“You don’t have a father,” Kane reminded, swallowing half the bottle of beer in one gulp. “That’s our job.”
Jaimie tugged to get her hand free. She never discussed her past if she could help it, not even with the ones who had seen her through it all.
“And we’re good at it,” Mack pointed out smugly. His hand kept hers trapped against his chest. “Why would you have beer in the fridge?”
“Entertainment purposes, and stop ruffling my hair.” She ducked under Mack’s hand.
“You cut it.” Kane made it an accusation.
“It’s just the right length for ruffling,” Mack pointed out. “Entertaining who?”
“Whom,” Kane corrected, his head back in the refrigerator. He came out with a handful of turkey slices. “Thank God you’re over your vegetarian phase. I nearly starved.”
Mack hefted two bags over his shoulder and followed Jaimie across the carpeted floor to the bedroom wall. “Who’s she entertaining with beer?” he demanded. “Let’s get some answers here.”
“Stop harping.” Jaimie curled up on the bed, watching him stow the gear in the corner.
“It isn’t harping if I don’t get an answer.” Mack stood right in front of her, his dark, gleaming eyes on her face as he began to unbutton his shirt.
Jaimie couldn’t tear her gaze away from his hair-roughened chest, the hard, defined muscles, his flat six-pack belly. She swallowed hard as his hands went to the waistband of his jeans. “Don’t you dare take your clothes off in my bedroom, Mack.”
He flashed a taunting grin. “You don’t have an over-abundance of walls, little darlin’. Where exactly am I supposed to get undressed?”
“Well, not right here, for heaven’s sake.” Her long lashes fluttered in shock. “The bathroom would be much more appropriate.”
Kane found a deep, comfortable armchair and sat down with a second beer and a sandwich. “Get away from that innocent little thing, you oversexed lout,” he said mildly.
“Tell her to answer the question.” Mack didn’t take his glinting black gaze from her startling blue one as he dared her.
“I did answer your question. Go ahead and change in the bathroom.” Jaimie’s chin lifted belligerently.
“The other question, the important question. Who’s the beer for, Jaimie?”
Her fist thumped the pillow. “You’re going to make me crazy, Mack. All right.
It’s for my assistant, Joe Spagnola. Are you satisfied now?”
“Damn it, Jaimie,” Mack snapped, his eyes blazing.
Kane sat up straighter, a dark frown on his face.
“Well, I couldn’t do this alone,” Jaimie hastily defended. “There’s a lot of work and he’s been invaluable.”
Kane snorted derisively. “Invaluable.”
“She gives him beer to drink,” Mack muttered under his breath. “How old is your Joe Spagnola?”
Jaimie threw her hands in the air. “Look, he’s thirty-two or so, I don’t know. What difference does that make?”
“You got this guy up here drinking beer in your bedroom and you don’t know what difference it makes?” Mack said, taking a step closer to the bed. His hands were at his sides, fingers opening and closing ominously. “Is he single?”
“Oh, for heaven’s sake.”
Kane hitched himself closer in the chair. “You bring that guy up here alone with you?”
Jaimie made a T out of her hands. “Whoa, there, guys. Stop right there. Time out.
I’m not a teenager anymore and you are not my guardians.” She glared up at Mack.