She dialed his cell, and Alex answered on the first ring. “Hey, Ri!”
She heard his teammates in the background and frowned. “Where are you?”
“Had some of the guys over.”
“After you came home from Ian’s?” she asked.
He laughed hard. “Are you kidding? Why the hell would I go over there? He screwed you—literally.”
She cringed. “You’re wasted.”
“You could be too if you’d come party with us,” he said.
She closed her eyes and groaned. For a man who stepped up when she needed him, he could also be such an overgrown child. The result of his big contract and the fact that his parents hadn’t been all that strict.
“You waited years for an opening with your half brother,” she said, trying to reason with Alex. “Why wouldn’t you meet him halfway?”
“Be right back!” he called out to his friends.
She assumed he was going somewhere quiet, because the noise level surrounding him died down.
“Because I don’t trust his motives. I don’t trust him with you. What if he’s using you to piss me off?”
She winced at the implication behind his words. “Flattering. Very flattering.”
“You know what I mean! He doesn’t deserve you. And the fact is, I don’t f**king trust him, period.”
Riley glanced heavenward. “You can’t begin to know whether you can trust him until you get to know him. If you won’t do it for yourself, do it for me.”
Heavy silence followed, which meant, at the very least, he was listening.
“Don’t know if I can do it, Ri.”
Pain twisted her heart.
Although she hadn’t known Ian long, she wasn’t finished getting to know him. She didn’t want to be. But she didn’t want to lose Alex either. She couldn’t imagine her life without him in it.
“How did the night go for your sisters?” she asked, hoping that at least Ian had made progress with the females on Alex’s side of the family.
His answer sounded muffled.
“Say that again?” she asked, hoping she’d misheard.
“They didn’t go to Ian’s either,” Alex said, sounding more subdued than earlier. Maybe because he’d heard in her voice how much this subject meant to her.
Riley shook her head, her throat full. She couldn’t bring herself to ask Alex if he’d told his sisters not to go to Ian’s either. She didn’t want to know, didn’t need another reason to be disappointed in him.
“Call me in the morning when you’re sober,” she said, unable to stay on the phone any longer.
“Riley, come on. Don’t put him between us.”
She shook her head. “You’re the one doing that. Not me. Night, Alex.” She hung up, her emotions veering all over the map.
From anger and disappointment at her best friend, to genuine worry about how Ian had handled their rejection. She’d promised herself she’d keep her distance, but knowing he’d extended himself to his other family, in a sense for her, she had to see him. To know if he was okay.
* * *
Riley drove to Ian’s and left her car with the valet then approached the man sitting behind the desk to give her name. She wished she could go right up without him announcing her beforehand, but if she wanted to see Ian, she had no choice but to let him call ahead and get his permission.
“Riley Taylor to see Ian Dare,” she said to the older, uniformed man.
He typed in her name. “You’re on his list, Ms. Taylor. Go right up.”
She narrowed her gaze, taken off guard, until she realized Ian had probably added her because he’d invited her to his family gathering. And she hadn’t shown up either. Of course she’d counted on Alex and his attitude to provide the explanation for her—never thinking he wouldn’t come and get his sisters to go along with him.
When the elevator let her off inside Ian’s apartment, he was waiting for her, arms folded across his chest.
“A little late for the party, aren’t you?” he asked in a sarcastic voice.
“I can explain.”
“Don’t bother,” he told her.
“Ian!” a horrified female yelled at him.
Olivia, Riley thought, recognizing the other woman’s voice. She should have realized Ian wouldn’t be alone.
Olivia strode into the room from the direction of the kitchen. “Hi, Riley,” she said, subdued.
“Who’s here?” another woman asked from the other room.
“Come here, Avery. I want to introduce you to someone. Drag Scott and Tyler with you,” Olivia called back.
“This is a waste of time,” Ian said. “Riley’s not staying.”
Olivia scowled at him.
“What’s up?” A younger version of Olivia joined them, equally as attractive.
“Riley, this is our sister, Avery.”
Riley smiled at the other woman.
“Nice to meet you!” she said in return.
“Av, I think it’s time we all get going.” Olivia gave both Riley and Ian a pointed stare.
“Do I look like I’m leaving?” a tall, gorgeous man with dark hair strode in, raising his burger in his hand. “I’m just getting started.”
“Take it to go,” Avery said, obviously having picked up on her sister’s meaning.
Riley appreciated the girls’ attempts to give her and Ian some privacy.
Ignoring his sisters’ request to leave, the taller brother stepped closer to Riley.
“What’s up?” another man asked. He carried a beer.
Avery and Olivia let out a joint sigh.
If Riley weren’t so upset, she’d laugh at the dynamics between these siblings. She only wished she had a close family like this.
“These two Neanderthals are our brothers, Scott and Tyler,” Olivia said.
Riley studied them. Although they resembled Ian, they each had more playful qualities that were evident immediately by the twinkle in their gazes and the warmth in their faces. Ian at his most relaxed always looked tightly wound. His siblings had dark hair, but their eyes were bluer, and each was drop-dead good-looking. Damn, their parents made gorgeous kids, she thought.
“Nice to meet you,” Riley said to them.
“Sorry to say hi and run,” Olivia said, nudging one of her brothers in the ribs.
“Hi, Riley. I’m Tyler,” he said, ignoring his sister. “And it’s always nice to meet one of my brother’s—”