You didn’t know someone was trying to kill you, an evil voice in the back of my head whispered.
I told it to shut up.
I glanced back at him again. He was rubbing his stubbly chin with his hand, regarding me in a way that showed the doubt in his eyes. He was nervous. It was kind of cute.
“If you slam on the brakes one more time, I’m going to insist on driving.”
A slow smile spread over his face. “No women are allowed to drive this truck.”
I lifted a single eyebrow. “Is that so?”
“Damn straight.”
And just like that, I was going home with a hot fireman stranger.
5
I didn’t realize the enormity of going home with him until he pulled in the concrete driveway beside his single-story home. It was a cute place—with a front porch that cried out for rocking chairs and extended the entire length of the front of the home. It was a newer built home, the siding a blue-gray color with wooden shaker-style shutters on each side of the window in a deep-brown shade.
The front door was white, and I knew if it had been my house, the first thing I would have done was paint it to match the shutters.
But this wasn’t my house.
My cute little house was no more.
“Everything okay?” Holt asked, turning to face me when I made no move to climb out of the truck.
“I like your house.”
“Thanks. I haven’t lived here very long. The inside’s pretty bare.”
“Like a clean slate,” I murmured without thinking.
“More like a bachelor pad.”
I glanced at him, feeling my lips pull into a half smile.
He didn’t say anything else but got out of his monster-sized truck. I opened the door and stared down at the ground hesitantly, thinking about how far up I actually was.
“Going down?” Holt said in a distinguished tone. He held out his hand and I didn’t hesitate placing mine inside.
His hand merely cupped mine, so gentle it was like he wasn’t holding on to me at all, and his skin felt cool against my heat-burned skin. Then he was taking me by the waist, lifting me down, and setting me gently on the pavement.
He didn’t step back but instead stayed in my personal space—invading it, taking it over. He leaned forward, causing me to lean back, and we bent in a gentle arch while he reached in and collected my sad bag of belongings.
Then he straightened and palmed the edge of the door and smiled, still not moving back.
I ducked around him, brushing up against his side as I moved. The brief contact sent a little sizzle of desire through me.
Get a grip, Katie! I told myself, disgusted with my own behavior.
I heard a soft chuckle from behind, and I resisted the urge to turn and glare at him. Did he know the effect he had on me?
“Come on Katie-cat, let’s go inside. It’s hot out here.”
“Do not call me Katie-cat.”
“Why not?” he said, glancing over his shoulder while he unlocked the front door.
“Because I’m not twelve.”
“Thank God for that,” he muttered as the door swung open and a blast of cool air reached out and beckoned me inside. Summers in the south were brutal and today was a scorcher.
“I love air-conditioning,” I said as I followed him into the house. I pretended not to hear his last remark. I didn’t want to think too closely about what it meant anyway.
“Everyone in the south loves a/c,” he said, pushing the door shut behind me.
His home was beautiful. It was a single-story ranch home with an open layout. We were standing by the front door that opened into a fairly large living room. The walls were off-white and the floors were made out of dark hardwood. There were shades covering the windows but no curtains. The shades were white, so it allowed light to get in without disrupting privacy. The only piece of furniture in the living area was a large gray couch and—big shocker—there was a flat screen mounted to the wall.
From my position, I could see directly into the kitchen, which was separated from the living room by a large island with a couple barstools slid underneath. Behind the island, I could make out stainless steel appliances and dark-wood cabinets. There was a space off to the side of the kitchen for a dining table, but there wasn’t one there.
Off to our right was a hallway that I assumed led to the bathroom and bedrooms.
“How long have you lived here?” I asked.
“About six months.”
I made a noise in the back of my throat—a noise that irritated the already sensitive area. “You’ve lived here six months and only managed to get a couch and a TV?”