Dream Spinner (Dream Team Book 3) - Kristen Ashley (bearly read books .txt) 📗
- Author: Kristen Ashley
Book online «Dream Spinner (Dream Team Book 3) - Kristen Ashley (bearly read books .txt) 📗». Author Kristen Ashley
This was something else that hit him as a surprise, like a shot.
His mom was just his mom. He’d always thought she was beautiful in a detached way any kid would think their mom was beautiful.
But as he took her in right then, he saw she really was something.
Tall, blonde, features that were classically attractive, she’d always been slender. Though the last year or so he’d noticed abstractedly that she’d been putting on weight, it looked good on her. It made her look healthier. Even more animated.
And in the moment of coming to this realization, Axl noted something else.
Her clothes were more casual than usual.
Hattie and he were dressed more formally than she was, something Axl hadn’t noticed his mother ever do “in company.” And they would consider the first visit with Hattie to be having company.
She was wearing pressed chinos, a crisp white Oxford shirt with the collar popped and a pair of neutral flats.
He knew the shoes were Louboutin, but unless someone recognized the style, or saw the lipstick-red sole, they wouldn’t.
What they weren’t were Chanel, his father’s preferred footwear (and accessories) for his mother.
And that was so much so, even Axl knew it. He couldn’t count how many times he’d heard his father say, “Rachel …no. You need to go back and put on the Chanel.”
There was something almost rebellious about those Louboutins.
And definitely the chinos.
“Sweetheart,” she greeted, moving direct to him while smiling at him, at the same time darting curious glances to Hattie.
“Ma,” he greeted back.
She arrived at him and did the mother thing with her hands on his shoulders. He put one to her waist and bent down for her to kiss his cheek.
He straightened and put a little pressure in his hand as he turned them to Hattie.
“Mom, this is Hattie Yates. Hattie, baby, this is my mom, Rachel Pantera.”
Hattie had a hand up and a smile on her face that did not look fake, but he could tell by the stiff line of her neck and shoulders that she was nervous.
“Mrs. Pantera, really lovely to meet you.”
“Hattie, please call me Rachel,” his mom invited, taking her hand then covering it with her other and holding it. “Nice to meet you too, and what an amazing dress. So effortless but so chic.”
“Wow, thank you, Mrs…. sorry, Rachel.”
Before Axl could introduce Hattie to Lisa, his father made his entrance.
“Did I hear … ?”
Axl tensed when he heard his dad’s booming courtroom voice.
“ … Axl’s Jeep?” The man appeared in the kitchen. “Yes! There’s m’boy.”
And then there was his father.
To make certain you didn’t miss how important he was, he hadn’t changed from work. His look gave the implication he’d just arrived home, shrugged off his suit jacket and pulled off his tie. But never fear, he’d arrived in the nick of time.
Axl had inherited a good deal from his father. Not just the dark hair turned silver early, but also his height, his build and his blue eyes.
His mom moved away from Hattie and immediately Hattie edged closer to Axl.
So close, her shoulder brushed his.
He slid his arm around her waist.
“My God, look at you,” Sylas Pantera said to Hattie. “Aren’t you a pretty little thing?”
Every fiber of muscle in Axl’s body strung tight.
She wasn’t a fucking pretty fucking little fucking thing.
Fuck.
Right off the bat, reductive language to put Hattie in her place.
So yeah.
It was going to be one of those nights.
Fuck.
“Mr. Pantera,” Hattie forged in, not leaving Axl’s side but lifting her hand Sylas’s way.
His dad waved in front of himself, booming, “No, no, no. Sylas. Call me Sylas.”
Then he took her by the shoulders, pulled her from Axl’s hold and bent down to kiss her cheek.
He let her go and Axl instantly claimed her again.
“Kid,” Sylas greeted him.
“Dad,” Axl replied.
“You look fit,” Sylas stated.
“You do too,” Axl returned.
“Work good?”
“The usual.”
His father’s mouth tightened.
Work was a thorny subject, mostly because his dad didn’t exactly know what Axl did, and even if he did, he wouldn’t know exactly what that entailed because Axl couldn’t tell him.
And Sylas didn’t like not knowing things.
So much so, there was a likelihood that his father had Hawk’s operations investigated. He had an in-house investigator, and as named partner, his father wouldn’t hesitate to use firm resources as he saw fit.
But even if he did, there was only so much to be discovered.
And Sylas would know just how much was not.
“I guess that’s good,” Sylas said tightly. “Now, are we going to stand in the kitchen all night, or am I making cocktails?”
“I could use a cocktail, darling,” his mom put in.
“Always,” Sylas returned, with an ogle to Hattie and then a dismissive, “It’s martini time.”
Rachel swayed back an inch at the not-so-veiled insult couched in an inference his mother had a problem with alcohol.
Something, to Axl’s knowledge, she did not have.
Axl fought punching his father in the throat.
Hattie forged into the breach.
“I love martinis too, Rachel. Are you vodka or gin?”
“She’s both if it has an alcohol content,” Sylas answered for his wife.
And there it was again.
What the fuck?
Dots of pink hit Rachel’s cheeks, she didn’t quite hide the side eye she shot at her husband, and Hattie’s fingers curled over Axl’s at her waist.
That was when he realized how hard they were digging in.
He released the pressure and dropped his head to look at her.
“Sorry,” he muttered.
“Don’t be,” she whispered back, keeping her fingers around his.
“What’s this?” Sylas asked.
“Nothing,” Axl said shortly. “I could use a martini too.”
Sylas looked to Hattie and jerked a thumb at Axl. “Gotta get this kid to start drinking scotch. Now, that’s a man’s drink.”
Hattie, doing her best to defuse the tension, shot him a bright, playful smile. “Well, Sylas, James Bond drinks martinis and I’m relatively sure everyone thinks he’s pretty danged manly.”
“Yes, but he’s fictional,” Sylas parried.
And then Hattie did something brilliant.
She capitulated immediately, stating “Touché,” in a way she made it clear she couldn’t give fewer fucks about what Sylas thought was a manly drink, so she
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