But some of her euphoria died when Summer led her back to her work station. Her sister insisted on styling her hair, without letting Becca face the mirror.
“I’m nervous,” Summer admitted as she finished.
“Oh God, really?” Becca braced herself for the worst. “Did you turn my hair green again?”
Summer bit her lip. “How do you feel about magenta?”
“Summer!”
“Just kidding. But gee, thanks for the confidence.”
“Just tell me,” Becca said urgently. “How bad is it?”
“It’s fab, stop it. All I meant was, it’s exciting for me to do something for you for a change.” Summer squeezed her shoulders affectionately. “Especially since you’ve done so much for me.”
Becca didn’t want to take any credit for their past. Their parents had been killed when she’d been only eighteen, and Summer just sixteen. Becca had taken care of her sister, but anyone would have done the same.
“You’re always right there,” Summer said quietly. “I’ve wanted to give you something back, anything. For so long, I’ve wanted that.” She smiled. “Thanks for letting me do this.”
Slowly she turned Becca to face the mirror.
Ooohs and aaahs filled her ears as everyone around them gave their opinion. Becca hardly heard. Her gaze was locked on the mirror, her heart suddenly thundering. Her head spun. Her eyes glowed, and thanks to the magic of makeup, seemed huge and green. And her hair…it wasn’t green or magenta. Instead, it was shiny, loose to her shoulders and the most glorious color of honey she’d ever seen.
“Well?” Summer demanded, looking at no one but Becca. “Say something. Anything.”
It was a miracle, was all she could think. “I had no idea I had such good genes.”
Summer laughed and hugged her. “You ought to take that trip to Italy after all. Reward yourself.”
She couldn’t stop staring at herself in the mirror. “Oh, I intend to reward myself,” she said slowly. “And you, too. But not with Italy.”
“I see the wheels turning,” Summer said cautiously. “But I don’t think—”
“Exactly. Don’t think,” Becca said, echoing her sister’s earlier words right back at her. Right out the window she could still see the parasailers. She smiled and turned back to Summer, who looked out the window and gasped when she saw someone hanging from a parachute one hundred and fifty feet above the lake’s water. “Oh no.”
“Oh yes,” Becca said, smiling.
“Okay, look.” Summer drew a deep breath. “I understand you’re going through some sort of mid-life crisis. You’re only thirty, but you hear your clock ticking, or something equally stupid. Becca, stop laughing, I’m serious! Going out and dangling from a tiny little string a million feet in the air isn’t going to—”
“Chicken.”
Summer closed her mouth and glared at Becca. “I’m not a chicken. You take that back.”
“Double dare,” Becca said and waited, knowing full well Summer had never, in all her life, been able to refuse a dare.
“You’ll ruin your hair and nails,” Summer said with an insulted sniff, as if this was her only concern.
“Triple dare,” Becca whispered.
Summer dropped the sophisticated air and swore the air blue. Then she grabbed her purse. “Okay, you’re on. But last one there goes first.”
3
THERE WERE A DOZEN THINGS Kent should have been doing, but instead, long after everyone had gone home for the day, he stood in his office, staring blindly out the window.
Normally he could stand right in this spot, with his picture-perfect view of Lake Tahoe, dotted with sailboats and whitecaps, and be so satisfied with his life he couldn’t stand it.
He loved this place, it was his heart and soul. It was also a symbol of all he’d accomplished in his life, of how far he’d come from the young, homeless street rat he’d once been. It had taken every ounce of courage and grit he’d had to manage college, then to procure an internship. Even more to start up his own company, but he’d done it.
Though he was no longer a nobody, some of the stigma had stuck to him, and it wasn’t often he let people inside. For so much of his childhood and young adulthood he’d had no control over his life, and now as a direct result, he valued his independence above all else.
Even his friendships were treated with kid gloves and some distance.
Until Becca.
There was just something about that woman. That he couldn’t put his finger on exactly what it was was more than a little disturbing. It wasn’t attraction, he assured himself. Not sexual attraction, anyway.
Yeah, right.
But sleeping with her would be a very bad idea. Sex, great as it would be, would ruin everything because afterward he’d be looking for a way to escape and she’d be planning their two-point-five kids and a white picket fence.
Today, though, when she’d been talking about making a change, talking about adventure and strip clubs, he couldn’t help but take notice. She was running hot and itchy, and she intended to get that itch scratched.
Something akin to panic filled him at that thought. Platonic panic, he assured himself, but panic nonetheless. After all, anyone could see she was a baby when it came to affairs of the heart.
And she was going out looking for action.
It was simple really. He had to do something. She’d made it clear that tonight was the night.
Like a caged lion he paced his office, knowing what kind of man she’d attract at a strip club. A bad one. An unkind one. One who would take advantage of her.
Dammit!
Someone was going to have to look after her, help her, protect her.
Someone was going to have to find out what the hell she thought she was doing, and he hoped it would be someone who cared about her. Someone who understood she just wanted an adventure. Someone who wouldn’t hurt her.
Someone like him. God. Him.
He swore again and grabbed his keys, hoping he wasn’t too late. Luckily the town was small, there were only a limited number of places she could have gone.
If she even stayed in town that is. She could have gone to South Shore, where there were any number of places she could go find her trouble.
Summer. She’d know what Becca was up to.
He hoped.
BECCA DID GO FIRST. Not by choice, but when she and Summer walked up to the man in charge of the parasailing, he took one look at Becca and said, “You first.”
“Me?” she squeaked in tune to Summer’s nervous giggle. “Why me?”
“Because, and no offense here, lady, you look as if you might back out after your friend here goes.”
“She’s my sister.”
“Ah,” he said, nodding. “All the more reason for you to go first.”
Well it had been her idea, she told herself as she was strapped into a complicated—and hopefully very safe—contraption. Only fair that she go first.
Right?
Sounded good in theory. But she screamed when the first rush of wind lifted her from the launch pad, and she gripped the strap in front of her so tightly her fingers promptly went numb.
She screamed when Summer waved to her from the shore. Summer, who was one little tiny dot on the sand. Oh my God, Becca thought, slamming her eyes closed, screaming again.
Adventure, a very teeny voice reminded her.
So she opened her eyes. And continued to scream when she looked down from her height of over one hundred and fifty feet and could see the entire Tahoe Basin spread out beneath her.
Oh my God!
When they started to lower her, and her stomach switched places with her now scrambled brain, and she kept on screaming. The rush was amazing, huge, and worth every penny of the exorbitant fee she’d paid to be scared witless.
At fifty feet she started breathing again. At twenty-five feet she waved triumphantly down to Summer, who was standing next to a tall, dark, handsome looking man… Twenty feet…
/>
Kent.
He was standing there next to Summer, head tipped back as he studied her descent with an inscrutable look on his face.
Still okay, Becca told herself at fifteen feet. You’re okay. Exhilaration raced through her, both because she’d had her first and second adventures already, and now Kent was looking at her in a way that made her think her third adventure might be far more interesting than she could have imagined.
Their gazes met, his dark and strangely fierce. A tingle started in her stomach, which was now thankfully back in it’s rightful place behind her belly button.
Ten feet.
And she remembered, she was looking pretty hot. Her hair, her makeup…had he noticed?
Oh yeah, she could tell by the way he was staring at her that he most certainly had noticed.
Yep, everything was going pretty darn good, and it remained that way…right up until the time she missed the launch pad on her descent and hit the icy, cold water of Lake Tahoe.
SHE DREAMED ABOUT IT, the mascara running down her face in oh-so-attractive rivulets, her clothing plastered to her body like a second skin as they’d hauled her out of the water, dripping like the catch of the day.
And was rudely awakened by the alarm.
Groaning, Becca buried her head because it wasn’t just a dream—it had really happened.
She wasn’t sorry she’d tried parasailing, she wasn’t even sorry she’d hit the water. That Kent had witnessed the whole thing was the sorry part. It was one thing to willingly make a fool of herself, but it was quite another to have an audience while doing it.
He hadn’t laughed when they’d unceremoniously dumped her back on the launch pad at Summer’s feet, he hadn’t dared, but she thought maybe he’d wanted to.
And what had he been doing there anyway?
After making sure she was okay and as warm as possible behind the heater in her car, Kent had vanished as quickly as he’d arrived.
Had Becca only imagined that flash between them? The sun had been setting, she remembered as she picked out one of her new outfits. It could have easily been a trick of light, that look in his eyes. Yeah, that was it.
A few minutes later she stepped into her new panties. The red lace thong immediately gave her a wedgy, but Summer had insisted she try them.
Doubtfully, she pulled on one of her new dresses and wondered if she would be able to go all day without yanking at her underwear.
She also wondered what Kent would say to her today. Would he mention the new look?
Probably not.
She supposed her next adventure would have to be something other than jumping her hard-to-read boss. But what?
Well it would have to come to her. Thoughtful, she drove to work and walked in the front door of Sierra Scientific Laboratory.
Cookie, the receptionist, was on the phone, her feet up on her desk as she simultaneously chomped on a piece of gum, polished her nails metallic green and took a message.
Becca shut the door behind herself.
Automatically straightening, Cookie set her feet down, a professional smile and a finger raised to indicate she’d be off the phone any second.
Then her jaw dropped.
Smiling weakly, a little startled by this reaction, Becca waved at the stunned woman and headed toward the back.
Then she stepped into her favorite place in the world. The lab. Her home away from home. It was here that she felt accomplished, as if she was making a difference. And she was, she reminded herself. At S.S.L. she was making a difference. Viruses were their specialty, and after intense study, they were coming closer to understanding them better. Her goal was to be able to treat them.
Without blowing anything up.
The lab wasn’t large. There were six work stations, all of which were filled at the moment with various projects. Through the lab and down another hall were a set of offices, including Kent’s.
Dennis, a junior chemist, sat at the first work station. He was superbly intelligent, funny, cocky, and a born troublemaker. He had at least one date a weekend, the details of which he enjoyed sharing with everyone on Monday mornings. Though he joked around with Becca as much as he did everyone else, she knew he thought her sweet, kind and…well, a bit stuffy.
Wait until he heard about the parasailing incident.
At the next work station sat Jed. He was the second most reserved one in their midst, after Becca herself. In his late twenties, Jed was quiet and generous. He would give a complete stranger the shirt off his back, and had. Which maybe explained why he also had dates every weekend. He just rarely shared the details as Dennis did.
They were both wonderful, but tended to treat her as if she didn’t have a female bone in her body.
She was about to test that theory.
Her new and very high heels clicked noisily on the floor. Since she’d never worn anything but tennis shoes in the lab, it sounded startlingly loud. Both Jed and Dennis glanced up.
And took a comical second take. Then a third.
“Wow,” Jed whispered.
Dennis let out a low, soft whistle. “Rebecca Anne Lewis, where have you been hiding all my life?”
She couldn’t help it, she grinned at his meaningless but sweet flirtation. “Right in front of your nose.”
Slowly he rose from his stool, his eyes on her body as he shook his head. “Oh baby.”
It embarrassed her. She knew how she looked, hadn’t she just spent every red light on the drive here staring at herself in the rearview mirror? The pastel yellow shirtdress flattered both her coloring and her body style, showing off her limbs, which were usually covered. She knew this, she’d wanted this, but it was going to take some getting used to.
Dennis couldn’t get over her. “If I’d known what you’ve been hiding all this time, I’d—”
“Um…Dennis?”
“Hang on a sec, Jed,” he said, still smiling at Becca. “Anyway, I’d—”
“Dennis—”
Dennis shot his closest friend a disgusted look. “Man, this is why you don’t get women—”
“I get plenty of women, and your slide is on fire.”
Jed and Becca both laughed as Dennis whipped back to the burner, swearing as he rescued his work.
“You look great,” Jed whispered while Dennis jumped around and swore some more.
“Thanks.” Becca headed past them, turning to smile at them as she backed into the third station, feeling all warm and fuzzy and happy. She dropped her purse and reached behind her to steady herself as she prepared to sit on her stool. “I can’t tell you how much your support—”
Not an empty seat, she thought vaguely as she sat. Beneath her thighs she felt two, hard, muscular ones. Beneath her bottom she felt the unmistakable lap that matched the male thighs.
Two strong, warm arms came up to steady her as she squealed in surprise and twisted to meet the dark, intense gaze of the man she’d convinced herself she wasn’t attracted to.
“Well, if it isn’t the resident parasailer,” he said. “I see you warmed up nicely.”
4
BECCA LEAPT UP, but not before Kent’s body heat seeped into her skin, seeming to warm her from the inside out.
She stared at him, unable to think. Her mind had gone mushy, but it was okay because he stared right back at her.
“Those legs were made for dancing,” Dennis called out. “Let’s try that new swing club tonight, you and me.”
Locked into Kent’s gaze, she couldn’t move. He didn’t either.
“What do you say, Becca?” Dennis asked.
“She’s busy.”
Surprised at Kent’s words, Becca responded. “I didn’t say that.”
“No, I believe I did.”
So much heat in his gaze. Heat was good, she told herself, her heart in her throat.
“Don’t you like to dance?” Dennis asked her.
How to admit she’d never done it? That no one had ever wanted to take her before? “Yes,” she said,
determined. Anything to get her mind off her gorgeous, unsuitable boss.
“Another adventure?” Kent asked for her ears only. “You know you could have been hurt last night.”
Was that rough, urgent tone all for her? Couldn’t be, much as she was starting to secretly wish otherwise. But she knew he wasn’t a one-woman man, not to mention she wasn’t his type. “But I wasn’t hurt.”
His jaw tightened. “Could I see you alone in my office?”
“You’re the boss,” she said flippantly while her poor, drumming, overexcited heart threatened to burst out of her chest. She passed Jed, who sent her a sympathetic smile. Dennis winked.
Kent’s office door shut behind him, the sound abnormally loud in the silent room. She stood facing his window, not quite daring to look at him. He stood directly behind her, she could feel him. Could feel his gaze on her hair, on her body, everywhere.
She knew this because everywhere he looked, she got hot. It was unladylike, and definitely not romantic, but she was going to start to perspire if he didn’t say something. “Nice view,” she said inanely, nodding her head toward the beautiful lake.
“What’s going on, Becca?”
“You tell me. Why were you at the lake last night?”
“I thought I was rescuing you from—” He shook his head. “Never mind.” A muscle in his jaw worked, and his eyes were so dark they looked black.
“You thought you were rescuing me from…” The lightbulb clicked on in her brain and she let out a disbelieving laugh. “You really thought I was going to a strip club, didn’t you?”
“Well you did mention it.”
“I mentioned Italy, too.”
“I knew you weren’t going to Italy on your salary.” He couldn’t seem to take his eyes off her. “You had the makeover. You look…amazing.”
“Same as last night.”
“Hardly. Not when you were a hundred feet in the air, waving your feet and screaming like a banshee, and certainly not afterward when you missed your landing and came out of the drink looking like a drowned rat.”
New and…Improved? & Andrew in Excess Page 3