by Apryl Baker
“Who ever said I play fair, Krasivaya?” His teeth sank into her sensitive lobe, and it sent a ripple of desire through her.
“What are you doing, Dimitri?”
“I don’t know.” He pulled back, his blue eyes muddled with questions. “Probably something I shouldn’t.”
He didn’t give her time to respond and crushed his lips to hers. She went completely still in his arms, shocked. He switched tactics when she didn’t move. He rubbed slow, soothing circles along her back with one hand and cupped her cheek with the other, softening the kiss. Becca’s own desire, coupled with how much she loved the man who she’d never thought even sent a lustful thought her way, melted her resolve, and she gave in to the burning heat blazing a path through every inch of her. She wrapped her arms around his neck and pulled him closer, opening her mouth when he nudged her lips.
He invaded like a conquering army. He took everything she had to give, and then some. He leaned forward, pushing her back into the table, tilting her head so he could deepen the kiss. Becca spiraled out of control, lost in the warmth that was all Dimitri Kincaid.
She tasted like sweet champagne and minty toothpaste. He explored her mouth, tasting, teasing her tongue. Fire ripped through him, and he fought the urge to bend her over the table, gather her hands in the center of her back, and fuck her so hard she’d wake the entire hotel. Fought the urge to carry her to bed. Fought the urge to do exactly what he knew he shouldn’t.
But for all that fight, he couldn’t keep his lips from hers. It had been a lost cause the minute he’d seen her this morning.
It was Becca who pulled away first. She dropped her head onto his chest and he laid his cheek against the top of her head. “We can’t do this, Dimitri.”
“I know.”
She went to stand, and he tightened his arms around her, not wanting to let go of her. “Just stay with me for a little while longer.”
“Not a good idea, Dimitri.”
“Maybe not, but I don’t want you to go.”
She didn’t say anything, but she stopped trying to get up. He should send her inside and attempt to get his desire under control, but the thought of letting her go brought out something in him he’d never experienced before. It was an instinct, a need to pull her close and stake a claim. It terrified him, truthfully, but not enough to send her away.
They sat that way for a good hour, listening to the night and drinking champagne, before she interrupted their peaceful interlude. He knew it was coming, but he hated when she pulled away from him.
“We need to go inside, Dimitri. There’s a lot to do.”
The mountain of boxes. He’d forgotten all about them. She was right, of course. There was a lot to do, but he resented the damn boxes. They were interrupting this…whatever this was.
“I need to get cleaned up. Why don’t you call the front desk and see if there’s any place open that delivers this late? Then we’ll tackle that army of boxes waiting. Sound good?”
She nodded and stood. This time he let her go without any arguments and rose, his legs quivering. He caught the back of the chair to steady himself. He saw Becca tense out of the corner of his eye, ready to help if he needed it, but understanding he wouldn’t want her help otherwise. Charlene had spent the last few months treating him like an invalid. Most probably would. That was another reason he wanted Becca with him. She’d make him man up and do it, but she’d be the first person offering him help if he needed it. She understood that. She’d grown up with bikers. That was probably where she’d learned it.
Bikers. He resisted the urge to laugh. His dainty girl grew up with bikers. Who would have thunk it?
“Becca?”
“Hmm?”
“Did those bikers teach you how to fight too?”
That pulled an impish grin from her. “Never piss me off, and you’ll never have to find out.”
“So, that’s a yes?”
“Let’s just say I can hold my own.” She wrapped her arms around herself. “Jackson made sure of it.”
“Come on, Jackie Chan, let’s get inside. Find us some food while I take a shower.”
She cracked a crooked smile his way and went to find the phone while he headed for the bathroom.
To take a cold, cold shower.
Chapter Seven
Becca’s nerves were about to get the best of her. What the hell just happened out there? She took a deep, shuddering breath and tried to steady herself. Falling apart wasn’t going to do anything to help her calm down. He kissed her, sure, but he was Dimitri, and Becca forcefully remembered all the women he’d gone through over the years. A kiss meant nothing to him. He was just full of alcohol. That was all it was. An alcoholic induced moment of insanity on both their parts. Best to leave it at that.
Instead of focusing on her very swollen lips, she set about opening boxes. The first two contained all the paper swag, and she set that aside. The next three were books. After opening the fourth, she turned her nervousness into full-on anger at CreateSpace. She’d specifically called them and asked each title be shipped in its own box, not thrown all together. And what did they go and do after assuring her otherwise? They threw them all together.
Dimitri had written twenty-three books in a little under four years. Granted, not all of them were popular, but he had three series that were, and now to have to sort them all out? He would have called her and pitched a fit if she hadn’t come. Hell, there was no way he could get this done by himself. The man had no sense of organization. She was surprised he managed to turn books out so quickly. Well, that wasn’t exactly true. When it came to writing, he was extremely well organized. The man had spreadsheets detailing everything in each series and book. Everything else? Toss it and hope it wasn’t important because there would be no finding it later.
So, instead of starting to organize the pre-orders, she began to sort books and stack them on the floor, muttering death threats at the shipping staff over at CreateSpace.
“What are you doing?”
Becca jumped and flailed backward, trying not to topple the books she’d so painfully organized, when Dimitri’s voice startled her. Strong hands caught her and yanked her up before she could fall. Her cheek came into contact with damp, warm skin. Holy hell. He didn’t have a shirt on. She bit her tongue to keep from tasting him.
“You okay?”
She nodded, not trusting her voice. She pushed away from him, keeping her eyes on the floor as she moved back to the boxes. If she refused to look, that was one image that wouldn’t haunt her dreams for a lifetime.
He walked up behind her, looking over her shoulder at the mess on the floor. “Why did you order so many books?”
One, two, three…she counted silently. Take a deep breath, and keep your cool. Don’t let him know how he affects you. “I told you earlier how many pre-orders you had. I took a stab at guessing how many you might need. What you don’t sell, you can pack up and use at the next event. Less for me to have to order.”
“When is the next event?” He leaned farther over her, his very naked chest resting against her back.
Dear God in Heaven, give me strength. “Two weeks. Austin, Texas.” The words were clipped, angrier than she meant them to be, but hell’s bells, did he have to be so close? She couldn’t move. He’d trapped her between the desk and himself.
“You sure you’re okay, Becca?”
“I said I was fine. Why wouldn’t I be?”
“Because you’re trembling, and you’re breathing so hard, you might have just jogged up five flights of stairs?”
She closed her eyes. Damn him.
“Don’t, Dimitri. I am not one of your flavors of the week.”
“I know that, Rebecca.” He turned serious. “Trust me, I know.”
“Then why are you doing this?” The confusion bled out in her words. “Just stop it, please.”
He moved away, and she caught the sight of his pained expression out of the corner of her eye. “I’m sorry. Sometimes I ca
n’t help myself.”
“Learn some control. You’re a grown man, not a three-year-old throwing a fit in Target because your mom wouldn’t let you have the toy you wanted. I’m not a toy.”
“That’s about what I feel like right now.” He let out a low chuckle. “I want what I can’t have.”
She turned to face him, her own ire slowly rising. “Deal with it, D. We have a lot of damn work to do because of the idiots who packed this mess. I don’t have time for your nonsense.” She picked up the paper swag and a silver Sharpie, and thrust them at him. “Here. Start signing these.”
“All of them?” He looked from the boxes to her, appalled.
“Yes, all of them.” She took her handy box opener she’d brought along and started to open another box. “I have to sort all these books before I can even start trying to get the pre-orders together.”
“Was there any place open this late with food?” He took out the first stack of postcards and started signing. Shit, this was going to take all damn night. He needed to do something less mundane to get his mind off the woman whose ass was prominently on display. She’d put on another one of those long t-shirt things, and every time she bent, he caught a glimpse of baby blue lace.
“I convinced the guy at Pat’s Pizza to take the order. Had to order four to get him to do it, though. They don’t deliver small orders at this time of night.”
“That’s fine. What we don’t eat, we’ll put in the fridge for later.” He’d probably scarf two by himself. Blue lace flashed in his field of vision, and he groaned. “Becca?”
“What?” She was pulling books out of the box she was currently working on.
“Put on some damn pajama bottoms.”
She went still then looked at him over her shoulder, her eyes suddenly twinkling. “Only if you put on a damn shirt.”
Well, now. Maybe he did affect her as much as she did him. He laughed and shook his head, getting up to grab a shirt out of his suitcase. He pulled on a plain white shirt and saw Rebecca jumping into some kind of knee-length pajama bottoms. At least they covered her damn ass.
“Better?” she asked once he’d settled himself back on the bed.
He nodded and picked up the Sharpie. “Where did we get a silver Sharpie? Do you just carry them around in your purse or something?”
“Nope.” She sat on the floor this time, facing him. Thank God. If he had to be subjected to her ass one more time, he’d have done something stupid. “I ordered a bunch of Sharpies and had them shipped here. You don’t think I’d send you into the gladiator’s arena without the proper weapons, do you?”
“It can’t be that bad.”
She snorted. “Oh, but it can. You didn’t do your research like I told you to. These things are huge affairs, readers fighting to get to their favorite authors by the droves. Lines out the whazoo for some authors. I’m expecting a line for you. I even coordinated with Sheila to make sure your lines wouldn’t hamper the other authors there. Nothing like pissing off someone because your lines blocked their tables.”
Fair enough. He’d be pissed if that happened to him. She stuttered her words a bit when she described the crowds, and it bothered him. He could see how terrified she was. It was written in every muscle. She tensed up like she was preparing for war. Maybe the gladiator reference made sense to her. She was preparing for war—a war with herself and her anxiety. He did want her to try. Her doctor told her she should try things, but if it was too much, he’d pack up, everyone else be damned.
A knock pounded on the door, and she jumped up to get it. He let her, since she seemed so intent on getting away from him. She couldn’t run for long, though, and that pleased him. He loved a good chase, loved catching his prey, holding them down, and showing them how much they pleased him.
He wanted her. More than he had anyone else. He admitted it to himself. Now he just had to come to terms with what it meant if he did chase her, if he caught her. Becca knew him well enough to know he’d never settle down with one woman because he did get bored so easily. He’d love to promise her otherwise, but he knew himself as well as she did. He’d get bored and hurt her.
Was he willing to risk that? Every part of him that loved her said no, but the predator in him said hell, yes. He wanted her, friendship be damned.
She came back carrying four pizza boxes, a two liter of Coke, and some plates and cups. “I ordered you your nasty banana peppers and anchovies, so don’t touch mine.”
“Mushrooms, bacon, and spicy Italian sausage.”
She flashed him a smile. “You remember that?”
“You remember how I like my pizza.”
“Yeah, but I’ve been on the phone with you enough while you’re eating it that it’s burned into my memory. I think I might have ordered pizza once while talking to you.”
“I have an excellent memory.” Actually, he didn’t. That was why he kept such detailed spreadsheets about his books. He knew if he didn’t, he’d screw storylines up. He barely remembered his own family’s birthdays, but with Rebecca, he always remembered things. From her favorite flower, which he sent her every year on her birthday, to how she ordered her pizza.
He frowned, contemplating that. It was odd. Why did he remember the smallest facts about her, things she may have only said in passing, like how she loved the old movie If A Man Answers? They’d been talking about movies, and she’d told him it was one of her favorites. He’d found it and sent it to her for Christmas a few years ago.
Babushka would tell him why. He could hear her voice cackling in his head, but he refused to admit it. The old woman would be enjoying this whole mess.
The pizza box landing on his lap startled him out of his strange thoughts. He took the plate and the full cup of pop she gave him. “Thank you.”
“You’re welcome.” She sat back down in her position in the middle of the stack of books. She opened her own box and snatched a piece out, not bothering with a plate. “Mmm, so good.”
“Hungry?”
“Starved.” She stuffed more pizza in her mouth, and he laughed as he started in on his own box. Starved wasn’t even the word. The last time either of them had eaten had been around four o’clock or so. He’d passed out soon after that and slept straight. It was good pizza, but he’d still take Papa John’s over it.
“Do we have to do all of this tonight?” He eyeballed the mess surrounding her. She’d driven for hours and had to be dead tired.
“Most of it.” She put the pizza box aside and pulled over the next box she had stacked up beside her. “You have to go over to the event location tomorrow night and get your table set up.”
“We have to go.”
Her head snapped up, her eyes wide, like those of a deer who’s just realized the headlights are coming for her and there’s no time to move to safety. “No, I mean you. You don’t need me to help you set up.”
“Becca.” He kept his tone patient. “Do you think I have any idea of how to do that? Do I just pile the books up on one end? Where does all this stuff go? I have no clue what I’m doing. You’re coming.”
“And I know any more about it than you do?” Her eyes dared him to say yes.
“Yeah, you do. You pay attention to all that shit. Tell me you don’t.”
“I hate you.”
“You’ll love me again in five minutes.”
They worked in silence after that, but it wasn’t forced or awkward. Another first for him. Usually, women felt the need to fill up the silence with useless chatter. This was so comfortable, it started to make him uneasy. He’d check tomorrow to see if they had a room open up.
He tossed down the last of the vile paper a few hours later and noticed Becca had fallen asleep, slumped against the chest of drawers. Her mess looked more organized, with the empty boxes now lined up and bags laid out, Post-it notes on the top one, and he assumed each bag would have one. She’d done a hell of a lot of work, more than he had. All he’d done was sign some paper.
Cracking his knuckles
to help relax his fingers, he stood, pulled the blankets down, and picked her up, careful not to jostle her too much. She never so much as roused or even murmured. The girl was dead to the world. He smiled when he pulled the blanket up and she flopped onto her side, her blonde hair spread out behind her. God, but she was magnificent.
His watch confirmed his suspicion. It was a little after five. The sun would be coming up soon. He put the ‘do not disturb’ sign out then did his business in the bathroom. The small couch was the only other place to sleep. His legs would murder him if he even tried.
Grinning like the devil himself, Dimitri made up his mind. He might yet decide to resist the temptation that was Rebecca Rhodes, but that didn’t mean he couldn’t enjoy the ride until it came to a stop. Pulling the blackout shades closed, he turned off the lights and got into bed.
She’d kill him when she woke up, but it would be worth it.
***
Becca cracked open her blurry eyes, burning up. Had she forgotten to turn the heat down last night? For a cheap apartment, her heating and cooling was better than decent. She preferred the cold to burning up, and it helped to keep her bills down in the winter. She’d better turn it down before the place got so warm she’d be dying later. Even though it was still early May, they’d been having some really warm days in Chicago.
When she tried to move, she became aware of the heat source currently surrounding her. It wasn’t her thermostat. No, it was one Dimitri Kincaid wrapped all around her, his leg thrown over hers and one arm around her stomach, his hand curled right beneath her breasts. What the hell?
“Dimitri!”
He didn’t move. Damn him. She wiggled and tried to throw his arm off, but he only tightened his hold. “Dimitri, wake the hell up!”
He muttered something, and instead of moving, his lips found her throat. Warm kisses trailed up until they met her jawline. Becca shivered as the same desire from yesterday rolled back up and parked, her subconscious flipping her off and saying, “Screw you, Becca, we’re content right where we are.”