Laura Browning

Remember Me


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turned from picking up their poles, handing them to her. “Don’t you worry about me, Lucy. I’m where I want to be, and I’m not at all bored.” He turned so he was next to her. “Come on, baby, we’re taking the lift this time.”

      Lucy had watched the chairs circling and the handful of early skiers hopping on and off the lifts as if it was no big deal. “I don’t know…”

      “You can handle it. You’ve got amazing balance. Remember when you exit the lift to keep your weight a little forward. I’ll teach you the right moment so the lift gives you some momentum to ski away without any problem.”

      He was right. It turned out to be a lot less complicated than she’d thought it would be. Now, standing at the top of her first intermediate run, all Lucy could do was grin. She had pretty much figured to be on the bunny slopes the whole day. While she was sure this was nothing to a skier like Brandon, it was a big accomplishment for her, and one she wouldn’t have achieved without his help. Going with the impulse, she leaned over and hugged him.

      “Thanks, Brandon.”

      He looked surprised. “What for?”

      “For getting me here in just a couple of hours. Skiing an intermediate trail was my goal for the week.”

      “Given the athlete you appear to be, I’ll have you going down some of the easier advanced runs in a day or two. Now, let’s practice using your poles before we head down. You’ll find them more useful on these longer runs.”

      Lucy wasn’t sure when she’d had such a good time or laughed so much. After landing on her butt the first time, she soon mastered controlling her speed and making the wide turns along the intermediate trails they explored. When Brandon suggested getting lunch, she agreed with reluctance.

      “Trust me, baby, you’ll be glad for some rest once your body gets around to telling you you’ve been engaged in something new to it.” They put their skis in storage and headed to the lodge. Brandon took her hand in his. “I hope you don’t mind, I asked the staff to have lunch ready for us in my suite.”

      Warning bells went off. Lucy pulled her hand from his. “I think you’re making some assumptions…”

      Brandon stopped her with a touch on her arm. “No. I’m not. It’s a suite, Lucy, not a bedroom. We’ll be eating in a dining area off a great room with its own fireplace. I think you’ll understand why I made those arrangements when you step inside the main lodge.”

      She’d pissed him off. It was there in the hard set of his jaw, but she couldn’t help it. Starting with puberty, she’d become a target. Boys and men had gone out of their way to take advantage of her, so she’d learned to be cautious. But Brandon was right about one thing. When she walked inside the lodge, she was greeted by a wall of sound almost as loud as a full crowd at Flamingo Road with the music pumping.

      Brandon stopped her just inside the door. “So, which will it be? Lunch here or in my suite?”

      “Your suite. And…I’m sorry.”

      He wrapped an arm around her shoulders. “Don’t worry about it.”

      * * * *

      They walked from the main lodge to a smaller building which housed Falcon Summit’s luxury suites, and Brandon was beating himself up. Don’t worry about it. The problem was she did need to worry. He would like nothing better than to strip off all those layers of clothing and get her on her back in his bed. He unlocked the door and opened it before allowing Lucy to precede him. From long habit, his gaze dropped to her bottom, outlined in the tight, figure-hugging material of her ski pants. Oh yeah. Being a gentleman was going to get harder and harder.

      “Wow, Brandon.” Lucy looked around her, eyes wide. “This is amazing. I thought I had a wonderful room, but this is unbelievable. The view of the mountains from your great room is incredible.”

      The view from where I am is incredible. “Like I said, I’m friends with the owner, so I get some perks.” Which wasn’t the complete truth. Matt made sure Brandon could get a suite anytime he wanted one, but Brandon paid fair market value for it too. He watched Lucy wander around the room, her fingers lingering over a sculpture on a side table and brushing over a copy of National News. He was reluctant for her to find out his connection to Barrett Newspapers. As wary as she was, he was afraid she might pull back completely.

      “Oh, look, lunch is set here on the table right by the window.” She turned to grin at him. “I am so starving. I guess it must be all the fresh air.”

      Brandon unzipped his jacket and tossed it aside. “No doubt. Let me have your jacket and we’ll tuck in.”

      She slid out of the pink and gray coat to reveal a form-fitting turtleneck beneath it. Brandon’s body temperature shot up several degrees. Lord help him, but she had an amazing body. When she handed him the jacket, their fingers brushed, their eyes met and the heat level jacked up another notch.

      “Lucy.” Her name hung in the air. He saw her swallow and blink before she took a step back. Brandon sighed. Whatever there was between them, she wasn’t ready to let her guard down, which made him wonder why she was so cautious. Someone with her beauty and generosity shouldn’t live life through a filter of mistrust. Brandon took a deep breath, smiled and gestured toward the table. “Let’s eat.”

      Even as hungry as she was, she ate with delicacy and care. She avoided anything high fat, and limited the starches. Curiosity once again getting the better of him, he said, “You know, you don’t seem like a person who needs to watch what they eat, yet you do. You say you don’t model, but you eat like someone who does.”

      Lucy paused with a bite of salad on the way to her lips. “I just like being in good shape.” A vague sense of disappointment filled him. She’d lied. There was more to it, but he didn’t feel like he knew her well enough to pursue the truth. Hell, admit it. He didn’t want to scare her off.

      “Matt’s invited me out on the resort’s newest expert run this afternoon,” Brandon told her as he finished his sandwich. “It’s been a couple of years since we’ve been able to hit the slopes together.”

      Lucy sipped from a mug of tea and set it aside. “I was going to hit the pool. They’ve got lap swimming time this afternoon, and I need to get in a workout.”

      Brandon nodded, wondering again what made her such a fanatic about keeping physically fit. She sure didn’t seem like one of those obsessed women on the verge of a serious eating disorder. “You swim every day?”

      She shrugged, her gray eyes once again a little wary. “Swim or run. I—uh—I lift a couple of times a week too.”

      “Sounds almost like the training schedule Matt and I had to adhere to while we were on the ski team in college.” He hoped the comment might get her talking about why she spent so much time working out.

      “You competed?” she asked instead, turning the conversation around to him. Not what he’d wanted, but he couldn’t very well ignore her question.

      “Yes. Matt and I also competed outside of school. We were both shortlisted for the Olympics. I didn’t make the cut. Matt did.”

      “So why isn’t he still competing?” Lucy asked. “I’ve heard of plenty of skiers who compete into their thirties. Why would he stop?”

      “Injury. I’m sure you’ve seen the video in the opening of some of those sports shows. It was a pretty nasty accident over in Switzerland. Matt was lucky. He had some great surgeons who were able to not only repair the damage to his leg and back, but even got him to the point where he could ski again.”

      “Just not to the point where he could be competitive, right?”

      Brandon nodded. “The difference between being a great skier and being a world-class athlete isn’t measured in much more than tenths of seconds. Matt tried to come back, but he was never able to break into the top ten in any of the World Cup competitions. He didn’t even