âSTEVE, TELL ME YOUâRE JOKING.â
My grandfatherâs lawyer shook his head. âIâm afraid not.â
âWhy didnât you tell me this when we went through his will and the details about Barlowe Capital?â
âIt was part of his expressed wishes that I wait six weeks after his death.â
I dragged in a calming breath. âAnd this is why when we had the initial reading, you said that he did not want a funeral service.â
Steve nodded. âCorrect.â
My mom had been irritated by Grandpaâs last requests, to put it mildly. Sheâd wanted to put her father to rest, but heâd specifically said no funeral service. Instead, heâd asked to be cremated and his ashes kept in an urn that heâd bought himself. The urn was currently at Mom and Dadâs house outside the city.
I guess Iâd be paying a visit to my parents this week.
âWhy couldnât he do anything normally?â I pinched the bridge of my nose. Even dead, the man was still pulling strings.
âGabriel always had his reasons.â
His fucking reasons.
Those reasons were sending me to Montanaâagainâto scatter his ashes at the cabin. A cabin that Iâd decided to sell. It would be on the market already if not for the clubâs stipulation that a property not change ownership more than once per six months. They didnât want anyone to a property, not that those places were exactly fixer-uppers.
Since the cabin had just become legally mine, I was stuck with it for a while.
It had been nearly a month since my visit to Montana. Twenty-eight days to be exact.
I knew because that was how many voicemail messages and corresponding emails Iâd received from the irritatingly beautiful Kerrigan Hale.
âMy parents are not going to be happy about this,â I told Steve.
âIâve already discussed it with them. Youâre only taking part of the ashes. Gabriel asked that the other half be taken to his villa in Italy. While you go to Montanaââ
âMom and Dad are heading to Europe.â
Steve nodded. âExactly.â
. Why couldnât I have gotten the Italian vacation? The last place I wanted to go was Montana.
Of course, I could simply refuse this trip. It wasnât like Grandpa would know.
But would I?
. The bastard had me trapped. Even though I was furious with him, even after all heâd done to me, he must have known that I wouldnât ignore his final requests.
Sentimental as it was, once upon a time, Iâd loved the man.
âIs this it? Or can I expect another surprise visit with another stipulation?â
Steve closed his leather padfolio. âSee you soon, Pierce.â
. So there was more. âYou could save yourself a trip. Tell me now.â
âThat wasnât what Gabriel wanted.â
And always got what he wanted, didnât he? No matter how much that meant fucking up my life.
âThanks, Steve.â I stood from my desk and shook his hand before escorting him to the door.
Nellie emerged from her office next door, smiling at Steve as he walked to the elevators. When he disappeared around the corner, she followed me into my office. âWhat was that about?â
I sighed and walked to the floor-to-ceiling windows of my corner office, taking in downtown Denver. âI am headed back to Montana.â
âYou are? When?â
âSoon.â I gave her the quick recap of my meeting with Steve. âWhatâs my schedule look like this month?â
âActually, this week isnât bad. But the rest of the month is already packed.â
. That meant if I was going to fit in this trip, Iâd be going immediately. Before Kerriganâs thirty-day notice expired.
Sheâd made no indication that she would be paying and though she still had two days left, I doubted it would make a difference.
âLetâs just . . . get this over with,â I said, turning to face Nellie. âBlock out the rest of my week if you can. Shove whatever canât wait to Friday.â
âAll right. Would you like me to call your pilot and get the flight arranged?â
âNo, Iâll drive.â I hadnât been on my airplane since my grandfatherâs had crashed, killing him and his passengers. Though it would be faster, I couldnât bring myself to fly. Iâd stick to driving for now.
âAll right. Jasmine called. Again.â
Sheâd tried me too. Twice. âIâll call her later.â
Nellie arched her eyebrows. âWill you?â
âYouâre running out of time.â
I waved it off. âI have time.â
âPierceââ
âI need to return a few emails, then Iâll go pack.â The benefit of living in the same building where I worked was a short commute. âWould you mind making me a reservation at the Calamity motel?â
âCalamity? I thought you were going to the cabin.â
âNot yet,â I grumbled. There was a stop to make first. âWould you also call Ms. Hale and request a meeting, first thing tomorrow morning?â
Nellie opened her mouth but closed it before she spoke.
âWhat?â
âNothing.â And before I could convince her to tell me otherwise, she spun on her heels, her sleek white-blond ponytail practically whipping through the air as she scurried out of my office.
I turned to the windows again, taking in the city. The sunâs rays bounced and glinted off the neighboring buildings in LoDo. Mine was one of the newest in this area of downtown. Iâd wanted the best and though it wasnât in the hub of the business district like my grandfatherâs building had been, I preferred being close to the cityâs well-known restaurants, art galleries and boutique shops.
My company used seven of the twenty floors of the building. The lower levels were residential apartments, all top-of-the-line and many rented by my employees, including Nellie.
The building had an on-site gym and pool. There was a parking garage for residents and employees. Security was tight and the guards stationed at the entrance were paid well to ensure that no one unwelcome was allowed entry.
It was prime real estate, especially with the Front Range in the distance. The rugged mountains cut a jagged line across the horizon. Above them, the blue sky was clear and cloudless.
Why hadnât Grandpa wanted his ashes scattered here? A quick trip to the Front Range and Iâd be done. Instead, I would make the long journey to Montana and, per Grandpaâs wishes, invite .
I groaned and returned to my desk. Like she knew she was on my mind, her name was at the top of my unread emails. Todayâs note read exactly like its predecessors.
DIDÂ she send the same email to annoy me? Because it was working. Every day, like clockwork, Iâd receive an email requesting a conversation. The note would put a slight damper on my morning, probably because I ignored it and ignoring clientsâeven those Iâd inherited from my grandfatherâwasnât my style. Still, I ignored her, deleted the email and went about my day.
Then, the moment I had a break in my afternoon schedule, Iâd get a phone call. It was like Kerrigan had direct access to my calendar and knew when I had ten minutes free.
I hadnât answered a single one of her calls. Iâd let them ring through to voicemail. But the moment her message was saved, Iâd replay it. The messages, like the emails, were always the same.
THE WAYÂ she tried to suppress her annoyance at my last name always made me chuckle.
Over the past twenty-eight days, hearing her voice had become a part of my routine, yet I hadnât once entertained the idea of returning her calls.
I didnât trust myself with Kerrigan. That was the problem.
The last time Iâd seen her, Iâd kissed her. And what a fucking kiss it had been. Probably the best of my life. As much as I wanted to blame it on the bourbon, the real problem was chemistry. My attraction to Kerrigan ran to the marrow, proving what Iâd suspected the day weâd met.
Kerrigan Hale was a dangerous woman.
Iâd suffered enough at the hands of another dangerous woman.
So I kept my distance. I ignored the calls and emails because nothing had changed.
If Kerrigan didnât pay her loan, the assets totaling the amount due would become the newest additions to Grays Peak Investments. Iâd assign them to one of the junior members of my team, push for a quick sale and do my best to recoup whatever loss I incurred.
In the past month, Iâd worked diligently to bring Barlowe Capital under the Grays Peak umbrella. It had been no small feat, but we were managing. Luckily, most of the Barlowe team had been willing to come to work for me.
Besides the cabin, Grandpaâs properties and his cash accounts had gone to my mother.
Mom, being his only child, had never struggled for money. My grandmother had been wealthy in her own right. She and Grandpa hadnât been married long, and when sheâd passed, Mom had inherited her estate. Dad had never hurt for money either, which had lessened the blow that Grandpa had bequeathed me Barlowe Capital.
Mom and Dad werenât equipped to run it anyway.
I came from a long line of successful businessmen and women whoâd ensured my billionaire status would never be in jeopardy. But living off someone elseâs fortune had never been my style, and Iâd started Grays Peak to build my own name.
Real estate holdings had provided a solid foundation for my company. Grandpa had specialized in real estate and Iâd learned many things from him during my time working at Barlowe Capital after college.
When Iâd branched out on my own, Iâd started smart, with low-risk ventures. Then as my net income had doubled year over year, Iâd diversified. My latest success stories were all in the technology sector. Iâd also expanded into sports and entertainment.
We were becoming a powerhouse throughout the country, and there wasnât a state where I didnât have at least one interest.
Except Montana.
Ironically, the one area I hadnât established any sort of interest in was where my grandfather had filled the gap. Heâd done it by giving a beautiful woman too much money.
He hadnât done her any favors. Heâd set her up for failure by handing over that money. Maybe that had been his goal all along.
If Kerrigan took a step back and evaluated her business honestly, sheâd see that she was overextended. She was smart and ambitious, but sheâd tried to grow too fast, and her liquidity had paid the price. By selling some properties, lightening her debt load, sheâd position herself for longer-term success.
I was doing her a favor by calling in my note.
Though I doubted sheâd say .
Nellieâs line rang through to my phone.
âYes?â I answered.
âKerrigan, uh . . . Ms. Hale is on the line for you.â
Sheâd called Nellie? This was new.
Granted, Iâd told her to contact Nellie for any questions. Had she? No. Sheâd kept calling my personal number, and fool that I was, I hadnât blocked her. It was that damn kiss I couldnât get out of my head.
âWhat does she want?â I asked.
âYou asked for a meeting tomorrow morning.â
âYes. For to schedule it.â
âWhoops.â
âNellie,â I warned.
âWhat?â she asked, feigning innocence.
. If Nellie was calling Kerrigan by her first name, then I suspected I wasnât the only one who got regular phone calls. Except Nellie must be taking Kerriganâs calls. âTell her Iâm busy.â
âThen you can forget seeing her in the morning. She wonât meet with you until you speak with her.â
âFine,â I clipped, hitting the flashing red button for the other line. âMs. Hale.â
âHello, Mr. Sullivan.â That sugar-sweet voice was nothing like Iâd been hearing in her voicemails. It was arrogant and taunting. The scales were no longer balanced in my favor.
I needed her time, something sheâd been asking of me for nearly a month. And to get what I wanted, it was going to cost me.
âNellie said youâd be in Calamity tomorrow and wanted to meet,â she said.
For years, all my clients had referred to Nellie as Ms. Rivera. Apparently, Kerrigan and Nellie had become friends in less than a month.
âYes, Iâd like a few minutes of your time.â Or an entire afternoon.
âSay please.â
I gritted my teeth. âPlease.â
âIn that case, no.â God, she was loving this, wasnât she? The smirk in her voice was as clear as the Colorado sky.
âItâs regarding my grandfatherâs last wishes.â
âOh.â She paused. âIn that case, Iâll be at The Refinery by eight tomorrow morning. We can meet there.â
I ended the call without a goodbye.
The details of Kerrigan and Grandpaâs relationship were a mystery to me, though I had a vivid imagination. Heâd always had a thing for strong, beautiful women, and she fit the mold.
Though at first glance, she didnât seem the type to screw an older man for money.
The idea of them together made my head spin and stomach crawl. Heâd feasted on her lips. Heâd known that she was soft and sweet.
I scrubbed a hand over my beard, wishing like hell I could forget my own kiss with that woman. But twenty-eight days later and there were times when I could still taste her on my tongue.
Had Grandpa actually cared for her? Or had he just lusted for a younger, stunning body? That was another mystery I didnât care to solve.
I shoved away from my desk, forgoing the work waiting, and left the office for my private elevator. With a swipe of my key card and a short trip up to the next floor, the doors opened to my penthouse.
Like my office, the exterior walls were mostly glass. The windows gave me the same view but even just one floor up, the city seemed quieter. Or maybe that was because here, in my home, I could breathe.
Iâd spent a lot of hours staring out of my windows, pondering everything that had happened in the past seven months. The past seven years. And thereâd been plenty of moments as of late that Kerrigan Hale had consumed my thoughts while Iâd stood at the glass.
Why had I kissed her at the motel? Was it simply because sheâd meant something to him? Had this need for revenge really turned me into such a miserable prick? Would I really have the nerve to steal her properties in two days?
Ruthless had been Grandpaâs strategy. While Iâd play that card when necessaryâmy letter to her had been one directly out of his playbookâI tended to take a fair approach with my clients.
Even before weâd met, Kerrigan had set me off-kilter. Why? She would be nothing to me. After this week, sheâd be a distant memory. Did it matter what kind of relationship sheâd had with Grandpa?
Now was not the time to search for answers. I jogged up the stairs to the upper floor, going straight for my bedroom and closet. With a travel bag packed, I returned to my office to grab my laptop.
Nellie was on the phone when I poked my head in to say goodbye, so I waved, then took the elevator to the garage.
After loading my car, I reversed out of my private space and used my personal entrance, then headed out of the city.
First, to stop by my parentsâ place and pick up Grandpaâs ashes.
Then, to Calamity.
OTHER THAN THEÂ colors of the trees, Calamity hadnât changed in the past month. Living in a booming section of Denver, I was used to seeing new construction. Window displays were constantly updated. Store signs were swapped out regularly as businesses failed and started.
But at first glance, nothing about Calamity had changed in a month. Nothing. It was oddly comforting.
I walked down First toward The Refinery, the street deserted except for the vehicles parked in front of the coffee shop and café. The sun peeked over the roofs from across the street and glinted off the shining windows of Kerriganâs gym.
The lights were on but the studio was empty. I went inside, escaping the morning chill, and stood by the reception desk, taking a moment to inspect the place. It, like the rest of Calamity, hadnât changed in twenty-nine days either.
Mirrors lined the longest wall on one side of the studio, making it seem twice as big. My shoes sank into the soothing gray mats beyond the tiled entryway. In the corner, a metal cage was stuffed with exercise balls. Stacked yoga mats were piled on one of the few shelves. Opposite the mirrors, a ballet bar had been mounted to the wall and it cut a honeyed-oak line against the white paint.
The studio was open, airy, and quite similar to many of the trendy fitness locations in LoDo. It didnât really fit in Calamity. It was too fresh. Too clean. Maybe it hadnât been designed for the town, but for the owner herself.
Kerrigan came rushing out of a short hallway at the back of the building and the moment she spotted me, her footsteps stuttered. âYouâre twenty minutes early.â
âGood morning.â
She frowned. âMorning.â
Kerrigan was in another pair of yoga pants. The gray material wrapped around her slender thighs and made her legs look a mile long. She was barefoot and her sweater draped over her shoulders, the front forming a deep V and the loose sleeves falling past her knuckles.
âOne minute.â She held up a finger, then spun around, retreating the way sheâd come.
With her hair twisted up, I had the perfect view of her top. The V cut just as low in the back as it did in the front. Beneath it was a bra with more straps than power poles had wires. They crisscrossed over her smooth skin, showing more toned muscle.
And her ass in those leggings was . . .
My cock jerked beneath my slacks.
âFucking hell,â I muttered, forcing my eyes away.
I hadnât been attracted to a woman in months. Why her? Why now?
I sucked in a long breath, willing myself under control. Maybe that inhale would have worked, except her scent filled the air. The same scent Iâd memorized when my lips had been on hers. Honeysuckle florals. Rich and sweet.
I could notâ
âget distracted by this woman. Any woman. Iâd done that once and look where that had landed me.
âWhat a disaster,â I muttered.
âExcuse me?â
I whirled around. Kerrigan was right behind me, her hands on her hips. âI said . . . what a disaster.â
Her eyes flared and her mouth pursed into a thin line. âWhat, exactly, is a disaster?â
I was the disaster. But answering her question with the truth would take more time than we had today. âThis trip. Itâs doomed to be a disaster and before you start telling me how much you hate me, let me say that the disaster has nothing to do with you.â
Not entirely true, but after a long drive yesterday and a fitful night of sleep at the motel, I didnât have the energy to argue with Kerrigan.
âWould you like to visit here or go somewhere else?â I asked.
âI was thinking we could go to the café.â
I gestured to the door. âLead the way.â
She grabbed her purse from behind the reception counter. Then she pulled on a pair of tennis shoes and walked to the door, locking it behind us.
The walk to the café was short and silent. She crossed her arms over her chest and walked at a pace that would require anyone with a shorter inseam to jog. But the moment we stepped inside the café, her cold demeanor evaporated.
Well, not toward me, but toward the rest of the room.
A smile broke across her face and damn it, my heart skipped. The smile lit up her face and made those pretty brown eyes dance. My dick, swelling again, thought it was beautiful too.
âHey, Kerrigan.â A waitress waved as she carried a pot of coffee across the room. âSit wherever you want.â
âThanks.â Kerrigan waved back and led us to the only empty booth along the windows to the street.
I slid into my side of the table, ready to launch into the reason I was here. It would be better to get this over with before we could order and delay this meeting over the length of a meal.
âThe reasonââ
âHi, Kerrigan.â An older woman appeared at the end of our booth. She bent low to give Kerrigan a hug, not sparing me a glance. âHow are you, sweetie?â
âGood, Mrs. Jones. How are you?â
âFine and dandy. I saw your parents at church yesterday. They look so well. I tried to convince your mom to tell me what skin cream sheâs using because I swear she hasnât aged a day in ten years.â
Kerrigan laughed. âIâll raid her bathroom and make a list, then sneak it to you.â
âYou do that.â Mrs. Jones laughed, then patted Kerrigan on the shoulder. âSee you soon.â
Kerrigan faced me and I opened my mouth, ready to speak, when once again, I was interrupted by a visitor. This time, it was the local sheriff if the badge and gun on his belt were anything to go by.
âHey, Kerrigan.â
âHi, Duke.â
He glanced at me and given the scowl on his face, Iâd say he knew who I was. âAll good here?â
âYeah.â She nodded. âTell Lucy Iâll call her later.â
âWill do.â He gave me one more stern look, then walked away.
I waited this time before opening my mouth, and sure enough, the moment the sheriff was gone, another person appeared to talk to Kerrigan about a raffle happening at the daycare and wondering if Kerrigan would donate a few classes at the gym.
Person followed person. Kerrigan was genuinely nice to each, even though it was obvious they were scoping me out. But she kept that breathtaking smile on her face for every conversation, seemingly unbothered by the intrusions.
It would be easier to deal with her if she werenât nice.
After another two visitors, the waitress finally got her own window of opportunity. She arrived with two ceramic coffee mugs, filled them both to the brim and left us with our menus.
âPopular today?â I asked when it seemed like the stream of endless guests had dried up.
Kerrigan shrugged and took a sip from her mug. âNot so much popular as just having lived here my whole life. Small town. Itâs hard not to know everyone.â
âAh.â I took my own drink and leaned my elbows on the table.
The restaurant, like her gym, surprised me. From the outside, Iâd expected a ghost-town-esque diner, greasy spoons included. But the interior looked to have been remodeled within the last decade. There was a chalkboard wall complete with todayâs specials. The white tile floor gleamed under the lights. And the tables, as befit the restaurantâs name, were all white oak.
The waitress returned, a pad of paper in hand. âReady to order?â
âIâll have the omelet special,â Kerrigan said.
The waitress pivoted in my direction. âAnd for you?â
âJust coffee.â
With a single nod, the waitress disappeared, leaving us alone.
âYouâre not eating?â Kerrigan asked.
âThis wonât take long.â I held up a hand when she opened her mouth to protest. âIâm not here to discuss your contract.â
âBut Gabriel gave me an extension andââ
âMy grandfather asked to have a portion of his ashes scattered at his cabin in the mountains.â
She blinked and drawled, âOkay.â
âHe would like you to attend.â
âOh.â Whatever irritation and frustration she had with me fell away. Her shoulders slumped. She swallowed hard. âIâd like that.â
It was as clear as the Montana sky that sheâd loved my grandfather. And for that reason, I needed to get the hell out of this booth.
Her loan was due tomorrow. Weâd scatter Grandpaâs ashes tomorrow.
And then I could forget about Kerrigan Hale.