Simply Sinful (Simply Series Book 1) Carly Phillips (best book recommendations .txt) đ
- Author: Carly Phillips
Book online «Simply Sinful (Simply Series Book 1) Carly Phillips (best book recommendations .txt) đ». Author Carly Phillips
Chemistry flared between them hot and strong. Unmistakable. Verbal seduction wouldnât be a problem tonight, but keeping his hands to himself just might be. He shook his head, trying to dislodge any thoughts caused more by emotion than common sense.
Cash in exchange for sex, he reminded himself. Money up-front. Stick to the plan and the answers would follow. And Kane always stuck to the plan.
As a punk kid, heâd followed a different code of conduct than the one he lived by now, but back then, respecting the law on the street had kept him alive. As a cop, he walked the straight and narrow. The rules were different but the reasoning the same. If he followed the rules, he kept his edge honed. Anything less and he didnât deserve his badge.
Kane closed his eyes, and a vision of Kayla danced before them. Between a body made for a manâs touch and a heart-shaped face that would test a saint, he had the distinct notion he needed that edge more than ever before.
* * *
âItâs a baseball game, not a formal banquet.â
âItâs a date, not Chinese food with your sister,â Catherine countered. She threw a disgusted glance at Kaylaâs old sweatshirt and jeans. âAre you trying to turn the man off before he gets to know how disgustingly smart you are?â
Kayla thought back to his references about her classes and how smart women turned him on. He couldnât possibly know that much about her after such a brief meeting. It had to be a lucky guess. âI donât want to look too eager,â she said.
âMore like you donât want to look too easy.â Her sister grabbed Kaylaâs hand. Head held high, Catherine led the way to her bedroom, a short distance down the hall from Kaylaâs own. With dramatic flair so opposite to Kaylaâs more subdued actions, Catherine flung open the closet door and began riffling through the clothes inside.
âThey wonât fit,â Kayla muttered.
âMaybe we donât share the same bra size, but donât tell me you donât steal my clothes every once in a while.â
âBorrow.â
âWhatâs the difference?â Catherine held up a yellow shirt, made a face, and hung it back on the rack. âI know I swipe yours.â She came out of the small walk-in with a white fitted top and a faded jean jacket. Next came a pair of black denim jeans. âHere. Try these on.â
Kayla glanced at the outfit, more casual than her usual conservative look. Still, when she tried on the clothes, she had to admit she liked what she saw.
Catherine made a show of walking around her twice, hands on her hips in a judgmental pose. âPerfect. Better than all those trousers and silk blouses you wear. So stuffyâeven Mama wouldnât have left the house like that.â
âMama liked to dress her own way,â Kayla said, thinking of the woman who had raised her girls alone. A woman with a heart of gold, but tarnished luck.
They hadnât had much money, but their mother had always made sure she looked her best before leaving the house. Unfortunately her best too often fell short. She looked like what she was: the checkout girl at the local supermarket, an aging woman still attempting to look younger than her years. Until Catherine had taken over clothing shopping, the Luck sisters had usually gone to school looking like mini-clones of their beautiful, but flamboyant mother.
âMen definitely took notice,â Catherine said.
âToo bad she never gave them a chance. Maybe things would have been different,â Kayla mused.
âYou mean maybe Mama wouldnât have died of overwork and a broken heart? No. She chose her life.â
Catherine had a point.
âShe liked pining for Daddy, thatâs for sure. You ever wonder if Daddy pined back?â Kayla asked.
Her sister shook her head. âI think one kid scared him to death; two made him worse than a coward.â
âDo you really have to sound soâŠfull of hate?â Kayla wrapped her arms around her waist.
âI donât hate him. Actually, I donât feel much about him at all. But truth is truth.â Catherine pinned her with her steady gaze. âI donât think all men are like him if thatâs what youâre thinking.â
âNot in the âlove âem and leave âemâ department,â Kayla agreed. âBut in the âcanât keep their hands to themselvesâ department, men are all the same.â After all, her parents had had Kayla and Catherine within one year of each other. If that wasnât a prime example of too much lovinâ, as her mother liked to call it, then Kayla didnât know what was.
Catherine lowered herself onto her white lace comforter. âYou know, a guy not keeping his hands to himself can be nice.â
For someone with Catherineâs confidence, maybe. Kayla joined her, staring at her fingers spread over her thighs. âAre you going out tonight?â Kayla asked.
âClubbing. With Nick.â
Nick had been Catherineâs best friend for years. Kayla suspected heâd once been in love with her beautiful sister but Cat hadnât been interested and Nick had moved on, apparently content as Catâs best friend. Leaving Catherine alone.
Kayla narrowed her eyes and took in her sisterâs miniskirt and tights, her stretch top that showed off delicate curves. Catherine didnât have Kaylaâs lush figure, but she attracted her own share of attention. Kayla admired her sister, but Catherine had her own share of insecurities. She covered them well, but the truth was obvious. Both Luck sisters had been scarred by their childhood experiences.
Each had reacted in a different way. Instead of becoming a social butterfly, Kayla had learned to push men away. Although she had a lingering desire for the traditional white picket fence, happily ever after, she knew better than to believe sheâd find it or the perfect man to share her life with.
Catherine placed a sisterly hand over hers. âMaybe youâve never found the right guy. The one who will put you first.â
âYou think he exists?â Kayla asked.
Kane immediately came to mind. He was the one man
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