Baiting the Maid of Honor (Wedding Dare #2)(48)



He crossed to his front door and opened it before she could do so with her own keys. “Pixie.”

Eyebrow quirked, she opened her mouth to speak, but stopped. In a flash, she was plastered against him, head tipped back to receive his kiss. Their mouths moved hungrily against each other as Reed dragged her into the apartment and pushed her back up against the door. Those thighs opened up to receive him like a f*cking dream and he grew so painfully rock-hard he had to release her mouth to drag in a ragged breath. They were always like this, hot and ready, but today he sensed something else behind her need, so he forced himself to refrain from kissing her. A nearly impossible feat.

Sweet. She’s so sweet.

“If I didn’t know better, I’d think you’re trying to distract me,” he rasped into her hair.

With a wicked glint in her eye, she worked her hips in slow a circle. “How am I doing, sugar?”

Reed groaned. “We’re going to talk.”

“There will be time for talk.” She sucked at his neck. “I want to show you the new move I learned on Saturday at my pole dancing class.”

“Christ, Julie.” Oh yeah, she knew all of his buttons and how to push them. Too bad he was stubborn as hell and today was the day she would agree to live with him, come hell or high water. He could face just about anything to get that outcome. Even resisting a lap dance from the sexiest woman on the planet. His woman. With a set jaw, he put a foot of distance between them. “Your things are here now. With mine.”

“I gathered.” He could hear her gulp. “You’re supposed to catch burglars, not act like one.”

Ignoring her barb, Reed tipped her chin up. “For months, I’ve been dropping hints, Pixie. Months. I bought new sheets, a bigger bed. I stocked the kitchen with all your salad nonsense. I had your name added to the lease.”

Her blue eyes shot wide. “You did?”

“It’s taped to the refrigerator.” He gathered himself with a calming breath. “This is where you belong and you refuse to settle in. What do I have to do?” When her chin wobbled a little, Reed wanted to howl. Pain of any kind on her face felt like an arrow right to his heart. Unacceptable. He hadn’t seen her upset in months. What had he done? “Julie, this is one of those times where you should be talking, but you aren’t. Words, please.”

“I knew you were dropping hints, but I didn’t know if you meant them. I thought maybe you were just doing what you thought I wanted. What I needed.” She squared her shoulders. “I’m the organizer. The planner. I don’t want to jeopardize what we have by trying to push or fix or organize you. And I don’t want to. You’re perfect just the way you are. We’re perfect.”

His heart got stuck in his throat. “Julie—”

“I’m so happy with you,” she blurted with her eyes closed. “It actually scares me when I remember you almost didn’t come to the wedding.”

Reed couldn’t take it anymore; he needed to get closer. Now. He wrapped his arms around her and lifted her into a fierce hug. Ah hell, she was trembling. “I’d have found you one way or another. And I’m keeping you one way or another.” He laid kisses along her hairline. “You’re right. I don’t need fixing. Neither do you. But we sure as hell would need fixing without each other.”

She leaned into his mouth. “Things can stay the way they are.”

“No. No, they can’t. My wife isn’t living in a separate house. I mean what I say.”

Very slowly, Julie pulled back to look at him. “Wife?”

“Yes. Yes, wife. I asked your father yesterday.” It took him a moment to find the words. How could he think when she was looking at him like that? Hopeful, surprised. Maybe even a little impressed. “I want to build a life with you, Julie Piper. You made me need this life, now you’re going to live it with me. We’re happy. We’re going to keep on being happy. Do you understand? I’ve had you and now I can’t go without.”

He reached into his pants pocket and took out the ring. A pale-pink diamond. He’d seen it in the store and thought of the dress she’d been wearing that first night out on the patio. The night she’d sneaked into his room, knowing full well who was on the other side of that door. He hadn’t even looked at any of the other ring choices. It had been made for him to give to her.

“Live with me. Marry me. All of it, please.” He worked to steady his voice. “Your things are already here, anyway, and I’m keeping them.”

She laughed through her tears, the sound so beautiful it colored the air around them. “Yes. I’ll be your wife. Of course I will.”

Relief moved through him so powerfully, he almost went to his knees. “Okay, then. Okay.” He smiled. A huge one he couldn’t contain. To cover his rare show of emotion, he threw her over his shoulder and strode toward the bedroom. “One more thing. You’re not planning the wedding.”

“Aw, come on, Reed…”

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