He was so calm, she couldn't tell if he was holding in raging anger or if he was just an incredibly good sport.
She prayed he was an incredibly good sport.
Plucking a blob of goop from his shirt, she said, "I'm really sorry about this. Of course I'll pay for your cleaning bill…" Her voice trailed off as a particularly large peeling disengaged itself from his hair and flopped down, covering his left eye.
Before she could stop it, a giggle bubbled up in her throat, and she bit her lips to contain it.
One dark blue eye glared at her. "You're not laughing, are you?"
She shook her head, desperately fighting to control her amusement, but each passing second brought her closer to exploding.
"Because laughing," he said, pulling the peel off his eye, "would not be a good idea."
Giggles erupted from between her lips and, unable to contain the torrent, she gave in to her mirth. She stood, staggered to lean against the counter, and laughed until her sides ached.
"You… you look like Mr. Potato Head with brown measles," she gasped.
He was on his feet in an instant, looming over her. Bracing his spud-encrusted arms on either side of her, he all but growled, "Mr. Potato Head?"
She peeked up at him from under lowered lashes. "’Fraid so. Although in all fairness, he was sort of doofy-looking, and you're not."
"He was very doofy-looking."
"Yes. And you're not." Another giggle bubbled up and she coughed to cover it. "Except for right now, of course. Right now you're extremely doofy-looking."
"I'm delighted you think so. Personally, I don't find this all that amusing."
"Then you must have had your sense of humor surgically removed, because this is funny." Reaching out, she flicked a peel from his shoulder. "Trust me on this."
"You realize the timing of that request is not the best."
Unable to stop herself, she allowed her palm to drift over his wet shoulder and settle on his chest. His muscles jumped and his heart thudded against her fingertips. "I'm truly sorry, Chris. Forgive me?"
Chris looked down at her hand resting over his heart and sighed. The woman was an environmental hazard. He wanted to suggest that she consider looking for a nudist for her next boyfriend, since she was such hell on clothes. But since he wanted to fill the boyfriend shoes himself, he kept his mouth shut, not a difficult thing to do as the damn potato starch was starting to tighten his skin.
He should have been furious. Or at the very least angry. Or annoyed.
But when he looked into those big brown eyes, brimming with remorse, a dozen feelings swarmed through him, and not one of them resembled anger.
Desire? Yes. Anger? Not even close.
In fact, he actually found this episode pretty amusing. Of course, he wasn't about to tell her that.
Arranging his stiff face into a stern expression, he said, "I suppose I can forgive you, provided you promise never to do such a thing again."
"You mean the flick-the-switch-before-the-repairs-are-done maneuver?"
"Precisely."
"I promise. I've learned my lesson. Yes, sirree. No more flicking for me. Ever."
He nodded slowly, considering her vow. "All right. But I insist we seal your promise with a kiss."
Mischief danced in her eyes. "Oh, my. I haven't kissed a Mr. Potato Head since I was five. As I recall, he was rather stiff-lipped and his nose poked me in the eye."
"Serves you right." Leaning forward, he touched his mouth to hers and his heart zinged into overdrive.
This is what he'd wanted to do from the moment he'd walked into her kitchen. Touch her. Taste her. Feel her.
The damn woman hadn't left his thoughts the entire time he'd been out of town. In fact, she was the reason he'd been able to come home early. He couldn't sleep for thinking about her. Her smile, her laugh, her kissable lips. So instead of restlessly tossing and turning in an empty bed, he'd worked every night until two or three in the morning, cutting an entire day off his trip.
Never had three days seemed like such an eternity. But now he had her in his arms again. And he certainly wasn't going to allow a few potato peels to come between them.
Crushing her to him, he deepened their kiss.
By damn, he wasn't going to allow anything to come between them.
Chapter 8
By Friday evening, Melanie had everything in perspective. Sort of.
So she had a date. And he was picking her up in five minutes. So what. Big deal. They'd have dinner, share a few laughs, end of story. One date, that was it. Nothing serious. Besides, he'd promised to be ugly. Totally gross were his exact words. Gross was good.
It didn't make any difference that he'd kissed her socks off last night in the Pampered Palate's kitchen. And who cared that he'd then helped her clean the potato mess off the floor and walls? What difference did it make that in spite of the disaster she'd caused, he'd proceeded to finish his repair job and unclog her garbage disposal?
So he was a nice guy. A nice, fun, smart, sexy, gorgeous guy whose kisses could melt brain cells into puddles and who had the patience of a saint. Whoopdee-doo. Lot of guys were just like that. Probably. Just because she didn't know any of them didn't mean they weren't out there. Somewhere.
After dressing in a pair of lightweight turquoise pants and a matching sleeveless cotton blouse, she slipped on her Keds and laughed aloud at herself for making such a big to-do over nothing. She'd just finished spritzing on her favorite cologne when the doorbell rang.
Perfectly calm, she walked down the stairs, giving herself a last-minute pep talk, like a coach encouraging his team before the big game.
"He's just a guy like any other guy. Probably leaves dirty socks, damp towels, and empty pizza boxes on the floor. His kitchen cabinets are no doubt full of sugar-frosted cereals and Spaghetti-O's. Undoubtedly mixes last week's Chinese takeout with scrambled eggs and calls it Egg-Foo Breakfast. So snap out of it, Melanie! This is just a date. He's just a man."
She pulled open the door and froze.
Just a man.
Good grief, and what a man.
She took one look at him and all her resolve trickled away like sand drifting through an hourglass.
He stood on her porch, a tall, dark, lethal hunk of manhood dressed in snug Levis faded in all the right places. A baby blue Polo shirt stretched across his chest, accentuating his shoulders and strong arms and bringing out the color of his eyes. A sprinkling of dark, intriguing chest hair peeped above the top button on his shirt. Wildly windblown ebony hair, a sexy half smile, and the subtle scent of his woodsy cologne completed the picture. The single long-stemmed red rose he held didn't hurt either.
What the heck had happened to ugly and totally gross?
Melanie gulped. She was a goner.
She would have said hello, invited him in, something, but it seemed she had suddenly forgotten how to swallow. And talk. Her hormones, however, were annoyingly vocal. Zippity doo dah, they sang, strutting their little hormone tushies.
He handed her the rose. "Hi."
She brought the bud to her nose and inhaled its sweet, heady fragrance. We love roses, her hormones said.
Okay. She'd say hi as soon as she remembered how to speak English. Resisting an urge to pound her chest with her fists à la Tarzan and shout, "Me woman, you man, let's mate," she managed to say, "Hi."
"You look great, Mel Gibson," he said in a soft, velvety voice that brought to mind long, slow, deep kisses.
She cleared her throat and somehow managed to smile at him. Good. That's good. A smile. Now talk. "Thanks. You look nice, too." Melanie almost groaned at herself. Nice? That was such an understatement, it fell into the realm of a blatant lie. "Thanks for the rose. They're my favorite."