by Violet Duke
âSure, sure.â Phoebe waved that away. âThatâs a given. Donât show up in cut-off sweat pants and weâll be good.â
Adrianne thought there was a compliment in there and then started to protest Phoebeâs assumption she would show up like that anyway. Then she realized that yeah, it was possible. It was a construction site, not the dinner theater or even her office. Cut-off sweat pants would be appropriate. âI could wearââ
âBut we have to get them apart tonight too before any more damage is done,â Phoebe cut her off. âWe have to do something now.â
Adrianne couldnât help but glance in Masonâs direction again. âHow are you going to do that?â
Phoebe definitely had a twinkle in her eye when she looked at Adrianne. âI have an idea.â
âOh boy.â That didnât sound good. âTell me.â
âCanât.â
âPhoebeââ
âItâs better if you donât know.â
She was probably right. âPhoebeââ
âI have to say one thingâhe was looking at you while you danced too.â
That made Adrianne pause. He had been looking at her. Not as a dance partner or even a very interesting new acquaintance but likeâ¦heâd really like to do body shots off of her.
And he didnât seem the type to generally do body shots.
âWhat do you mean?â she asked, wondering if Phoebe had noticed the same things she had.
âYou know how I said I noticed how you were looking at him?â
Adrianne nodded.
âHe was looking at you like that too.â
Adrianne swallowed. Okay, sheâd noticed. No matter Masonâs history with Hailey, there had been some definite heat between them on that dance floor that wasnât one-sided. âYou sure?â
âI was surprised you both got off the dance floor with all your clothes on.â
Adrianne felt her cheeks heat and put her hand over her heart. âIââ
âGet up.â Phoebe got to her feet and reached to pull Adrianne out of her chair.
Adrianne stood. Phoebe looked at her. Adrianne spread her arms. âOkay. Now what?â
Phoebe picked up her shot glass and splashed the butterscotch schnapps down the front of Adrianneâs shirt.
âHey!â Adrianne stared at her friend. âWhat the hell?â She started to reach for a napkin, but Phoebe stepped on her foot. Hard.
âOw!â Adrianne glared at Phoebe. âWhatâs wrong with you?â
âCome on.â Phoebe yanked on her arm, causing Adrianne to trip over the leg of her chair.
âDammit, Phoebâoomph.â She lost her train of thought as she spun and bumped into Mike Corbin. His beer sloshed out of the mug, a large spot landing on her thigh. âSorry.â
Mike smiled and skirted around her as Phoebe pulled her forward.
âLetâs go.â
âWhat is going on?â Adrianne demanded of her friend when there were no people or chairs between them.
âWhat?â Phoebe called over her shoulder.
Adrianne found herself limping the next two steps due to her sore toe. âWhat is going on?â
âWhat?â Phoebe asked again from a step ahead of her.
Adrianne raised her voice. âWhat. Is. Going. On?â she practically shouted. As the song ended. Several people turned to look. Phoebe pushed her into the table to her right and Adrianne knocked the bowl of popcorn on the edge to the floor.
She mumbled an apology and turned to blast her friend. Only to find herself face to face with Mason. She froze for an instant as she met his gaze. Dang. There was something about this guy that could stop her in her tracks. And she didnât mind.
He was still standing with Hailey, but his attention was fully on Adrianne.
âHailey.â Phoebe grasped the other womanâs arm with her free hand. âAdrianne needs a ride home.â
Hailey was talking to Christine, one of the bartenders. But her knees were very close to Masonâs crotch. Her bare kneesâthanks to the short skirt and how sheâd crossed her legs.
Phoebe wasnât one to be ignored. âHey, Hailey!â she said louder. âAdrianne needs a ride home.â
Adrianne barely registered the words as she continued to stare dumbly at Mason. But she did hear her name. And the word home.
Hailey stopped mid-sentence and swiveled toward them as she realized Masonâs eyes were no longer on her. She looked Adrianne up and down. âWhy? Are you okay?â she asked Adrianne.
âLook at her,â Phoebe said before Adrianne could answer. âSheâs got schnapps and beer down the front of her, she canât walk a straight line and she doesnât know whatâs going on.â
âShe doesnât drink,â Hailey said with a frown.
âSheâs a mess,â Phoebe said, conveniently not quite lying.
Adrianne opened her mouth to protest that she was a mess. Or drunk. She didnât know what Phoebeâs plan was, but it seemed like a bad idea.
âPhoebe, Iâ¦â But she made the mistake of glancing at Mason again.
He was watching her with a faintly amused expression. She didnât care. She loved that he was still looking at her. Pathetic, ridiculous, silly. But true. His expression was hard to label. It wasnât the way he had been looking at Hailey, but she decided not to analyze that.
His eyes on her made her warm and a little jumpy, but not in a bad way. Jumpy, excited, short of breath, but her heart didnât skip or race. So it was all good. Very good.
Phoebe turned to Adrianne. âWhat time are we meeting to put the picnic stuff up tomorrow?â
They hadnât talked about that yet. âI donât know.â Adrianne frowned, confused. âI thoughtâ¦â
Phoebe turned back to Hailey. âSee what I mean? She doesnât even know whatâs happening tomorrow.â
Hailey sighed. âYou need to learn to pace yourself,â she said to Adrianne.
Adrianne really wanted to protest now. She didnât need to pace herself for drinking soda. And she always knew all the details to all the plans. She made most of the details and the plans. This was character defamation.
âAre you taking her home then?â Hailey asked Phoebe.
âOh, I canât. My carâs full of stuff for the softball game and picnic.â
âCompletely full?â
âPacked,â Phoebe insisted.
Hailey sighed. âDrive her car.â
âHow will I get home?â Phoebe asked.
âWalk.â
âItâs like five miles.â
âItâs two. At most.â
âI donât want to walk two miles in the dark.â
Hailey rolled her eyes and reached for Adrianneâs arm to pull her closer. âFine.â Though her tone suggested it really wasnât fine. âIâll take her. In a minute.â
Phoebe frowned. âI thinkââ
âIâll take her home.â
Hailey, Phoebe and Adrianne all stopped and looked at Mason as one. Adrianne quickly glanced at Phoebe who had a suspiciously pleased smile on her face. Her gaze swung to Hailey, who looked exasperated. Then she looked at Mason again.
He was watching her with a slight curve to his lip.
He didnât look like he minded the idea. He was already setting his glass down and straightening.
Phoebe looked at his half-full glass. âHave you been drinking?â
âSoda.â
She beamed at him as if heâd announced she was Miss America. âThen thatâs a fantastic idea.â
Phoebe push
ed Adrianne forward and she had to step quickly to avoid Masonâs toes. He steadied her with two warm, large palms on her upper arms. âEasy,â he said quietly, staring down at her. His eyes went from her eyes to her lips and back to her eyes. âIâve got you.â
âThanks,â she said. It sounded breathless to her, but she couldnât help it.
âYou can give me directions, I assume?â His smile hinted that he knew she was more than capable of telling him how to get her home.
âSeven twelve Crimson,â Phoebe said, earning her another frown from Hailey.
âShe could walk from here,â Hailey inserted.
Adrianne felt her right knee buckle. Enough that Mason had to pull her up against him.
âLook at her,â Phoebe said. âShe canât walk home.â
Adrianne knew exactly why her knee had given and she couldnât look at her friend or sheâd start to laugh. This was junior high get-a-boyâs-attention stuff.
âThis is ridiculous,â Hailey muttered. She pivoted on her stool. âThere are a dozen guys here who would take her home. Hey, Dave!â she called.
âIâm taking her home,â Mason said.
Adrianne was surprised by the firmness of his tone. He turned her and tucked her under his arm.
âItâs fine,â he said, less forcefully. âI was heading out anyway.â
Hailey was quite obviously not happy. Adrianne carefully avoided making eye contact. Instead, she let herself lean into Mason, enjoying his strength and warmth.
What the hell? It wasnât like being up against him was going to last. He was only here for three days, and Hailey obviously had some kind of stake on him already.
Besides, Adrianne didnât want any kind of excitement or pulse-increasing activity. She was looking for a laidback, home every night, steady and simple farmer for the long term. So having Masonâs hands on her was going to be short-lived. She might as well enjoy it for the moment.
âLetâs go,â he said near her ear and started for the door.
Adrianne wondered if she could get away with giving him the round-about directions to her house instead of going straight home.
As they stepped onto the wooden front porch of the Come Again, Mason said, âHey, Adrianne, hold these a minute.â
He flipped his car keys into the air and she reached out and snagged them smoothly. No problem.
Mason chuckled.
Oh.
âYou definitely smell like butterscotch schnapps, but Iâm not convinced you drank that much,â he said.
âUm, we never said I drank it.â She tossed the keys back to him and headed for the parking lot.
âGood point.â
She headed for his car, the only one with Illinois plates in the lot. And the only Porsche in town. Or the county probably.
He hit the button on his key chain to unlock the doorsâit was also probably the only car in the parking lot that was lockedâbut made no move to open the door.
Taking a deep breath, she turned to face him. He was standing really close to her. She pressed her back to the car, her palms against the warm metal of the passenger door.
âI need to ask you something,â she said quickly before she could rethink it.
âAnything.â He seemed to move closer.
âDid you offer me a ride because you would have offered anyone a ride or because it was me?â Internally, she cringed. Definitely junior high stuff.
It was a dumb question and she felt dumb askingâand even dumber letting the answer matter so much. But she really wanted to know. Because she was about to do something crazy and needed to know if there was even a slightly good reason.
âI would have given anyone a ride.â Mason slipped his hands into his pockets and shifted his weight back onto his heels.
âOh.â Her heart dropped. She put her hand against her chest. âOkay.â
He leaned in, hands still in pockets. âBut I was really happy about it because it was you.â
She wondered if sheâd imagined the words for a moment, then she saw his grin and let herself be glad sheâd asked.
Now for the crazy part.
âSo you know that I havenât been drinking.â
âI was pretty sure.â
God, she loved that grin. She returned it. âSo you will also know that anything I do or say is for reasons other than being under the influence.â
âOkay.â
She leaned forward, her hands still on the car door, rose on tiptoe and kissed him.
There were no hands, no contact other than lip to lip, but she felt her entire body catch fire.
She started to lean back away from the blaze, but Mason brought a hand up and cupped the back of her head, holding her in place.
This wasâsensational.
They stepped forward at the same time, bringing them belly to belly. Or belly to belt buckle. And something very nice below his belt buckle.
The kiss deepened as he tipped her head to one side. Her hands went to his shoulders and she pulled herself up more flush against him.
Mason seemed to approve, because he growled in the back of his throat, grasped her thigh with his other hand, pulled it up to his hip and then stepped forward again so her back was against the side of the car.
With the firm surface behind her and her thigh in his big palm, Mason was able to press exactly where she most needed him.
They groaned together and Adrianne knew that this was going to get out of hand.
CHAPTER THREE
THOUGH MASON FELT his pulse hammering as he struggled to rein his desire in, their mouths moved together slowly, deeply and fully.
Her lips were perfect, her tongue was perfect, the sounds she made were perfect and how she smelledâlike every one of his favorite things rolled into one and dipped in sugarâwas absolutely perfect. And not a bit like butterscotch.
Several minutesâhell, it could have been a day or twoâlater, he pulled back. He stared down at her, loving that she looked dazed. The women he kissed enjoyed it, but he didnât exactly surprise them and wouldnât describe them as overcome by him. He dated women who dated a lot of men. He wasnât sure he brought anything new or unusual to the interactions.
Adrianne was acting, and looking, like she was stunned by him. Or by what was happening. Or how she was feeling. Or something.
Something he hoped wasnât inane like how nice the weather was tonight or that he drove a Porsche.
âNo butterscotch,â he said, pulling his thumb along her lower lip, simply doing what he wanted to do, instead of thinking it out from every angle.
She shook her head. âNo butterscotch.â
âToo bad. I like butterscotch.â
âHow about cinnamon?â
âI really like cinnamon. Why?â
âI chewed cinnamon gum earlier.â
He smiled. âYeah?â
âI can prove it.â
She pulled him in for another kiss.
She tasted good. Not specifically any flavor other than Adrianne. Which was better than anything heâd ever tasted.
She also felt good. She was short enough that tiptoes were necessary to really fit together, but her body seemed shaped perfectly for his. And vice versa.
When she pulled back, she smiled up at him. âSee?â
âDelicious.â
She licked her lips and he was ready to start all over again.
This was nuts. He felt a hunger. It was never like this with women. Things were very predictable in his dating worldâas they were with everything in his world.
Drinks, dinner, dessert. That was the order in which his dating life progressed. Dessert was telltale for him. What his date ordered, how she ate it, how much she ate all
told him how much she wanted him. He hadnât published his research, but it was ninety-five percent accurate.
He hadnât had dessert with Adrianne yet.
Then again, he never kissed women up against his car like he couldnât get enough of them.
He always got enough.
He knew the female body and the science and psychology of female sexuality better than anyone in his acquaintance. The same way heâd studied agriculture, geology, political science and business, heâd studied women, read about women, experimented with women until he understood everything and had the right formula.
The right formula meant the rightâand predictableâoutcome.
Adrianne was an anomaly.
Generally, he intensely disliked anomalies.
Looking down at her now, however, he realized he was going to make an exception in this case.
She was too short to fit where he wanted to be, so he did the logical thing and slid his hands to her butt, picked her up and set her on the hood of the car.
She instantly wrapped her legs around his waist, moaned and started unbuttoning his shirt.
âGod, I want you,â she panted. âThis is crazy.â She spread his shirt open, her gaze roaming over his shoulders, chest and stomach. âI want to taste every inch of you. I want to suck on your earlobes.â She did, making Mason groan. âI want to lick your neck.â She did that too. âI want to lick your chest.â She wiggled against him to reach his left nipple, which she licked, making his erection pulse. âI want to suck on your fingers.â Instead, she put her index finger against his mouth. Mason drew it past his lips, swirled his tongue over the pad and then sucked the length of her finger into his mouth. Her breath hissed out between her teeth. âLike that.â
âI want to suck on a few things myself.â
He slipped his hand under the soft, stretchy material of her top to cup one of her breasts and run his thumb over the silky cup of her bra that couldnât hide the hardened tip.
She pressed her hand over the back of his. âYes.â
When he felt her other hand at the front of his pants, he sucked in a sharp breath.