“You’re toasted,” he said.
“What? No, of course not. I only had two beers.” Or was it three? “Okay, maybe I’m half toasted. I’ll call my sister for a ride.”
He wrapped his fingers around her wrist and turned back to his truck.
“Hey. Hey,” she said, tapping him on the shoulder to slow him down. “What are you doing?”
“I’m driving you home.” He hustled her back up into the truck’s passenger’s seat.
“I can’t ask you to—”
“You didn’t ask.” He shut the door on her next protest and walked around the hood to the driver’s side. He slid behind the wheel and turned to her, an arm up along the back of their seats. His other hand came up and he stroked the worry lines between her brows. “Don’t worry about the car, Emily. I’ll get it to you.”
She nodded. She didn’t trust her voice. He was sitting there, still wearing his puppy and kitty tie. And those glasses that made her want to steam them up. The combination should’ve made him look utterly ridiculous, but it didn’t. Instead, it gave the big, leanly muscled, sexy-as-hell guy an unexpected softness, and she wanted to kiss him. The kind of kiss where you tasted each other for a good long time, where you tried not to bite but maybe you bit a little anyway.
“You’re staring at me,” he said.
“Am not.”
She could practically hear him smile. Good Lord, she was out of control. He was over there being all Captain Platonic, and she wanted to rip that tie off and use it to bind him to her bed.
It was the beer, she decided. It had awoken her inner slut. He had one hand up on the headrest behind her, the other on the steering wheel, his thumb idly strumming back and forth.
She could remember that thumb doing the same over her nipple. “This is never going to work.”
“What?” he asked.
“Nothing.” Get a grip. The night was dark around them, pitch-black in a way that she never really got to see in Los Angeles with all its city lights.
Here, there were no lights at all, nothing but stars littered like diamonds across a blanket of black velvet. It took her breath away. “It’s really beautiful here.”
“You sound surprised.”
She turned to him and felt herself brush up against the inside of his forearm where it rested behind her. It was shockingly like being in his arms. She felt his fingers brush her bare arm and she shivered. “What are you doing?” she whispered.
“Waiting for you to tell me where you live.”
Oh. Right. “I live off Highway 29, between Rancher’s Way and Fisher Creek Road.”
“I own some land out that way,” he said, turning the truck’s engine over and pulling out of the lot. “Ten acres.”
“You live there?” she asked, wondering if they were neighbors. “With your sisters?”
“No, the land is just mine. I’m going to build a place on it eventually.” He glanced at her. “Just out of morbid curiosity, what did you think I was doing back there?”
“Trying to turn me on.”
He smiled. “I don’t have to try.”
Damn, he was right about that. In fact, he was doing it right now. She squirmed a little, and his smile turned to a grin, which made it easier to ignore him for the rest of the drive home.
The house she and Sara rented was on the end of a short cul-de-sac that backed up to at least thirty acres of wilderness. There were a few other properties scattered throughout the area, but not many. The closest house was fifty yards in one direction, and twice that in the other. She’d not met a single neighbor.
Her house was dark. It was karaoke night at the local bar, and Sara loved karaoke. She wouldn’t be home for hours. “You do realize that I totally blame you,” she said, breaking the silence.
“For?”
“Sitting there wearing a goofy-ass tie, driving like you do everything else, which is so stupid sexy I can’t think.”
He swiveled his amused gaze her way. “Anything else?”
She blew out a breath. “Fine. Mock me. Just . . . keep your hands to yourself.”
He lifted them in surrender.
“And your mouth.”
Said mouth quirked, and he mimed zipping it closed.
God, she was out. Of. Control. She covered her face with her hands and took a deep breath. “I’m going in now.”
She didn’t go in.
“This is so ridiculous,” she finally whispered.
She felt his fingers grip hers. He lowered her hands from her face. “It’s fine,” he said. “You don’t want anything to happen, nothing’s going to happen.”
She stared at him. “It’s not?”
“Well, not unless you want it to, and then instigate things in a big way.”
She stared at him, and then dropped her head back to stare at the roof of the truck instead of into his mesmerizing eyes. “Well that’s just great.”
“You changed your mind. You want something to happen,” he said, sounding like maybe he was smiling again. “You’re the one who made the rules, sweetness.”
“I know, but . . .” She sank in her seat a little bit and sighed. “It’s just that I’ve never really mastered being the instigator in the man department when I don’t know how that instigation will be received.”
There was a horrifyingly long beat of silence, and she sunk in her seat a little lower, wishing she could poof, vanish.
“The problem isn’t whether I’m attracted to you,” he finally said. “But this isn’t about attraction.”
Her head came up, both startled and relieved to hear him admit the attraction was mutual. “It’s not?”
“No,” he said. “You have a grand plan. I’m not on it.”
“And I’m not on yours,” she said, grasping at straws. “Right?”
“Right.”
She ignored the little stab of disappointment. “Right.” Nodding, she stared at him in the ambient light. So strong, inside and out. He was so much more than she’d known on that long ago night.
“Emily,” he said, his tone low. A soft warning.
“I know.” She looked at his mouth again. And his Adam’s apple. And his throat. And his shoulders, covered by his shirt. Which didn’t matter because she knew what he looked like without that shirt. “It’s just that I hadn’t had an orgasm in forever,” she blurted out.
“What?”
“That night. I hadn’t had an orgasm in six months.” She hesitated. “Or since,” she whispered, and then clapped a hand over her mouth. “Oh my God. Shut me up. I’m begging you.”
He laughed, that low, sexy sound that never failed to make her nipples hard. He slid his hands to her arms and gently squeezed. “How about we just say good night.”
“And pretend this conversation didn’t happen?” she asked hopefully.
He gave a slow shake of his head, eyes flashing good humor. “Afraid I can’t make that promise. This conversation was good for me.”
“Okay, now I’m really going in.” She thrust out her hand. “Good night.”
Still looking vastly amused, he took her hand. His was warm, callused. Big. She held it for a moment too long, and then, oh God and then there was more eye contact. Nobody did eye contact better than Wyatt Stone.
“I like having you at Belle Haven,” he said. “I hope you get a lot out of this year, Emily.”
She stared at his square jaw, at his dark, thick eyelashes that were totally not fair and so wasted on a man, and then . . . and then somehow she tugged on his hand a little, to kiss his cheek.
Except she missed his cheek and got his mouth instead, dislodging his glasses, which fell between the car door and the seat.
“Uh-oh,” she murmured, but didn’t move away.
His hands went to her arms. “Emily.”