were expecting him for lunch. Instead, he drove to a job site fifty miles north in Garden. The subcontractors were surprised to see him. The framers were even more surprised when he pulled on his work gloves and picked up a nail gun. He shot the hell out of the subfloor and wall studs. It had been several years since he and Louie had taken part in the physical part of construction. Most of his time was spent driving or talking with contractors and suppliers. If he wasn’t driving or talking or doing both at the same time, he was creating new business. But after the day he’d had, it felt good to shoot something again.

By the time he got home, it was past dark outside. He tossed his leather jacket and car keys on the marble countertop in the kitchen, then reached for a Bud. He could hear the television in another part of the house but wasn’t concerned. His entire family had a key to his front door, and Sophie often came over to watch a movie on his big screen. His boots echoed on the hardwood floors as he made his way to the great room.

The television blinked off and Louie rose from the beige leather sofa. He tossed the remote on the pine coffee table. “You should call Mother and tell her you’re not dead in a ditch.”

Nick took a pull off his beer and eyed his older brother. “I will.”

“Both of us have been trying to reach you since noon. Did you forget about lunch?”

“No. I decided to drive to Garden.”

“Why didn’t you call?”

He hadn’t wanted to hear the disappointment in his mother’s voice or listen to the guilt she’d heap on his head. “I got busy.”

“Why didn’t you answer your cell phone?”

“I didn’t feel like it.”

“Why, Nick?”

“I told you why. What in the hell is this all about? You haven’t been waiting for me because I didn’t answer my cell phone.”

Louie’s brows lowered over his brown eyes. “Where were you?”

“I told you.”

“Tell me again.”

Nick’s scowl matched his brother’s. “Go to hell.”

“It’s true then. What everyone is saying about you is true. You were screwing Delaney Shaw on the counter in her salon. Right there on Main Street for anybody walking by to see.”

A slow smile started at the corners of Nick’s mouth, then he burst into laughter.

Louie didn’t see the humor. “God damn you,” he swore. “When Mom told me she’d heard you were kissing Delaney at Hennesey’s, I told her not to believe it. I told her you weren’t that stupid. Jesus, Joseph, and Mary, you are!”

“No I’m not. I didn’t screw Delaney in her shop or anyplace else.”

Louie sniffed and scratched the side of his neck. “Maybe not yet, but you will. You’re going to go right ahead and lose it all.”

Nick raised the beer and took a drink. “Now we get to the real reason you’re here. Money. You don’t care who I screw, as long as you get to develop Silver Creek.”

“Sure. Why not? I’ll admit it. I want it so bad the thought of it keeps me up at night just thinking of all those million-dollar houses and ways to spend all that money I stand to make. But even if that piece of property wasn’t worth a pile of shit, I’d still be here because I’m your brother. Because I slithered through bushes with you. Spied with you, flattened the tires on her bike with you, and I thought we did it because she got a nice new Schwinn. She got what you should have had. And because I thought you hated her. But you didn’t. You flattened those tires because you wanted to walk her home. You said you walked with her so Henry would see you and get all pissed off, but that was a lie. You were infatuated with her. You’ve had a hard on for Delaney Shaw since you could get it up, and everyone knows you think with your dick.”

Slowly Nick set his bottle on the stone mantel of the fireplace. “I think you better leave before I kick your ass all the way out of my house.”

Louie crossed his arms over his barrel chest, not looking like he planned to leave any time soon. “That’s another thing. This house. Look at it.”

“Yeah?”

“Look around. You live in a thirty-eight-hundred-square-foot house. You’ve got four bedrooms and five bathrooms. You’re one guy Nick. One.”

Nick glance about at the fireplace made of smooth river rock, the high ceiling with exposed beams, and the bank of cathedral windows that looked out at the lake. “What’s your point?”

“Who’d you build it for? You say you’re never going to get married. So why do you need such a big house?”

“You tell me. You seem to know all the answers.”

Louie rocked back on his heel. “You wanted to show Henry.”

It was close enough to the truth that Nick didn’t deny it. “That’s old news.”

“You wanted to show her, too.”

“You’re full of shit,” he scoffed. “She didn’t even live here.”

“She does now, and you’re going to screw up your life for a piece of high-price ass.”

Nick pointed toward the front door. “Get out before you really piss me off.”

Louie walked forward, stopping within an arm’s distance. “You going to throw me out, little brother?”

“You going to make me?” Nick was taller, but Louie was built like a bull. Not only did Nick not want to fight his own brother, he knew Louie hit like a bulldozer. He was relieved when Louie shook his head and walked past.

“If you’re going to have sex with her, do it now.” Louie sighed as he picked up his jacket from the back of a leather arm chair. “Do it before you get other contractors involved in Silver Creek. Do it before you contact more lenders, and do it before I waste any more of my time.”

“You’re worrying about nothing,” Nick assured his brother as they walked to the front door. “I’m not going anywhere near Delaney, and I have a feeling she’ll be avoiding me for a long time.”

“Then what happened in her salon today?”

Nick opened the heavy wood door. “Nothing. I changed her locks for her. That’s it.”

“I doubt it.” Louie shrugged into his jacket and headed down the steps. “Call Mom,” he said. “The sooner you get it over with, the better.”

Nick shook his head and walked back into the great room. He wasn’t in the mood to call his mother. He didn’t want to hear her rant about Delaney. He snagged his beer off the mantle, then headed through a pair of French doors to the deck. Steam rose from the octagonal hot tub, and he flipped the switch to start the jets. His right shoulder ached from the work he’d done in Garden. He stripped naked and goose bumps broke over his arms and chest before he stepped into the bubbling hot water. The windows from the house threw oblong patches of light but didn’t reach his corner of the deck.

Louie had been right about some things and dead wrong about others. Nick had originally built his house as an “up yours” gesture toward Henry. But before construction had been halfway completed, he’d lost interest in proving anything to anybody. As far as Delaney, he hadn’t really expected to see her again. His brother was way off the mark with that theory. He’d been close to the truth with the bicycle conspiracy theory of his though. Originally Nick hadn’t planned to push the bike all the way to Henry’s, but then he’d looked at her face when she’d seen her tires. She’d looked as if she were about to burst into tears and he’d felt so guilty, he’d helped her. He’d even given her a Tootsie Roll, and she’d given him a stick of gum. Peppermint.

Louie had been right about the other-although he’d call it a strong interest rather than infatuation. But contrary to his brother’s opinion, he wasn’t going to have sex with her. He might not be able to control his body’s reaction, but he sure as hell could control what he did, or didn’t do, about it.

People said a lot of things about him. Some were true. Some weren’t. For the most part he didn’t care. But Delaney would. She would be hurt by the gossip.

Nick took a drink of his beer and looked at the reflection of stars in the black water of the lake.

He didn’t want her hurt. He didn’t want to hurt her. It was time he stayed away from Delaney Shaw.

The telephone inside the house rang, and he wondered how long it would take his mother to give up on the phone calls. He knew she’d want to talk about the gossip like she had some sort of maternal squatter’s rights on his life. Louie didn’t seem to mind the constant prying as much as Nick. Louie called it love. Maybe it was, but when Nick had been a boy, she’d sometimes held him so tight he couldn’t breathe.

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