an ear infection.”
He’d missed his cousin, but worried Si might have been in Mike’s camp. Simon and his wife Chelsea no longer worked for McKay-Taggart, though their new company often worked with them. Simon’s new job meant he hadn’t had a chance to weigh in on whether JT was screwing up the world. “I’ll check in on them when we get back. I should go since we’ve got a flight in the morning. I’ll see you when we get back. Call me if anything changes with Dad.”
Michael stepped up and held out a hand. “Hey, I’ll be here. I’m taking a couple of days off from work. I’ll stay out here with the old man, so you don’t have to worry.”
It would be a relief. Not that he didn’t trust his mother. He simply didn’t want her to be alone. That had been his place in the family for so long—the dutiful son, the one who always thought of the family and the business before himself. The one who hadn’t had a real relationship in years because he hadn’t found anyone he thought was perfect for the family and the business.
Fuck it. He didn’t care if Nina fit in, though she likely would. He’d realized he’d looked for the “perfect” wife because he hadn’t found the right one before. When the connection was right, perfection didn’t mean a thing. All that mattered was being with her.
He shook his brother’s hand. “Thank you. I’ll concentrate on the mission.”
Michael shook his hand and rolled his eyes. “Yeah, sure you will.”
He stepped away. “You say that because you think I’m talking about the spy mission. I’m talking about my mission, brother, and I assure you I’m dedicated to that one.”
He jogged down the steps where the truck and Nina were waiting for him.
His mission would be making her never want to leave him. Nina was his mission and he didn’t intend to fail.
He slid into the cab and buckled his belt. The valet had the cab nice and toasty, though the weather was a bit chilly outside. “You ready? I called the hotel and they said everything’s been delivered, including your new luggage. All you should have to do is pack.”
“And go over a few things for the mission. The rest of the team is there, and I’ve got a call scheduled with them in the morning to ensure everything is running smoothly. I need to prepare for that, so I think I should stay in the guest room tonight.”
She’d given up her room when they’d decided to spend time together. The suite had a second bedroom, but every night this week she’d slept in the master with him. He sighed and pulled the truck away from the house he’d called home all of his life. “So they scared you off?”
“No,” Nina replied. “Your family is perfectly lovely, but the whole time I should have been watching our suspects, I was thinking about you. I was talking to your mother instead, or asking your father about you. It wasn’t very professional of me.”
“The mission hasn’t started yet. I don’t think it would have done much good to try to question Deanna, Patrick, and Jordy at a party where you’re supposed to be getting to know everyone. I’m not especially close to them, so it made sense you would talk to my family.” He could salvage this. “You looked like a woman getting to know her fiancé’s family. That’s a good thing.”
“It would be if I’d meant to do it, but I didn’t. I found myself falling into conversation and forgetting all about what I was actually there to do.” She kept her eyes on the road ahead of them. “This mission is more important than our relationship.”
“It doesn’t have to be.”
“This is my job and it’s all I have. It has to be more important.”
He could argue with her, but now wasn’t the time. They had five days on the island ahead of them, and despite what she was obviously planning, she would spend most of that time with him. “So you’ve decided we shouldn’t sleep together.”
She turned in her seat. “I’ve decided we need to understand that this is a sexual relationship and it can’t last. I have to go back to London, and you’ll do your thing. Maybe we could see each other when we can, but you need a different type of woman.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means I saw your life tonight and I don’t see where I would fit.