Fast & Loose (14 page)

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Authors: Elizabeth Bevarly

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

BOOK: Fast & Loose
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She held the door open while Rufus entered, then closed it behind him. Belatedly, she realized she hadn’t left on any lights, so she reached for the switch by the front door…only to smack her hand against Rufus’s chest. Or rather, the acreage that was Rufus’s chest. Good God, she’d never thought he would have such a hard body—he seemed too tall and lanky for that. But what her knuckles grazed was solid rock. Just to be certain, she opened her palm flat over the soft fabric of his white bartender shirt and pushed lightly. Yep. Although his shirt was virtually identical to the one she wore, what was underneath was totally different. He was like Granite Man. Just to be absolutely certain, though, she skimmed her palm downward—
bump, bump, bump
—over abdominal muscles that rippled like the Sahara after a sirocco.

Wow.
She never would have thought Rufus would be the gym type. Maybe, just to be absolutely, positively certain, she should—

“Bree?”

“Yeah, Rufus?”

“Either turn on the light you were reaching for, or it’s going to stay off for a long,
long
time.”

Yikes.

“Uh, sorry,” she mumbled as she took a giant step to the right to feel for the switch she’d all but forgotten about.

She flicked it quickly, activating a wall socket into which was plugged an antique standing lamp with an amber glass shade. The room was immediately bathed in soft, ambient gold, giving it a sort of otherworldly aura. The lamp was the very first purchase she’d made for her very first apartment, and when she’d seen the color it cast, she’d bought all her additional furnishings to match it. The overstuffed sofa and club chair were a tawny cognac color, while the pillows tossed onto both and the throw slung over the sofa’s back were the color of strong tea. Two prints hanging on one of the creamy walls were of dark yellow flowers framed in gold, while another wall held antique-looking maps of the Aegean and Mediterranean, two of many areas in the world Bree hoped to visit someday—preferably with her Greek tycoon boyfriend Stavros and his fully outfitted yacht. An old steamer trunk covered with the remnants of someone else’s travels nearly a century ago served as her coffee table, and two throw rugs that were shaggy with all the colors of the room combined rounded out the decor. Every time she looked at it, she felt like she was watching an old sepia-toned movie.

Usually, coming home and turning on that lamp to reveal her golden room served to calm Bree after a long night’s work. Now, though, it allowed her to see the way Rufus’s cheeks had darkened in response to her careless touch, the way his pupils had expanded, and the way he’d halfway lifted a hand to touch her. Although his black bartender pants were virtually identical to hers, too, what was under them, it was more than evident, was also way different from what was under hers. Immediately, he dropped his hand to his side and shifted his weight to make his condition a bit less obvious—though, she had to admit, there was no way he could completely hide something like
that
.

“Uh, coffee?” she asked quickly. Even more quickly, she made her way to the tiny galley kitchen to start a pot brewing. Even though the last thing she needed at the moment was any kind of, ah, stimulant. So she added, “Beer? Wine? Scotch? Oh, wait, I don’t have any Scotch. Or wine, either.” She feared she was also out of beer, but tugged open the fridge door anyway. “Aha!” she said when she saw a solitary bottle of Sam Adams—one of Lulu’s—sitting on the shelf. She plucked it out and held it up as if she were a spokesmodel for the brand. “Here ya go. Sam Adams is just waiting to make your night.”

The trip across the room had sent the butterflies in her stomach scurrying back to the Amazon, thankfully. But taking their place was an odd knot of tension that clenched tighter with every passing moment. It pulled taut enough to cut off her breath when Rufus began to walk across the apartment toward her. Slowly, deliberately, his eyes never leaving hers, until he stood barely a breath away from her. He extended his hand forward, and she thought he was going to take the beer from her, but instead, he moved his fingers to the dark curtain of hair that had fallen over her shoulder. In one swift, economical move, he brushed it away from her face, dipped his head to hers, and kissed her.

It was totally unexpected. Bree was in no way prepared. Without even thinking—because thought was impossible when a man’s lips felt as good as his did—she kissed him back, leaning her entire body forward, as if he were a magnet and she was steel. Hot, molten, malleable steel just waiting to be hammered. When he opened his mouth against hers, she eagerly parted her lips, drawing his tongue inside, tasting him as deeply as she could.

It was all the encouragement he needed. He drove both hands into her hair and turned himself and Bree until her back was against the doorjamb. Then he crowded his body into hers and kissed her more deeply still. She roped her arms around his waist, opening her palms over his back, dragging her fingers down the finely sculpted muscles she felt beneath his shirt. He slanted his head first one way then another, as if he couldn’t decide which way he liked kissing her better. She followed every move, giving as good as she got, taking as much as she could. Not that Rufus seemed to mind her demands, since he met them with a fire and passion to equal hers.

Where had this come from? she wondered vaguely. Yes, she’d always found him attractive, but this? This went beyond attraction. This was something she feared she could barely contain. Which was all the more reason, she told herself, why she had to contain it.

Now.

Rufus sucked her lower lip into his mouth and nibbled it gently with the edges of his teeth.

Really, she told herself. Had to contain it
now.

He traced her upper lip with the tip of his tongue, then rubbed his nose lightly against hers.

Now, Bree. Now.

He threaded his fingers in her hair, gripped a long strand and pulled gently to tip her head back, then rubbed his lips over the sensitive length of throat he exposed.

Now!

She had no idea how she managed it, but somehow, Bree was able to dip her head to the side and halt his progress. He didn’t seem to notice she was doing it to stop him, though, and covered her mouth with his again. She kissed him back for a little while longer—since she knew this was never, ever going to happen again…dammit—then dragged her mouth from his to pull in a few long gasps of air.

He allowed her that small escape, but pressed his forehead to hers and kept his fingers tangled in her hair. She felt more than saw his smile as he murmured, very, very softly, “So, Bree. It suddenly occurs to me that maybe you might like me a little bit, after all.”

She wished she could deny it. But she’d look like an idiot if she tried. She couldn’t even deny it to herself anymore. She’d liked Rufus more than she should—more than she’d allowed herself to think about—since her first day on the job. She hadn’t wanted to, but there it was all the same. How could a woman not be attracted to him? He was gorgeous, funny, smart, and sweet. He was a good guy. An incredibly hot good guy at that.

“Okay, I admit it,” she said softly. “I like you a little bit.”

He brushed his lips lightly over her temple, and she couldn’t help the purr of contentment that rose inside and rolled out of her. “I think,” he said, his breath warm against her face, “that maybe you even like me a lot.”

He moved his mouth to skim it over her cheekbone, nuzzle her jaw, and draw his open lips down the sensitive flesh of her neck. The purr of contentment grew to a shudder of delight, and suddenly Bree was curling her fingers in his hair and tilting her head back, to both bring him closer and give him better access. He took full advantage, combing his fingers through her hair and pushing it back, moving his head upward again to rub his nose softly against hers, then skimming his lips across her cheek until he could nibble her ear lobe.

“Admit it,” he whispered. “You like me a lot.”

“I do,” she groaned. “I like you a lot. Too much.”

And that was the problem, she told herself. She liked Rufus way more than she should. Enough to risk losing sight of the goal she’d been focused on all her life. The goal that was growing more important every day. Rufus couldn’t provide what Bree needed. It was as simple as that. To let this go any further would only hurt them both.

Reluctantly, she pulled her head away from his and stepped back, far enough to move out of the kitchen doorway and, more important, out of his reach. Just to be safe, though, she also turned her back on him before saying what she had to say. If she was looking at him when she said it, she’d lose sight of what she needed to make clear to him. Or she’d lose her nerve. Or she’d lose herself.

“Rufus, I can’t do this. Not with you.”

He said nothing in response, but she heard him sigh. Loudly. Impatiently. Angrily? Oh, surely not. Rufus was too good a guy to get angry over something like this.

“Because I don’t have money,” he said.

“Yeah.”

“That’s the only reason.”

“That’s the only one.”

“It’s a stupid reason, Bree.”

“To you. Not to me.”

“Then maybe you should explain it to me in a way that would make me think it less stupid.”

There was no way she could do that. Unless Rufus had grown up the way she had, unless he knew her mother as she was now, Bree couldn’t make him understand. In spite of that, she turned around and, still avoiding his gaze, crossed her arms over her midsection in an effort to shore herself up.

“I never knew my dad,” she said. “I don’t even know how well my mom knew my dad. Hell, I don’t know for sure if my mom even knows which guy of a couple she dated
is
my dad. He was a soldier at Fort Knox—that much I do know. My mom could never resist a man in uniform.”

Her mother still couldn’t resist a man in uniform. There was a new guy at the nursing home who thought he was Douglas MacArthur, and Rosie Calhoun was completely enamored of him. He was crazy about her, too. Of course, he thought Bree’s mother was one of the Andrews Sisters and Rosie hadn’t exactly tried to dissuade him of the notion. Then again, there were times when Bree wasn’t sure her mom didn’t think she was one of the Andrews Sisters, too.

“Anyway,” she started again, “whoever my father was, he never came around after I was born, and he never sent anything to help out.”

Rufus said nothing, but he took a few steps toward her. Bree took a few more in retreat, circling the sofa to put it between the two of them.

“Okay, I get it,” he said, stopping. “I promise to stay on my side.” He shoved his hands deep into the pockets of his trousers. “Go on.”

“My mom was a single mother at a time when it wasn’t all that hip to be one, you know? I mean, no one ever gave me a hard time about not having a dad around, and I had friends whose parents had split, but it was tough on my mom. She never got to go to college, and she wasn’t trained or qualified to do much of anything.” She shrugged. “Except look pretty and be charming. That didn’t pay the bills, though, so she worked two jobs. Two crappy jobs. She waited tables at night, and she cleaned people’s houses during the day. She’d take me with her on her housekeeping gigs in the summers, when school was out, and I’d help out.”

She sighed as she remembered. “Some of those houses she cleaned, Rufus…These huge estates in Glenview, and big houses in the east end…I couldn’t believe how some of these people lived. I couldn’t believe they had so much room to move around in, so many things to dust and polish and scrub. Beautiful things,” she added. “And the women would be home while we worked sometimes, reading the paper and drinking their coffee. Or they’d come home in their tennis and golf outfits while we were there.” She finally met his gaze, levelly and unflinchingly now. “My mom worked
so hard
, Rufus. She was no different from any of them. She deserved to live the same kind of life. But she had
no
life. She had to take care of herself and me instead. I decided a long time ago that I wasn’t going to let the same thing happen to me.”

“That sucks, Bree,” Rufus agreed. “You and your mom should both have had better. But you know what? A lot of people have crappy jobs. A lot of people deserve better than they have. It doesn’t make them go out and look for somebody else who has a better life to take care of them. Either they do what they can to improve their own lives, or they make do with what they have. Having money doesn’t mean all your problems are magically solved. A lot of times, it just makes more problems.”

“I know that,” she said. “I know my life won’t be charmed and perfect just because there’s someone else paying the bills. But it sure as hell would be better than what I have now. I’m not a lot of people, Rufus. I don’t want to make do with what I have. I want something better.”

“Then make it happen for yourself.”

“You don’t think I haven’t tried?” she said.

He jerked his hands from his pockets and took a step forward. “You majored in English, for God’s sake,” he reminded her. “That’s not exactly a degree that lends itself to moneymaking.”

“No, but it’s good for making a person smart and articulate and interesting to talk to. Look, Rufus,” she hurried on when he started to object, “I tried taking classes in economics and finance and business, and I just don’t have a head for it. It’s not in my genes. From my dad, whoever he was, I got a strong survival instinct and good strategy skills. From my mother, I got good looks and the ability to be charming when I want to be. Put them all together, and you get someone who knows what needs to be done and can figure out the best way to do it. I knew a long time ago what I needed to do. And I’ve done my best to do it. Just because it hasn’t happened yet doesn’t mean it won’t. Maybe it’s taking longer for me to reach my goal, but I will reach it. I have to.”

“You’ll hand yourself to some guy—let him take whatever he wants from you—just because he opens his wallet and lets you take whatever you want from it.”

She tried to feel militant and defiant when she said, “Damn right.” Instead, she only felt tired and defeated.

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