Hold Me

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Hold Me Page 2

by Lucianne Rivers


  The waiter came to take their food order. Since the first margarita had given her a nice buzz, Jane requested another to go with her enchiladas. As her companion ordered, she propped her elbows on the table and observed him. He really was sinfully gorgeous.

  After the waiter left, Jane asked, “What’s your name?”

  “Harrison.”

  “I’m Jane.”

  She reached across the table to shake his hand and knocked over the saltshaker. The tequila, aided by an empty belly, had achieved its desired effect. “Oops,” she said, as her fingers gripped his. She giggled.

  She never giggled.

  His hand felt dry and firm in hers, and he withdrew it far too quickly.

  “Do you often rescue damsels in distress?” She sipped her drink, and decided he deserved a full-wattage smile, rarely bestowed. Her news anchor smile, set on full dazzle.

  “Not in a long time.” His eyes flickered with a light of truthfulness. He clasped his hands in front of him on the white tablecloth.

  “Well I’m glad you decided to get back on the wagon.”

  He didn’t laugh.

  The waiter brought the food and Jane tried to pace herself while eating. The enchiladas tasted orgasm-good. She moaned and caught Harrison watching her intently.

  After a third margarita, she felt decidedly revived, even emboldened. The happiest she had been since… since her mother died. The remembrance brought her crashing back to reality. She stared into thin air, dazed.

  “Are you okay?” Harrison asked.

  She swallowed the now-familiar lump of sadness and tore off the corner of her sopapilla. “Can you hand me the honey, please?”

  His fingers brushed hers once more, a frisson of electricity passing between their hands. She looked to see if he had felt it, too, but his face registered only mild concern.

  “You remind me of someone,” she said.

  He stiffened.

  She thought about who it could be. “Michael Douglas in Romancing the Stone.”

  He relaxed. “Don’t get your hopes up. I don’t do the salsa.”

  Had he just made a joke?

  “Do you wield a machete?”

  “Only in my backyard.”

  She laughed. The man had to be joking. “So what are you doing down here?”

  The mask returned. “I was visiting friends on the coast.”

  “You live here?”

  He shook his head. “Your turn.”

  Okay. He liked his privacy. Tequila had loosened her tongue and she didn’t mind filling in the blanks in the conversation. “I’m looking for someone.”

  “Oh?”

  “My dad.” Jane had trouble saying the words aloud. She remembered her father, vaguely. He had been an active soldier when she was a child and they hadn’t seen much of him, even before he died—disappeared. She had kept photos of him. Brown hair, brown eyes, square face. Handsome. She wondered what he looked like two decades later. If he was alive.

  “Is he missing?”

  “Oh, only for most of my life.” She laughed, but there was that desperation again. A sudden, vivid memory flashed in Jane’s mind—her father teaching her to ride, the sensation of his sturdy arms tightening around her, steadying her in the saddle.

  Harrison’s eyes searched her face and her cheeks heated under his scrutiny. Margarita-bold, she returned his studying gaze, assessing him as he did her.

  He had biceps to die for. They peeked out from under his T-shirt sleeves, and she considered reaching out and touching them. She could blame the alcohol for her brazenness. She longed to trace his skin with her fingertips, and for him to touch her, too. Was it wrong to want a night away from her troubles? Grief and alcohol mingled in her blood, making her desperate for some kind of release. A physical one would do.

  Could what happened in Mexico, stay in Mexico?

  It had been so long since she’d been able, or allowed herself, to let loose. Back home, she was a public figure—always conscious of her image. No one would recognize her here, among the morass of foreigners. Could she permit herself one night of passion? Kathleen Turner had done it, but could Jane Caldwell?

  She’d searched him for a sign of reciprocal attraction, but Harrison’s face remained inscrutable.

  Jane caught herself staring.

  “Come on.” He pulled out some cash and tossed it on the table, then helped her stand and took her suitcase, waving her in front of him.

  Their abrupt departure took her by surprise. “You didn’t have to pay.”

  “No problem.”

  As they walked out of the restaurant, the band played something romantic. Jane wanted to dance, preferably with Harrison. It had been ages since she’d felt a man’s arms around her.

  Jane’s heel met something slippery on the tile and she lurched backward. Harrison caught her, his fingers closing around her waist. For a brief second, the heat of his body burned her back and his spicy scent wafted over her. She swayed against him, just for a moment. “The Little Drummer Boy” tapped away in her blood, on steroids.

  Harrison steadied her and released his grip.

  She looked over her shoulder so she could read his eyes.

  The man was implacable, but she thought she caught a glimpse of something in the brown depths before the wall came up.

  Yes, this once, she would let her guard down. And she knew just the man to help her with that.

  Chapter Two

  Harrison avoided staring at Jane’s tight little ass in the crumpled skirt as she stepped onto the street. He tried to focus on the back of her head instead.

  Apart from her current state of disarray and insobriety, he could tell she liked expensive clothes. He recognized a designer cut when he saw one, even though her suit hung open and looked as if she’d spilled coffee on it. Her brown hair had been professionally streaked with blonde and her impractical high heels probably cost more than a month of living comfortably down here. He’d met a million women just like her.

  Well, maybe not just like her.

  There was something uniquely attractive about Jane. When he had saved her from falling, her silky hair brushed against his cheek. Her scent had been strangely intoxicating. He’d felt the urge to turn her toward him, to test her lips for taste and softness.

  He bet she tasted good.

  Releasing her had taken some resolve, especially when he saw the invitation in her eyes. She was on some crazy search for her father, and her mother had just died. He’d learned about nobility in his thirties and put the lesson to good use with Jane. She was drunk and looking for release. There had been a time when he would have been happy to oblige, but he wasn’t that guy anymore.

  Outside, the mellow air hit his face. Relief washed over him, dissipating tension he hadn’t known he held. Harrison tended to avoid bars nowadays. He could count on his discipline, yet preferred to stay well away from temptation in all its forms. He glanced at Jane and gritted his teeth. She was definitely a temptation.

  He put her at mid-to-late twenties, making her at least ten years younger than him. Back in the day, she would have been just the type to get him in trouble. She looked around at the town lights, glancing quickly away from the flashing neon sign of a strip club. He envisioned the unwanted image of her wrapped around a stripper pole, wearing very little.

  Shit.

  He led her across a bridge with cars trundling by in both directions. The clack of her heels mixed with the clunk of her suitcase on the pavement. He was momentarily irritated at the unsuitability of her attire. Pampered maidens generally hired cars and eschewed buses and footpaths. He supposed he could take her to a decent bed and breakfast; he knew of one nearby.

  Harrison pointed to the B&B as they approached. This place would suit her refined sensibilities. “Here we are.”

  She seemed relieved to see the B&B and that, perversely, pissed him off.

  Inside, they inquired about a room and the clerk shook his head. “Fiesta. No rooms.”

  T
hey got the same response at two more hostels.

  Well, he’d tried, hadn’t he? She was flagging and he wanted to be rid of her. He’d seen the way she’d looked at him in the cantina, and he’d liked it too goddamn much.

  Pausing at the street that led to the hostel where he’d booked a room, he crossed his arms. “I don’t know what to tell you, Jane. Everywhere’s going to be full.”

  She retrieved her suitcase from his grip, clinging to its handle. “Where are you staying?” she asked, wide-eyed.

  He couldn’t just leave her there with no place to go. They could give it one more attempt. He turned, knowing she would follow.

  The hostel looked like a dive. The Senora in charge opened the ancient wooden gate and frowned at them for making her come out so late. Inside, the rooms surrounded a paved courtyard with a large covered kitchen in the center. Plastic utensils and plates were piled in two sinks and cheap white chairs haphazardly surrounded the tables. A part of him appreciated the grimy surroundings. He’d been used to luxury in his prior life, and it had cost him. These accommodations served as a welcome reminder of how the average Joe lived.

  Or the average Harrison, in his case.

  He watched as Jane gazed around in dismay. Lucky she didn’t see the cockroach crawling toward her. Harrison asked the hostel owner if she had any rooms available, but she shook her head.

  He turned to Jane. “She says she’s booked up.”

  Jane looked relieved. Perhaps she’d seen the roach after all.

  But they weren’t leaving. The hostel owner ambled away, expecting him to follow. Harrison faced Jane and held out his hands, palms up. “I booked a room online yesterday.”

  She shook her head. “I’ll sleep in a dormitory. They have those here, right?”

  “No beds available,” he explained.

  He couldn’t ignore the pathetic look on her face. “Follow me.” He tried to tell himself that sympathy had motivated his words, but it hadn’t. Where was his nobility now?

  The Senora led them to a tiny room to the west of the courtyard, pointing out the banos along the way. Jane paused at the open door of the bedroom. He put his rucksack on one of the two beds and watched her reaction.

  Yes, this was his room. And yes, there were two beds.

  Harrison stifled a smile. He would have bet she’d wanted to share a bed with him tonight, but maybe she was quick to back down when faced with reality.

  The hostel owner shuffled off.

  Jane swallowed, the movement obvious. Slowly, she stepped inside.

  “I’m going to need your last name,” she said, raising an eyebrow, “if we’re going to sleep together.”

  Maybe not so quick to back down.

  She pushed past him into the dim bedroom, suitcase in tow, walked to the other bed and sat. Her skirt rode up her legs.

  “DeNeuve,” he said, pulling clothes out of his bag, avoiding the sight of her smooth thighs. He needed control of the situation, quick.

  “Harrison DeNeuve,” she said.

  The sound of his name on her lips was like a shot of aphrodisiac straight where it counted. He felt her eyes on his back as he unpacked. Get out, man.

  “I’ll let you change,” he said, without turning. He grabbed his toiletry bag and left.

  So he could take a cold shower.

  …

  Harrison did a double take when he realized that the nymph walking toward him through the hostel courtyard was Jane. She clopped across the cobblestone in the same shoes she’d been wearing earlier, her long legs bare. She’d slung her suit jacket over her shoulders, but it didn’t cover the sexy piece of brown satin that served as a nightgown. He caught a peek of tantalizing cleavage above its neckline.

  Harrison’s blood simmered. His damp hair was probably steaming. What was she thinking, walking around dressed like that in a public place? Luckily, all the other guests had gone to bed.

  She spotted him and smiled.

  The surge of hormones made his penis jump. A light of invitation ignited in her eyes and he goddamn knew it. She obviously found him attractive, and he couldn’t deny his attraction to her. Too bad he had sworn off casual sex.

  So why had he invited her to sleep in his room?

  “Hi, again.” She paused a short distance away, shifting her weight from foot to foot. Testosterone-driven pride swelled in his chest when he saw her checking out his pecs—he’d left his shirt open after his shower. She caught her lip between her teeth and something sparked inside of him. There was that urge to taste her again. He wanted to do that to her.

  He didn’t respond to her greeting. She waggled her toothbrush at him and swept past, resuming her journey to the bathroom. Her ass swayed beneath her thin nightgown, and he watched. He couldn’t help himself. He suddenly imagined filling her between those cheeks.

  Double shit.

  Harrison headed back to the bedroom then pulled off his shirt and hung it on a makeshift clothes hook. The room was built from wooden planks that had never been plastered over. Electrical wires threaded up the walls, bare and, no doubt, dangerous. There was no mosquito netting so he pulled a can of OFF from his pack and sprayed himself liberally.

  Figuring Jane hadn’t considered the possibility of being eaten alive in her barely-there nightgown, he left the can on her blanket. He shucked off his jeans, climbed onto his cot in his boxers, put his hands behind his head, and stared at the wooden ceiling. Cobwebs hung from the beams.

  Jane returned and shut the door, darkening the room.

  “There’s a light cord to your right.” It dangled from one of the dirty beams. Harrison kept his eyes on the ceiling.

  She clicked on the light. An unadorned, clear bulb illuminated the Spartan room. From the corner of his gaze, he saw her take in the cobwebs and shudder.

  “I feel like I’m in a prison camp.” She walked around him to her bed.

  Harrison didn’t speak, which elicited a glance from her. He knew she was trying to figure him out. Set above well-cut cheekbones, her dark eyes took him in. Her glossy hair reflected the light.

  She slipped off her jacket, back turned, and his gaze wandered over the supple muscles of her shoulders. She really was quite beautiful and, unlike the LA models in his past, still a little vulnerable.

  She slowly laid her jacket on the bed cover, spotted the bug spray and smiled. “Thanks. Mosquitoes love me. Sweet blood.”

  Oh yeah, he would bet on that.

  Jane sprayed the repellant on her skin, and it left a sheen of moisture in its wake. She put her foot on the bed to spray her legs and her gown rode up on her hips, giving him a glimpse of black, lacy underwear.

  He closed his eyes. The spraying stopped then he heard her go to the light and turn it off. Her footsteps rounded his bed once more and her cot creaked when she laid down. The loudest sound in the room was the thundering of his heart.

  …

  Jane’s scream woke him and he shot off the bed, colliding with her as she stood in a panic.

  He gripped her arms. “What is it?”

  Moonlight reflected in her terrified eyes. She pressed against him.

  “Something was crawling on me,” she said, her voice a hoarse whisper.

  Her breasts rubbed against his bare chest, the sensation exquisite. He felt her heart thud as her breath warmed his chin. His eyes adjusted to the moonlit room and he scanned her bed for insects. “There’s nothing there that I can see.”

  Jane looked at the rumpled mess of sheets and gradually relaxed. She put her hand to her chest and took a shaky breath. “Sorry for waking you like that.”

  He’d only been dozing. Having a hot woman in the next bed had made sleep impossible.

  Heat from her body penetrated his. Her breasts were tantalizingly close, her long hair smelling like expensive soap. He ached to caress the fine strands, to pull her closer then wrap her legs around his waist.

  As if reading his mind, she gently put her hand on his bicep—her fingers a brand, her eyes a question
.

  He didn’t need this. He had sworn off well-dressed American women, and for good reason. What benefit would come of taking her to bed?

  Beyond the obvious, of course.

  Jane must have sensed his indecision, because she did something from one of his wildest fantasies. She released his arm then slipped her fingers beneath the smooth spaghetti straps of her nightgown, pushing them from her shoulders. The silky fabric fell away from her body to her waist, revealing round, pert breasts and hard, pink nipples.

  He stopped breathing. She gauged his reaction through sultry eyes and he tried to solve the mystery of her. He hadn’t pegged her for a one-night-stand kind of girl, despite her clear attraction to him, but perhaps he had guessed wrong. His hormones urged him to take what she offered. If she looked down, she would see how happy his body would be to oblige.

  She swayed toward him, closing the distance between their bodies—simply a whisper of a movement that brushed the hard peaks of her breasts against his chest. She did it again, watching his eyes.

  Should he call her bluff and pull her hard against him? Push her onto the bed and take her? The image made him fully erect. Jane grazed against him again, and her hips swayed toward his. She gasped against his hardness, and let out a soft murmur.

  He reveled in the erotic feel of standing next to her, touching but not touching. Her sweet breath mingled with his. Debating whether to push her away, or pull her close, he touched the fabric bunched above her hips. Moonlight shone on her breasts and her lips parted in welcome. Through the satin, he could feel the smooth warmth of her waist. Wanting more from him, she rocked her hips against his.

  Jesus.

  He could have her right now—hot, wet, and hard—and he could rationalize his actions. Yes, the woman had just lost her mother, was alone in a strange country, and had consumed three margaritas. She wanted a temporary release, affirmation, validation, and was practically begging him to make love to her.

  “Harrison,” she pleaded.

  The use of his assumed name broke the spell.

  Harrison was a figment of his imagination, a product of his childhood infatuation with Indiana Jones. A phoenix rising from the ashes of a misspent youth, Harrison DeNeuve didn’t exist. As badly as he wanted the sexual release, he couldn’t undo years of practiced abstinence. Not even for Jane.

 

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