So why did I let him bother me?
I gritted my teeth and slammed my wok against the stove. He turned off the burner. His sausage was still pink but the ground meat was Cajun blackened. I grimaced as he stirred the paste-like gloop that became of his noodles. The fool couldn’t even feed himself. He needed a personal chef more than a mansion.
Didn’t his parents teach him anything about the kitchen? He didn’t seem the home-maker type, and, from the bits I heard about Emily, his mother wasn’t either. She was the perpetual cleansing dieter—the one who ate a piece of ginger after every five raspberries to catch the free radicals. Her wedding menu demanded free-ranged chicken, cage-free eggs, deep-massaged beef, and non-GMO, pesticide-free, herbicide-free, taste-free salads, so fresh you could see where the caterpillars had munched.
It must have been her idea. My father used to eat McDonalds cheeseburgers he accidentally dropped on the ground.
I washed a knife and readied my ingredients, but curiosity burned me. I knew nothing about Zach’s family or his mother. I hadn’t even asked.
But nope.
I wasn’t getting involved. I didn’t care what Zach did. My only concern was that he didn’t imprint the taste of his insult to Italy into our best skillet.
I added water to my pot and opened the bag of white, stone-ground grits. My stomach rumbled in anticipation, but it sunk when I opened the fridge. I wanted to keep our food separate, but getting the label maker was probably a little overkill. I shifted the containers, moved the drinks, and searched behind Tupperware’d leftovers. Then I uttered an uncouth word and groaned.
No butter.
Thank God Gran wasn’t alive to witness this travesty. Only two sins existed in the world for her—taking the Lord’s name in vain and substituting anything for butter. Both margarine and profanity offended the baby Jesus.
I didn’t need Zach to sneak up behind me, summoned by my groan and the frustrated shoving of his Gatorade from my shelf. He reached over my head, aiming for a can of fake cheese that would be the best part of his meal. His arm brushed mine.
My heart stopped.
No, it leapt into my throat, which was good because it prevented me from speaking to him. In the drawer with his parmesan—butter. Four glorious sticks.
The only thing more humiliating than arriving home to greet his booty-call was the temptation to break my vow of silence and ask to borrow some butter.
But the brush of his body devastated my defenses, destroyed my self-made promises, and betrayed me to the rush of shivers over every sensitive part of me.
He radiated a perfect heat. His scent promised a sexy tease. And his low hum? That rumbling cadence of his murmured song sent me reeling.
He hovered. He loomed. He invaded my space.
And all I wanted was one broken, foolish moment where our bodies would touch and I could sink into his impossible strength. My head buzzed with the hope of earning another caress from his award-worthy fingers.
Zach radiated trouble. He was the alcohol in a mixed drink of mistakes. The patient zero of a love-sick epidemic. The catalyst of a reaction that centered only on me.
It was wrong and idiotic. I knew he was as much a fiend as he was a liar.
Except, during that perfect night we spent together, he didn’t seem like any of those things. He was just…Zach. Testosterone. Sex. Passion.
He was a cocky bastard who had no problem sexing up his step-sister and stealing an inheritance from a will with ink that wasn’t even dry. So why did I still had that tickling, foolish hope that he was different? I didn’t want him to be a bad guy. I wanted to someday forgive him.
But I wasn’t that naive.
Besides, a pot of hot, creamy, cheesy grits was the next best thing to sex. I didn’t need his hands on my body, lips on my neck, or weight crushing me into the bed.
I just needed butter.
I didn’t even have to ask.
Zach leaned over me, pressing his hips against mine as though he planned to take me then, there, and in danger of breaking the eggs. He reached, and the irresponsible vixen in me hoped it was to loop his arm around my waist and have his way with me on the floor.
Instead, he rooted through his supplies and handed me a stick of butter. How it didn’t melt instantly in my hands was a modern day miracle.
I swallowed. He pulled away before I could thank him without actually speaking.
I was just lucky I hadn’t sunk to my knees and showed him how grateful I felt.
Zach whistled as he stirred the charred mess of his pasta. He added a generic can of sauce over the chaos and tossed a lid on the horror. It simmered as I started the grits and cooked my shrimp in the rendered bacon fat, onion, garlic, and enough cayenne to put hair on your chest, as Gran used to tell Grandaddy. It only took about twenty minutes to come together—enough time for Zach to burn his first batch of garlic bread and douse our toaster with brunt garlic powder caked onto the slots.