smelled quite like Dane. A hint of spicy soap and his own brand of musky, masculine scent.
And he felt right at home, with his body heat warming her all down her left side, while water trickled over the smooth stones beside them and the air was heavy with the scent of damp earth and vegetation.
What if she leaned in now and kissed him again? He was right: it had felt darn good. Sheâd watch his grey eyes turn smoky. Sheâd let her tongue slide over his, warm and decadently rich, like rum-flavoured chocolateâ¦
And sheâd be the one to pull back first, she thought darkly. Just when his mouth responded to hers. Payback time.
Or was it all too long ago to matter?
His hands dropped away. And maybe a corner of his mouth tipped up in a hint of a smile, maybe his eyes flickered with a one-step-ahead-of you glint. Or maybeit was the barely veiled cynicism of a man all too experienced with womenâs ways. She couldnât be sure because she was still finding her way out of her little daydream.
âGoodnight, Queen Bee.â He rose, giving her an eyeful of male crotch. âIâll lock up behind me. Pleasant dreams.â
Then he left.
As he should, Mariel told herself, pouring the rest of her beer into the fountain. Judging by the impressive bulge at the front of his jeans, one moment more might have been too late.
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Pleasant dreams? Hours later Mariel lay on her bed, staring up at the familiar ceiling. Night air chased goosebumps over her naked body, pebbling her nipples and making the hairs on her arms stand up. The draught through the window was an uncomfortably warm northerly. But the heatwave conditions werenât the cause of her shivers.
Linen shwupped beneath her restless feet as she shifted for the zillionth time. Her lips still tingled from their encounter with Daneâs; she could still smell his scent in her room.
She frowned into the dark. Despite her attempts to put tonight to the back of her mind, stubborn imagesâmake that one stubborn imageârefused to co-operate.
Sheâd first locked eyes with Dane when Justin had kissed her and tipped her off that he was there. Sheâd been subjected to that familiar cool and casual gaze he was so good at.
Ah, but at other moments his eyes had blowtorched her with such searing heat sheâd wondered how her skin hadnât blistered.
It was still there between them, that connection, like the ghost of Christmases past. Sheâd thought she was over it; sheâd even put it behind her and moved on with Luc, but had she been fooling herself all these years?
Sheâd come to Dane, her closest friend, looking for comfort and support on the eve of her first solo overseas adventure. Heâd come upstairs to help her close her suitcase. Then, in a fit of nerves and excess energy, sheâd decided to rearrange her furnitureâ¦
They shifted the shabby-chic dressing table sheâd bought at a little French provincial shop in town, relocated her blanket box, then sheâd flopped back on her bed.
Sheâd stared up at the ceiling and told him sheâd paint it indigo, like the night sky. And that sheâd paint gold stars and suspend a crescent moon over the mirror. If she was staying.
Heâd watched her in silence, but her young heart had been sureâ¦
Sheâd taken his hand and pulled him down onto the bed so that they were both staring up and sharing her sugarplum dreams. Then, in that typically female way, sheâd succumbed to the tears sheâd been fighting all day.
Yes, she wanted to study overseas. She wanted a career. But she was coming back. Because she had someone to come back to. Dane.
She just hadnât told him that.
Sheâd thought she was in love⦠And then theyâd shared the most dreamy, most poignant kiss of allâ¦
She shook the memories away. She was over it. Over him. Teenage heartache was always the most painful. The most memorable.
Years later