Reading Online Novel

The Forbidden Twin(9)



"Scarlet?"

His husky voice would've stopped her, no matter what he said next. "What?"

"I was jealous of every guy you danced with tonight, every guy who touched you and got to be so close to you."

Desire flooded her body … rushing … pounding … pulsating. His gaze drifted  down her. Her nipples drew taut. She wasn't used to having a man want  her so passionately, so … violently. It fascinated her, both that he  wanted her that much and that she liked his Neanderthal reaction. She'd  never tolerated jealousy before, but the flare of heat low in her body  told her his jealousy meant something.                       
       
           



       

"You don't think I felt the same?" she asked. "I have to go." She  wouldn't risk staying any longer with him, having someone see their  attraction instead of just acquaintances having a conversation, or  whatever defined the parameters of their relationship now in the public  eye.

He said nothing. He was good at that.

She didn't see him return to the dance, and was torn between gratitude  and disappointment as Mitch again invited her to dance. She saw her  grandparents come onto the floor, as well, as Glenn Miller's "Moonlight  Serenade" played, Gram's favorite.

A few seconds later, John tapped Mitch's shoulder. Mitch looked at Scarlet. "You don't have to."

"It's fine." Her heart thundered as John's arms came around her. Several inches of space separated their bodies.

"What are you doing?" she whispered, pasting on a smile.

"Passing another Woo U course."

"I can't believe you did that."

"Then you don't know me."

She didn't. She loved him, but she didn't know him. Not really. But everything she learned about him only deepened her feelings.

"Scarlet, there's no reason we can't be civilized in the world's eyes.  So, there'll be a little talk. It'd mostly be about me and that I must  still be pining for Summer."

"Are you?"

"No."

It was one of the most awkward moments of her life. She glanced at her  grandparents. Gram lifted her brows. Granddad kept a carefully blank  expression.

And yet through all the awkwardness, all the awareness of eyes focused  on them, all the annoyance at being the center of attention when she'd  tried so hard to stop doing that, she loved that he'd done it. Loved  that he was that self-confident and daring. She never would've guessed  it of him.

At the end of the dance the club manager approached Scarlet. "You have a phone call, Miss Elliott."

"From whom?"

"I wouldn't know. If you'll follow me, please."

She excused herself from John, grateful that the potentially awkward  moment of moving off the dance floor and away from each other had been  solved by a mysterious phone call.

She and the manager went down a long hallway to a door marked Conference  Room. He opened the door then walked away. Scarlet peered in. A phone  sat on the conference table but no light blinked. Uneasy, she took a  step back.

"Careful," came a whisper in her ear. John. He moved her inside the  room, shut the door and locked it, the sound echoing like a prelude to  gothic seduction.

He slid a hand along the wall beside her, then the lights went out,  plunging them into darkness. Music drifted faintly through the closed  door.

"You dance like you make love," he said, dragging a finger along her jaw, across her mouth.

"How's that?" Breathless, she parted her lips.

"Primal. Like a creature of the earth. With passion and abandon." He  slipped his arms around her waist. "Dance with me. A real dance."

"Dance" was a relative term. They barely moved. It was just an excuse to  align their bodies, and since in her heels she was as tall as he, their  bodies aligned perfectly.

"You're quiet," Scarlet murmured after a while.

"Some of us are capable of it."

She nipped his earlobe, and he laughed softly. She'd needed this moment  alone with him. Needed to touch him. The music stopped, but they kept  moving, pressed together, their clothing the only barrier, and even that  wasn't much. He curved his hands over her rear and lifted her slightly,  changing the point of contact. Perfume and aftershave mingled with the  urgent scent of desire. His need was evident in the tautness of his body  and the hard ridge pressed to her abdomen. His breath felt hot and  unsteady against her temple.

Scarlet tried to resist. She couldn't abandon herself to him, all too  aware of where they were and the possibility of discovery. She wouldn't  do that to her grandparents or Summer. Or herself.

But she had a hard time not letting go, giving in, enjoying … .

His hand slipped over her breast just as his mouth took hers in a long,  hot kiss, a merging of breath and need and unchecked lust. They were  always in such a hurry with each other.

He moved her back until her thighs hit the table. She realized what he intended and pushed at his chest.

"We can't do this here."

He trailed her low V neckline with his tongue, leaving a damp, shivery  trail. "I'm familiar with the long list of rules this club has," he  said. "Nowhere does it say there can't be sex in the conference room. In  fact, I would hazard a guess that this room has seen plenty of action."                       
       
           



       

"Stop." She slipped away from him and found her way to the door, then  fumbled for the light switch, turning it on. "I mean it. We can't do  this here." She blamed herself for letting things get out of hand. The  speed at which they'd landed in bed before this-twice-would have led any  man to think he could have what he wanted, whenever he wanted it.

He shoved his hands through his hair. "You're hard to figure out," he said, then blew out a breath.

"I know. I'm sorry." But I love you, and that's why I took those chances the other times. I needed a memory of you.

"You don't really live up to your reputation, do you?" he said, half sitting on the table, his arms crossed.

"Do you want me to?"

After a few long seconds he shook his head.

She thought about her grandfather, how much she'd disappointed him. As a  teenager she'd desperately wanted his attention, and he'd been totally  focused on his business, but his disapproval of her dates meant he would  at least communicate with her, if only to berate her. She was such a  cliché, she thought.

"I always found the 'wild-child' tales interesting," John continued,  "because there was no hard evidence you were easy, just speculation,  based on who you dated-and maybe how you dress in look-at-me outfits and  move like a whirlwind, as if you always know where you're going and who  you are, which is very sexy. I'd say you pretty much made everyone  wonder."

"I'm not the one who arranged this tryst."

"I didn't mean to offend you, Scarlet. I thought you would want it as much as I did."

"Believe it or not, sometimes I think about other people before my own needs."

His gaze locked with hers. He studied her for a long, quiet moment, then  he nodded slowly and stood. He ran a hand down her arm as he passed by.

"Good night," he said. "Thank you for the dance."

After the door closed quietly behind him she stood motionless, waiting for her world to return to normal.

She'd misread him, pure and simple. And maybe he'd misread her. It was  her manufactured reputation that had driven him to take such a chance as  to want to have sex with her on a conference room table with hundreds  of people-her grandparents included-nearby.

Maybe he got a rush out of such clandestine moments.

She didn't. She'd only gotten a rush out of him.

So where did that leave them now?





Six


O n the Wednesday after the country club incident, John arrived a few  minutes early for a three o'clock meeting with Finola Elliott at  Charisma magazine. He wasn't made to wait in the lobby but was escorted  immediately to Fin's office by an auburn-haired young woman named  Jessie, who kept up a running commentary as they wove through the maze  of cubicles. He learned she'd been raised in Colorado, was an unpaid  intern and a roommate of a Charisma proofreader, Lanie Sinclair. And by  the way Jessie eyed him curiously, he guessed she knew he'd been engaged  to Summer.

He wished he could ask her which cubicle was Scarlet's. If he could just  look into her eyes, he'd know where things stood between them. They  hadn't spoken since the disaster at the club. In three days they were  supposed to go on their first Woo U date.

Or were they?

Maybe his lesson had been only in how to ask a woman out, not the actual follow-through. Another question he needed answered.

Who would break the stalemate? Or had they already burned out? He wasn't  ready to end it. He wanted the whole month until Summer returned. Every  last minute. And he wanted some of that in bed.