Playing with Trouble

Home > Romance > Playing with Trouble > Page 10
Playing with Trouble Page 10

by Amy Andrews


  If someone had looked over the wall at them right now, she and Cole probably appeared companionable. Two people sitting close enough to be friends, drinking a beer together. But there was an awareness between them that did not feel remotely companionable. It felt alive with possibilities, fraught with tension. The me Jane, you Australian Rugby God kind of tension.

  Cole Hauser was a man, and every cell in her body keened to his blatant masculinity.

  After a long, silent minute, Jane dragged in a steady breath, determined to act like her body wasn’t lit up like a switchboard right now. “Thank you for today.” It came out clear and steady. If Cole hadn’t been here, Jane would have done a little victory dance.

  He glanced sideways at her, a small smile playing on his mouth. “So I passed?”

  Jane laughed at the wholly inadequate statement. “With flying colors.”

  “Does this mean I get an A on my performance review?”

  “Oh no.” Jane shook her head, trying to rid herself of the sudden urge to grade him on things that had nothing to do with his child-minding skills. “You get an A plus. Finn didn’t stop talking about you and your day all during his bath and getting ready for bed. He even kept interrupting the book I was reading him to tell me the things he hadn’t remembered to tell me. You were a hit.”

  Cole grinned, his teeth even and white, a cleft in his chin just barely visible through the scruff on his jawline. The fact her son’s praise clearly thrilled him made him that much harder to ignore.

  Slow heat suffused her body as Jane pushed on. “And thank you for dinner, too. You didn’t have to cook for me.” She faltered. “For us…but it was very much—”

  Appreciated.

  She cut herself off abruptly before she said the word, and he cocked an eyebrow, that small smile playing peek-a-boo on his lips again as if he knew exactly what she’d been about to say. She didn’t know why she’d stopped. God knew she wanted him to lean in and kiss her again. Properly, this time, deep and slow and wet.

  Maybe cradle her face and slide his hands into her hair.

  “It was very nice of you,” she said instead, her tummy tense, the pulse in her neck bounding thick and sluggish.

  He shrugged. “It was just mac and cheese.”

  Maybe, but it’d been delicious, and to put down her tools at five and not have to worry about what to feed Finn for dinner had been ah-mazing. “You shouldn’t undersell yourself. You’re a good cook. Did you take lessons or pick it up along the way?”

  Jane congratulated herself on steering the conversation onto a mundane, day-to-day track. Nothing more mind-numbingly boring and sexless than the Groundhog-Day-conundrum of families the world over—what to eat for dinner.

  “I’m hardly Michelin star,” Cole dismissed. “My mother taught me a few basic dishes to get by. She worked several jobs and sometimes didn’t get home until late at night, and she was determined to raise a boy who knew his way around a kitchen.”

  “She sounds great.”

  He smiled, and it was so full of nostalgia and affection it did funny things inside Jane’s chest. “She was.”

  “She’s…not around anymore?”

  “No.” He shook his head. “She died three years ago.”

  The thickness in his voice was unmistakable, and Jane battled the urge to slide her hand onto his arm and squeeze. She settled for a gentle, “I’m sorry.” Her parents may live in Germany right now, but she couldn’t even begin to imagine not having them in her life. Finn not having them in his life.

  “Thank you.”

  “And your father?”

  “I have no idea. He buggered off for good when I was twelve, and I’ve not heard from him since. I assume he’s also dead.”

  Jane frowned. That was a big assumption. “Why?”

  “Because I’m pretty well-known in Australia. As is the amount of money I’ve earned over the years—and my father is the king of freeloaders. He’d have come out of the woodwork a long time ago if he was still around.”

  “I’m…sorry.” Jane wasn’t sure what else to say.

  “It’s fine,” he murmured, returning his gaze to the backyard as he took another slug of his drink.

  Jane followed suit, and they lapsed into silence again. She had no idea what he was thinking, but he didn’t seem angry or upset, more…contemplative, which suited the early evening ambience.

  “Arlo Pike wants me to run a rugby clinic for the local kids this weekend.”

  The bottle paused halfway to Jane’s mouth as she glanced at Cole. It didn’t surprise her. She’d met Arlo a couple of times since arriving in Credence, and he struck her as nothing but proactive in the community.

  “That sounds like a great idea.” She did some quick mental calculations on how much she could get achieved tomorrow to make up for Cole being otherwise occupied at the end of the week. “I might bring Finn down to watch for a while those days.”

  “I’m happy to take him with me.” Cole’s gaze met hers. “He likes kicking a ball around, and it’ll be plenty of exercise for him.”

  “Oh.” Jane sat back a little. She hadn’t considered that Cole would want a tagalong while he taught a rugby clinic.

  He frowned. “If that’s okay by you.”

  “But…won’t you be busy running the clinic? You don’t need your attention divided.”

  Jane knew from experience that her son needed an eagle eye trained on him at all times.

  “Apparently, it won’t be a big group, and Arlo’s making sure there are plenty of volunteers to keep an eye on everybody at all times.”

  Jane had no doubt that Arlo would make sure it was run with full supervision, but mother guilt reared its ugly head again. She volunteered to help with Finn’s activities whenever she could—she took time out of work specifically to do so. But ordinarily, during vacation, when it was her time with Finn, she didn’t work at all.

  It felt wrong to not be a part of it.

  “I’ll put him in with some kids his age,” Cole added. “He’ll have a blast, and I’ll get him back to you in one piece at the end of the day, I promise.”

  He smiled at her then, and her stupid stomach turned over as she returned the smile. “And what about you? Are you…?” She tipped her head at his ever-present walking stick. “Should you be taking on something like that right now?”

  Picking up his stick, he twirled it in his hand, and Jane held her breath. She’d obviously annoyed him this past week any time she’d called his fitness or ability into question. But he seemed pensive rather than annoyed right now.

  “Trust me.” He turned his head to the side, his eyes finding hers. There was a mischievous sparkle there, and the world tilted wildly for a second or two. “The only thing I need when running a kid’s rugby clinic is a really loud voice.”

  His lips twitched, and Jane laughed. To her surprise, he followed suit. His laughter was rich and full and deep, and his head tipped back a little, ruffling those curls and stopping the breath in her throat. His mouth was big and open, and his teeth flashed white in the encroaching shadows, and for a second she wished he’d lean in and kiss her again like he had last night.

  Even though she’d asked him not to do it again.

  So if there was going to be any kissing tonight, she was going to have to kiss him, which was exactly what she did. She ignored her wiser angels and kissed him. Jane Spencer, divorced single mom and historical-house rehabber, kissed Cole Hauser, Australian rugby royalty. She swooped into the space between them—with more haste than finesse, in case she chickened out—and took his mouth.

  Jane wasn’t sure who was more stunned at first. Him or her. There was certainly a beat or two when they both sat stock still, just like last night. Then he groaned a groan that was the most wickedly delicious noise Jane had heard in a long time, followed by a clatter, which sounded like his cane dr
opping, and then his hand was sliding onto her face and pushing into her hair.

  Of its own volition, her body half turned toward him, and his body mirrored the movement as his tongue stroked along the seam of her lips, and it was so damn erotic her mouth opened on a silent kind of oh. He swallowed that oh right up, and Jane pressed closer, her hand sliding on top of his as Cole angled his head to deepen the kiss, his lips slanting over hers. Jane’s heartbeat was so loud in her ears she couldn’t even hear herself breathe.

  God…was she breathing? She felt too lightheaded, too airless to be sure.

  The kiss was slow and deep—not gentle, but not rushed, either—it was thorough, his tongue exploring, his hand firm in her hair as he held her in place. Cole took his time kissing her, and it was absolutely him kissing her. She might’ve instigated it, but he had taken control, and she was more than happy to follow his lead.

  He was the kisser, and she was the kissee.

  Her pulse thrummed, and her belly twisted tight, and fireworks exploded behind her eyes, and she was…

  Bamboozled. Ensorcelled. Enslaved.

  By his mouth. By the cool flavor of beer on his lips, the masterful stroke of his tongue, and the undiluted masculinity of him, invading her senses every time she remembered to breathe.

  It was intoxicating, and someone needed to bottle it. Call it Jock or Pro or Stud and sell it for a thousand bucks a pop. She’d buy a case of the stuff.

  Hell, she’d bathe in it every damn night.

  A sudden noise like the grunting of a wild animal pierced the sexual haze, and Jane broke away, her brain spinning in her head, her lungs grabbing for air.

  Finn.

  Fumbling the monitor from her pocket, she ogled it blindly, listening for…she couldn’t remember what she was supposed to be listening for. Hell, she was barely remembering how to breathe, but when there was only silence, the mommy part of her brain relaxed, and she finally snuck a sideways look at Cole.

  He was staring at her with glazed eyes, his breathing as hard, if not harder, than hers. His mouth was wet, and his pupils had blown out. “Just so we’re clear here, when you go to bed tonight and tell yourself this kiss shouldn’t have happened, remember that it was you who kissed me this time.”

  His voice was a low rumble that plucked at muscle fibers deep inside her pelvis. “I know.” He definitely hadn’t started it. That was on her.

  But he’d sure as hell finished it.

  He opened his mouth as if he was going to say something else but closed it, straightening himself, facing the backyard again as he took a long swallow of his beer. Given her legs weren’t quite capable of supporting her yet and her pulse rate was still dangerously high, Jane did the same, barely tasting the cold amber fluid as it slid down her throat.

  She shut her eyes. God…what had come over her? She’d asked him not to kiss her again yesterday, and now here she was, kissing him! Sure, he hadn’t been averse to her advance—quite the contrary—but she didn’t believe in giving guys mixed signals.

  Hell, she didn’t believe in giving herself mixed signals.

  Jane knew she had to say something. They couldn’t just sit here and pretend she hadn’t kissed him and he hadn’t kissed her back. She owed him an apology. She’d fessed up to being the instigator, but she hadn’t said sorry. And they really should clear the air.

  Or, option B—pray for a giant bald eagle to come swooping down and carry her away.

  “So that’s a yes to the rugby clinic?”

  Jane blinked. Or option C—ignore it altogether? “Um…yes.”

  “And I take it…” He turned his head to look at her, and there was that slight smile on those swollen lips again. “I’m cleared to look after Finn again tomorrow?”

  She gave a confused kind of half laugh. Okay, they were going to ignore it. Jane couldn’t decide if she was relieved or not, but frankly, she was too chicken to push. “Yes.”

  “And you still want a performance review tomorrow night?”

  Oh dear god. Jane should not want that. She should run a mile from the mere suggestion of it. Cole was clearly capable of looking after Finn, and the last thing she needed was to revisit this…intimacy. Because that’s what it was between them, sitting on the steps side by side, drinking booze in front of an eastern Colorado sunset, their chemistry stirring like crazy.

  Intimacy.

  It’d been like that last night, too; she just hadn’t recognized it. But maybe Cole had. And that’s what he was really asking. Is it wise to put ourselves in this situation again?

  Another very good question.

  Jane did not want intimacy. She hadn’t been looking for it, nor could she afford to want it. Especially not with a guy who was here on vacation and lived on the other side of the planet. But, even now, she knew not even wild horses could keep her away from this porch tomorrow night. Because, as much as her head was telling her she didn’t want this kind of closeness with this man, her body was telling her something entirely different.

  And, it turned out, her body was a demanding little hussy.

  “Of course,” she said briskly, then tipped the bottle back and drained it dry in several long swallows. Standing on legs that felt much stronger than they had a few minutes ago, she mustered all her nonchalance. “This time tomorrow.”

  And damn if it didn’t sound more like a promise than a threat.

  …

  It was two o’clock the next afternoon before Cole had more than a brief exchange with Jane. She had looked him straight in the eye with a daring kind of defiance earlier this morning, like she wasn’t going to apologize for anything—which suited Cole just fine; he hadn’t wanted nor expected her to—but her pink cheeks had betrayed her somewhat. As had her speedy handover of Finn and her even speedier exit out the door to the red sitting room.

  She was clearly more rattled by their kiss last night than she was prepared to admit to him or maybe even herself. Cole could definitely relate. After her explicit no-more-kissing instructions to him the night before, her move had been unexpected. Especially when he’d been resisting the urge to do exactly what she’d done.

  Because she’d asked him not to.

  He’d busted his arse not kissing her. And then she’d laid one on him. He’d thought about that a lot today. Her contradictions. How she blew hot and cold. And the blatant attraction roaring between them. Also, he’d thought about that dress. How it had bared her shoulders and slid silkily over her legs, falling between her thighs, clinging to their outline. Apart from that first night in a tank top and her underwear, he’d only ever seen Jane in her work clothes of T-shirt, shorts, and boots.

  Last night, she’d worn flip-flops.

  After he’d taken Finn to the park, they went to the library. It was only a small library, but the summer break program was in full swing, and they just happened to luck upon children’s reading hour. Cole and Finn spent two hours there reading books and doing some art in the activity corner. Well, Finn had. Cole had just gone through the motions as his brain had relived that kiss.

  Like it was now, when he should be concentrating on his supervision duties of Finn as he poured three glasses of milk. Pulling his brain back into line, Cole placed the glasses on the tray next to the plate of chocolate chip cookies. Finn had suggested they bake them on their return from the library because Mommy loves milk and cookies.

  Given Mommy’s penchant for beer, Cole suspected it was Finn who loved milk and cookies, but apparently there was a secret family recipe, and Finn thought a floor picnic in the red sitting room sounded fun. Because, also apparently, picnics were a favorite Jane thing.

  Along with needle-nose pliers, prickles, and stealth make-out sessions.

  Unsurprisingly, Finn didn’t know the secret family recipe, but fortunately the great God Google knew about a million. Cole soon found one that matched the ingredients in the pan
try, and, an hour later, with the kitchen smelling divine, they were all set.

  “Okay.” Cole lifted the tray. “You got the blanket?” Finn nodded enthusiastically, holding it up. It was actually an old round tablecloth they’d found in one of the drawers, but it was good enough. “Got my cane?”

  Finn dutifully brandished it as Carl balanced on his shoulder, displaying his full, vibrant colors. Up until Credence, Cole had never even seen a chameleon in real life, and he had woken three times now to the Houdini reptile staring him in the face.

  “Let’s go, then.”

  Cole had no idea how they were going to be received. Jane had made it pretty clear by her hasty scramble from the kitchen this morning that she wasn’t keen on his company, and he knew she was operating on a strict schedule to get the job finished on time, but surely she could put down her tools for fifteen minutes. She probably hadn’t eaten since breakfast. The kitchen appeared untouched from when they’d departed this morning, and the woman had to eat, right?

  “Mommy’s going to love it, Cole.”

  Finn grinned so big it sucker punched Cole right in the chest. The boy was such a sweet kid and clearly besotted with his mother. Cole remembered how much he’d adored his mother at Finn’s age, knowing even then that she was doing her best and trying to please her, to make things just a little bit easier for her when he could.

  Sure, he’d been a live wire and had gone through a period of rebellion in his teenage years, not long after his father had left for good, but never more than she’d been able to handle. Life had not been kind to his mother, but she’d never made him feel anything other than loved.

  The sounds of Pink singing one of her hits grew louder as Cole slowly approached the red sitting room. He needed two hands for the tray, so he was walking tentatively without the aid of his stick. Finn was using it instead, even though it was almost as tall as him. Needless to say, he wasn’t making a lot of headway, and Cole laughed and shook his head. Between his hindered gait and Carl perched on his shoulder like a bloody parrot, he looked like a miniature drunken pirate.

 

‹ Prev