But she had received a raised brow when she’d instructed him to send Drew back to the kitchen when he arrived.
That was if he did arrive. She looked at her watch. It was ten past three. Considering their kiss on the street that morning, she’d half expected him to stick around the hotel until the time she’d set for their late lunch.
Instead, he’d left and had yet to return.
Second thoughts, maybe?
She shut off the fire under the pot then moved it from the burner, continuing to stir.
Since their spontaneous connection, she’d been running their kiss and their conversation through her mind, over and over again. She’d made the request of their temporary liaison for her own emotional safety. But by doing so had she taken the thrill out of it for Drew? Having a woman fall head over heels for you then leaving her when it was time to go might be part of the fantasy. By stating up front that she had no intention of falling for him, had she ended their liaison before it had a chance to get interesting?
Josie realized she’d stopped stirring and continued, doubling her efforts. Even if Drew wasn’t around for the meal, she and Philippe would enjoy eating something other than the staple gumbo they kept on hand for potential guests.
The old black cat that called the hotel home jumped up onto the counter next to the burner.
“Jezebel, what are you doing in here?” She plucked up the curious feline before she could do any damage and carried her to the back door, where she put her outside. Careful to prevent the cat from getting back in, she filled the bowl next to the door with dry food. For some reason she couldn’t put her finger on, being there made her uneasy.
The inner hotel telephone extension on the wall rang, startling her.
She backtracked to the stove, wiped her hands on her apron and answered it.
“He’s on his way to the kitchen.”
Josie’s heart nearly beat straight out of her chest.
She thanked Philippe, then hurried back to the pot, trying to regain control over herself.
It was just a meal, for crying out loud. No reason to be so nervous.
She supposed it might be because she had half expected him not to show and had gotten used to the idea. That must be the reason for the butterflies in her stomach. But when she turned her head at the sound of the door swinging open and saw Drew, she knew she was dead wrong.
It was the fact that her attraction for him seemed to have doubled since earlier that had her heart pounding in her chest.
And if the dark awareness in his eyes was anything to go by, his desire for her was just as strong.
She smiled, trying to force a swallow down her tight throat. “Come on in. I hope you don’t mind, but I thought we’d eat in here.”
He blinked as if just breaking from some sort of trance, then looked at the chopping block in the middle of the room she had set with checkered place mats, linen-wrapped silverware and a dozen candles in different colors and sizes. A bottle of red wine was breathing next to two sparkling crystal glasses.
She’d done so much rattling on during their walk earlier that she was armed with a thousand and one questions she wanted to ask him. Questions that vanished now. She could barely focus enough to keep from ruining the simple yet very Creole meal she’d prepared.
Drew hadn’t moved from the doorway.
She stopped stirring and picked up two bowls from the sideboard. After filling them, she switched on the flame beneath the boil pot, then carried the bowls to the cutting board.
“Pour the wine?” she suggested.
Finally, he moved from the doorway, slowly doing as she asked. After she finished cutting the thick, crusty bread she’d placed on the board earlier, he handed her a glass. She looked to find his eyes regarding her soberly.
“To the strangers we meet along the way,” she said quietly.
He clinked his glass lightly against hers and drank.
She broke eye contact then climbed up on one of the two stools. “This is best eaten hot.”
He sat across from her. “What is it?”
“Yam and crabmeat bisque. Have you ever had it?”
“Can’t say as I have.”
She took a piece of bread. “It’s best eaten this way.” She scooped a bit of the thick soup with the bread then reached to put it in front of his mouth. He cracked his lips and accepted the soup-drenched morsel. He chewed silently.
“Do you like it?”
“My compliments to the chef.”
Josie looked away quickly. The recipe was one her granme had shared with her, teaching her how to make it when she was eight and was no longer a danger around an open flame. Over the years, she’d learned to experiment with the spices herself and even her granme had proclaimed hers the best she’d ever tasted.
“Most Creole food is meant to be eaten with your fingers,” she said. “I hope you don’t mind.”
His gaze seemed to linger on her hands as she licked bread crumbs from the pad of her thumb. “I think I can get used to it.” His eyes smiled at her.
“After this morning, I feel at a disadvantage,” she said.
“Oh?”
“You know more about me than I do about you.”
His gaze dropped to his soup as he expertly scooped up a dollop of it from the side before it could drip onto the place mat.
“I mean, did you always want to work in the auto industry? I can see a little boy dreaming of growing up to be a race-car driver, or even fixing up classics, but…”
“But you can’t imagine a ten-year-old thinking, ‘Gee, I think I’ll sell car parts when I grow up.’”
He loved it when she smiled.
Drew had to remind himself to eat his soup as he watched the woman across from him. It wasn’t that the soup wasn’t delicious; it was. It was just that Josie looked even more appetizing.
He’d thought deeply about not coming to the late lunch. But when the time came and went, and the prospect of standing her up became more fact than possibility, he’d found himself almost running in order to make it back to the hotel.
The thought of hurting this beautiful creature, of giving her cause to think he wasn’t interested in her, emerged too much of an injustice to ignore.
And now as he sat there enjoying watching her, all misgivings disappeared.
Even her question about his career slid off his back with ease.
And he knew why. His physical need for her was increasing exponentially with each time their paths crossed, banning his mind from playing any role in what was happening between them on a primal level.
He also knew there was an answer to his dilemma. He could tell her the truth.
6
“NO, I DIDN’T DREAM OF BEING a car-parts salesman.” Drew searched for the words to tell her the truth. Tell her who he was and what his intentions were-his client and the consequences be damned. He had to tell her. He couldn’t continue without her knowing the truth.
“What did you dream of being?”
The question took Drew aback.
He could count on one hand the times he’d been asked something so personal. And even then the questions had been asked by people like school guidance counselors whose job it was to steer him toward something more productive than what his upbringing had prepared him for.
He looked at Josie now.
“I don’t know,” he answered honestly.
“There had to be something. A fireman? Policeman?”
“Indian chief?”
Her laugh reached in and touched something he hadn’t known was inside him. A sensitive place, a soft spot that absorbed her interest like a dry sponge drank up a drop of water.
“Funny. You know what I mean.”
And, remarkably, he did.
Had anyone else asked the question, he would have come up with some off-the cuff response like “A lawyer, because I used to watch Perry Mason.”