Read Crush Online

Authors: Crystal Hubbard

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #African American, #General

Crush (8 page)

BOOK: Crush
8.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Lucas has a full day planned for us.” Miranda set her tray aside and climbed out of the bed. “I’m going to shower and dress.”

“Come and get me when you’re done, hon.” He scurried off the bed after taking another piece of toast and a sausage. “I’ll be in my rooms, recording my speculations about what went on in here last night.”

Miranda nodded, preoccupied with her own thoughts as Bernie left. So Lucas had stayed the night. She didn’t quite know what to make of that. The eight o’clock delivery of the breakfast tray had awakened her from a very pleasant, very sound sleep. She had remembered to put her top back on before inviting the butler in, but she almost hadn’t remembered that Lucas had ever been there in bed beside her. She recalled his presence and his touch as one would recall a very happy, very pleasant dream. The kind of dream you tried to recapture every night thereafter, no matter how futile the pursuit. But by their very nature, dreams weren’t meant to be reclaimed, or real.

Miranda tried to force herself to remember that very important point: that this whole experience with Lucas wasn’t real, no matter how genuine it all felt. She paced the bedroom, telling herself that this weekend at Conwy would ultimately be no more than a modest sentence or two in the rich history of the Emberley Suite, and a nice memory for her to muse on when she was old and gray and covering cribbage tournaments for her convalescent home newsletter.

She went into the dressing room and grabbed a pair of jeans and a black V-neck sweater. She carried them into the bathroom and hung them over the clothes post. The shower distracted her from thoughts of Lucas. The thing was amazing. One of its walls was one-way glass and faced the ocean, giving the bather the impression of washing right there in Conwy Bay. There were four adjustable showerheads, each positioned at a different height. “Perfect for parties,” Miranda chuckled.

She started the water and undressed. As she stepped into the spray, a devilish notion crept into her head. She wondered what it would be like to bathe in the ocean with Lucas’s warm hands traveling over her skin…

* * *

Lucas blasted the cold water in all six heads of his shower. He was tempted to start running laps through them, hoping the brisk water would finally cool the heat that had been raging in him since he’d awakened in Miranda’s bed. Bracing his hands on the slate tiles, he let the cold water batter him. He hadn’t meant to stay the night in her room, and certainly not in her bed. He hadn’t even meant to fall asleep. He’d closed his eyes just for a moment, to better focus his attention on the satiny texture of her skin, and the next thing he’d known, he was waking up with the bright sun in his eyes and Miranda’s warm backside against his groin.

Not that he had minded. He could have stayed that way until Christmas, but the longer he stayed the bigger a liar he would have appeared to be. He had given her his word that he she would be safe from untoward advances, so he’d eased away from her, careful not to awaken her. But she had rolled over onto her back, partially into the space he had vacated.

In the morning sunlight, her beauty had drugged him. He knew that he should have gotten the hell out of her room, or at the very least he should have covered her. But he’d been transfixed by the sight of her.

The sheets were wrapped around her waist and her hair was a shining tangle of sienna on the pillow. Her golden brown skin was perfectly unblemished but for a tiny, heart-shaped birthmark low on her flat abdomen. One of her graceful arms was draped over her pillow, the other rested across her middle. Lucas’s eyes had traced every lyrical inch of her neck and collarbones before coming to rest on her breasts. They were small but so exquisitely formed, Lucas yearned to touch them.

Under his gaze, the plumrose peaks of her breasts pebbled invitingly. Her nude torso was a thing of perfect female beauty—strong, healthy, soft, lovely. From stage light, to candlelight, to moonlight and sunlight, Miranda had grown only more beautiful, and the sight of her had violently aroused him. Even his toes had felt erect. His head had forced his feet to get him out of the room before his heart conspired with the rest of his body to crawl back into the bed and wake her with kisses.

“Fool!” He shook his hair beneath a swirling jet of water. Bringing her to Conwy had been a huge mistake. Her visit was supposed to make him forget her, not want her that much more. He exited the shower, and it had helped, although now he was so cold and numb that he couldn’t feel his fingers or toes. But his fingers and toes weren’t the problem. They weren’t the parts that would betray him once he saw Miranda.

* * *

A whirlwind of activity and Bernie’s boisterous presence managed to keep Lucas and Miranda from having to face each other one-on-one, a situation both dreaded given their convoluted feelings regarding the night they had spent together. As they browsed in Harrods, London’s famous Knightsbridge luxury department store, Lucas wondered how he had gotten into so much trouble without having even slept with a woman with whom he’d spent the night.

Miranda barely noticed her surroundings. She was acutely aware of Lucas and the handsome figure he made in his long, dark wool coat. And the way he picked up things, such as a six-foot tall teddy bear and a diamond-studded choker, to ask her if she liked them. She was scared to say yes, for fear that he would buy them for her.

She showed a spark of interest in a Manchester United sweatshirt. She fingered the cuff and collar, looked at the price tag, then moved on to a display of men’s underpants. In the tail of her eye she caught the slight nod Lucas aimed at one of the Harrods personal shoppers attending them along with the store’s elite security team. But when she turned to get a better look, Lucas seemed inordinately interested in a mannequin modeling purple silk pajama pants.

By the time they were ready to leave the store, Bernie had filled six giant shopping bags with ties, shirts, shoes, belts, pants, and oddest of all, a tin of digestive biscuits. At a newsstand, Miranda bought a pack of Smarties, the English equivalent to M&Ms, and she had refused to let Lucas pay the starry-eyed cashier for her.

Weary from touring dozens of departments covering seven floors of everything from designer clothes to the Bagel Factory, Miranda was more than happy when Lucas asked her if she was ready to leave.

“I was ready to leave two hours ago, but I didn’t want to spoil Bernie’s fun.”

Lucas stopped in the middle of the wide pathway. “Bernard told us that you loved to shop.”

“He’s the one who likes shopping. He should have his paycheck directly deposited at Abercrombie & Fitch.”

Lucas glanced at Bernie, who was still grabbing at merchandise even as they were trying to leave the store. “He certainly seems to be in his element. I bloody hate shopping myself. The last time I came here, I was barred entry because of the dress code.”

“No shoes, no shirt, no service?” Miranda guessed.

“This is the one and only Harrods,” Lucas said. “The Harrods dress code, and I quote, ‘Does not permit any person entering the store who is wearing ripped jeans, high cut Bermuda or beach shorts, swimwear, bare midriffs, athletic singlets, cycling shorts, bare feet, flip flops or thong sandals, dirty or unkempt clothing or any extremes of personal presentation.


Miranda laughed. “How very English. That last bit should have kept Bernie out.”

“I’m somewhat more well known now than I was the last time I came here. These days, I could walk in bum naked on my hands and I’d still be permitted to shop.”

“It’s good to be the king,” Miranda said.

Lucas asked one of the security guards to collect Bernie while another called for Lucas’s car. At the Brompton Road entrance, Miranda couldn’t see daylight through the glass doors. The scene before her was a hundred times worse than the one she’d suffered through at the
Herald-Star
. A full phalanx of English “Bobbies,” standing with linked arms behind a barricade of portable steel fencing, held back a writhing mass of humanity that looked capable of swallowing Lucas’s limousine. Autograph books flapped on the ends of arms jutting from the crowd. Though she was still safe in the quiet store, Miranda didn’t resist when Lucas practically pulled her into the security of his coat.

“Perhaps we should utilize a more discreet exit, sir,” offered the head of security in his very proper, very cool English. “We’re well able to handle the safe arrival and departure of our more well known guests. Your shopping experience has been quite pleasant, up until now, may I presume?”

Miranda peeked out from Lucas’s embrace. It was a Sunday afternoon, but the store was eerily deserted. She looked around more carefully and saw store guards at the doors and at various escalators. Now that she thought about it, each floor they had visited had been markedly empty, but for sales personnel who had been friendly, but not at all pushy. She had chalked that up to the nature of the English, rather than something she herself had been taught as a reporter: Don’t go nuts over celebrities.

She now realized that the store had expected Lucas’s visit and had prepared for it accordingly. The staff had probably been forewarned to be on its best behavior, and each floor had been cleared to allow Lucas to browse in peace.

All that trouble
, Miranda thought,
and the only thing we bought was a bag of M&Ms with an English accent.

“Sir,” the security chief said, “I really must ask you to reconsider going out there.”

“We have to,” Lucas said pensively. He took Miranda by her shoulders. “Your newspaper and my label wanted photographs, and I refused to allow either party at Conwy. My publicist arranged to have some of our more friendly paparazzi here to shoot us, but apparently word of our presence has spread. Are you up to going out there? I leave it to you, Miranda.”

She looked at the crowd, and the waiting limo that seemed small and vulnerable within it. The driver and two bodyguards stood ready to spring into action the instant she and Lucas hit the sidewalk. The limo was so close, really. And the photographs were a necessity. “I can do it.”

“There you go, love.” Lucas proudly kissed her forehead and turned to the security chief. “We’re ready.”

Reeling somewhat from his offhand kiss and his use of the word ‘love,’ Miranda tightly held his hand as the store security team closed in around them. They headed for the door.

“No!” Bernie protested as he was practically carried out ahead of them. “I never got to go to the music section!”

Bernie stilled when the doors flung open and the roar of the excited crowd washed over him. He shrank into a ball, clutching his bags for dear life, and let Harrods’ security pitch him into the limo. Lucas hurried Miranda to the car, keeping his head bowed but pausing just long enough to allow a decent photograph.

“Sir Lucas!” his fans screamed. “Sir Lucas!”

Only when the crowd noise was a dull growl on the other side of the bulletproof vehicle did Miranda dare open her eyes.

Lucas poured her a glass of water. “I assumed that you would be used to crowds and the hoopla surrounding a celebrity. You are a reporter, after all.”

“That’s just it.” Her hands shook, dripping water onto her lap. “I’m usually on the other side of the action. I don’t think I’d like being famous.”

Lucas helped steady her hands as the limo pulled into traffic and headed for a police heliport, where they would take a chopper back to Conwy. “I’m afraid you already are, love.”

“That makes two.” From the other side of the limo, Bernie rifled through his bags, making sure that he hadn’t lost or forgotten anything.

“Two what?” Miranda asked.

“Two ‘loves.

” Bernie withdrew one of his new ties and laid it over his hand. “This looked great on me in the store but now it looks sallow. Oh, well.” He tossed the tie back in its slim box. “I’ll give it to Rex. Sallow is his color. So what’s up with the ‘loves,’ Lucas?”

“You reporters don’t miss a thing, do you?” Lucas rarely blushed, but he felt one fighting from under the collar of his sweater. “I was wondering when you’d show your stripes.”

“Answer the question,” Bernie said. “If you don’t mind.”


‘Love’ is just…” Lucas looked at Miranda as he pondered an answer. She had removed the black elastic ponytail holder from her hair and now wore it on her left wrist. She used her left hand to comb her hair from her face, and as it cascaded past her shoulders, she turned and looked at him. She wore no makeup. Her expression seemed troubled, yet her simple beauty was stunning. She was funny and smart, and touching him with nothing but her trust and intellect, she had made him feel like more of a man than any woman ever had. All at once, he knew that the woman sitting beside him was someone he could…

‘Love,

” Lucas began again, “is just an expression. Like ‘duck’ or ‘egg.


“It’s an expression of affection, though, right?” Bernie persisted.

“Yes.”

Bernie sat back, letting Lucas off the hook. “I like ‘love’. I’m more of a ‘duck’ man, truth be told, but love is nice, too.”

* * *

Love wasn’t just an expression of affection. For Miranda, it was also a curse, and the very thing she wanted to avoid. As a reporter, she had learned to read people, particularly those who didn’t wish to have their true feelings or thoughts known. Lucas had explained his use of the word love, but Miranda had sensed more meaning behind it.

The chopper ride back to Conwy had seemed too quick. Miranda had focused on the scenery beneath them, and listened as Lucas had pointed out key landmarks and sites. But every time she had looked up at him, he had been looking at her, not at what he was describing.

The helicopter had delivered her and Bernie to the Welsh airstrip where their bags awaited them on the jet that would take them back to Boston. As much as she had dreaded the big date, Miranda scarcely believed that in eight hours or so, she would be right back at the
Herald-Star
. And Lucas Fletcher would be out of her life forever.

BOOK: Crush
8.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

God-Shaped Hole by Tiffanie DeBartolo
El Día Del Juicio Mortal by Charlaine Harris
The Boy Who Never Grew Up by David Handler
Colorful Death by S. Y. Robins
Playing the Game by M.Q. Barber
Sun and Moon, Ice and Snow by Jessica Day George
B017GCC62O (R) by Michelle Horst
Three To Get Deadly by Paul Levine