Melt for You

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Melt for You Page 14

by J. T. Geissinger


  I can’t be insulted, because it’s a legitimate observation. “Cat food’s on the third shelf in the pantry.” Without waiting for an answer, I head to the bedroom and crawl back into bed.

  I hear Cam moving around in the kitchen, opening and closing the pantry door, murmuring to Mr. Bingley. Then he’s in my bathroom, running the water in the sink.

  “What’re you doing?” I mumble with my eyes closed, irritated by his presence.

  The edge of the mattress dips with his weight. He presses a cool wet cloth to my forehead. “Gettin’ this shit off your face.”

  He starts to gently wipe the makeup off my skin as I lie there wondering if it’s weird that I’m enjoying it.

  “Stop frownin’. I’m doin’ you a solid here, lass. I think your poor cat is traumatized from seein’ you like this.”

  “Mrs. Dinwiddle had good intentions.”

  “Or she secretly hates you.”

  That makes me smile. “I’m glad to hear you don’t think it was an improvement.”

  The washcloth pauses, then goes back to work under my jaw. “You don’t need makeup.”

  I snort because he’s being ridiculous. “News alert: you need to see an optometrist. I don’t normally wear makeup, but I definitely should. My bare skin has caused many a man nightmares.”

  Cam’s sigh is gentle and also disgusted. “You’ve got a head full o’ bullshit, lass. Your skin is beautiful.”

  Beautiful? No, he can’t mean that. He’s screwing with me again. He feels pity. I’m so pitiful he’s forced to make up a lie to distract me from my pitifulness.

  His voice turns dry. “Do you always freak out when someone pays you a compliment?”

  “I’m not freaking out.”

  “Oh, no? Then why did your entire body go stiff? And your eyes are rollin’ around under your eyelids. You look like you’re gettin’ electric shock therapy.” He returns to the bathroom and runs the water again, leaving me feeling exposed and vulnerable on the bed.

  No one has ever told me I have beautiful skin. No one has ever told me I have beautiful anything. Well, there is Dr. Sternberg, my dentist, who always tells me how lucky I am to have such naturally straight teeth, but in the same breath he usually suggests a whitening product, so he can’t be counted.

  When the mattress dips again, I crack open an eye and look at Cam. “Do you really think I have beautiful skin?”

  He makes a face like I’m being an idiot. A bloody idiot, I’m sure he’d say. “You don’t even have pores.”

  “But I’m so pasty.”

  “Ha! You wanna see pasty, come to Scotland.”

  “Oh. So that explains it.”

  He looks at me warily. “I don’t know what kind of demented BS is about to leave your mouth, lass, but lemme just say this. Your skin isn’t the only beautiful thing about you. If you weren’t such a wee numpty, you’d realize what a braw bird you are.”

  My other eye opens, and now I’m gazing up at him, wishing I had a translator handy. “Um . . . thanks?”

  “Close your eyes,” he demands, sounding mad. “I’ve gotta get all the goop off your lashes.”

  “I think you just pull those off. Be gentle—there was glue involved.”

  He mutters, “Jesus.” It sounds like Jayzus and makes me giggle.

  Cam carefully peels the fake eyelashes from my eyelids, making noises of disgust while he’s doing it. When he’s done with that and satisfied he’s gotten most of the goopy foundation off my skin, he says, “You didn’t eat last night, did you?”

  I roll away from him onto my side and bury my face in the pillow.

  His huge gust of a sigh stirs my hair. “All right, lass. I’m gonna make you somethin’ to drink, and then I’ll let you sleep.”

  He rises and leaves. I don’t know how long he’s gone because I drift back to sleep, but then he’s there again, gently shaking me awake by my shoulder. I roll over to find him holding out a glass of poisonous-looking amber liquid.

  “What’s that?” I ask groggily.

  “Homemade hangover cure. Drink it all, sleep for a few hours, and you’ll be right as rain.”

  I lift to an elbow, take the drink from his hand, and chug it, coughing at the end because it’s so vile it makes my eyes water. “What the hell is this?”

  He winks at me. “Butt crack juice. Sourced fresh this mornin’.”

  The faint taste of bile rises up in the back of my throat, hot and acidic. I slap my hand over my mouth.

  Cam throws his head back and laughs. He takes the glass from my hand and rises from the bed, looking down at me with a huge grin. “I’ll see you later, lassie. Sweet dreams.”

  I fall asleep within moments, smiling.

  SIXTEEN

  In green and gold and brown they’re lit,

  Composed of dazzling color,

  With sparks and laughter and lively wit

  They move me like no other

  Eyes in a face I’ve ever seen.

  So starkly seductive they are,

  A gaze straight from a lovely dream

  With a shine like a brilliant star.

  And lashes long and curved and dark

  As soot and devils’ souls,

  All my resistance is a lark,

  These knees are weak as a newborn foal’s.

  I beg of you, my burning Sun,

  With this poor heart you’ll soon be done.

  When I open my eyes, it’s light outside, and my head is perfectly clear. I sit up carefully, worried the room is about to spin, but everything stays stable. I feel no trace of headache or nausea.

  I run to my desk, pull out my sonnet book, and quickly scribble down the words in my head.

  When I’m done, I read it aloud, then frown at the first line. “It should say blue. Michael’s eyes are blue.” I scratch out the words green, gold, and brown, and insert cobalt, azure, and sapphire.

  It feels wrong. And clunky. Too many syllables, too embellished, too much. So I rewrite the original line again, above the one I’ve scratched out, and stare at it.

  Green, gold, and brown equals hazel. In my sleep, I composed a sonnet about hazel eyes. “He put something funny in that drink,” I accuse the book.

  “What’s that?”

  I slam the book shut with a strangled little scream because Cam is standing at my bedroom door. “Nothing! What are you doing here?”

  He jerks his thumb over his shoulder. “Watchin’ ESPN with the cat. Why’re you shoutin’?” His gaze drops to my sonnet book.

  I shout, “I’m not shouting!” and throw the book into the top drawer of my desk, slamming it closed so hard the whole desk shakes.

  “Uh-huh. That didn’t look guilty at all.”

  His smile is like acid on my nerves. I jump up from the chair, smooth my hands over my hair, and try to compose myself. “I thought you left.”

  “You thought wrong.”

  He’s still looking at the drawer I threw the sonnet book into, so I move in front of it, crossing my arms over my chest. He glances at me, his smile growing wider.

  “Okay, I’ll let it go. For now. How’d you sleep?”

  “Fine. Amazing, actually. I shouldn’t feel this good after all that wine. What was in your homemade potion?”

  “It’s a secret. I could tell you, but then I’d have to kill you.”

  When I just stand there staring at him, he relents. “Ginger, raw honey, flaxseed, red pepper flakes, lemon juice, B vitamins, other stuff. Whips up in the blender in no time.”

  “You’re quite the blender master, aren’t you?”

  “It was my mum’s recipe. They all are.” A cloud passes over his face. He looks away, shifting his weight from foot to foot.

  “What time is it?” I ask, to change the obviously unwelcome subject.

  He drags a hand through his hair and shakes his head like he’s shaking off a bad memory. “Ten. You got anything planned for today?”

  “Nope.”

  “Good. We’re goin’ sh
oppin’.” He turns around and disappears, and now I’m worried.

  “Shopping?” I hurry after him into the living room. “We already bought enough food for a month—”

  “Not for food, lass. For a dress for the holiday party.”

  When I stand there blinking at him in surprise, he shrugs. “Unless you don’t want a man’s opinion on the matter. I’m sure whatever you pick will be nice.”

  I think of what I wore to the last holiday party and cringe. I thought ruffles would help hide my girth, but in photos I looked like a demented pirate who’d consumed his entire crew. “I mean, if you don’t have anything better to do, that would be great.”

  His eyes—damn hazel eyes!—burn right through me. “I don’t have anything better to do.”

  Now I’m feeling shy. Also weirdly guilty and ashamed, like he caught me masturbating or something. “Um. Okay. I need to take a shower.”

  “I’ll go change out of my sweats. How much time d’you need?”

  “Twenty minutes.”

  “That’s it?”

  “Why do you look so surprised?”

  “Nothin’. Just in my experience women usually take a lot longer than that to get ready.”

  Right. In his “experience” with women, which, if made into book form, would encompass several thousand pornographic volumes.

  Inspecting my face, Cam says, “You’ve got that intestinal gas look again, darlin’.”

  “I’ll knock on your door when I’m ready.” Scowling, I go back into my bedroom and close the door firmly behind me, pushing aside my curiosity at why I’m suddenly so mad.

  It must be because he called me darling.

  Jerk.

  If I thought going with Cameron McGregor to a grocery store was an education in the collective lust of women, going with him to a mall filled with holiday shoppers turns out to be an education in the collective lust of the entire human race.

  Everyone stares at him. Everyone. Women, men, children, dogs. Heads swivel in his wake like weather vanes in the wind. Mouths hang open. People stop in their tracks and gape.

  It’s so creepy that after a few hours of it I’m ready to jump out of my skin.

  “God, how do you stand it?” I ask under my breath, edging closer to him as a pair of goggle-eyed women move nearer. They’ve been circling like vultures for the better part of twenty minutes, whispering to each other as they follow us from rack to rack in the dress department of Saks.

  “Stand what?” asks Cam, browsing through the rack with an expert eye. Every once in a while he’ll pull something out, then put it back after a brief inspection and move on. Apparently he has a very specific idea of what he’s looking for.

  “The ogling.” I nudge him with my elbow.

  He looks up and sees the women. When he smiles at them, they freeze. Then they perform a hilarious about-face and dart away, giggling hysterically like a pair of silly teenage girls, though they’re obviously both over fifty.

  “I hardly notice it anymore,” he says with a shrug, then withdraws a red dress from the rack with a little growl of pleasure. “This one.” He tosses it at me and keeps going.

  I drape the dress over my arm and watch him continue his quest. “Seriously, though, it must get annoying! The amount of attention you get doesn’t bother you?”

  “Comes with the territory, lass. This kind of rare, extraordinary beauty has a price.” He sends me a wink and I roll my eyes.

  “God, I’m glad I’m not beautiful. I’d wind up a hermit if I had to deal with this every time I went out.”

  I’m fingering the neckline of the dress over my arm when I bump right into Cam because he’s stopped moving. Startled, I look up into a pair of hazel eyes, intense and unblinking.

  “The only reason you don’t have to deal with it is because you don’t notice it,” he says, his voice low. “And the only reason you don’t notice it is because you’ve mind fucked yourself into thinking you’re fat and plain.”

  My lips part, but I’m too shocked to form a sentence. He takes my silence as permission to continue.

  “Since we walked into this store, I’ve seen at least half a dozen men looking at you. Yes, you,” he repeats when I start to protest. “If you want an example of what I’m talkin’ about, look to your right. Three o’clock. Lad in the leather jacket with the red scarf. Look.”

  He glances up, and I follow the direction of his gaze. Sure enough, there’s a guy across the aisle in a leather jacket with a red scarf looking right at me. He’s tall, with nice hair, and a nice face. He’s actually kind of cute.

  When he sees us both looking at him, he glances away, cheeks ruddy. He turns and pretends to browse through a display of stacked sweaters.

  “It must be you,” I say, astonished. “I’m getting some of your glow. Like the moon reflecting the sun’s rays. If the sun didn’t shine so brightly, the moon would just sit there in the night sky like a dead lump of rock.”

  Cam’s sigh is aggrieved. “Bloody fucking hell,” he mutters, and storms over to another rack. I follow at a safe distance and watch with growing alarm as he tears through the rack, eyes black and lips thinned, his entire body bristling.

  A young man in a suit with a gold name tag on his lapel stares at Cam with glowing heart eyes from a nearby register. When he sees me looking at him, he bites his lip and puts his hand to his throat, like Cowabunga, girlfriend, is that big, glorious beast yours?

  I should introduce him to Cam. They’d make a lovely couple.

  Smiling, I approach the Mountain and brave the storm brewing over his head. “What you’re failing to take away from my comment is the compliment I paid you.”

  He glares at me from under lowered brows. “Don’t talk to me right now. I’m mad at you.” He savagely pulls a dress from the rack, rakes his black gaze over it, and tosses it in my general direction. I have to leap a few feet to catch it before it drops on the ground.

  “Oh, okay,” I say, acting casual. As casual as one can be, standing on the slopes of an erupting volcano. “So it’s no biggie that I called you beautiful.”

  He freezes, narrowing his eyes at me. “No, you didn’t.”

  “Didn’t I?” I drift toward another rack. Cam follows on my heels like I knew he would, because there’s nothing more irresistible to his ego than a stroke down its back.

  “When?” he demands, cutting me off as I reach for a sparkly silver jacket.

  “Use that big brain of yours and think.” I move around him and admiringly fondle the sleeve of the jacket, then decide I’d look like a disco ball in it and let it go.

  Cam moves in front of me again. “You said you were glad you weren’t beautiful. How is that a compliment to me?”

  “Because it’s implied that you are.”

  He purses his lips, looking at me askance. “No. A negative doesn’t count. You can’t prove a negative.”

  It’s so obvious what he wants me to say, but I know if I come right out and tell him he’s beautiful, I’ll never hear the end of it. Also, the building could explode if his ego gets any larger, so I just shrug and drift away again.

  Cam surprises me by taking my arm and gently pulling me into his chest. “So what you’re sayin’ is that you think I’m beautiful?”

  I aim for a breezy, nonchalant tone that doesn’t give away the sudden thumping of my heart. “Well . . . you’re not entirely unfortunate looking.”

  He’s serious and intent, gazing at me with laserlike focus, not a hint of a smile in his eyes or on his face. “It’s a yes-or-no question, Joellen. So—yes or no?”

  Heat begins to creep up my neck. “You know exactly how you look, McGregor.”

  “Beauty’s in the eye of the beholder, lass. I dunno how I look to you.”

  The roughness of his voice surprises me, as does the intensity burning in his eyes. Has all my ribbing hurt his feelings?

  I’m breathless with shame when I realize that all the times I’ve been sarcastic with him might have been taken at face v
alue. Not everyone appreciates a sharp tongue, or that its owner is usually just a big scaredy-cat who uses sarcasm as a shield.

  Oh my God. I’m such a dick. A spiteful, petty little dick who’s made a man feel bad about himself.

  Looking into his eyes, I say quietly, “To me you look like a man everyone underestimates, objectifies, and misjudges because of his appearance. To me you look like a man who’s thoughtful, insightful, and kind, but hopes no one will notice because it will be mistaken for weakness. To me you look like a man who hides his pain behind smiles and buries it in women and tries everything he can to forget whatever’s hurting him but can’t because he’s got a soft heart that scars easily, but no one has ever looked close enough to see.”

  A look of anguish crosses his face. His fingers curl into my arm. He swallows, hard, a muscle in his jaw flexing.

  A sudden pop of noise and a flash of light make us both turn.

  There’s a man with a camera standing across the aisle. It’s one of those cameras with the long lenses and the big flash box—the kind the paparazzi use.

  A growl rumbles through Cam’s chest, so violent and animalistic sounding it raises the hair on my arms to gooseflesh.

  It scares the crap out of the photographer, too. He leaps into motion, sprinting off down the aisle, bumping into people as he flees.

  Cam lets loose a stream of obscenities under his breath that could peel the paint from the walls.

  “Was that—”

  “Aye. C’mon.”

  Holding my arm, Cam steers me away from the aisle and through the dress department, to the dressing rooms located in the back. A young female sales associate is there, helping shoppers into rooms. Her eyes widen when she spots us coming.

  “She needs a room,” Cam growls, “and I need to speak to your manager.”

  Neither of us dares to disobey him. In his current state, he’s too intimidating to refuse. The girl quickly ushers me into a dressing room, then I’m alone with my shaking hands and knotted stomach, wondering what he’s going to do.

  And what would’ve happened if the photographer hadn’t been there.

  Was he about to kiss me?

  “Are you going crazy, Joellen?” I whisper to my reflection. In the mirror I’m all wild eyes and flushed cheeks, a startled bird poised for flight. “Get it together. Your imagination is running away with you again.”

 

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