He took another shot, this time missing and barely hitting the rim. “My stepfather was the person who talked me into joining the team. He thought it would be good for me.”
“Over-privileged fuck,” I echoed, ignoring the wiggle of jealousy that trickled through me. “God, you put it so eloquently.”
“It’s the truth, beautiful. Greg intervened and got me into this.” Staring up at the basketball goal again, his features wrinkled into a frown.
I was dying to know what he was thinking, but I didn’t want to probe—for both our sake. Digging too deep could be catastrophic, a heartache I wasn’t willing to let consume me tonight. Eventually though, his shoulders relaxed. His movements were slow, predatory, as he crossed the small court to stand in front of me.
Suddenly the racing of my pulse had nothing to do with melancholy thoughts of the past.
It had everything to do with the man in front of me with his hands on my face, his body a mere few inches from mine. “You didn’t come out here to talk about basketball.”
“No,” I admitted, “but I don’t mind.”
“I do.” He gathered me against him. “Call in tomorrow.”
I moaned in frustration. “She’d kill me.”
Releasing a curse, he gripped my ass and lifted me up. Need spiraled through me, and I refused to deny it. I denied so much already, that this—this was one thing I’d admit. Digging my fingers into his light brown hair, I tugged the damp locks back until we were eye to eye. When I tried to speak, he quieted me with his teeth, suckling on my lower lip until my core pulsed.
“I want you, Lizzie,” he growled, carrying me through the door and into the house.
“Again?”
I gasped when his shorts came down around his legs and the head of his erection settled between my folds. Supporting me against the closest wall we came in contact with, his fingers dug into the soft flesh of my hips as he buried himself inside my body. “Yes. Again.”
My pussy contracted around his cock, driving him to thrust harder. One of his hands moved from my hip to my hair, tangling in the straight platinum strands as my body arched and bucked against his.
He groaned. “I can’t get enough of you.”
“Don’t,” I cried out, clawing my fingernails over his muscled back. “Don’t.”
His mouth covered mine, and his tongue invaded my mouth, demanding more, refusing to let me back down. I accepted his challenge, molding my body to his as the orgasm built. A moment after I came, spiraling into oblivion, I felt his body go taut, and then he pulled out of me quickly, his hardness against my thigh. Before he could finish on my body, I wiggled out of his hold.
He watched me, his blue eyes darkening as I fell to my knees, and rounded my lips around him, pulling and sucking, wanting everything from him. Then, with a guttural roar that seemed to echo through the house, he let go.
I tasted him. Tasted him and myself, and I was on fire.
I shook my head fiercely, my hair a blanket between my face and his body, and once I could breathe enough to speak, I heard myself moan, “No, Oliver, don’t ever get enough.”
*
For the second night in a row, when I dragged my tired body into my apartment after work, we had company. Whoever was here reclined on the couch, so I couldn’t see his face, but Pen was sitting on the floor in front of him, running her tongue worriedly over the tiny gap between her front teeth. One thing for sure, it wasn’t Oliver, because the second my best friend’s blue-gray eyes lifted to me, she stopped talking, and her posture slumped.
“Finally! I’ve been texting you all night, Gem.”
“I had ... a few things to take care of,” I said tentatively, thinking that Linc had decided to move his trip back to L.A. up a few weeks. After the third degree he’d given me over the weekend, I wouldn’t be surprised. Peeking over the couch, shock snapped me upright when I saw another familiar face—a man I knew could probably hack into every bit of technology in my apartment in a matter of minutes.
“Hello, August,” I greeted Pen’s longtime associate and friend.
Sitting up, he turned and dipped his head in acknowledgement. “Gemma.”
Keeping my stance behind the couch, I rested my weight against the leather and dug my hands into the cushion. After what felt like an eternity, I exhaled, exasperated. “You’re both looking at me like you want to say something, so spit it out.”
I was sore from last night and in a mood from spending another day transcribing recordings for Margaret. I just wanted a bath.
A bath and my boss’ son—the reason behind my exhaustion and aching muscles.
Pen looked down for several seconds, and when she tilted her chin back, all thoughts of Oliver took a backseat. Her expression was conflicted. Conflicted and hesitant. Waiting for her to speak, a ball of pressure started to form in my ribcage. She was about to say something that would rip me apart—that much was obvious.
When my father died, Mom and I were living in New York. After school, she had met me on the sidewalk like usual, walking all twelve blocks back to our apartment in silence, her beautiful face worked into a series of worried lines. She hadn’t told me about my dad until after we got home, but I’d never forgotten the look she wore all the way there.
It was just like the one marring my best friend’s face at this very moment.
Pen’s chest heaved as she got off the floor. Reaching over to the ottoman, she picked up a packet of papers I hadn’t noticed before and held them close to her chest.
“Sit down,” she suggested, none of the usual gaiety present in her voice.
Numbly, I walked completely into the living room and lowered my butt to the edge of the armchair. “You figured out the court documents?” I whispered, but she shook her head.
“Your mom—she didn’t have any real reason to suspect anything. You were her kid, and she thought you’d been wronged; she was just looking out for you.”
A sob hitched in my chest, and I didn’t know if I was more relieved or furious. If this was over, I could go back to Vegas. But if this was over, that meant my caller had been wrong. That I’d dredged up old doubts for no reason.
That I would be saying goodbye to Oliver.
“So we came here for nothing?” I was unable to keep the hysterical edge from my voice.
Once again, Pen moved her head from side to side. Her hand was trembling so violently, the papers fluttered together when she handed them to me. Even though I looked down, studying the last will and testament of Gregory Robert Emerson—my father—she continued speaking.
“I wanted to make certain before I told you anything, but that guy who called you was on to something.” Pacing the living room, she dragged her fingers through her dark hair. “Are you reading it?”
Gripping the pages with both hands, I cleared my throat. “This is the exact same document I looked at in Scott’s office the day I came to L.A. to meet Margaret. Pen, I—”
“Flip to the other stack,” August spoke up, his deep brown eyes pitying. Taking his advice, I turned to the second set of stapled documents.
It was almost identical to the first—there was my father’s name again—but instead of Margaret Manning-Emerson peppering every page, another name glared up at me.
Gemma Angelina Emerson.
Gemma Angelina Emerson.
My name.
My head was spinning when Pen spoke up, but her words broke through the barrier. “August had a friend compare the signatures to your parent’s marriage certificate and your birth certificate. It looked legitimate because Michael Scott was your dad’s attorney and the witnesses’ names were there, but even their signatures didn’t match up to the original. The one with your name.”