“A glass of Chenin Blanc and an IPA, please.”
I proceeded to stare at Lenny helplessly as he leaned into his forearms on the bar and reeled off a list of ten different IPAs, with names that ran the gamut from sounding like vaguely threatening sex positions to fantasy novel titles generated by an enthusiastic but confused A.I.
I was at the pub for a business lunch with my favourite client, Paulina, who’d stopped in for a rare face-to-face meeting en route to a conference in Milton Keynes. The IPA was for her. I hadnoclue.
“The Hobgoblin is good,” Adam said about twenty seconds into my blank silence.
I did my best not to shiver, but the hairs on my arms lifted anyway. “In that case, I’ll take the Threshing Orc, thanks,” I said, grabbing one at random.
It sounded like an advanced sex positionanda fantasy novel. A decent choice for Paulina, who was very much into both of those things.
“Oh-kay,” Lenny said, looking from me to Adam and back again before he shook his head and ambled off.
I did my very best not to fidget as I waited.
Adam was staring at me. Iknewhe was. I literally felt his attention go up and down my face like a warm stroke. Huffing out a breath of irritation, I tipped my head to glare up at him.
And he—oh. He wasn’t glaring back. His expression was wary. Almost…soft?
“Hi, Ray,” he said.
“Go fuck yourself, Adam,” I said. Oh, shit. Where did that come from?
Adam’s hazel eyes flared. “Mm. Already did that twice this morning. Once in bed when I woke up, and once in the shower. Maybe I can fit something in after lunch, though.” He ran his gaze over my trembling body. “I’m certainly in the mood for it now.”
My eyes bulged, he smiled sweetly, and I strode off.
I’d always known it was likely that I’d see Adam around, since we lived in a small town. But I didn’t think we’d actuallytalk. I was utterly unprepared for this.
Why couldn’t I have said something cool and polite? Something breezy and distant? Anything at all, other than telling him to go fuck himself.
Because now I wasimaginingit.
Paulina watched me sit down. “I’ll get the drinks, shall I?” she said, amused.
I stared at her blankly. Drinks. “Sorry,” I said. “I don’t know what I... I’ll grab them.”
“Don’t bother,” she said. “Here they come.”
I looked up in time to watch Adam stroll over with an insolent, loose-hipped gait, drinks in hand. He set them on the table.
“You forgot these,” he said.
“Thank you.” Paulina grinned at him.
“No problem.” Adam flashed her a smile, and arched a brow at me.
“Thank you,” I said. Like a grown-up, professional man taking his favourite client to lunch. “How kind.”
Adam held my gaze for a second, his eyes narrowing on mine, and then he lifted his chin, bestowed another devastating smile upon Paulina, and went back to the bar.
“There’s a story there,” Paulina said, dragging her pint toward her. “I want all the details, especially the filthy ones, because he is gorgeous. Spill it.”
“Ha. Not a chance.”
She pouted. “Not even if I ask nicely?”
“Nope.”