight, seeing how, just this afternoon, she’d hired the in-house lawyer who would be taking on some of her responsibilities. He wouldn’t start at Sterling for another two weeks, but change was on the horizon. She’d left work at six o’clock on a Friday night—possibly with a few heart palpitations on her way out the door, but she’d persevered—and now she had the whole night free to spend with Cade.
Or, rather, with Cade plus five hundred rabid high school football fans dressed in maroon and gold.
Brooke’s eyes scanned the stands. “Wow. I didn’t expect it to be so packed.”
“Zach said that the team they’re playing tonight is his school’s rival,” Cade said.
They spotted Noah and his wife, Tracy, about halfway up the bleachers. Cade linked his fingers through Brooke’s and headed in that direction.
Over the last three weeks, Cade and his father had made progress in getting to know one another. The initial step had been the most difficult and awkward, with neither man knowing exactly how to make the first move. Fortunately, Zach had intervened once again, suggesting the three of them meet for dinner at a restaurant not far from the Garritys’ house—and then had remembered at the last minute that he had a “late practice,” and had suggested that Cade and Noah carry on without him.
“I like this kid’s style,” Brooke had said, chuckling, when Cade had told her about the obvious setup.
When Cade had finished grumbling, he’d admitted the dinner wasn’t “too terrible.”
“In some senses, it was easier not having Zach there,” he’d said. “We just talked about him the whole time.” He’d paused. “And about how Noah’s treatment is going.”
The bitter part of this bittersweet reunion, of course, was that it was finite in duration. Although Noah was currently asymptomatic, the doctors had explained that the radiation and steroid treatment was only buying them time and that, in the not-too-distant future, the tumor on Noah’s brain stem would grow and begin to impair his motor skills and respiratory functions. Nevertheless, Noah had laid down the law: people weren’t going to spend every moment dwelling on his cancer—they were going to enjoy the time they had left together, for as long as they could.