“Is serious required?”
“It helps.”
“You’re a little stuffy. I think it’s the lawyer thing. We should—” She glanced at her watch. “Yikes. I’m keeping staff here late. That’s not good.”
He checked the time and saw it was after eleven. How had that happened? He would have guessed they’d been there an hour at most.
Dani stood. “I hate to make you eat and run, but I’ve got to get everyone out of here or they’ll hate me forever. Dinner’s on me.”
He rose. “I don’t think so.”
“Don’t get all macho on me, Alex. Seriously. Bernie won’t even let me pay for it, so we’re good. I appreciate you stopping by. Now leave.”
“Ever gracious. When do you go home?”
“In about fifteen minutes.”
“I’ll wait.”
She frowned at him. “Why?”
“I’ll walk you to your car. It’s late. You shouldn’t go to your car alone.”
She rolled her eyes. “I do it every time I work dinner, yet I’ve managed to survive. I appreciate the offer, but I’m good.”
He shrugged into his suit jacket. “I’ll wait.”
She sighed. “I recognize that stubborn tone of voice. Fine. You can sit by the door.”
“I live to serve.”
“If only that were true.”
He used the time to check his cell phone. There was a call from his mother.
He called back on her private line, which only rang in her office. If she’d already gone to bed, it wouldn’t disturb her.
“You’re working late,” he said when she answered.
“So are you.”
“I just finished dinner.”
“A campaign dinner,” she said. “You’re working too hard.”
He hesitated, then decided not to tell her otherwise. “I could say the same about you.”
“Then we both need to reform. You mentioned you might come by later?”
“It would be close to midnight.”
“I’ll be up another hour at least.”
“Then I’ll be by.”
He hung up just as Dani walked toward him with her purse over her shoulder. She wore a fitted red dress that emphasized her curves but covered her completely. It was a combination designed to make a man crazy.
He’d done his best to be immune to her physical charms, but he’d noticed all of them. The curves, the big eyes, the easy smile.
“Are you armed?” she asked. “Are we going to fight our way to my car, do you think? What about snipers? We could scurry along the perimeter of the building. Of course you’re so big and strong, I don’t really have to worry.”
She was making fun of him. It should have bugged the hell out of him. Instead he found himself wanting to lean in and kiss her.
Kiss her? Where had that come from? Sure she was pretty and sexy and funny, but so what? He wasn’t interested. Not in her. She was the enemy, or at the very least, a big problem. Yet once the thought shot into his head, he couldn’t seem to let it go.
“We’ll risk the snipers,” he said as he pulled open the door.
“Oooh, you’re so brave,” she cooed. “I’m over there.”
She pointed to a late year import. He followed her to the car and waited while she dug her keys out of her purse. When she waved them in front of her, he started to take a step back.
At least that had been the plan. But instead of moving away, he found himself moving forward. Until they were close. Very close.
“You’re a pain in the ass,” he said.
“Right back at you.”
“You should be afraid of me.”
She pretended to yawn. “I’m sorry. Were you talking? I couldn’t hear anything just then.”
She made him crazy. So he kissed her.
He put his hand on the back of her neck, bent down and pressed his mouth to hers.
She went totally still. For once she didn’t have a snappy comeback. Instead she rested one of her hands on his chest and softened her mouth against his.
Heat exploded between them like a fireball. Long-forgotten need flared until every part of him was hard, hot and ready. The desire was as immediate as it was powerful. Suddenly the hood of her car looked plenty inviting.
He brushed his tongue against her lower lip and she parted for him. He dived inside, wanting to claim her and arouse her until she was as desperate as he was.
He put his hand on her waist and pulled her close. She melted into him, her body supple and soft, touching him in all the right places.
She tasted of wine and whipped cream. Even better, she matched his urgency with quiet moans.
It was a kiss of desperate lovers, one that left him shaken with a passion he’d never experienced before. All that in less than a minute and with the one woman he should never be with.
Reality returned in the form of male laughter coming from behind the restaurant. He drew back just as Dani pulled away.
They stared at each other in the overhead lights of the parking lot. She looked stunned, which was exactly how he felt.
She swallowed. “That can’t be good. Us kissing. Like that.”
Her breathing was still ragged. Considering he was hard enough to rupture steel, he appreciated knowing it hadn’t been a party for one.
“Agreed.”
She exhaled slowly. “To quote Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman—big mistake. Huge.”
“Epic.”
“Epic’s good.”
Her eyes were dark, her mouth swollen. He wanted her again. He wanted her naked and he wanted to kiss her everywhere. He wanted to hear her scream and feel her come for him.
Damn.
“You are so the wrong man,” she whispered. “I couldn’t be a worse woman. Well, that doesn’t sound right, but you know what I mean.”
He nodded. “So it never happened,” he told her.
She gave a strangled laugh. “Right. Like we’re going to believe that.”
Chapter Five
ALEX LET HIMSELF into his parents’ house and made his way to his mother’s study. He paused in the hallway, trying to shake off a feeling of guilt. It was like being seventeen and tiptoeing in after curfew. Except he wasn’t a kid and he didn’t live here anymore. Still, kissing Dani? What had he been thinking?
He hadn’t, he reminded himself. That was the problem. He’d been reacting—to her, to circumstances. The kiss hadn’t meant anything. How could it? She was a complication in all their lives.
Yet his sexual reaction to her hadn’t faded. He still hungered for her with a powerful need that shocked him.
He ignored the desire and the memories, then lightly knocked on the closed study door.
“Come in.”
He stepped into the small cozy room and smiled at his mother.