by Abby Green
‘It’s my birthday.’
‘Oh? Which one?’
Did the man not know it was rude to ask? She nearly giggled. But he was so gorgeous she decided to forgive him immediately. Besides, she had the feeling his boldness was innate. It was simply him. It gave her another charge. ‘My flirtieth.’
‘I’m sorry?’ She could see the corners of his mouth twitching again.
‘My flirtieth.’ So she was making an idiot of herself. What did she care? This night was hers and she could do as she wanted with it—and that might just include flirting with strangers.
‘You’re either lying or lisping. I think maybe both.’ His lips quirked again. And the thing was, she didn’t find it offensive. So he was laughing at her. It was worth it just to see the way that smile reached right into his eyes.
‘How many have you had?’ he asked. ‘You seem to be slurring.’
Not only that, she was still staring fixedly at him. She forced herself to blink again. It was so hard not to look at him. His was a face that captured attention and held it for ever. ‘These were my first.’
‘And last.’ He called the bartender over and ordered. ‘Sedate white wine spritzer, please.’
‘Who wants sedate?’ she argued, ignoring his further instructions to the waiter. ‘The last thing I want is wine.’ The urge for something stronger gripped her—something even more powerful, something to really take her breath away. She wanted the taste of fire to take away the lonely bitterness of disappointment.
‘Not true. Come on, whine away. Why are you here, celebrating alone?’
He’d do. The blue in his eyes was all fire.
‘I’m not alone. My family is here too—my sister is getting married tomorrow in the resort.’
His brows flashed upwards again. ‘So why aren’t they here now celebrating your birthday with you?’
She paused. A chink in her act was about to be revealed, but she answered honestly. ‘They’ve forgotten.’
‘Ah.’ He looked at her, only a half-smile now. ‘So the birthday girl has missed out on her party.’
She shrugged. ‘Everyone’s been busy with the wedding.’
The spritzer arrived, together with a bottle of wine for him and two tall glasses of water.
‘Tell me about this wedding.’ He said wedding as if it were a bad word.
‘What’s to tell? She’s gorgeous. He’s gorgeous. A successful, wealthy, nice guy.’
He inclined his head towards her. ‘And you’re a little jealous?’
‘No!’ She shook her head, but a little hurt stabbed inside. She wasn’t jealous of Vita, surely she wasn’t. She was truly pleased for her. And no way on this earth would she want Hamish. ‘He’s solid and dependable.’ The truth came out. ‘Square.’
‘You don’t like square?’
She thought about it. Hamish was a nice person. And he thought the world of Vita—you could see it in the way he looked at her. He adored her. That little hurt stabbed again. She toughed it out. ‘I like a guy who can make me laugh.’
‘Do you, now?’ But he was the one who laughed. A low chuckle that made her want to smile too—if she weren’t having a self-piteous moment. He sobered. ‘What’s your role in the wedding?’
‘Chief bridesmaid,’ she said mournfully.
His warm laughter rumbled again.
‘It’s all right for you,’ she said indignantly. ‘You’ve never been a bridesmaid.’
‘And you have?’
She nodded. It was all too hideous. ‘I know all about it. This is my fourth outing.’
And, yes, she knew what they said. Three times a bridesmaid and all that. Her aunts would be reminding her tomorrow. The only one of her siblings not perfectly paired off.
‘What’s the best man like?’
She couldn’t hide the wince. Rex. How unfortunate that Hamish’s best friend was the guy Bella had once picked in her weak moment of trying to be all that the family wanted.
‘That bad, huh?’
‘Worse.’ Because after she’d broken up with him—and it had been her—he’d started dating her most perfect cousin of them all, Celia. And no one in the family could believe that Bella would dump such a catch as Rex and so it was that she earned even more sympathy—more shakes of the head. Not only could she not hold down a decent job, she couldn’t hold onto a decent man. No wonder her father treated her like a child. She supposed, despite her Masters degree and her array of part-time jobs, she was. She still hadn’t left home, was still dependent on the old man for the basics—like food.
‘So.’ Her charming companion at the bar speared her attention again with a laser-like look. ‘Invite me.’
‘I’m sorry?’
‘You’re the chief bridesmaid, aren’t you? You’ve got to have a date for the wedding.’
‘I’m not going to invite a total stranger to my sister’s wedding.’
‘Why not? It’ll make it interesting.’
‘How so?’ she asked. ‘Because you’re really a psycho out to create mayhem?’
He laughed at that. ‘Look, it’s pretty clear you’re not looking forward to it. They’ve forgotten your birthday. This isn’t about them. This is about you doing something you want to. Do something you think is tempting.’
‘You think you’re tempting?’ OK, so he was. He sure was. But he didn’t need to be so sure about it.
He leaned forward. ‘I think what tempts you is the thought of doing something unexpected.’
He was daring her. She very nearly smiled then. It would be too—totally unexpected. And the idea really appealed to her. It had been her motivation all evening—for most of her life, in fact. To be utterly unlike the staid, conservative perfectionists in her bean-counter family. And how wonderful it would be to turn up on the arm of the most handsome man she’d ever seen. Pure fantasy. Especially when she was the only one of the younger generation not to be in a happy couple and have a high-powered career.
And then, for once, she had a flash of her father’s conservatism—of realism. ‘I can’t ask you. I barely know you.’
He leaned forward another inch. ‘But you have all night to get to know me.’
CHAPTER TWO
ALL night? Now it was Bella’s lips twitching.
His smile was wicked. ‘Come on. Ask me anything.’
Holding his gaze was something she wasn’t capable of any more. She ducked it, sat back and concentrated on the conversation.
‘All right. Are you married?’ She’d better establish the basics.
‘Never have, never will.’
Uh-huh. ‘Live-in lover?’
‘Heaven forbid.’
She paused. He was letting her know exactly where he stood on the commitment front. Devilry danced in his eyes. She knew he meant every word, but she also knew he was challenging her to pull him up on it.
‘Gay?’ she asked blithely.
He looked smugly amused. ‘Will you take my word for it or do you want proof?’
Now there was a challenge. And not one she was up for just yet.
‘Diseases?’ Tart this time.
His amusement deepened. ‘I think there’s diabetes on my father’s side, but that doesn’t seem to manifest until old age.’
She refused to smile, was determined to find some flaw. To get the better of him somehow. ‘What do you do for a living?’
‘I work with computers.’
Gee, she nearly snorted, that could mean anything. ‘Computers? As in programming?’
His head angled and for the first time his gaze slid from hers. ‘Sort of.’
‘Ah-h-h.’ She nodded, as if it all made perfect sense. Then she wrinkled her nose.
‘Ah, what?’ He sat up straighter. ‘Why the disapproval?’
She hit him then, with everything she could think of. ‘Did you know the people most likely to download porn are single, male computer nerds aged between twenty-five and thirty-five? You’ve probably got some warped perception of the female body
now, right? And I bet you’re into games—with those female characters with boobs bigger than bazookas and skinny hips and who can knock out five hit men in three seconds.’ She stopped for breath, dared him to meet her challenge.
‘Ah.’ His smile widened while his eyes promised retribution. ‘Well, actually, no, that’s not me.’
‘You think?’ she asked innocently.
‘I’m single, I’m male, I’m into computers and I’m aged between twenty-five and thirty-five. But I don’t need porn because …’he leaned closer and whispered ‘… I’m not a nerd.’
She leaned a little closer, whispered right back. ‘That’s what you think.’ Admittedly he didn’t look much like one, but she could bluff.
But then he called her on it. Laughing aloud, he asked, ‘Should I be wearing glasses and have long, lank, greasy hair?’
His hair was short and wind-spiked and his eyes were bright, perceptive and unadorned—and suddenly they flashed with glee.
‘Do nerds have muscles like these?’ He slapped his bicep with his hand. ‘Go on, feel them.’
She could hardly refuse when she’d been the one to throw the insult. Tentatively she reached out a hand and poked gingerly at his upper arm with her finger. It was rock hard. Intrigued, she took a second shot. Spread her fingers wide, pressing down on the grey sleeve. Underneath was big, solid muscle. Really big. And she could feel the definition, was totally tempted to feel further …
But she pulled back, because there was a sudden fire streaming through her. She must be blushing something awful. She took a much-needed sip of her watered-down wine.
His told-you-so gaze teased her.
She sniffed. ‘You’re probably wearing a body suit under that shirt.’ Completely clutching at straws.
‘OK,’ he said calmly, ‘feel them now.’ He took her hand, lifted the hem of his shirt and before she knew it her palm was pressed to his bare abs.
OK? Hell, yes, OK!
She froze. Her mind froze. Her whole body froze. But her hand didn’t. The skin on his stomach was warm and beneath her fingers she could feel the light scratchiness of hair and then the rock-hard indents of muscles. This was no weedy-boy-who-spent-hours-in-front-of-a-computer physique. And this wasn’t just big, strong male. This was fit. Superfit.
Her fingers badly wanted to stretch out some more and explore. If she moved her thumb a fraction she’d be able to stroke below his navel. She whipped her hand out while she still had it under control.
His smile was wicked as the heat in her cheeks became unbearable. ‘And what about this tan, hmm?’ He pushed up a sleeve and displayed a bronzed forearm as if it were some treasured museum exhibit. She stared at the length of it, lightly hair-dusted, muscle flexing, she could see the clear outline of a thick vein running down to the back of a very broad palm. Very real, very much alive—and strong. She was taken with his hand for some time.
Finally she got back the ability to speak. ‘Is the tan all-over-body?’
‘If you’re lucky you might get to find out.’
The guy had some nerve. But he was laughing as he said it.
‘So why are you single, then?’ she said, trying to adopt an acidic tone. ‘I mean, if you’re such a catch, why haven’t you been caught already?’
‘You misunderstand the game, sweetheart,’ he answered softly. ‘I’m not the prey. I’m the predator.’
And if she could bring herself to admit it, she wanted him to pounce on her right now. But she was still working on defence and denial. ‘Well, you’re not that good, then, are you? Where’s your catch tonight?’
The only answer was a quick lift of his brows and a wink.
She pressed her lips together, but couldn’t quite stop them quirking upwards. ‘You hunt often?’
He laughed outright at that, shaking his head. She wasn’t sure if it was a negative to her question or simple disbelief at the conversation in general. ‘I’m like a big-game animal—one hunt will last me some time.’ His eyes caught hers again. ‘And I only hunt when I see something really, really juicy.’
Juicy, huh? Her juices were running now and that voice in her head saying ‘eat me’ really should be shot.
His laughter resurfaced, though not as loud, and she knew he’d twigged her thoughts.
Still she refused to join in. ‘But you don’t keep your catches.’
‘No.’ He shook his head. ‘Catch and release. That’s the rule.’
Hmm. Bella wasn’t so sure about the strategy. ‘What if she doesn’t want to be released?’
‘Ah, but she does,’ he corrected. ‘Because she understands the rules of the game. And even if she doesn’t, it won’t take long until she wants out.’
Her mouth dropped. She couldn’t imagine any woman wanting to get away from this guy’s net. Flirting outrageously was too much fun—especially when the flirt had a body like this and eyes like those.
His smile sharpened round the edges. ‘I have it on good authority that I’m very selfish.’
‘Ah-h-h.’ She was intrigued. That smacked of bitter-ex-girlfriend speak. Was he playing the field on the rebound? ‘You’ve never wanted to catch and keep?’
He grimaced. ‘No.’
‘Why not?’
For the first time he looked serious. ‘Nothing keeps. Things don’t ever stay the same.’ He paused, the glint resurfaced. ‘The answer is to go for what you want, when you want it.’
‘And after that?’
He didn’t reply, merely shrugged his shoulders.
Bella took another sip of the spritzer and contemplated what she knew to be the ultimate temptation before her—defence and denial crumbling. ‘After that’ didn’t matter really, did it? He had a beautiful body and a sense of humour—what more would a confident, cosmopolitan woman want for an evening? And wasn’t that what she was—for tonight?
‘So, now that you know something about me,’ he said, ‘tell me, what do you do?’
He might have told her some things, but strangely she felt as if she knew even less. But what she really wanted to know, he didn’t need words for. She wanted to know if that tan was all-over-body, she wanted to know the heat and strength of those muscles—the feel of them. Everything of him. Cosmo woman here she was.
‘I’m an actor,’ she declared, chin high.
There was a pause. ‘Ah-h-h.’
‘Ah, what?’ She didn’t like the look of his exaggerated, knowing nod.
‘I bet you’re a very good one,’ he sidestepped.
Her cosmo confidence ebbed. ‘I could be.’ Given the opportunity.
‘Could?’
‘Sure.’ She just needed that lucky break.
Now he was looking way too amused. ‘What else do you do?’
‘What do you mean what else?’ she snapped. ‘I’m an actor.’
‘I don’t know of many actors who don’t have some sort of day job.’
She sighed—totally theatrically, and then capitulated. ‘I make really good coffee.’
He laughed again. ‘Of course you do.’
Of course. She was the walking cliché. The family joke. The wannabe. And no way in hell was she telling him what else she did. Children’s birthday party entertainer ranked as one of the lowest, most laughable occupations on the earth—her family gave her no end of grief about it. She didn’t need to give him more reason to as well.
‘And how is the life of a jobbing actor these days?’ He was still looking a tad too cynically amused for her liking.
She sighed again—doubly theatrical. ‘I have “the nose”.’
‘“The nose”?’
She turned her head, offered him a profile shot.
He studied it seriously for several seconds. Then, ‘What’s wrong with it?’
‘A little long, a little straight.’
‘I’d say it’s majestic.’
She jumped when he ran his finger down it. The tip tingled as he tapped it.
‘Quite,’ she acknowledged, sitting back out of re
ach. ‘It gives me character and that’s what I am—a character actress.’
‘I’m not convinced it’s the nose that makes you so full of character,’ he drawled.
‘Quite.’ She almost laughed—it was taking everything to ignore his irony. ‘I’ve not the looks for the heroine. I’m the sidekick.’
She didn’t mention it, but there was also the fact she was on the rounder side of skinny. A little short, a little curvy for anything like Hollywood. But Wellywood—more formally known as Wellington, New Zealand’s own movie town? Maybe. She just needed to get the guts to move there.
‘Oh, I wouldn’t say—’
‘Don’t.’ She raised her hand, stopped him mid-sentence. ‘It’s true. No leading-lady looks here, but it doesn’t matter because the smart-ass sidekick gets all the best lines anyway.’
‘But not the guy.’
She frowned. So true. And half the time she didn’t get the sidekick part either. She got the walk-on-here, quick-exit-there parts. The no-name ones that never earned any money, fame or even notoriety.
She figured it was because she hadn’t done the posh drama academy thing. Her father had put his foot down. She wasn’t to waste her brain on that piffle—a hobby sure, but never a career. So she’d been packed off to university—like all her siblings. Only instead of brain-addling accountancy or law, she’d read English. And, to her father’s horror, film studies. After a while he’d ‘supposed she might go into teaching’. He’d supposed wrong. She’d done evening classes in acting at the local high school. Read every method book in the library. Watched the classic films a million kazillion times. Only at all those agencies and casting calls it was almost always the same talent turning up and she couldn’t help but be psyched out by the pros, by the natural talents who’d been onstage from the age of three and who had all the confidence and self-belief in the world.
Bella thought she had self-belief. But it fought a hard battle against the disbelief of her family. ‘When are you going to settle into a real job?’ they constantly asked. ‘This drama thing is just a hobby. You don’t want to be standing on your feet making coffee, or blowing up balloons for spoilt toddlers for the rest of your days …’ And on and on and on.