Sunsets & Seduction: Mine Until Morning / Just for the Night / Kept in the Dark. Tawny Weber
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      Kate sent them a limo?

      Only then did she note the name of the transport company embossed on the inside of the rich leather door.

      Masters’s Luxury Transport.

      “Kate owns the limo service?” Tessa said in shock, catching Collins’s smile in the rearview mirror.

      “Yes, ma’am. It’s a small company with only five vehicles, but we do a steady business. Her husband started it many years ago, and left the majority of it to her when he died, with a small share going to me, as well, for my retirement, but I enjoy the work. Hank Masters hired me twenty-five years ago. He was a good man.”

      Tessa sat back in the luxurious seat, shocked. She never would have guessed. Kate lived so conservatively, and even took the bus and train to get around town, at least as far as Tessa knew.

      Collins leaned in, his arm on the door. “Kate told me what you did for her tonight. She tried to contact me earlier in the evening, to pick up her medicine for her, but I was in Baltimore dropping off a couple to their wedding and couldn’t get back in time. Thank you, ma’am and sir,” Collins said expressively, obviously very fond of his employer.

      “I would do anything for Kate,” Tessa said truthfully, taking Jonas’s hand. “And thank goodness Jonas could get that door open,” she said. “I could never have done it by myself.”

      “You let me know if you need anything,” Collins said. “I am at your disposal for as long as you need me.”

      Kate was obviously trying to help her and Jonas along a little, Tessa guessed. A compartment opened on the other side, sliding out to reveal a champagne bar, strawberries and pretty, foil-wrapped chocolates.

      “Some privacy, perhaps?” Collins asked with a twinkle in his eye.

      Tessa, still stunned, nodded.

      “Enjoy,” was all Collins said as he closed the door and slid into the driver’s seat, which seemed yards away from where they sat. A solid, and probably soundproof, barrier rose between them. A minute later, the car pulled smoothly away from the hospital.

      The vehicle seemed to cut through the wind and rain like butter, the dark windows lit only now and then by a flash of lightning.

      “I can’t get over this,” she said. “In all the time I’ve known Kate, she never said a word about owning a business.”

      “It sounds like it was her husband’s venture, and maybe Collins runs it now,” Jonas agreed.

      “I’m so relieved. I always worry about her being comfortable, or paying her bills.”

      “People of their generation don’t make an issue out of wealth like some do,” Jonas said. “It’s good to have friends who care about you. Kate obviously values that,” he said.

      “I do, too,” Tessa responded, hoping he knew how much she meant it.

      A buzzer sounded. Tessa pressed the button that lit up on the console.

      “Yes?”

      “I have your addresses, ma’am, but Ms. Masters wondered if you would like a late meal, since you may have missed dinner while getting to her apartment. There’s no hurry.”

      “Now that you mention it, I am hungry,” Tessa said. “And please call me Tessa. But we’re not really dressed for dinner,” she said. They looked like a couple of surgeons coming home from work.

      The idea triggered a fun idea for role play—she would love to play doctor with Jonas, she thought mischievously, but then returned her attention to Collins.

      “If you have any preference, let me know. I’m sure your attire won’t be an issue.”

      An idea sparked immediately, and Tessa put down the divider, climbing forward to whisper something in Collins’s ear. She knew the perfect place.

      Putting the divider back, she eyed the champagne. “Okay then. I guess we’re riding in style,” she said to Jonas as she poured two glasses of champagne and went back to sit by his side, handing him one.

      “I’m so glad it wasn’t my dad who sent this car,” she said honestly.

      “Why?” Jonas asked, and she wasn’t sure if she detected a note of suspicion in his tone.

      “I don’t like owing him anything, or having him monitor my movements. He says he doesn’t, or that he’s just trying to keep me safe, but I know old habits are hard to break.”

      “He’s just looking out for you. Dads are usually protective of their daughters.”

      “Protective is one thing. Dad takes it to a whole other level.”

      “How so?” Jonas asked.

      “When I was young, we were close,” Tessa said, remembering.

      Her father had been the sun, moon and stars back then. He’d taught her to ride a bike, played tea party with her and had sent her first flowers, delivered by a florist on her thirteenth birthday.

      “But he confuses protection with control. I don’t like to be controlled,” she said, remembering less pleasant teenage years when her father had made her life miserable more than once. “As I got older, I realized he wanted me to be who he wanted, not who I am.”

      “Isn’t that typical with teenagers and parents? My brothers and I gave my parents a few tough moments, as well. All teenagers rebel.”

      “It was more than that. I couldn’t have a normal social life, even more so than what happens with other politicians’ kids. He wanted to approve my friends, my activities, my boyfriends. It seemed like I only mattered so far as I was a reflection on him.”

      “I’m sure he didn’t think that,” Jonas said. “Your father has always seemed to genuinely care for you. He’s proud of you.”

      Tessa snorted. “That’s the image he shows to everyone else. He was furious when I dropped out of college.”

      “Seems like most parents would be.”

      “Yeah, probably, but I was only studying law because he wanted me to. I’d gotten into soap-making as a hobby, but I loved it. I was good at it. I was selling soaps online and to classmates out of my dorm room,” she said with a laugh.

      “You couldn’t do both?”

      “I didn’t want to. Maybe if he had let me do something more creative, more … me, I would have stuck it out, but I hated what I was doing, and I knew I wanted to open a shop. He thought that it was frivolous, the shop, the soap-making. He forbade me to do it. He tried to stop me, at first.”

      “How?”

      “He blocked the business loans I applied for, and did anything else he could to thwart me,” she said, remembering how ugly that had gotten.

      A woman who had been buying her products for a while, who also happened to work in credit services, told Tessa why СКАЧАТЬ