Soldier Bodyguard. Lisa Childs
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No. He could not be her bodyguard because no matter what promise he’d made their daughter, he would not be able to protect her.
Even if that bomb had been meant for her, like he’d claimed, he still posed the greater threat to her. She still reacted to him, just as she had when she’d loved him. And she could not fall for him again.
Loving him last time had nearly destroyed her. If she fell for him again, she was terrified she might not survive.
Xavier Bentler smiled as he softly slid the pocket door closed on the couple embracing inside the library. He didn’t want anyone to interrupt them. Not even their daughter. When Maisy had caught him standing in the hallway, he’d sent her off to the kitchen to get him some cookies. Fortunately Shawna hadn’t banned them from the house like she had his cigars.
He turned away from the door and slammed into what felt like a steel post. Cooper Payne steadied him with a strong hand on his shoulder.
“You’re playing a dangerous game,” the younger man warned him.
“What game?” Xavier asked, feigning innocence.
“My mother’s a wedding planner,” Cooper related. “I know a matchmaker when I see one.”
Xavier shrugged. “I have no idea what you’re talking about. My nurse is obviously in danger. She needs protection.” He had a bad feeling that she could be in danger because of him.
“And you could have hired any other security firm besides ours,” Cooper said. “You could have even hired one of my brother’s franchises of the Payne Protection Agency. But you chose mine. No.” He pointed toward the closed pocket doors. “You chose him.”
Unabashed, Xavier nodded in agreement. “Of course I did. He’s my grandson. I know he’s the best.”
And he also knew nobody would protect Shawna like Cole would. Xavier was pretty damn sure that was why the stubborn young fool had broken their engagement all those years ago. Cole had been trying to protect Shawna from the pain of losing him.
Damn fool. He’d just put her through that pain sooner.
His grandson’s boss studied him through narrowed blue eyes. The guy was shrewd. Xavier understood why he was friends with Cole.
“He’s good,” Cooper acknowledged. “All my guys—and my sister—are very good. They will do everything within their power to keep Shawna and her daughter safe.”
“Good,” Xavier said as he released a breath of relief. “That’s what I hired you to do.”
Cooper snorted. “We both know that’s not the only reason you hired us. You’re playing matchmaker. And that’s a dangerous game.”
“More dangerous than bombs?”
“When emotions are involved, things get messy,” Cooper warned. “People get distracted. Cole can’t afford to be distracted right now. You hiring him has put him in even more danger than she is—in even more danger than he was on our missions for the Marine Corps.”
Xavier tensed as fear replaced his earlier satisfaction. “How’s that?”
“Because Cole will give up his life for hers,” Cooper said.
“But you’re all here,” Xavier said. “You’ll all work together to keep her safe.”
“Her,” Cooper said. “But Cole’s going to be more worried about protecting her and that child than himself. He’s now in more danger than she is.”
Xavier hadn’t considered that. He’d known his grandson had defied odds before—in the Marines, even in his new role as bodyguard. But he hadn’t considered that the job he had hired him to do could be the one that would get him killed.
What the hell had he done?
His heart beating frantically, Cole hadn’t been this afraid...since the last time he’d held Shawna Rolfe in his arms. But she wasn’t Shawna Rolfe anymore. She was Shawna Little. She was another man’s wife.
But having her in his arms again felt so right, felt so natural. She fit just as perfectly as she always had even though she was so petite and he was tall. She was delicate, and he was tough. Actually they had never really fit at all.
He should have never proposed to her in the first place, not when he’d been leaving for the Marines. He’d been young and arrogant then and so convinced that he was invincible. After his father’s death, he should have known no one was, if his incredibly strong, independent father was not.
But it had taken a few deployments for him to understand how tentative his life was. And he hadn’t wanted to put her through yet another loss. Her parents’ deaths had nearly destroyed her.
But losing him hadn’t affected her at all. She’d moved on quickly. And really, he had tried to be happy that she’d had. That she had a husband with a good, safe job. Emery Little shouldn’t have died.
So Cole offered his condolences again with all sincerity. “I’m sorry.”
Shawna pulled back, tugging free of his arms. “Why?” she asked.
“Your husband died.”
Her usually pale skin flushed. “I know. But why are you sorry about that?”
“I didn’t want him dead,” Cole said. “Hell, that was the last thing I wanted.”
She flinched.
“Because I wanted you to be happy,” he explained.
“Why?” she asked the question again, her brow furrowing with confusion. “When you broke up with me...”
He’d had to say terrible things to get her to accept that they were over, that she had no reason to wait for him. Obviously he’d gotten through to her far too well.
“We were not meant to be together,” he said. Then or now. His life as a bodyguard was no less dangerous than his life had been as a Marine. “But that didn’t mean I didn’t want you to be happy.”
He would have preferred that she had waited a little longer though before she’d married someone else and started a family with him. But then he was a hypocrite because the whole reason he’d broken up with her was so she wouldn’t mourn him. Mission accomplished.
She shook her head in denial. Obviously she didn’t believe him. He wasn’t going to argue with her-not while she was in mourning.
“Why are you here, Cole?” she asked.
“My grandfather hired the Payne Protection Agency to protect you.”
“Why are you here?” she asked.
“My boss assigned me to this job.”
She chuckled bitterly. “And what—he would fire you if you refused the assignment?”
“Maybe.” But he doubted it. Cooper probably would have understood if Cole had told the truth, that he was not over her, that he would never be completely over her. But Cole had lied, had claimed that he had no reason to be jealous of her and her dead husband. Why the hell had he lied?
“And what if he had fired you?” she challenged him. “You could start your own damn security firm. Or you could never work another day in your life like the rest of your family.”
While they were all employed at his grandfather’s billion-dollar business, it was