FOUR AND A HALF YEARS LATER
âIâm going to tear his head off,â Nate decided. âThatâs the right thing to do.â
Kris rolled her eyes, a mixture of amusement and exasperation stamped on her face. âI donât think your sister would appreciate you murdering her boyfriend on her graduation day.â
âSisters never appreciate the things their brothers do for them. Itâs a law of siblinghood.â
Nate glowered at Teague, who was chatting with Michael like he had every right to be there.
The fucker was four years older than Skylar and annoying as ever with his blond hair and Ralph Lauren polo. Nate had thought the blond was all right after he helped with the Gloria thing all those years ago, but that was before Teague started dating Skylar.
Nate didnât care that Skylar was twenty-two years old and, as of today, a Stanford grad with a biology degree. She was his baby sister, and it was his job to protect her from privileged little shits.
He was still suspicious of how Skylar and Teague allegedly ran into each other âby accidentâ at The Grove when she came home for winter break a couple of months ago.
Judging by how quickly they jumped into a full-blown relationship, he was convinced theyâd been talking before then.
âStop. Breathe. Calm down,â Kris ordered. âYour sisterâs coming.â
Sure enough, Skylar appeared in the crush of laughing, crying graduates and proud parents, her golden hair streaming behind her and her rolled-up diploma clutched in one hand. She wore the standard black graduation robes and cap, a red stole with the university seal, and a huge grin.
Some of the tension eased from Nateâs shoulders. It was hard to be upset when she looked so happy.
âYou made it!â She tackled Nate first, as bubbly as ever.
He laughed, squeezing her so hard he lifted her off the ground. âWouldnât miss this for the world.â
He was so damn proud of her. Keeping up with her classes, internships, and soccer at a school like Stanford was tough as hell, and it wasnât like heâa college dropoutâcould coach her through it. But Skylar had handled it all with poise, aside from the occasional lapse in judgmentâlike that time sheâd inhaled two pot brownies at a frat party and called Nate at two in the morning, rambling about Aristotle and Taco Bell.
Kris had helped too, guiding Skylar through the pitfalls of college and early adulthood not because Skylar had been her mentee but because the two had developed a true sisterly bond. Sometimes, it was too sisterlyâif Nate had a dime for every time theyâd ganged up on him, he wouldnât need to work another day in his life.
Skylar greeted their father next, followed by Kris.
Nate was gratified to see Teague was last in the receiving line, though the gratification morphed into disgruntlement when the little shit kissed Skylar on the lips.
âCome on.â There was laughter in Krisâs voice when she spotted the scowl on his face. âLetâs take some pictures.â
Nate grunted his agreement. His fist could meet Teagueâs face later.
They shuffled around until Skylar had posed with everyone in their group in various groupings.
âFamily pic last.â Kris held up her phone and gestured for Nate to join Michael and Skylar beneath an oak tree.
Once the photoshoot was over, they huddled around her and scrolled through the pictures, laughing at the ones where Skylar pulled a funny face or Nate made bunny ears above her head.
âVery mature,â Skylar said, playfully punching his arm. âI thought you outgrew that prank in middle school.â
âOld habits die hard,â he quipped, but he fell silent when the last photo came up.
It was a normal photoâjust him, his sister, and his father standing together, beaming at the camera.
But it was its ordinariness that made it special. The Reynoldses looked like your average, functional American familyâand, miracle of miracles, the appearance matched reality. Michael was strong and healthy, going on five years sober. He thrived as a construction site manager and lived in their old house in North Hollywood, which Nate had bought outright after the check from his first film cleared. Heâd offered to upgrade his old manâs digs, but Michael refused, saying he didnât need a big old house when he lived by himself. He spent his weekends fishing and watching sports with friends or working on home improvement projects. He said it kept him busy, though Nate heard through the grapevineâaka Skylarâthat Michael had started dating again. She claimed sheâd seen their father on an online dating site over the holidays, and that sheâd overhead his whispered conversations with a woman named Diana.
Clearly, Michael wasnât comfortable telling his children he was dating again, and Nate wasnât going to push him. He and Skylar were on the same page when it came to their fatherâs love lifeâno details needed, thank you, but Michael deserved to find happiness again. No one could ever replace their mom, but Joanna Reynolds had died almost a decade ago, and she wouldâve wanted them to move on.
Skylar, meanwhile, was enjoying life as much as a twenty-two-year could. Sheâd graduated magna cum laude, and she was leaving for Thailand in a few weeks for a gap year in Southeast Asia before putting her biology degree to good use as an environmental scientist. Teague was joining her for the first half of her trip, which ground Nateâs gears, but heâd long given up on trying to tell Skylar what to do. For all her smiles and bubbliness, she could be stubborn as a mule.
Kris said the stubbornness proved Skylar and Nate were related, given they looked so different. Nate, in retaliation, had pinned Kris beneath him and had his way with her, keeping her on edge for an hour until sheâd apologized and begged for release.
That had been a fun nightâ¦
âExcuse me.â The shy voice tore Nate from his stroll down X-rated memory lane.
The speaker, a brunette clad in the same graduation paraphernalia as Skylar, stared at him with starry eyes and pink cheeks⦠âIâm sorry to interrupt, but are you Nate Reynolds?â
Nate shifted gears and flashed the smile he reserved for fans: friendly but professional, charming but not flirtatious. âYep.â
The girl squealed in excitement, the stars in her eyes multiplying. âDo you mind if I get a picture? Iâm sorryâI know this isnât the best time, but I am your biggest fan! I watched Triple Vendetta in the theater three times!â
âSure,â Nate said easily, earning himself another squeal.
The girl shoved her phone into what had to be her motherâs handâthey had the same hair color and similar featuresâand grinned so hard he was surprised her face didnât crack.
After that, the floodgates opened, and everyone in the vicinity wanted a picture, an autograph, a handshake. Nate indulged most of them, but after the thirteenth or fourteenth meet and greet, he politely excused himself, saying he needed to return to his family.
As his impromptu fan circle dissipated, Nate found Kris, Teague, and his family staring at him with varying degrees of grins and smirks.
âMy brother, the big action star,â Skylar said dramatically. âI should sell embarrassing baby photos of you on eBay for extra cash.â
âDo it and Iâm impounding your car,â Nate threatened. Heâd bought Skylar a BMW as a belated graduation/congrats-on-getting-into-Stanford present with the proceeds from his first movie.
She gasped. âYou wouldnât.â
âTry me.â
âFine.â She pouted. âNo baby pics for sale, but the BMW better still be here when I come back from Asia.â
âOnly if you check in at least twice a week and bring back one of those lanterns from Vietnam. They look cool as fuck. Sorry,â Nate added when his father frowned at the f-bomb.
Michael shook his head and sighed.
âHow do you put up with him?â Skylar asked Kris.
Kris laughed. âI have my ways.â
The youngest Reynolds wrinkled her nose. âI donât want to know.â
They hung around on campus for a while longerâSkylar seemed to have separation anxiety and stared at every building, tree, and shrub with sad, nostalgic eyesâbefore heading out for lunch.
Nate fell into step with Teague while Kris, Skylar, and Michael debated where to eat.
âBreak her heart and Iâll break your faceâto start,â Nate said without preamble. His smile came off more threatening than friendly. âGot it?â
Teague appeared amused. âUnderstood. You donât have to worryâIâd rather die than hurt Sky.â
âGood, because thatâs whatâs going to happen if she so much as sheds a tear over you.â
The other man chuckled, and Nate debated the merits of punching him in the face even though he technically hadnât done anything wrong except breathe and exist.
Oh, and date Nateâs sister.
âYou and Kris seem to be in a good place,â Teague said. âI havenât seen her this happy inâ¦well, ever.â
Nateâs âsmileâ widened until he was all but baring his teeth. âWe are, so donât get any ideas.â
âIâm not.â Teagueâs own smile was wry. âI really like Skylar, and Kris and I have always just been friends.â
âReally.â It wasnât a question.
âTrust me, I donât feel for her that way, and itâs mutual. I remember telling you the same thing during that summer I took you guys up in my plane.â
âI didnât believe you then, and I only half believe you now. Anyway, Iâm not worried about Kris.â Kris, Nate trusted one hundred percent. Teague? Not so much, whether it was with his sister or the love of his life.
âI know. But the way you feel about Kris? Thatâs how I feel about Sky,â Teague said. âSo with all due respect, you can snap at me all you want, but nothing you say or do is going to drive me away. I understand you want to protect your sister, but sheâs a grown woman capable of making her own decisions. I also want you and me to be on good termsâboth for Skyâs sake, and because you seem like a decent guy when youâre not snapping at me. If I hurt her for any reasonâand I swear, Iâd never willingly do soâyou can come at me with all you got, but for now, letâs shelve the overprotective-brother routine, yeah?â
Nate could count on one hand the number of times heâd been this surprised. He was torn between two reactions: 1) break Teagueâs face, as heâd said he would do earlier, or 2)â¦
A laugh rumbled out of his chest, quietly at first and then loud enough that the trio walking ahead of them glanced back with curiosity.
A grin split Skylarâs face when she saw what was happening, and Krisâs eyes twinkled before she said something that diverted the other womanâs attention.
âYouâre okay,â Nate said, clapping Teague on the back. He still didnât like the guy, but at least his sisterâs boyfriend had balls. That deserved some respect.
Plus, it didnât escape Nateâs attention that Teagueâs words sounded quite familiar. He had given Krisâs father his version of the same speech four years ago.
By the time he and Kris returned to their hotel that night, Nate had forgotten all about Teague. Theyâd spent the day with Skylarâfirst lunch, then a spontaneous mini-golf excursion followed by dinner and drinks.
Kris had grimaced at the mini-golf idea but followed through with it like a champ. The sight of her handling a putter had been hot as hell.
âI recommend you take up mini-golf as a hobby,â Nate said, watching Kris undress with hooded eyes. âPreferably in one of those short golf skirts.â
âIn your dreams,â Kris teased. Her ring flashed beneath the lights as she unhooked her bra and the scrap of black lace drifted to the ground.
Nate hardened immediately, both at the sight of her breasts and the ring on her finger. It was a five-carat, pear-shaped Harry Winston diamondâKrisâs dream ring, according to both her mother and Courtney.
After years of making up for lost time, Gemma and Kris had developed a true mother-daughter bond, and Courtney was one of Krisâs oldest friends. As a result, Nate trusted their intel implicitly.
Good thing Scott Westâs Triple Vendetta, featuring none other than Nate Reynolds, had been such a blockbuster hit. Enough that itâd gotten the franchise green light, and Nate had signed a four-movie contract with enough zeroes to make his eyes water. That, plus the endorsement deals that flooded in after Nate was branded Hollywoodâs hottest new star, made purchasing the five-carat diamond a drop in the bucket.
Heâd popped the question in Italy, after he and Kris snuck off to the Amalfi Coast when the principal production for the Triple Vendetta sequel in Rome wrapped. After years of exposure therapy, Nate had gotten over his fear of flying. He got nervous whenever there was turbulence, and his stomach hitched with each ascent, but that was nothing compared to his earlier aerophobia.
Nate still remembered every detail of the proposalâthe dress Kris wore, her expression when heâd dropped to one knee, the sound of the waves lapping against the shore in the distance when she said yes and tackled him with a kiss.
Itâd been the best night of his life.
Kris climbed into bed and snuggled into his arms.
âIf youâre really nice to me, maybe Iâll wear a short golf skirt during our honeymoon,â Kris murmured. âAs long as we donât actually play golf.â
Nate chuckled and stroked her soft skin, her scent burrowing into his nose and shooting straight down to his cock. âTrust me, golf is nowhere on my honeymoon itinerary.â
Their wedding wouldnât happen for at least another two or three years. Theyâd both agreed to a long engagement for multiple reasons, including Nateâs crazy filming schedule and Krisâs equally busy calendar juggling her roles as Director of Fundraising for MentHer and board president for the Joanna Reynolds Scholarship Foundation for low-income high school students.
Kris and Nate had established the foundation last year. Heâd contributed some money, but the bulk of its funding came from Krisâs trust fund, which had paid out when she turned twenty-threeâdespite his threats, her father had never changed the terms after he found out about Krisâs scheme to frame Gloria for infidelity. While theyâd both had a hand in shaping the foundationâs goals, hiring its staff, and building out the logistics, Kris was the one who kept it running like a well-oiled machine. In fact, sheâd been the one whoâd suggested starting a scholarship fund for high schoolers whose families couldnât afford college in memory of his mother. That was the night Nate knew, deep within his gut, that this woman was his forever.
Heâd known it for a while, but that was the first time it struck him to his core. So much so, he almost shed a tear when heâd gruffly agreed the foundation was a good idea.
Nate had called Gemma and Courtney the next day and bought the engagement ring the day after that.
âHow are you feeling about your parentsâ wedding?â he asked, sinking deeper into the pillows and tightening his grip around Krisâs shoulder.
That was another reason they were delaying their wedding. Gemma and Roger were getting married first, and Nate wasnât stupid enough to put Kris through Wedding Mania twice in a short period of time. He liked his balls attached to his body, thank you.
âGood.â Kris hitched a nonchalant shoulder, but he could tell she was getting choked up. âWe knew it was coming.â
Indeed. Roger and Gemma had danced around their relationship for a frustrating two years before they bit the bullet and officially started dating. They had progressed at warp speed since then, and their wedding was in two months.
Nate, in an ill-advised slip of the tongue, had joked to Roger that heâd gotten the whole thing backwards. You were supposed to date and get married before having a child, not after.
To be fair, Nate had been jet-lagged and delirious from seventy-two hours of no sleep, but Rogerâs menacing scowl reminded him once again why he was an action movie guy and not a comedian.
âItâs nice to see my parents together, though,â Kris murmured. âTwo decades is a long time to go without your other half.â
Ainât that the truth. Nate went crazy at the thought of two days without Kris, much less two decades. His out-of-town shoots were the worst. Luckily, theyâd perfected the art of long-distance, and sometimes Kris found the time to sneak away and surprise him on set.
âItâs funny,â Kris said. âMy study abroad friends always say our year in Shanghai changed their lives, but not me. I met some great people in China, yeah, but it was the summer after that that was the game-changer. Meeting you. Meeting Mom. It was almost like fate.â
âNot almost.â Nate brought her hand up to his mouth and kissed her knuckles. âIt was fate.â