Get a Clue(19)
“Oh, no,” Shelly said, coming in behind her. “No one has to dress for dinner. This isn’t an inn—it’s your private house for the week. You dress as you want.”
“Not exactly private,” Breanne noted dryly, her gaze cutting to Cooper. “But it’s a good thing about the dress code, because my luggage is gone.”
“Oh, dear. You have had a rough day,” Shelly said in sympathy.
Cooper wasn’t sorry. He had hopeful visions of her having to go all week in only her underwear—
“How about I see what I can round up for you in the morning?” Shelly offered, crushing Cooper’s dream as she left them alone.
Breanne stood just inside the room, seeming as if she’d run if she only had somewhere to go. At the very least she was going to sit in the chair farthest from him, which was approximately miles down the room. To avoid that, he rose and pulled out the chair right next to him.
Breanne hesitated, but then came close, until once again he could see the wild, almost frantic beat of her pulse at the base of her neck.
“You still afraid?” he asked.
“Of course not.”
“Cold?”
“Haven’t we already had this conversation? No.”
“Then . . .” He lifted his hand and stroked his thumb over her throat. He wasn’t really sure why, except the strangest thing had happened when he’d touched her before. He’d felt a spark, from deep inside where he hadn’t felt anything in too goddamn long. And he wanted another.
And another.
His brother had been fussing over him for months to get the hell out, take a leave, relax, just be, before he landed in the psych ward. Cooper had finally caved and gotten the hell out.
He’d quit.
And he still hadn’t felt any better. Hadn’t felt anything.
Until tonight.
Breanne encircled her fingers around his wrist and that inner spark leapt to flame. “Cooper.”
“Breanne.” Don’t shove me away. God, don’t.
Shockingly enough, she didn’t, and for a long moment they stood just like that, eyes locked, her fingers over his.
“You keep touching me,” she whispered.#p#分页标题#e#
He knew it. He had her soft skin imprinted on his brain already.
“If you keep it up, I’m going to—”
“What?”
Still looking into his eyes, she chewed on her bottom lip. “Something.”
“Anything you want,” he murmured, and smiled grimly when, with a sound of great vexation, she tossed his hand from her and stalked around the table—click, click, clicking—strutting as if she wore something straight out of a fashion magazine rather than his sweats. In fact, just the look of her hips sashaying with attitude turned him on.
He was in bad shape if riling and baiting her like this was the most fun he’d had in too long.
On the other side of the table now, she pulled out her own chair, shooting him a smug, superior smile.
“I think you’re crazy about me,” he said.
She sputtered. “You’re delusional. You—” She broke off whatever insult she’d been about to fling his way as Shelly came back into the room with a bottle of wine. She was followed by Dante, who set down a large tray at the head of the table.
Shelly beamed at the butler-who-didn’t-look-like-a-butler. “Thanks, Dante.”
He didn’t smile back. “You’re welcome.”
Shelly arranged the plates between Cooper and Breanne, one filled with an assortment of breads, another with luncheon meats and cheeses, and a third with fruit. “I feel so bad,” she said, her smile still in place, but a bit wobbly now as she clasped her hands in front of her. “Edward insists on a gourmet meal, and I really did spend the day making up roasted chicken with asiago polenta and truffled mushrooms, but then the power went out, the oven flicked off—” She sounded close to tears. “It didn’t finish, and now . . .” She lifted her hands helplessly.
“No worries,” Cooper said. “I’d eat anything tonight and be happy.”
“Really?” Shelly asked anxiously.
“Absolutely.”
“Me, too.” Breanne gave Shelly a smile of her own, one Cooper hadn’t seen, which meant it was real and full of warmth. He almost did a double take, struck by how it softened her face, removing all lines of sarcasm and bite.
Had he thought her not classically beautiful? He needed his eyes checked.
“Thank you for serving us at all,” Breanne said sincerely to Shelly.
“Oh, but it’s nothing like how it should be,” the cook told them, still twisting her fingers.
“You did the best you could,” Dante said. “We all know it. Stop worrying.”