About That Night
Page 20
She moaned, the sound reverberating in his own throat.
He broke the kiss, pressed his mouth to the side of her neck. Flicked the tip of his tongue against her rapid pulse. Her head fell back.
“Let me show you,” he murmured, trailing his teeth along the sensitive skin beneath her ear. “Let me touch you.” Raising his head, he held her gaze. “Let me celebrate you.”
* * *
IVY SWALLOWED. She could still taste Clinton, champagne and mint from his toothpaste. The feel of his body against hers was temptation itself, his hand on her stomach a warm reminder of what they’d made together. His words about celebrating had touched her. He was starting to mean something, and that made the next step much more important.
“It would be so easy for me to say yes,” she admitted, her body thrumming with need, her lips tingling from his kiss, her hands wanting to touch him everywhere, to explore his body again, this time as someone who’d come to know him. “So very easy but...”
“But?” he asked quietly when she remained silent.
She sighed. “It’s too important. When we take this next step—and I don’t doubt we’ll take it; there’s too much between us not to—I want it to be right. I don’t want it to be just because we’re attracted to each other, because we have an itch to scratch.”
“I can guarantee you that this is more than just an itch for me.” His voice was sincere, his gaze intense. “But I don’t want to push you, Ivy. I don’t want a repeat of our first night together.” He stepped back, though it seemed to cost him, and Ivy’s heart soared because she knew, could feel how much he wanted her. “So we’ll slow down.”
Because she was worried about what he meant by that—because she wasn’t sure what she wanted him to mean—she linked her fingers together at her waist. “I guess I’ll see you later, then. Thanks for the champagne.”
He raised an eyebrow. “Are you kicking me out?” His expression darkened. “Swear to God, Ivy, if you tell me you have plans I’m going to wring your gorgeous neck.”
She laughed. “Calm down, cowboy. I don’t have any plans. I just figured you’d want to be on your way since you’re not...since we’re not...”
“Since we’re not having sex, you figure I’ll just skip on out? That that’s the only reason I’m here?” He shook his head. “I’m not sure if I’m pissed you think so little of me. Or of yourself.”
“Oh, believe me, I think quite highly of myself, thank you very much. I’ve just been around enough men to know where their priorities lie.”
He trailed a finger down her cheek, and it was all she could do not to lean into him. “You’ve obviously been hanging out with the wrong men.”
“No argument there.” He was the first man she actually wanted to hang out with.
He checked his watch and her heart sank. He probably was just saying those things to be polite. Now he’d make an excuse, an appointment he forgot about, a phone call he had to make. He smiled at her. “It’s close to dinnertime. Want to go out? Get something to eat?”
She smiled, her relief way bigger than it should be. If she wasn’t careful, if she wasn’t smart, this man would have the power to crush her. She cleared her throat. “Actually, I picked up the ingredients for a new chicken dish I’ve been wanting to try. You could...stay here. I mean, we could eat dinner here. Maybe watch a movie after.”
She held her breath wondering if that was a stupid thing to ask a millionaire to do. Did they even sit at home and watch DVDs? On regular televisions on regular couches, instead of some media-slash-theater room complete with professional sound system and picture?
“A homemade meal? Sounds great to me,” he said with a smile. “I can’t tell you the last time I had someone cook for me. Who wasn’t paid to do so.”
“Well, this meal won’t be free. Not exactly. If you want to eat, you’ll have to pull your weight in the kitchen.”
He blanched, looked at the kitchen as if it was her personal torture chamber and he was next in line for water boarding. “Can’t I just do the dishes?”
She took his hand. “Come on. I’ll show you the ropes, and I’ll even be gentle with you. I promise.”
An hour later, chicken thighs were simmering in tomato sauce laced with cinnamon while a pot of rice bubbled on the back burner. Her kitchen was a disaster area. She usually preferred to clean as she cooked, but she was too busy supervising her assistant to keep her work area tidy tonight.
Clinton hadn’t been kidding about being nervous in the kitchen. At first she’d thought maybe he was just against doing something as domestic and, well, blue-collar as cooking for himself. But then she’d given him the task of chopping an onion, and she’d realized he didn’t think he was too good for the chore. He was just completely inept.
And embarrassed by it.
It had been sweet and had endeared him to her even more—more than was wise, that was for sure. Especially when she was still so wrapped up in his earlier words, in how he’d accepted her rejection by being so kind. So understanding. So charming. As if he cared about her, about her feelings. As if he, too, wanted to make sure the next time they were together it was right. Special.
She turned the burner down under the rice and cursed to herself. Oh, she was in so much trouble here.
“How old were you when you started cooking?” he asked from the sink, elbow deep in suds. Hey, just because she’d put him to work didn’t mean she wouldn’t take him up on his offer to do dishes.
She faced him. Leaned against the counter, Jasper at her feet. “I’d mastered the art of grilled cheese sandwiches and scrambled eggs by the time I was six.”
“Six? Isn’t it dangerous for a kid that young to be using the stove?”
“Probably. Melba—my mother—wasn’t too concerned as long as I didn’t burn the apartment down.”
Clinton rinsed a bowl, set it in the drainer, then emptied the sink. “You must have really enjoyed cooking.”
Ivy snorted. “More like, I enjoyed eating, and if I wanted to eat something that wasn’t out of a can, I had to cook it.”
He nodded. “Your mother didn’t know how to cook?”
“For all I know, she may have been a gourmet chef, had the skills to be one, but she didn’t bother making meals. She preferred to have someone else doing things for her.”
He raised his eyebrows. “Sounds like my mother.”
“Well, having only seen your mother that one time, I can’t say for sure, but I’d guess there were plenty of similarities. Vanity, for one. Fear of ageing, of being old and no longer seductive. Of losing the power she’d held over people since she first learned how to bat her baby-blue eyes.”
He stared at her, and Ivy wished she could tell what he was thinking. “You just described my mother perfectly.”
Ivy nodded. Smiled. “Yeah, I figured they were cut from the same cloth.”
“I’m almost glad they won’t ever have a chance to meet,” he muttered. “They’d probably bond, and a friendship like that could ruin the world.”
“No need to worry. My mom would have hated yours. She didn’t like competition. Besides, your mom has everything Melba always wanted. The wealth. The big house. Melba would have thought your mom had it made. No worries, no having to wait on drunks, no flirting for tips.”
“She was a waitress?”
“Since she was old enough to serve alcohol.” Ivy had taken to the trade earlier than that, having worked the breakfast shift at a local diner during high school. Having the same profession was where any similarities between Ivy and her mother ended. Melba had hated waiting on other people. But there was no shame in being a waitress. In working hard. Something her mother had never understood. “To Melba, her job wasn’t a way to get ahead—it was a way to meet the man who would finally give her everything she’d ever wanted. Everything she deserved. Taking care of herself wasn’t her priority.”
“What about taking care of you?”
Ivy forced a smile. Took two plates from a
n upper cabinet. “That, too, was a necessary evil. A burden. Don’t get me wrong. She wasn’t abusive or even neglectful. I was clothed and fed—though not well, until I started cooking for us. She was just...vain. Self-absorbed and focused solely on what other people could do for her. How they could help her. Focused on finding a man to take her away from her life. Give her everything.”
The timer buzzed and Ivy pushed away from the counter to turn off the rice. Set the plates on the table. “My mother was beautiful. Stunning, really. One of those women people stop and stare at, the kind who turn men into slobbering idiots. She knew how much power she had, and she used it whenever she could. She loved attention and went through men like gum.”
“Like...gum?”
“She chewed them up, then spit them out. She was always looking for something better. Someone better-looking, more exciting, richer.” Ivy pretended great interest in folding a paper napkin, matching up the corners, getting the crease just right. Part of her was afraid to let Clinton hear about her past, about her mother. She cared what he thought, she realized, and that grated. But another part wanted him to know where she’d come from. Needed him to see her clearly. “She loved me—in her way. As much as someone so narcissistic can love anyone else. But as I got older, she viewed me less as a daughter and more as a rival. All women were competition to her, and for that competition to be her own daughter...? She hated it and began to resent me for being younger. For taking attention away from her. Things between us were tense, and as soon as I graduated high school, I moved out. We weren’t close during those last few years.”
That was an understatement. About the only time she and her mother spoke during that time was when they happened to run into each other.
“How did she die?” Clinton asked.
“Car accident. She’d been seeing a local businessman who was going through his midlife crisis by buying a sports car and taking on a beautiful cocktail waitress as his mistress. The roads were icy. He took a corner too fast and went off the road. She died instantly. He survived. One of those freak things where he walked away with a few bruises and scratches. He came to see me after,” she heard herself admit. She’d never told anyone about her mother’s lover visiting her. “And offered to pay for her funeral expenses.”
“Generous of him. He must have cared about her quite a bit.”
“More like he was worried if he didn’t at least offer, I was going to take him to civil court, fleece him and his family of all his hard-earned money. It was payoff, pure and simple. I declined.”
“You paid for your mother’s funeral? She didn’t have insurance?”
“When you live paycheck to paycheck, you can’t afford luxuries such as life insurance or even health insurance. I paid to have her buried.”
She’d used the money she had saved for culinary school. Now she was saving again.
“I take after her, you know,” Ivy felt the need to point out. “In looks. In temperament. But I promise you this—I’ll be a better mother.”
Studying her in a way that made her nervous, Clinton slowly closed the distance between them. “I’ve never met your mother, but I know the type of woman you’ve described. As you said, your mother and mine have quite a bit in common, and I can tell you that you’re nothing like them. You haven’t been sitting around waiting for some man to take care of you. You’re one of the smartest, hardest-working people I’ve ever met. I know you don’t need me to take care of you or to make you happy, but I’d be damned lucky if you let me in your life.”
And then, millionaire Clinton Bartasavich Jr., with his designer jeans and shirt that cost more than she made in a week, did the most wonderful thing a man had ever done. He kissed her forehead and hugged her. Just...held on.
She wanted to resist, to assert her independence. It was scary being that vulnerable, but in the end, she couldn’t fight the emotions flowing through her. She relaxed, wrapped her arms around his waist and laid her head against his chest.
She wasn’t sure how long they stayed that way, wrapped in that embrace, his chin resting on the top of her head, his hands making soothing circles on her back, her cheek pressed against the softness of his shirt. His warmth seeped through the material to her cheek. She could hear his heart beat strong and steady.
When she finally lifted her head, she gave him a wry smile. “And that’s the story of my mother.”
He laughed. “My mother doesn’t seem so bad now.” He frowned, scratched his cheek. “Don’t get me wrong—she’s a lunatic sometimes, and if she collects one more boy-toy boyfriend, I’ll probably go insane, but at least she didn’t blame me or Kane for her mistakes. Just our dad.”
Ivy laughed, remembering his mother in that little dress at the engagement party. “I’m glad I could help you realize you don’t have it so bad, after all.”
“Your mother didn’t know what she was missing by not being a part of your life,” he said gruffly. “Don’t ever think you’re like her.”
“I don’t want to, but I have used my looks to get attention, to get certain things in life.” Admitting it was hard, but somehow, making this confession to Clinton seemed like the right thing to do. “When I was younger, it was easy to charm the boys a bit to make myself feel good. Oh, look how many boys want me, want to date me, have me on their arm, but then I realized that they were using me as much as I was using them. I became cynical. I couldn’t tell who was with me because they really liked me and who just wanted to use me. For a while, I couldn’t even tell that about myself. I used them and told myself it was fair because they were doing the same.”
Maybe Clinton had been right earlier. Lord knew she hadn’t given those men or herself nearly as much credit. Especially herself.
She forced herself to face Clinton. “But I don’t expect you to take care of me. Your child, yes. But I already know you’ll take care of your responsibilities. I don’t want you to think I’m trying to trick you into a relationship with me. If you want to go your way, I understand.”
He kissed her. Hard. Just swooped right down and claimed her mouth, the kiss stealing her thoughts and her breath. When he finally broke away, he scowled at her, took hold of her upper arms as if he wanted to give her a shake. “Does that feel like I want to leave? I’m the one who came here, asking you to give me a chance. Don’t push me away, Ivy.”
He wanted assurances she couldn’t give him, so she hugged him. But even as she held on, she knew she’d have to let him go eventually.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
C.J. STEPPED INSIDE O’Riley’s the next afternoon, tipped his hat back and scanned the bar for his brother. Pearl Jam’s “Even Flow” played over the jukebox in the far corner. It wasn’t nearly as crowded as it had been when he and Ivy had been there for dinner. Only a few tables had customers, while the booths lining the wall were empty.
C.J. would have thought the bar would be busier on a Friday, but maybe midafternoon was slow no matter what day it was. Then again, today was July third. Maybe people were at home, gearing up for the Fourth, getting ready for picnics, parades and fireworks. All of which he would like to share with Ivy. If he could convince her to spend the holiday with him. He thought he could. Especially after last night.
Ivy had opened up to him. Had trusted him with a piece of her past. And since he hadn’t pushed for more, the rest of the evening had been relaxed and fun. They’d eaten a delicious dinner then watched the latest Tom Hanks movie. It’d all been very normal. Almost as if they were a couple.
But it wasn’t enough. He wanted to spend more time with her. And what better way than celebrating their country’s independence?
He’d call her about it, maybe charm her into having dinner with him tonight, as well. Right after he figured out why his brother had texted him and invited him for a drink.
He didn’t believe for one minute that the impromptu invitation was Kane’s way of extending an olive branch. For one thing, Kane didn’t drink. Not since becoming clean and sober over fifteen yea
rs ago. For another, Kane had never reached out to C.J. first, preferring to stay hidden. Letting his family make all the moves.
Now suddenly Kane wanted to pal around?
Something was up. Whatever it was, C.J. figured there was a good chance he wasn’t going to like it.
He started walking across the room, spied Kane in the last booth. Kane looked up, caught C.J.’s eye and gave him a smug grin that set all of C.J.’s instincts humming. Had his footsteps slowing, his muscles tensing as if waiting for a blow.
A blow that landed squarely in his midsection when he reached the booth and saw Ivy sitting across from his brother.
“Look at that,” Kane said. “You’re right on time.”
C.J. couldn’t take his eyes off Ivy. “What are you doing here?”
She scowled. Then turned that glare on Kane. “Did you call him?”
Kane lifted a shoulder, all badass in his white T-shirt, with his tattoos peeking out from the sleeves. “I may have sent him a text inviting him for a drink. But only because I thought it would piss him off to find you here. I didn’t think he’d actually show up.”
“God save me from idiot brothers and their stupid sibling rivalry,” she muttered.
“You want to avoid idiot brothers and sibling rivalry,” Kane said in a slow drawl, “you’d best keep away from any and all members of the Bartasavich family.”
Ivy sighed. Patted her stomach. “Hard to do that now.” She stood and met C.J.’s gaze. “Did you need something?”
You.
He frowned, hoped like hell the word that had popped into his head hadn’t also popped out of his mouth. But neither Ivy’s nor Kane’s expression changed, so he guessed it hadn’t.
“What are you doing here?” he repeated. “With him?”
“He,” she said with a nod at Kane, “is doing me a favor.”