When the Lights Go Down. Amy Cousins Jo. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Amy Cousins Jo
Издательство: HarperCollins
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Жанр произведения: Современные любовные романы
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781474008990
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door and then stepped back, looking at her framed in the light from the bright hallway. Her clothes were wrinkled and her eyes were tired, but she was bouncing on the balls of her feet, probably still riding an adrenaline high that would have her crashing any minute. He turned to the side, motioning her in.

      She didn’t move.

      Chin lifted, she stared at him, an almost visible shimmer of energy rising off her skin.

      “I don’t sleep with people I work with. Or for.”

      An interesting opening line.

      “You know, you don’t really work for me.” He shoved his hands deep into his pockets and leaned one shoulder against the doorway. He’d thought about this quite a bit in the week during which he’d kept himself away from the project. “I’m more of an outside consultant.”

      Her slow grin slid over him like tiny, licking flames.

      “See, that’s just what I was thinking.” She stepped inside and closed the door.

      Chapter Four

      The sparkling Chicago skyline sprawled in front of the wall of windows in the living room. The distant reaches of Lake Michigan merged seamlessly with the dark sky, a horizon that couldn’t be seen, only imagined.

      “The view on the forty-sixth floor just oozes wealth, doesn’t it?” She drifted over to the windows. “My view is of the Cigarettes Cheaper across the street.”

      He didn’t have any response to that. He wasn’t about to deny enjoying his home.

      Having decided to come inside, Maxie seemed unable to settle in one spot, pacing around the room like a cat. She stopped to run a hand over the back of the leather couch, rest a fingertip on the roughly carved surface of the stone obelisk on the large low table in front of the couch, click her fingernails against the floor-to-ceiling glass.

      He thought about what it would be like for her to take such a delicate, thorough inspection of him instead of his condo, and wished she’d stay still for a moment.

      “Tommy brought you here?” The silence needed to be broken.

      “Yes, but I knew where you lived.” She turned and started flipping idly through the pages of a coffee-table book—graceful photographs of architectural details, enlarged to lose all resemblance to reality—and looked up at him through dark lashes, her eyes giving away nothing. “You’re not the only one who can run a background check.”

      “Excuse me?”

      “I figured that out because you knew where I live. I work pretty hard to keep that info off the web, you know.” She dropped the cover of the book and walked back to the window. The room was dimly lit and her silhouette showed as negative space against the city lights. “Do you have any idea how likely actors are to turn up on your doorstep at 3:00 a.m. with a broken heart, looking for beer?”

      “It’s past 3:00 a.m. now. If you tell me you’re here because you’re broken-hearted and looking for a six-pack, I’ll be hugely disappointed.”

      She laughed and swung around to face him. The lights behind her left her face in darkness.

      “No six-packs in your fancy condo?”

      She was needling him. Why? The fancy condo insult from any other woman might have led him to believe that she was uncomfortable with his penthouse. It was a pretty goddamn visible display of wealth. But he couldn’t imagine Maxie Tyler, chameleon extraordinaire, being out of her element anywhere.

      He wasn’t about to start apologizing for the family fortune he’d rescued through long hours of hard work. He took a deep breath and Maxie froze, as if bracing herself for the sarcastic comment she’d tried to provoke. He decided on a different tack.

      He kept his voice mild as he moved into the open kitchen that unfolded off the living room. “I have beer, if that’s what you’d like. Or celebratory champagne. Coffee?” His waving hand took in the lineup of glasses on the marble countertop.

      She stayed silent for a long minute.

      He could wait.

      Finally, she shook her head and walked toward him. The sway of her hips as she strolled was a powerful prod to the imagination. He wondered if it was unconscious or for his benefit.

      “Just water, thanks.”

      He’d expected her to stop on the far side of the counter, the wide stretch of stone between them, but she circled it and stepped onto the terra-cotta tiles of the kitchen floor, stopping several feet away from him.

      When he handed her the tall, cool glass, she stretched out an arm to take it. Her fingers avoided his on the glass.

      Seeing that ratcheted the tension up anyway.

      She lifted the glass to her mouth, eyes locked on his, and only broke the connection when she tilted her head back, her throat working as she drained the glass dry and set it back on the counter with a clink.

      “What are you doing here, Maxie?”

      He could read her face as she ran through a dozen different responses and discarded them all.

      In favor of the honest truth.

      She shrugged.

      “I don’t know.”

      He gave her an out.

      “Do you want me to call you a cab? I already told Tommy to go home for the night.”

      “I don’t want you to do anything at all for me, Nick.” She tried to jerk away as he caught her slim wrists in his hands and gently pulled her toward him.

      “Maxie.”

      Staring at his shirt, she refused to meet his eyes. He rested his chin gently on the top of her head, her curls tickling his face. After a moment her arms crept around his waist and he was glad she couldn’t see his smile.

      “Make up your mind, Maxie. You can’t be pissed at me and want to go to bed with me at the same time.”

      Her voice was muffled but clear.

      “Wanna bet?”

      A hard pinch on his stomach was her answer to his silent laughter. Then her hands slid under his T-shirt and stroked up and down his back, warm fingers on skin that suddenly felt hot. When her face tilted up to him, her mouth was right there. She sighed into his kiss, opening to him, and he wasn’t laughing any longer.

      He brushed fingertips down her cheek, smoothing over downy softness before stroking down the strong column of her neck. Her mouth was cool and wet from the water and her tongue teased his, dancing with it for a moment before pulling away as she tilted her head to the other side and changed the angle of the kiss.

      She was warm in his arms, and the slow drift of heat from her spread over him like a drug. Breaking the kiss, he dragged his hands up to frame her face, pushing back her dark curls. Lowering his mouth to hers again, he brushed his lips back and forth until she deepened the kiss.

      Her palms slid up his chest and over his shoulders and he buried his face at the base of her neck, inhaling her dark, sweet scent.

      He looked up and caught her snaking a hand up to cover her mouth, wide open in a giant, creaking yawn.

      Ah, the death of the ego.

      “Whoops.” He couldn’t believe she’d made him blush. “Sorry.”

      Abandoning all hopes of wild sex in the moonlight, he wrapped one arm around her shoulders, tucked the other under her butt, and bumped her up into his arms. “Come on.” He headed down the dark hall to his bedroom.

      She pounded a fist on his chest.

      “Put me down. I can walk.”

      “I know you can. I’ve enjoyed watching you do so on more than one occasion.”

      Thump.