Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Romance,
Contemporary,
Adult,
Love Stories,
Fiction - Romance,
Romance - Contemporary,
seduction,
Romance: Modern,
romance adult
wait to bump into her coming out of the shower or knock on her door at night to borrow some toothpaste.
He wondered if she slept naked. Then he wondered just how long it would take him to find out. Not long, he hoped.
It was too bad he’d be moving out in a few days. Then again, maybe his new apartment wouldn’t be ready for a week. Maybe he’d make damn sure it wasn’t. “So, why aren’t you sure you’re staying with Max? He knows you’re coming, doesn’t he?”
As she nibbled her full lower lip, the heat in his gut shot up another notch. She had a mouth made for kissing. And other things.
“Not exactly,” she mumbled. “Leo dropped me off here, then went to find him. He’s, uh, setting things up, I think.”
“Leo? Leo Gallagher, Max’s nephew?”
She nodded.
Not good. Leo was a white-haired weasel, as far as Troy could tell. Not that it was his place to judge, of course. He barely knew the man, who had some high-level job in this company, though no one seemed sure exactly what he did. But he did know Max’s nephew had been vehemently opposed to Troy’s arrival, and to the possibility of the company being sold.
Apparently, from what Max said, Leo had fully imagined himself to be heir apparent and had been angling for more than a decade for Max to retire so he could step in. Max referred to him as the pencil-necked leech and said he’d retire when they pried his office keys out of his cold dead hand. Or when he passed them over to a new owner—which somehow made Troy think Leo’s job aspirations weren’t going to pan out.
Venus must have noticed his sudden silence, and his frown. “You know Leo?” she asked.
“Barely.”
“You barely know him, but you know you don’t like him?”
He hedged. “I don’t dislike him, I only met him last week when I started working for Longotti Lines.”
Her eyes widened and she finally turned to give him her full attention again. “You just started your job? I thought maybe you’d just gotten a promotion and transferred in from Florida or something.”
“Today is my one-week anniversary.” Leaning closer, he went for smooth charm, since honest conversation hadn’t gotten her to relax, the way she had at first. “Inever imagined perks like beautiful redheads sunning themselves right outside my door when I took the job. Maybe I should stock up on sunscreen. Would you like me to do your back?”
She rolled her eyes. “Save it. I liked you better when you weren’t being oily. Besides, you’re not very good at it.”
He straightened, not sure whether he felt amused or offended. Then a reluctant chuckle crossed his lips. “All right, Venus. In the interest of being strictly sincere, I personally think Leo Gallagher is a shifty, spoiled man with abominable taste in shoes and a need for a good barber.”
She grinned. “My, my, from oily to pompous. You are a contradiction, aren’t you?”
Pompous? She’d just called him pompous? He raised a brow and leaned closer. “You’re one to talk about contradictions. From sultress to iceberg in under a minute.”
He stared into her brilliant green eyes, daring her to disagree. She didn’t even try. “It’s a woman’s prerogative to change her mind.”
“So you don’t want to have dinner with me?” He dared her to deny it, knowing damn well she did.
She raised a skeptical brow. “Oh, you mean we were really talking about dinner?”
“What else could we have been talking about?”
“I was thinking more along the lines of dessert.” Her voice held a note of challenge.
“I hadn’t even asked about dessert,” he said, his voice holding a hint of playful challenge.
Her creamy cheeks began to grow pink with obvious embarrassment. He doubted this woman blushed very often and he found the heightened color in her face extremely attractive.
He let her sweat for a moment. Then, unable to lie toher any more than he could to himself, he said, “But I would have.”
Her answer was equally as