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The Forbidden Twin(6)

By:Susan Crosby

Huh? Oh. He was talking to her.

She didn't answer immediately. She understood that he was trying to  figure out what the parameters of their relationship were going to be.  She wanted more than sex, but she knew that was all she could have. Too  much stood in their way, especially how quickly they got together after  the breakup. Should she settle for only sex? Would the desire fizzle in  time?

"I'm enjoying this as much as you are," she said truthfully, testing his own expectations. "Although we both know-"

He put a hand over her mouth. "We do. And we don't need to talk about it."

She moved his hand away. "I wouldn't have guessed that you were an avoider of truth."

"It's my superhero role. That's why you never see me in tights and a cape, and only in suits."

"Oh, that's why. I did wonder."

"When do we start Woo University? Tomorrow?"

So, they weren't going to define their relationship yet. Maybe that was a good thing for now. "Why wait?" she asked.

"I'm not done registering for class yet." He rolled on top of her, bent  to kiss her. "Haven't finished uploading from my hard drive."

She laughed. Who would've thought the man could be so playful? "You're not what I expected."

"In what way?"

"In every way. You always seem so serious."

"You'd never seen me naked."

She smiled. "I guess it does make a difference."

He nuzzled her neck. "You're not what you seemed, either."

Her body tingled from the feel of his warm breath against her skin. "How?"

"Less bold."

"I thought I'd been plenty bold."

"Sexually, you have been."

"What other way is there?"

He didn't answer. The hand that had been roaming over her body stilled.  "Do you really want to spend our time analyzing this?" he asked, pulling  away, locking gazes.

No. It was a time to enjoy him, to make memories. He would change her  life-she knew that without a doubt-but her obsession could finally end  and she could move on, once and for all. Her relationship with her  sister would never have to be tested, nor would Scarlet give the  publicity hounds something to sniff out. If Summer could change, so  could she.

"No," she said, looping her arms around his shoulders and pulling him  down to kiss him. "No analysis necessary. Although I do plan to study  your moves."

"As a mentor?"

She smiled slowly. "As a woman."

"Nothing like putting on the pressure."

His words may have indicated a lack of self-confidence but his actions  didn't. He knew exactly what to touch, and how, and when. She couldn't  remember being aroused so skillfully. But was that all there was-skill?  Was his heart engaged even the slightest?

He cupped her face. She opened her eyes, sensing a question coming.

"You don't seem to be in the moment," he said.

"I am completely in the moment," she replied honestly, although his  interpretation was probably different from her own. All her desires, all  her fears raced through her mind. She wanted to ignore them. They  refused to go away.

His silence lasted several long seconds. He started to pull away. She  wrapped him close, drew him down … and gave him no more reason to wonder.                       
       
           



       





Four


J ohn picked up his office telephone the next day, started to punch in a  number, then stopped. His first homework assignment was to ask Scarlet  for a date in the way he usually asked a woman out. He had to think  about it. When he was seeing Summer they'd talked every day and decided  together what they would do. He'd never wooed her, since they'd just  sort of fallen into the relationship gradually. It had been a long time  since he'd asked out a woman.

He ran a hand down his face, then dialed Scarlet's work number, feeling  like a novice at this dating game instead of a twenty-nine-year-old  veteran.

"Scarlet Elliott," she answered, all businesslike.

Which turned him on. He pictured her as she was last night, leaning  against her headboard, her hair tangled, face flushed, the sheet tucked  over her chest but drifting bit by bit while they talked, until he'd  tugged it away and gathered her close.

"Hel-lo?" she singsonged.

He ignored his body's stirrings. "Good morning."

A pause, then, "Who's calling?"

"The man who heated up your sheets last night."

"Stop that," she said in almost a whisper. "You're supposed to have just met me and are asking for a date."

Role-playing? He considered that for a moment. It might be fun-for a day  or so. "Not my fault. My mentor didn't give me a syllabus for my first  Woo U class."

He heard her laugh briefly.

"Start over." She hung up before he had a chance to say a word.

John sat back in surprise then began to laugh. He redialed.

"Scarlet Elliott."

"Good morning, Ms. Elliott. This is John Harlan of Suskind, Engle and  Harlan. We met at the Charisma open house over the holidays."

She sighed. "If you have to add the name of your firm, you didn't make  much of an impression in the first place. Start over." She hung up.

He was tempted not to call her back, but after a minute, he did.

"Scarlet Elliott."

"Good morning, Ms. Elliott. This is John Harlan. We met at the Charisma open house over the holidays."

"I remember. You defended the existence of Santa Claus quite well."

He smiled. "Someone told me your name was Virginia."

"Friend or foe?" she asked.

"Someone who wanted me to embarrass myself, apparently, by calling you by the wrong name."

"You didn't. Embarrass yourself."

Was there double meaning in her remark? "That's good to hear." He was  aware she wasn't calling him by name, probably so that no one could  overhear her. "I'd like to get to know you better. I was wondering if  you would have dinner with me."

"When?"

"Saturday night." This was too easy. How long could he draw out the lessons? He'd have to play dumb just to drag it out.

A long pause ensued. "This is Friday," she said coolly.

"Would you rather go out tonight?"

Dead silence.

He brushed a speck of dust from his slacks. Something told him he'd just messed up his first assignment, big-time. "Scarlet?"

"You don't think it's a little insulting to ask me out the day before? You don't think I would have other plans already?"

"We only started this class today," he countered. "If we'd started on  Monday, I would've asked you then." Although he'd would've asked her for  Tuesday, but he wasn't about to tell her that. "Do you have plans for  Saturday night?"

"Yes, I do."

He wasn't sure what to say. Should he ask her for the following Saturday?

"Start over," she said, then hung up.

He decided to make her wait. When he finally redialed fifteen minutes later, he got her voice mail.

"Ms. Elliott," he said, starting from the beginning. "This is John  Harlan. We met at the Charisma open house over the holidays. I was  wondering if you'd like to have dinner with me a week from Saturday.  Here's my private line." He recited his phone number. "I look forward to  hearing from you."

He'd barely hung up when his private line rang.

"It's a good thing I came into your life," Scarlet said. "Has that  method worked in the past?" She said method as if it were something that  stank.

"What method?"

"Leave a message for a woman asking her on a first date?"

She sounded either shocked or disgusted.

"I asked for more than a week from now."

"You asked her answering machine."

He massaged the bridge of his nose and closed his eyes. "Which is  apparently the wrong thing to do. I'll start over," he said, hanging up  before she could. Normally he would've been frustrated by that kind of  game by now, but he found it stimulating. She challenged him. The trick  would be to challenge her in return.                       
       
           



       

He lifted the receiver, then hesitated. She would be expecting him to call back.

"Not this time, Ms. Elliott," he said as he flipped through his Rolodex. He wanted an A on his first homework assignment.

She'd gotten him thinking outside his normal box. He wanted her to see what he'd already learned.



"Somebody likes you," a woman said as she rounded Scarlet's cubicle.

She smelled the flowers before she even looked up from her computer and  spotted the bouquet, not something neat and tidy like a dozen roses, but  an exotic bundle of baby orchids in a variety of deep colors. Her heart  did a little dance at the sight. She hadn't been sent flowers in a  long, long time. Even so, she resisted the temptation to bury her face  in the blossoms as the vase was set down in front of her by Jessie  Clayton, the vivacious twenty-three-year-old intern assigned to work  with her.