“Risqué?” His grin widened. Under the bright lights, his eyes glittered and his earring sparkled. Every inch of him oozed a sexiness that left her with little or no ability to resist him. “Honey, what you’re doing with those vegetables should be R-rated.”
She couldn’t help it, she blushed. Her body tightened in a funny way that made her want to rub her thighs together. “Why is it a man has to make everything dirty?”
“It’s a male genetic flaw.”
She made a sound of disgust and grabbed the next vegetable. A red pepper. A round red pepper that in no way could be construed as anything sexual. Her eyes dared him, waiting for some comment.
He was at her side, his dark hair falling over his forehead as he leaned forward and seriously examined what she was doing. Silently, thank God.
She used the opportunity to describe her tried and true method for slicing the vegetables in order to get the most flavor out of them. When she’d finished, and Mitch was handing her a bowl of oil and the paintbrush she used to coat the veggies over the flame, she gave him a sidelong look and went for broke. “I can’t tell you how much I’ve appreciated your help the past few weeks.”
Mitch looked at her.
“But I think I could take it from here.” When he merely raised a brow, she said, “You know, handle the show by myself. The way I used to. Without an assistant.”
“Is that right?” He poured more oil into her bowl, making sure that their fingers touched.
“Yes.” She hated the little spark of awareness that stunned her even now. Why hadn’t she gotten used to him and all his blatant sexuality? Why hadn’t he realized she was pathetic, that she wasn’t suited for this hot sexy siren stuff? “Tomorrow we’re cooking shrimp and littleneck oysters with wild rice. A one-person job, really.”
“Oysters. Hmm.”
She supposed that secret little grin he shot her would be considered irresistible. Not to her. “What does hmm mean?”
“Nothing.”
She relaxed and kept slicing.
“It’s just that you said oysters.”
“Yes.”
“You having problems with your libido, Dimi?”
Too late she remembered the myth following the poor oyster. Dammit.
He merely grinned. “Hey, are the veggies supposed to be on fire like that, do you think?”
She tore her gaze away from his and wanted to groan. Live television didn’t make that possible, so she held an even expression while quickly turning down the barbecue. The flames leapt until she grabbed the water spritzer hanging from the side of the barbecue and sprayed water over the coals.
Smoke filled the kitchen set. Managing not to cough, she smiled into the camera and said, “Whatever you do, watch the oil.” She watched as Mitch rescued her vegetables before they got charred. “As you can see, it can easily get out of control if you let it.”
“And whatever you do,” Mitch added, leaning close to Dimi in a familiar way, also smiling into the camera, “don’t get sidetracked by your partner.”
“I did not get sidetracked by you.”
“Ah, so you admit it. We’re partners.”
They were close enough to kiss, she realized inanely. “I admit no such thing.”
“Sure? Cuz it would appear I’ve saved your veggies. Sure would be a shame to lose me, wouldn’t it?” He blinked innocently into the camera. “Seeing how much she needs me and all, right?” His smile was cozy, easy and entirely addictive.
“Break!” the director called. “Commercial, everyone. Three minutes.”
Dimi hightailed it off the set, leaving Gracie and Leo leaping up to clear the smoke. She assumed Mitch stayed to help, as well, but she had a whole three minutes to herself, and she desperately needed it. Racing to her dressing room to take one deep breath in peace, she opened the door.
As she entered, Cami jerked away from her closet and looked guilty.
“What are you doing here?” Dimi knew she sounded petulant, but darn it, she wanted to be alone to clear her head of the lusty haze Mitch always managed to put her in.
Cami shoved her hands, full of something chartreuse and gauzy, behind her back. “Nothing. I’m not doing anything.”
“You’re stealing my clothes.”
“Okay, I’m stealing your clothes. But God, Sis, you have an amazing set of designer stuff now. Not a Kmart item in the bunch. You don’t mind, do you? After all, you always steal my food.”
“But you sew all your own clothes.” Dimi rubbed her temples. “Never mind. Take what you want. I’ve got to get back out there.”
“Hmm.” Cami looked her over. “Your headache wouldn’t be Mitch-induced by any chance, now, would it?”
“Of course not.”
Cami shook her head. “If you let him go, especially after I humiliated myself to help you catch him, I’ll be mad at you.”
“You’re always mad at me.”
“Okay, I’ll sic Mom on you.”
Dimi shuddered. “Not that.”
“Remember all my blind date disasters?”
“How could I forget?”
“If you let him go,” Cami vowed, “that’s what’ll happen to you.”
“If I let him go…” Dimi shook her head. “What are you talking about? I don’t have him.”
“By the crook of your little finger, Sis. You’ve got him by the crook of your little finger.”
That was when Dimi realized her sister had truly lost it. She was so in love with Tanner her brain had turned to mush.
Running to the set just in time to get her nose fluffed and to repin her mike to her shirt, Dimi caught Mitch’s dark, questing gaze.
By the crook of your little finger, Sis. You’ve got him.
Yeah, right! She’d never caught anything-by the crook of her little finger or otherwise. And even if by some miracle it could be true, did she even want him?
Suzie adjusted Dimi’s mike, caught the strange connection between host and producer and smiled knowingly. “By the way, Dimi, you can’t lose your assistant.”
“What? Why?”
“Only seconds after you suggested it on the air, the phones went crazy.”
Mitch’s mouth curved, but wisely, he kept it shut.
Suzie said it all for him. “People are freaking out that maybe you’ll get rid of him. They’re begging you to reconsider.”
“Fifteen seconds, people!”
Suzie backed off the set, leaving only Dimi and Mitch, and given Mitch’s superior, triumphant glow, there was nothing left to say.
She was stuck with him.
BY THE END of Mitch’s second week, Food Time’s dramatic turn into a rating and critical success had been cemented. In the eyes of everyone around him, all of whom had thanked him repeatedly, he was a hero.
In everyone’s eyes except Dimi’s, that is, and as it so happened, she was the only one he worried about, which concerned him for various reasons. One, that he cared for her at all, when she was an entire world away from what he’d always gone for. Hell, make that a galaxy.
And two, that she didn’t care for him back, not even a little.
Oh, she lusted after him, he’d made sure of that. Lusted even while she fought it. But getting her there had been work, and work only.
Which brought him to troubling fact number three. He never mixed business and pleasure, so this entire train of thought was moot.
Completely moot.
Yet here he was, heading out on his bike toward some small pizza joint in the middle of nowhere to join everyone for a staff dinner to celebrate their success.
Chilly wind froze his face. The smell of the mountain air assaulted his senses as he rode through the streets. The majestic Sierra peaks all around him were tall, dark. Huge. Nothing like the bright, noisy streets of Los Angeles, but for some reason, he suddenly couldn’t think of anyplace he’d rather be.
Power drummed between his legs, the power of his Harley. It was a release to drive through the black night with only the stars and one lone headlight guiding his way, but not the kind of release he needed after so many weeks of hot and heavy sexual innuendo and teasing.