Her eyes flashed wide with the realization that if I wasn’t her masked stalker, she was choking off the blood flow of an innocent man. She let me go and took a harried step back. “Sorry, no, I just…”
I raised a brow, waiting for her to finish the sentence.
She opened her mouth. Closed it again. Was Aly flustered? Oh, this was too good. My dark, devious heart sang at the sight of her searching for a way to excuse her behavior. I was going to torment the fuck out of this woman, and it was going to be so much fun.
“Just…sorry,” she finished lamely, looking away.
I briefly took pity on her and stepped aside, holding the door wide. “Come on in.”
“Thank you,” she said, skirting past me.
“Sorry if it’s chilly. The heat kicked off a while ago and won’t come back on. I called the building’s super, and he said he’s on it.”
Her gaze dropped to my gloves. “Oh, so that’s why you’re wearing those.”
“Yup. If you get cold, we have more pairs lying around.”
She smiled, still looking embarrassed about her imitation of a boa constrictor. “I’ll let you know. Thanks.”
I closed the door behind her and strode toward the kitchen. “Coffee?”
“Sure,” she said.
“Just half-and-half, right?”
She was quiet, likely wondering how I knew how she took her caffeinated beverage of choice. From watching her, duh, but I’d known it for even longer, and that little nugget of truth would probably throw her off just as much.
I turned and grinned at her, wide enough to make my dimples pop. Her gaze dropped to them and lost focus for a second, and I was grateful my oversized shirt and sweatshirt hid the way my dick responded. I knew what I looked like, knew the effect I had on people. Up until now, I’d always resented how handsome I was because it reminded me of how easy it must have been for Dad to lure his victims.
For the first time in a long time, I was grateful for my looks because the girl of my dreams seemed rattled by them, caught off guard because she hadn’t gotten a good look at me the first time we met and didn’t know what to do about the fact that Tyler’s roommate looked like he could get cast in the next Superman movie.
“I remember how you liked it from when you stayed over,” I said, adding a wink to see if I could get her to blush again.
Sure enough, the pink fading from her cheeks came rushing back. “How I liked it?” she asked, having picked up on the innuendo in my words. Her eyes flashed wide as they glanced toward Tyler’s room, and I saw the wheels turning in her mind, wondering how much I might have heard that night.
“Yeah, your coffee,” I said, tone innocent, expression anything but as I looked her over.
She sucked in a deep breath and turned away. “Yup!” she squeaked. “Half-and-half is fine, thank you. I’ll just go over here and sit down.”
Her ex-hookup’s roommate was flirting with her, and she didnotknow what to do about it. Inside, I was cackling. Maybe I could keep her so off balance that she forgot why she was here.
But I should have known better than that.
By the time the coffee finished brewing and I ambled over to her carrying our cups, she’d gotten control of herself, back to the no-nonsense, competent woman I watched almost every night. It must have only been her surprise that threw her off at first.
“Thank you again,” she said as I passed her coffee to her. “I know this is a strange request, asking you to hunt someone down for me, and I appreciate your help. Are you sure I can’t pay you?”
“I’m sure,” I said. “The challenge of it will be payment enough.”
It was my turn to get flustered as I stared into her wide brown eyes. Up close, there were lighter hints of amber and topaz hiding amongst the deeper tones. Her eyebrows were thick, a shade or two darker than her hair, arching in the middle like one of the beauties out of a Renaissance painting.
Whatever you do, do not look at her mouth, I told myself.
I used the excuse of sipping my coffee to tear my gaze away before I gave in to that temptation. Looking at Aly’s mouth wasdangerous because it would remind me of what that mouth had so recently done to me, and my dick was already hard enough as it was.
I set my coffee on a coaster and opened my laptop. The screen came to life, displaying the emblem of the company I worked for. I’d scrubbed this machine down earlier, removing any trace of Aly from it just in case I had to get up and pee, and she got curious and started clicking around.
“Why do you need to find this person?” I asked. “Tyler was kind of vague.”