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My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby
My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby
作者: Chloe Laurent

Chapter 1

作者: Chloe Laurent
Rosalie's POV

I was nineteen when I saw Aiden King step out of the shower wearing nothing but a towel, water running down his chest as he muttered my name like a curse.

I hadn't meant to be there. I'd only gone upstairs to grab my sketchbook from my room when I heard the water shut off. The bathroom door was slightly open, steam drifting into the hallway like an invitation I should have ignored.

But I didn't.

I stood frozen in the hallway, my heart pounding so hard against my ribs I thought it might break through them.

It was late afternoon. My father and my brother, Jeffery, were on base for a training exercise. The house was supposed to be empty except for me. But Jeffery had called two hours earlier to say Aiden was coming. He explained that his best friend had finally gotten leave after eight months on deployment and needed a place to stay before heading home to see his family.

I'd been a complete mess ever since.

Aiden King was six-foot-three, toned and bronzed. My brother's best friend ever since they enlisted in the Navy six years ago. Eight years older than me. Completely out of reach. And the only man I'd ever wanted badly enough for it to physically hurt.

I'd met him when I was thirteen and he was twenty-one. He'd walked into our house in uniform, all confidence and sharp angles, and I'd tripped over my own feet. Jeffery had laughed. Aiden hadn't even noticed.

He never noticed me.

To him, I was just Jeffery's annoying little sister. The kid who interrupted guy time. The girl who didn't exist unless she hid the remote or ate the last slice of pizza.

For six years, I was invisible to him… Until three months ago.

I'd gone to visit Jeffery on base, bringing the brownies he'd been begging me to make. Aiden was there too. I was wearing a sundress. It was summer, and I hadn't thought anything of it. But when I bent down to pick up my keys, I caught him staring at my legs, just for a second.

His jaw tightened. His gaze darkened. Then he looked away so quickly I thought I might have imagined it.

But I knew I hadn't.

Something had changed that day. I'd felt it deep in my bones. And now he was here, in my house, using my shower, and I couldn't seem to breathe.

Through the crack in the door, I watched him run a hand through his wet black hair. His dog tags hung against his bare chest. His skin was tanned and marked with scars I'd always wanted to trace with my fingertips. Muscles shifted beneath his skin in a way that looked both dangerous and controlled.

Then I heard it. It was barely more than a whisper.

"Rosie."

My name. He said my name.

I stopped breathing altogether.

His hand slid down his stomach, disappearing below the edge of the towel. I should have looked away. I should have run. But my legs refused to move. My entire body felt locked in place, burning.

He tensed beneath the towel and tipped his head back. A low, rough groan escaped him.

"Fuck, Rosie."

My knees nearly gave out. Heat rushed through me. I'd never felt anything like it before. I'd kissed two boys in my life and felt nothing. But hearing Aiden say my name like that made it feel as though I were on fire.

He pulled the towel away.

I saw everything. Every inch of him.

It was thick, hard, and perfect, and his hand tightened around it so firmly that a sound escaped my throat.

Then he suddenly turned his head toward the door.

Our eyes met.

Time stopped.

I saw the exact moment he realized I was there. The exact moment shock gave way to something darker. Hunger. Need. Something that twisted my stomach and tightened every nerve in my body.

For three seconds, neither of us moved.

Then his expression changed. Hunger vanished, replaced by fury.

"Get out!" he roared.

I stumbled backward, my shoulder slamming into the wall. My heart was pounding wildly.

"Now, Rosalie!"

I bolted down the hallway and into my bedroom, slamming the door behind me. My whole body was shaking. My face burned. My thighs were clenched so tightly it almost hurt.

I collapsed onto my bed and buried my face in my hands.

What had I just done?

What had I just seen?

He'd been thinking about me. He'd said my name like it was the only word that mattered.

Aiden King wanted me.

The thought made me dizzy.

But he'd also just screamed at me to leave. He'd looked at me as though I'd done something unforgivable, as though I'd crossed a line that could never be uncrossed.

Maybe I had.

I lay there for what felt like hours, trying to calm my racing heart, erase the image burned into my memory, and ignore the ache that wouldn't go away.

It didn't work.

Around six o'clock, I heard the front door open. Dad and Jeffery were home. Their voices drifted up from downstairs, followed by Aiden's deep voice. I stayed in my room. I couldn't face them.

Especially not him.

At seven, Dad called me downstairs for dinner.

I changed into sweatpants and an oversized hoodie, threw my hair into a messy bun, and tried to make myself look as unappealing as possible. Then I crept down the stairs as if I were walking to my execution.

They were all there in the dining room. Dad was pulling beers from the refrigerator. Jeffery was laughing at something on his phone. And Aiden stood against the counter with his arms crossed, watching the doorway.

He looked like he was standing guard.

The moment I walked in, his gaze locked onto mine.

I froze.

His jaw was tight, his eyes dark and unreadable. He looked as though he wanted either to kill me or devour me, and I wasn't sure which possibility frightened me more.

"There she is," Dad said with a smile. "Rosie, you remember Aiden, don't you?"

I nodded, not trusting my voice.

"Of course she remembers me," Aiden said, his voice low and dangerous. "Don't you, Rosalie?"

Jeffery frowned as he looked between us. "You okay, man? You look pissed."

"I'm fine," Aiden said, never taking his eyes off me. "Just tired."

What a liar.

I grabbed a plate and sat as far away from him as possible. But I could feel his eyes on me throughout the entire meal. Every time I looked up, he was watching me. Every time I reached for something, his gaze followed my hand.

It was torture.

After dinner, I helped Dad with the dishes while Jeffery and Aiden went into the living room. I finally felt safe. I thought I could retreat to my room and avoid him for the rest of the evening.

But when I turned to leave the kitchen, he was there, standing in the doorway. Blocking my way out.

"We need to talk," he said quietly.

My heart stopped.

"Now."

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  • My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby   Chapter 30

    Rosalie's POV The number came up as Unknown on a Thursday evening. I almost let it go to voicemail. Over the years, I'd gotten into the habit of not answering unknown calls. Partly out of caution, the kind that comes from spending seven years making yourself difficult to find. Partly because unknown numbers were usually either wrong numbers or sales calls, and I didn't have the energy for either. I answered on the fourth ring because something made me. I couldn't have said what. It was an instinct that had nothing to do with logic. "Rosie." As I heard that voice, my world tilted. I sat down, not by choice. My legs made that decision for me, and suddenly I was in a kitchen chair with the phone pressed to my ear, every nerve in my body humming with something I couldn't name. It was my brother's voice. Seven years… It had been seven years since I'd heard it in real time. I’d only spoken to my dad once, briefly, maybe eighteen months after I'd left. A call from a payphone

  • My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby   Chapter 29

    Aiden's POV I'd been staying at the Grandview for six weeks. Four thousand dollars a night for six weeks was insignificant from a practical standpoint, but symbolic in every other way. I didn't need to live in a presidential suite. I'd grown up in a two-room apartment with water-stained ceilings and a father who spent the rent money before the first of the month. I had money now because I'd earned it. Through hard work and the particular determination of someone who remembered exactly what it felt like not to have enough. But I'd never confused comfort with meaning. The apartment on Addison Street was a twenty-minute drive from Rosie's building. It had three bedrooms, a decent kitchen, and a building with a functioning elevator. That had mattered to me The elevator in Rosie's building had been broken since before I arrived, and she climbed four flights of stairs every day carrying everything she needed while raising a six-year-old child. I didn't tell her about th

  • My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby   Chapter 28

    Aiden's POV Marcus called on a Tuesday morning while I was signing a lease. I let it ring. He called again while I was carrying the first box from a delivery up to the third floor of the building on Addison Street. I ignored that one too. By the time the movers had finally brought up the rest of it, a bed frame, a decent couch, a kitchen table that would do the job, I had four missed calls and a text message that read: [I know you're still in that city. You've been there for six weeks. We have a defense contract review meeting in eleven days, and two clients are asking where you are. Call me back or I'm getting on a plane.] I called him. Marcus Chase had been my business partner for four years. We'd met during a period when I was transitioning my investments into more structured ventures. He possessed the practicality I lacked, and I had the military connections he needed. The arrangement worked so well that neither of us had ever felt the need to formalize it beyond a ha

  • My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby   Chapter 27

    "Can I get the big set?" Lucy asked. She was holding a watercolor box with twenty-four colors. "You can get whatever you want," Aiden said. Lucy dropped the box into the small basket he was carrying for her and moved on to the next section. I was studying a display of round paintbrushes with no intention of buying any of them when I heard her ask the question. Her voice was clear and direct, the way she asked most things. "Captain Aiden," she said, "are you going to be my dad?" The store didn't actually go quiet. The background noise remained. Someone talking at the register. Music drifting from a small speaker near the entrance. The ordinary murmur of a business going about its day. But something in my immediate world froze. I didn't turn around. I stayed where I was in front of the paintbrush display, holding a size-six round brush without really seeing it, and waited. I heard Aiden make a small sound. Not an answer. A breath. Slow and deep. Then I hea

  • My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby   Chapter 26

    Rosalie's POV The visits had settled into the rhythm of the week, like everything else. Wednesday afternoons and Saturday mornings were marked on the refrigerator calendar with the same blue pen I used for Lucy's dentist appointments, school picture day, and library book return dates. The first few outings had been to the park. Then Aiden suggested the children's museum one Saturday, and I agreed because Lucy had been asking to go for two months. I'd been putting it off because admission was seventeen dollars per person, and when money was that tight, even seventeen dollars felt like a luxury. So we went. Lucy spent forty-five minutes in the science section conducting an experiment involving water and tubes. She ended up slightly soaked and completely satisfied. Aiden paid for admission and lunch at the museum café without making a thing of it, and I let him. After the rent situation, I'd decided some battles cost more energy than they were worth. That was what I told m

  • My Brother's Best Friend's Secret Baby   Chapter 25

    Rosalie's POVI was furious. I was sitting at my kitchen table holding a rent statement that said my account was paid in full, and I was experiencing a feeling I'd almost forgotten the texture of. That strange physical sensation of a weight lifting. A weight you'd been carrying for so long that you'd stopped noticing it was there. Four thousand eight hundred dollars. For six months, I wouldn't have to do end-of-month calculations. I wouldn't have to check my bank balance before buying ingredients for Lucy's lunches. I wouldn't have to choose between paying the dental copay and buying groceries. I wanted to throw the statement across the room. Instead, I sat perfectly still. "This doesn't change anything between us," I said. My voice was neutral. "I know," he said. "I'm not going to change how I feel about this situation because you paid my rent." "I understand." "I need you to really understand that. This isn't the beginning of something. You're not buying goodwill."

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