Authors: Lauren Dane
huge amount of food just this
morning. I can’t tell you what any of
it is. I just tucked it all into my fridge.
But I can guarantee whatever it is
you’ll love.”
“And you live in your own place?”
“No. Of course not. I live in a
dorm with all my college pals. We
play beer pong and have pillow
fights in our underpants while
giggling.”
He’d been about to frown at her
until she made the pillow fighting
comment and then he went there in
his head and had to fight off a hard-
on at the thought.
She handed him a business card.
“My house is here. Well, not the
gallery part. I live in a small house
on the same lot. Mine is the one with
the blue shutters. You can meet me
there in a bit. I need to take these figs
to the same friend who brought me
the food this morning. I’ll be home in
about thirty minutes.”
“All right. I’ll see you then.”
She waved and he watched her
head to the front to check out. At least
he had time to run his own groceries
home first.
Daisy knocked and went inside when
she heard Mary call out. “Hey, I was
at the market and I saw figs on sale.”
She held up the bag and Mary took
them with a delighted sound before
she kissed Daisy’s cheek and hugged
her.
“Awesome! I’ve been working for
the last two days on a few new
recipes with figs. Stay and be my
tester.” Mary drew her into the large
kitchen where Mary’s brother Cal
and their friend Jules were already
seated.
“Hey gorgeous!” Jules hopped up
to come and hug Daisy.
“Hey you.” She hugged Jules back
and then moved to drop a kiss on
Cal’s cheek. “I can’t stay. I have…I
guess it’s a date.”
“You
guess?”
Jules’s
pretty
features darkened.
“It’s this guy I met in a class. Or it
wasn’t my class, I was subbing in the
class and he was in it by mistake and
he left and I left.”
“Oh, hot guy in the suit. Yum.”
Mary put the figs on the counter.
“Yes, him. I just saw him at the
grocery store. I’m going to make him
dinner. Or actually serve him your
food, which is better. I told him it
wasn’t my cooking all up front and
everything.” She added this when
Jules’s brow went up.
“Girl, I don’t care about that. Who
is this guy? You’re letting a near
stranger come to your house?”
“He’s some uber professional hot
dude. If I end up dead and stuffed in a
freezer, tell ’em some pretty guy
named Levi Warner saw me last.”
“Don’t make fun.” Jules glowered
and Daisy hugged her, loving how
protective they all were.
“I’m not making fun of how you
care about me. But he seems wary
because of the age thing. It’s dinner,
not an engagement.”
“He’s legit.” Cal sipped his beer.
“Warner family is a big deal in some
circles. They’ve got a law firm in
Seattle. He’s got a small office here
as well.”
“Is he throwing shade on you guys?
I will totally kick him out if he is.”
Cal laughed. “No, baby, but thank
you. He does land use stuff. Not
anywhere near what we do. He’s
even sent some of his local people to
us when they needed representation
on issues he doesn’t do. But he’s
older than you are.”
“He is.”
Everyone made a deal about her
age. Usually until they got to know
her. It used to bother her more than it
did by that point. At the beginning of
Delicious, she was just eighteen
years old. Gillian and Jules were
already close friends. Mary and her
brothers too because they lived right
next door. Daisy had been the kid
who ran errands for them. She’d
made extra money in high school
working for Jules’s parents at their
cafe so she knew them all. Liked
them and wanted to be part of their
circle. So she’d just done it. Showed
up. And they’d let her in and they’d
all grown close and now six years
later she was one of them, twenty-
four or not.
“Like how much older?”
Daisy shrugged. “He looks mid-
thirties. But he’s got one of those
faces some men have. Could be up to
fifty. Though I don’t think so.”
Cal interrupted. “He’s got to be
forty or so. He was ahead of me at
UW. He and I both went to law
school there. What’s a forty-year-old
man want with a twenty-four-year-
old?”
Daisy indicated her body. “Dude. I
mean, come on. Twenty-four-year-
old boobs.”
Cal blushed furiously as Mary and
Jules laughed.
“Look, it’s dinner. He’s not a
creep. I’d know. I can always tell.
He’s hot. We had chemistry. That’s
all we’re talking about right now.
And I need to run. He’ll be at my
house in ten minutes.” She hugged
and kissed everyone before heading
out again and back home.
Truth was, she found herself
deliciously intrigued by Levi Warner.
He was nothing like any man she’d
been with before. Distinguished, she
thought as she put her bags down in
the kitchen and headed to her closet
to find something to change into. He
made her want to dress up to please
his eye. Which was interesting in and
of itself.
It was too late for a full new outfit
and all that. But she could do better
than yoga pants. She found some
trousers and a shirt to wear over the
tee she had on. A quick brush of
teeth, some lipstick and a braid of her
hair and she was ready by the time he
knocked on the door.
She’d even had time to light some
candles so the house smelled good
when she opened her door to find him
standing on her stoop with a huge
bouquet of flowers and a bottle of
wine.
“Come in.” She took the flowers
and led him to the kitchen, just a few
steps away. “Thank you.” She loved
that he’d chosen a bunch of colorful
wildflowers. They went perfectly
with the vase she’d finished up a few
months ago.
“I brought wine.” He held up a
bag. “And some beer too. I wasn’t
sure what you’d be serving.”
“Put them here on the counter. Let
me see what I’ve got. I just walked
in. If you’d like, you can put some
music on.”
He wandered off, looking around
and probably thinking she didn’t
notice it. The house was where her
grandmother used to live and work
after her grandfather had died. But
she was in her late eighties now and
lived in her parents’ house. She and
Daisy shared a workspace out back.
So the little house had become
hers.
Little Dragon began to play
through her speakers. She watched
him pause to listen and then nod to
himself as if he found it acceptable.
This was a good sign.
She pulled out the containers Mary
had left, peeking in and taking sniffs
as she peeled the lids back.
“Mmm, pulled pork. Do you eat
pork?”
He moved to her and she had no
choice but to freeze in place. He was
too much and not enough all at once
and she didn’t know how to process.
So intense she wanted to run and rub
herself all over him at the same time.
He was the most intense man she’d
ever been attracted to. Though,
attracted was a lightweight word for
the
way
he
simply
assumed
ownership of all her parts, leaving
her mentally panting. And he hadn’t
even touched her yet!
He got even closer to look into the
container she held. “I do.”
Licking her lips, she stepped back
to grab plates and put things into the
microwave.
“Sit. I’ll get you something to
drink. We’ve got pulled pork, which
will go awesome with the brioche
she put in with it. Shrimp salad of
some kind. Don’t know what she
calls it, but it’ll be good. Other little
puffy things and some crunchy bits
and bobs.”
“Beer please.”
He watched through hooded eyes
as she moved around the small space
and served him. Watched as she
tipped the glass when she poured the
beer. Watched as she automatically
dished him up a plate and handed it
to him along with a linen napkin she
casually put on his lap.
Watched and fell under her spell.
“I meant to ask you last week when
I ran into you. Whose artwork is
that?”
“Did you like it?” She nudged
some chili sauce in his direction.
“I did. I take it you work for the
gallery next door? I’d like to speak
with the artist. See if he’d be willing
to donate something to a charity
auction I’m working on.”
One of her brows rose. “I do work
at the gallery next door, yes. It’s only
open a few hours a week. And I’m
sure she’d be willing to donate
something for a good cause. What’s
the cause?”
“Ah, sorry. I assumed and that was
silly. I figured ‘Ramona’ was the
name of the art, not the artist.”
She laughed and paused to hum in
delight after she popped something
into her mouth. “You need to try that
pickled thing there.” She pointed.
“Ramona is my first name.”
He sucked in a breath. “It’s yours
then?”
She nodded. “It is, yes. What’s the
charity?”
He took her hand and kissed her
knuckles before turning it, unfurling
her fingers and kissing her palm.
“You’ve got a lot of talent.”
When he looked at her face again
she was blushing. “Thank you. Oh!”
She jumped up and headed to the
fridge. “Tortillas. I knew I had
something I was forgetting. Hang on,
I’m going to warm them.”
“Did your friend make those too?”
“No. My mom made them. Though
she learned from my grandfather. He
was the cook in the family.”
“And what do they do? Your
family, I mean.”
“My father and sister run a dental
practice. My mother teaches at a
private
elementary
school.
My
grandmother is a painter.”
“Ah, that must be where you got it
then. Does the gallery sell other art
or just your stuff?”
“The gallery is my grandmother’s
place. She and I work there a few
days a week. My grandfather opened
it when he got back from World War
Two. We have some local artists we
feature, as well as my work and my
grandmother’s. This is their land. My
parents live in the big house. My
grandmother now with them. This
used to be her studio and living
space.” She waved a hand as she
continued heating the tortillas.
He liked it. The house wasn’t big.
But it was vibrant and sensual. Her
bed was in a far corner. Unmade. He
loved the burst of rich color, the
blankets and sheets a tangle of purple
and orange. She had a huge collection
of music and movies. Her electronics
were all very good. He’d apparently
been too busy looking at her butt in
those pants to have noticed the art on
the walls.
The space smelled good. Like her.
Sexy. Spicy. Probably forbidden but
he had no plans to get up and leave
anytime soon. She wasn’t a fluffy-
headed young woman. Not at all from
what he could see.
“And you? What do you do? Other
than paint and give dance lessons?”
“I do lots of things.”
“Is that so?” Goddamn, he hoped
so.
She looked at him over her
shoulder as she stood at the stove.
Her mouth quirked up on one side.
“Oh, that too. If you’re lucky.”
“Tell me about your art, then.”
She returned to the table and he
didn’t try to resist the tortillas. Once
he rolled it around the pork and took
a bite he was glad. “Christ, that’s