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Reckless In Love(12)

By:Bella Andre & Jennifer Skully


"What were your favorite shows when you were a kid?"

In an instant, he went completely still inside, the relaxed feeling gone  as if it had never been there at all. Sebastian didn't hide his history  from people, but he'd learned how to talk about his childhood on stage  and in interviews without getting upset about it. He used his past as an  example, treating his story as an object lesson in his talks: You  didn't have to be controlled by your past, but you did need to make sure  you learned from it so that you wouldn't end up repeating those  mistakes.

But he knew he couldn't do that with Charlie tonight. Not if he wanted  her to know more about him than the billionaire façade right there on  the surface.

"Are you okay, Sebastian?" she said softly, breaking through the fog he'd let descend around them.

He stroked her cheek, her soft, warm skin helping to bring him back to her. "Just thinking."

Thinking about how he hadn't watched TV as a kid because he'd been too  busy looking after his parents. As far back as he could remember, they'd  drunk too much and partied too hard. When they were drinking, they'd  had huge fights, but they'd never hit each other or him. Mostly they'd  just loved to party, staying out till all hours of the night until their  bodies gave out, forcing them home to pass out in their bed. Or as  close to their bed as they could manage. Once his mother had recovered  from their latest binge, she'd always promised they'd change their ways.  But then his father would reel her into another drink, another party,  another great night out.

Until the day things went from great to deadly in the span of a heartbeat.

Sebastian had learned that you could love someone with all your heart  and still be the worst thing for them. Like his dad had been for his  mom. Each other's worst enemies. It was a lesson he'd never let himself  forget-just how much love could hurt and how toxic it could be when two  people were a bad fit for each other.

Finally, he told her, "I didn't watch much TV. I grew up in a seedy  neighborhood of Chicago and my parents were alcoholics. TV wasn't a  priority." Keeping them alive was. Until he couldn't even manage to do  that anymore.

Her lips parted, then her gaze moved over his face like a caress. When  she put her hand on his arm, her heat highlighted his cold skin and how  easily she warmed him up again. "That must have been tough. That's why  your friends mean so much to you, isn't it? Because they were there for  you when you needed them?"

He not only appreciated her questions-none of the women he'd dated had  wanted to know more about his past than they could read in an interview  or hear him speak about from the stage-but how matter-of-fact she was  about it. Concern without pity. Strength and support without anyone  being considered weak.

Charlie Ballard was an extraordinary woman. So extraordinary that he  understood less now than ever about what could possibly be holding her  back from the glittering success she deserved. With her heat seeping  into his bones, his marrow, his heart, he silently vowed to give her the  world. Whether she was ready for it or not.





CHAPTER SEVEN


The words had rolled off Sebastian's tongue as if they were no big deal.  I grew up in a seedy neighborhood of Chicago and my parents were  alcoholics.

Maybe most people let him get away with that because they were so wowed  or intimidated by the billionaire with the entire world at his feet. But  the pain she'd heard-the pain he'd clearly been working so hard to  hide-made Charlie desperately want to reach out to him, to help him in  any way she could. Even if it was just by listening, she hoped he'd know  he wasn't alone.

"You're right. If my friends hadn't been there..." There was little  inflection in his voice, but from the way he played with the ends of her  hair, curling it around his fingers in a repeated loop, she knew that  what he was saying bothered him. "My parents were big partiers. My mom  might have been able to make it on her own. But my father was always  about the next party. Until he burned them both out."         

     



 

"You took care of them, didn't you? Even though you were just a kid."  She wished she could absorb the pain of his childhood and erase it, but  for now, the stroke of her foot along his leg was a small connection he  seemed to appreciate.

"I did my best." He rubbed his cheek against the top of her head,  obviously needing comfort. Comfort she so badly wanted to give him. "But  when my parents couldn't hold down jobs anymore, I moved in with my  friend Daniel's parents for good. I was about thirteen then."

Thirteen. Just a child. Anyone else who had grown up in Sebastian's  shoes would have been filled with darkness. But even as he exposed his  past to her, he was sweet, caressing, gentle.

"They must be wonderful people."

"Bob and Susan have greatness in them. Kindness. Caring. They had it  tough too, but they still shared everything they had with us. Everything  and more."

She recognized the love threaded through every word-not only when he  spoke about Bob and Susan, but also about his parents. "What happened to  your parents?" Something told her she should slide her hand into his  before he answered.

"They fell off the wagon one too many times." The pain of their passing  expressed itself in the slight tightening of his fingers around hers. "I  was a senior in high school when Mom had a bad fall. She never  recovered and died a couple of weeks later."

"Oh, Sebastian." Even bracing herself hadn't helped. She still felt the  pain of his loss arcing through her...just as she knew he had to feel it  himself.

"A few weeks later my dad died in a drunk-driving accident. Luckily he didn't hurt anyone else."

Heartache spread to her entire body. To have to use the word lucky while talking about his father's death?

It speared her, all the way to the core.

She slid her hand from his to take his face in her hands. "I'm sorry."  Not that she'd asked, but that he'd had to live through it at all.

"I am too. They were good people. Good people who couldn't beat their addiction."

It was an amazingly kind way of looking at the situation. But even  though kindness was great, so, Charlie knew from personal experience,  was anger. At least in small doses, if only to purge it from your  system.

Had Sebastian ever given his anger wings-or four wild horses to drag it  on a chariot through the streets until the wind, and the rain, burned it  out?

"How did you get from there to-" She paused and swept her hand in front  of her to encompass the huge house and property. Even the helicopter now  waiting for its next flight in the nearby hangar.

"I'm a big talker." Now that he was no longer telling her about his  parents and his childhood, the tension began to leave his body. "I  didn't go to college, but I always liked telling people what to do. I  especially liked it when they listened." He grinned. "And, of course,  when their lives got better as a result. A talk-show host who liked my  shtick gave me my first big break."

"What you do isn't a shtick." She'd never seen him in action, but he  couldn't have achieved all this-he owned a Monet, for God's sake-with  mere magic tricks or smoke and mirrors.

"You're right, I should erase that word from my vocabulary." She swore  she could see him silently do that. Erase erase erase. "I truly do  believe every word I say, every piece of advice I give." He smiled at  her. "And the rest is history."

"You make it sound so easy. As though anyone could build an empire and make billions."

Pulling her hands down, he held them and locked his gaze on her eyes.  "You can. Believe in yourself. Push for what you want and deserve. It  will manifest."

Her head spun at how quickly he'd twisted the focus around to her,  making her feel slightly uncomfortable with the intensity of his gaze.  Or maybe, if she was being totally honest with herself, she wasn't  uncomfortable with Sebastian, but with all of the big changes she could  see coming down the pike. His words from the first day he'd come to her  workshop replayed in her head: We won't just unveil your work, we'll  unveil you to the world too.

Her roof might sag, but her life had been comfortable. Of course she  wasn't averse to being a big success, but was she ready for it?

"I'm already manifesting," she quipped in an effort to relax a bit about  it all. "You saw my dragon in Chinatown and now here I am, poised to  create something amazing."

"Definitely amazing," he murmured as he pulled her into him, his arm  deliciously warm across her shoulders. "Tell me more about yourself.  From the way you speak of your parents, I can tell they were good ones."         

     



 

"They really were. My dad taught me everything about welding. My mom  taught me everything about cooking." She grinned at him. "Only one of  them succeeded at getting through to me, though."