Read Have Bouquet, Need Boyfriend Online
Authors: Rita Herron
Tags: #Contemporary, #Romance, #Erotica, #Fiction, #General
his soul about the baby. As if he had never kissed her and almost taken
her to bed.
He gripped the door handle when she stopped and swung open the door,
ready to climb out. “Thanks for the ride, Rebecca.”
She nodded, even more confused by the conflicting heat flaring in his eyes.
Then the wind brought a cloud of some strong odor toward her, and she
realized it was perfume. A woman’s perfume.
No wonder he was in such a hurry to get away from her. He had obviously
been with another woman tonight.
Thomas felt like a jerk as he sped toward his house in his Porsche. He
had been so cold to Rebecca, but he had to put some distance between them.
Some much-needed emotional distance.
After all, miles would separate them when he moved, just as their needs
and goals in life separated them now. And he didn’t want to hurt her, so
he couldn’t lead her on or let her believe that they might have a future
together. He could never bring his baby brother back, but in Atlanta he
could save others. As long as he had the skills he needed to do so. And
the equipment and technology and staff. Sugar Hill had none of that. So
he didn’t really belong here.
Yet deep inside his chest that emptiness returned, that aching and
yearning for something more.
Why? What was it he wanted that he wouldn’t have in Atlanta?
Rebecca fitted perfectly into that small-town celebration. She would not
be comfortable at charity fundraisers and entertaining hospital board
members, all part of the trimmings he’d need for a wife.
Wife?
Was he really considering marrying Rebecca?
No. He wasn’t ready for that kind of commitment. They’d never officially
even dated.
So, why had he been so upset when she’d spoken up adamantly against the
institution?
Shaken by the direction of his thoughts, he pulled into his garage and
went into the house. The empty rooms greeted him with silence, the
sterile odors of cleaner and expensive woods almost stifling. He roamed
through each room, trying to decide whether or not he liked the
modernist artwork and decor the decorator had chosen. There were no
photos of family or friends, no homey touches like the ones Rebecca had
crammed into that tiny little place of hers. That place should feel
stifling, not his.
But in his mind he saw the tulip garden Rebecca had painted, the lush
mountain greenery, the gazebo up on Pine Mountain where all her cousins
had married, the vibrant colors and the passion she interjected in each
piece.
Was that what was missing from his house? The passion…
And what about his life?
No, he had passion for his work. Like the other doctors he’d met
tonight, that was all the passion he had time for.
Determined to prove that his work still satisfied him, he headed back to
his car. New Year’s Eve or not, he’d stop by the clinic and pick up a
few of the medical journals he hadn’t had time to read yet. Might as
well accomplish something on New Year’s Day.
Out with the old and in with the new-and onto a new life.
Medicine was all that mattered, wasn’t it?
Rebecca worked on the waterfall scene, well aware she was using her art
as an escape. She’d been so rattled after she’d left Thomas she hadn’t
been able to eat, but she’d stopped by the celebration in the park and
bought one of the picnic dinners just to support the town. The uneaten
food still sat on the table at the clinic.
She should forget about this crazy attraction to Thomas. Tomorrow would
be the start of a new year, her resolution would be to forget him.
Still, knowing Thomas had commissioned her to paint the murals for the
clinic, that he roamed the halls of this building and spent his days
here, that she could smell the lingering scent of his cologne in the
empty hallways drove the knife deeper into the pain she felt from his
earlier dismissal.
Something had changed since his trip to Atlanta, but she didn’t
understand what.
Except that it involved another woman who reeked of some expensive
French perfume. Someone obviously much more experienced and
sophisticated than her.
Her hand slipped, the brush strayed, and glittery white paint streaked
down into the sea of blue she’d chosen for the pool of water at the base
of the waterfall. Drat.
At least she could fix the paint.
How could she fix her heart from breaking over a man who obviously
didn’t want her?
She glanced at the desk where The Pregnancy Bible
lay open and another wave of pain assaulted her. There was no way she
could ask Thomas to help her with her baby plan now.
Maybe it would be easier to visit a sperm bank and talk to a stranger,
anyway. Someone who wouldn’t judge her or think she was desperate. Or
worse, look at her with pity.
An idea struck, and she rushed to the front desk, turned on the
computer, then checked for fertility clinics and sperm donor centers in
Atlanta. When she located one, she logged on and sent an e-mail asking
the clinic to mail her information. It wouldn’t hurt to read up on the
procedure before she went for a consultation.
And if it didn’t work out, no one would ever know.
Thomas couldn’t believe it when he saw Rebecca’s car parked at the
clinic. It was almost midnight. What was she doing here?
Hell, it was dark and cold, someone might see her here and try to break
in. The mere possibility sent his blood racing through his veins. Angry
with her for being so foolish, he hurriedly let himself into the clinic.
Not certain which room she was in, he checked the first two and saw the
dinosaur mural, then the jungle one. Wow. The colors certainly
brightened up the exam areas; she had done a fabulous job. He still
didn’t understand why she didn’t show her work to others.
He found her in the fourth room, completely immersed in the details of a
gorgeous waterfall that pooled into a crystal-blue stream on the side of
a mountain. Pure heaven.
“Rebecca?”
She shrieked, then jerked around and flung the paintbrush at him, as if
she thought that skinny piece of wood might fend off an attacker.
“Y-you scared me.” She ran toward him, reaching for a rag to wipe the
white paint splattered on his pants legs. He grabbed her hand before she
did too much damage.
“I’m sorry I frightened you, but you shouldn’t be here this time of
night alone.”
“I was…w-working,” she stammered.
He tightened his grip on her hand. “Don’t you know how dangerous it is
for a woman to be here at night by herself?”
“I thought the door was locked.”
“It was. I have a key.”
Her big blue eyes met his. “But you aren’t going to hurt me.”
A loaded question. He met her gaze and saw the remnants of what he
thought might have been tears glistening in her eyes. Was it already too
late?
Had he already hurt her?
He’d never meant to.
“Besides, you’re here alone.”
So, he was slightly sexist when it came to safety. Out of the corner of
his eye, he caught sight of the uneaten picnic dinner for one, and his
throat went dry.
He’d eaten with dozens of people around him all week but he’d still felt
lonely.
She lowered her gaze and began to fidget, and his heart tugged. Unable
to stand her distress, he tucked a strand of her silky hair behind one
ear. Just the simple contact drove him insane. Especially when her
breath hitched out in a throaty sound and the passion in her eyes echoed
the passion in her paintings.
Like that rose opening its petals toward the sun, he felt her opening up
toward him….
That empty hole inside him throbbed. The clock struck midnight. New
Year’s Eve.
He had wondered who she would be kissing at midnight. He’d wanted it to
be him.
He might be leaving soon, but he had to taste her once again.
Forgetting his earlier resolve to avoid her, he lowered his mouth and
allowed her to assuage the aching void inside him. And when he kissed
her, he suddenly felt as if he were coming home.
Rebecca sank into Thomas’s arms, thoroughly confused by his actions but
totally mesmerized by the hunger in his kiss. He drove his mouth over
hers in a frenzy of need, then dragged her up against his body, molding
her into the vee of his thighs, and rubbing his hard length along her
stomach so that she moaned and clung to him.
She wanted him to take her all the way to heaven and back this time.
His hands combed through her ponytail and snaked down her face to her
shoulders, then lower to cup her buttocks and grip her hard against him.
Warmth pooled in her belly and floated upward in a spiral of desire that
left her dizzy.
“God, Rebecca, you taste like the sweetest of sins,” Thomas growled in
her ear.
The smile that radiated from her mouth originated straight from her
soul. She kissed his jaw, ran her fingers along the strong set to his
chin, then nibbled at his neck, giggling softly when the thick dark
stubble of his beard scraped her neck. His own need escalating out of
control, he dipped his head and tasted her neck. His breath licked her
skin as his hands found her breasts and kneaded them through her sweater.
She had never allowed a man to see her naked before, but she suddenly
craved to feel his touch everywhere.
He seemed to have the same idea.
His hands reached to the bottom of her sweater, and she slid her hands
along his muscular arms and down his chest, which hardened beneath her
touch.
Her rear end suddenly collided with cold metal. He jerked his gaze up
and met her eyes, the passion in his look so wild and feral she lost her
breath. Then he looked down and saw the exam table behind her and his
look of desire changed to disgust.
“What the hell are we doing?”
The harshness of his words hit her like a slap in the face. She
stiffened and bit down on her lip to stem the cry of disappointment.
What had she done wrong?
He shook his head in regret, then dropped his head forward into his
hands and stepped back from her. The cold metal pressed into her back as
she gathered her control.
“I’m sorry, Rebecca. I…” His voice was so hoarse she could barely hear
him. “I practically attacked you. And in here of all places.”
He gestured around the exam room as if he’d committed a cardinal sin.
“You didn’t do anything I didn’t want,” she said in a surprisingly
strong voice. “In case you didn’t notice, I wasn’t fighting you.”
His hands fell to his sides, and his clear green eyes met hers, turmoil
and regret and hunger warring together. “This is no place for-“
For her first time? He couldn’t know, could he? “To make love.”
He hissed out a breath. “For sex.”
The bluntness of his words stabbed at her insecurity. “Right.” But she
refused to allow him to see how much he’d hurt her. Instead she lifted
her chin and gathered her purse. She had to get out of there before she
disintegrated into tears and unleashed the foolish words threatening to
erupt.
He grabbed her by her arms and forced her to face him. “I don’t want to
hurt you, Rebecca.” His voice was hard, gravelly. “I can’t deny that I
want to be with you. But…”
“But what, Thomas?”
“But I can’t make any promises.”
She stared at him long and hard. A heartbeat of silence stretched into
eternity.
“Is that what you think I want?”
“I don’t know.” He shook his head, yanked his keys from his pocket and
gently coaxed her toward the door. “But it’s what you deserve. And I
can’t take you here like I’m some horny high schooler.”
She allowed him to lead her into the chilly night air. Snow fluttered
down from a darkening sky, creating a soft blanket of white on the tops
of the cedars and pines. But the breeze brought the scent of that French
perfume again.
This time disgust filled her.
Didn’t she have any pride? How could she have crawled all over him, been