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My brain was scrambled eggs. I wasn’t thinking straight. Bianca had told me not fifteen minutes ago that she was my friend. My friend. Not the girl who’d think it was a super great idea to play handsy with the aching, throbbing, twitching monster between my legs right before we went down to dinner with my estranged parents.

This was a disaster.

The water went on behind the bathroom door, followed by some faint gasping noises. That was probably Bianca puking into the sink. I had to make this right. I had to apologize.

I lumbered to my feet and went to the bathroom door. I rested my forehead against it and closed my eyes. When the sound of running water stopped, I said, “If you want to hit me with something, there’s a very heavy bronze reproduction of the obelisk in Saint Peter’s Square on the credenza. I can bring it to you. It has a conveniently pointy tip.”

Her response was muffled by the door. “I don’t want to hit you.”

I didn’t dare hope that meant anything other than she’d rather shoot me than clobber me over the head. I waited, my hands pressed flat against the wood, my heart pounding.

She moved closer to her side of the door, because her voice was clearer when she said, “Maybe we could just . . . forget that happened.”

I was swamped by relief. Until she added softly, “For now.”

I bolted upright and stared at the door. For now? For now? What the hell did that mean? Was she going to wait until after dinner to yell at me, or . . .

Or what?

Holy fuck. I was having a heart attack. No, I was letting my imagination run away with me again.

No. I was having a heart attack.

The doorknob turned. She cracked open the door and peeked out at me through a two-inch sliver. Only the left side of her face was visible, and all of it was flushed.

“You mentioned something about clothes,” she said.

I nodded.

“Is the dress I’m wearing appropriate for dinner?”

“Yes. But there are things in the closet you can look through if you’d like to wear something else.”

Her left eyebrow arched.

I said, “I had a few things brought in for you.”

She swung the door open wide. “You shopped for me?”

I couldn’t tell from her expression if she was pleased or thought that was creepy, so I just nodded again.

“How did you know my size?”

Now I knew it would be creepy if I said I’ve spent a lot of time staring at your body, so I went with, “I guessed.”

Her expression soured. “Please tell me you didn’t guess I’m a

size two, because if you did, I’ll be wearing this dress for the rest of the weekend.”

Pressing the smile from my lips, I turned and went to the wardrobe. I opened the doors and stepped aside.

Bianca poked her head out the bathroom door and gazed at the wardrobe. It was a big hunk of carved oak, an antique from Italy, I think, and had enough drawers and hanging space for even the most dedicated clothes horse. Intrigued, she walked over and stopped by my side. She stared into the wardrobe for a while, then looked up at me, her face serious.

“There are a lot of clothes in there, Jax.”

“They don’t belong to someone else, if that’s what you’re thinking. I just wanted you to have choices.”

She looked back at the wardrobe and kept looking at it without saying anything.