Authors: Sheila Roberts
And Jason started imagining his hands around Duke's throat. “I'm gonna kill him.”
“Oh, I don't think you need to go that far,” said a soft voice at his elbow. “Just cut off his feet.”
He turned to find Hope standing next to him, hands in her pants pockets, watching her sister. She didn't look ready to commit murder, but judging by her disapproving frown, she probably wasn't above some foot cutting herself. “Bobbi loves to dance,” she explained.
“I've figured that out,” he said sourly. Well, it was caveman manners to stand there like a lump and not ask the woman next to you to dance. “I could use a lesson,” he said to Hope. “Wanna teach me?”
“I'm not the dancing queen my sister is,” she said, and took a step back.
“I'll bet you've got some moves.” He shouldn't have said that. It made him remember their aborted horizontal bop in the bounce house.
Never mind that. You're just being nice to your girlfriend's sister
. As he took her hand and led her to a corner of the crowd where a few determined couples were putting on their own exhibition, he couldn't help asking himself if “girlfriend” was an accurate label for Bobbi since they still hadn't had sex. Girlfriend in the making, maybe? Did she want to be his girlfriend? To night he felt like he was getting mixed messages.
He and Hope had barely started movingâstumbling in Jason's caseâwhen the band stopped. She smiled at him and shrugged a shoulder, indicating he was off the hook.
But now the band was going into a slow song, and Duke had already whirled Bobbi into some kind of showy slow dance. Jason really was going to kill the guy.
He forced himself to put murder on the back burner and said to Hope, “I think my feet will do better at this speed, anyway.”
“Oh, that's okay. You don't have to.”
She looked flustered, almost frightened. Did he make her nervous? “I promise I won't bite,” he teased.
Even though she looked like she wanted to run, she let him take her hand. It was trembling, and she had sweaty palms. He was making her nervous, which was weird. There was no need to be nervous around him. It was Duke she had to watch.
Jason put a hand to her back and drew her to him. She had longer legs than her sister and it made her just about the right height to fit him perfectly. What did those long legs look like without the pants
covering them? What did they feel like? He could almost imagine skating his hand over one of them and feeling silky skin beneath his fingers.
Where the hell had that thought come from? The bounce house, of course. He reminded himself that this woman could wind up his sister-in-law and put a brotherly distance between them.
“After this, we should find Bobbi,” Hope said, searching the crowd.
“Good luck with that,” Jason grumbled.
Duke should be arrested for kidnapping
.
“I know she looks like a flirt, but she's not really. She's just bubbly, full of energy,” Hope explained.
“Duke's being a shit,” Jason said. “If I had a two-by-four handy, I'd hit him with it. He's supposed to be your date.”
And Bobbi was supposed to be his. It wasn't fair of either Bobbi or Duke to ignore them like this. No wonder he was getting into mental trouble here with Hope, with Bobbi ignoring him the way she was.
Out of sight, out of mind? What kind of a shit did that make him? He decided he didn't want to think about it. Easier to be pissed at Bobbi and Duke.
“That's okay. Duke and I aren't a match,” Hope said. “He's not my type.”
Somehow, he'd known it. He should never have listened when Bobbi suggested he bring Duke along. The guy liked his women with an edge.
“So, what is your type?” Jason asked, making conversation.
She cocked her head, considering. “Oh. I like men who think about more than the next party. Who think, period,” she added with a smile.
“What? Guys don't think?” he teased.
“Some do. I get the impression you do.”
“I try,” he said, flattered. “So, what else?” The music was still playing. They had to fill the time somehow.
“I like a man who enjoys nature.”
“Hiking?”
Her cheeks turned pink as soon as he'd said that, and Jason remembered their trail encounter when she'd landed on her back. “Sorry. I didn't mean to embarrass you,” he said.
“I'm really not a klutz like that.”
“Everybody has klutzy moments,” he said. The music ended and, as he turned to see what had become of Duke and Bobbi, he felt something soft under his right foot. Hope's toe.
He quickly removed his foot as she said, “Yeah, I guess everybody does.”
She was grinning. He found himself grinning, too. Then chuckling. Then they were both laughing.
“Well, you two are having fun,” said Bobbi, now back at his side again.
They were. Hope would make a great sister-in-law.
If he and Bobbi got together. Right now, looking at her all flushed and happy from dancing with his friendâmake that former friend, former dead friendâhe wasn't so sure. She'd seemed so right, so perfect. But a perfect woman didn't leave a guy to go off dancing with his friend.
“Let's get something to drink,” Bobbi suggested. “I'm dying of thirst.”
“I think I'm going to go home,” Hope said. She turned to her sister and held out a hand. “Keys?”
Bobbi made a face. “Oh, come on. Not yet. We're just getting started. And you've only danced two dances.”
“Yeah, the best is still comingâdancing with me,” added Duke.
Hope shook her head. “I really need to get going. Sorry.”
“That's okay,” Duke told her. “Good hangin' with ya.”
Bobbi gave up the keys and Hope said her good-byes. “Thanks for the dance,” she said to Jason.
“I enjoyed it,” he told her. And he had. Now, maybe, before the night was over, he'd get to enjoy a dance with Bobbi.
Hope left and the trio went to the beer garden for more beer. And then Bobbi went to the bathroom, leaving Jason and Duke together for a little talk.
“Okay, you shithead,” Jason growled as soon as she'd left their table. “What's the idea of dancing off with my woman?”
Duke looked surprised. “Hey, we were just dancing.”
“You had someone to dance with.”
“She wasn't into me.”
“Well, neither is Bobbi.”
Duke leveled him a get-real stare. “Yeah? I hate to say it, man, but I don't think she's that into you.”
“The hell she's not,” Jason growled and shot up, ready to seize the moment and Duke's throat.
But Duke held up two hands and scooted his chair back. “I'm not fighting with you over a chick, not when I didn't even put the moves on her.”
“The hell you didn't,” snarled Jason. “I saw you out there.”
“Hey.” Duke stabbed a finger at him. “She asked me. You got a problem with that, maybe you need to talk to her.”
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EFORE JASON COULD
rip his head off, Duke left the table, calling over his shoulder, “I'm out of here.”
Jason fell back onto his chair. Bobbi asked Duke to dance. Why was she asking Duke to dance? Well, duh. The guy was friggin' Patrick Swayze. Still, Bobbi was his date, not Duke's.
She returned to the table, all smiles. She was so damned cute, so fun. Jason was ready to forgive her.
Until she opened her mouth. “Where's Duke?”
“Missing him already?”
She slid into her seat and her smile ran out of energy. “Just curious. Are you okay?”
“Yeah. Just wondering how my date wound up dancing with another guy.”
Her face turned as red as her jacket. She lowered her eyes, unable to meet his gaze. Or was she simply showing off that thick
curtain of eyelashes? “That was tacky. I just love dancing with really good dancers. So, when he made some crack about giving the women a treat on the dance floor, I had to ask if he knew how to dance and he said he did and I said, âYeah? Show me,' and then . . . he did.” Bobbi looked at him earnestly, leaned across the table, and put a hand on his arm. “I'm sorry. Let me make it up to you.”
“I can't dance like Duke,” Jason said grumpily.
She grinned at that, all dimples. “No, you can't. But you can be taught.”
Okay, she'd said she was sorry. She wanted to make up. He'd be a bastard to sulk. He stood up, managed a smile, and held out his hand to her. “Let's dance.”
And they did. Mostly slow dances and some shaking around to the fast numbers. She tried to show him a couple of steps, but even though he had the moves on the softball field, even though he could untangle the most confusing architect's drawings, here, on this asphalt dance floor, he felt like a dumb clod. His brain and feet refused to cooperate.
“You'll get the hang of it eventually,” Bobbi promised.
Jason wasn't sure he wanted to get the hang of it, but he kept his mouth shut. As the evening wore on, he realized he was not having fun. Bobbi didn't seem to notice his gritted teeth as he struggled with the steps, and that dropped the fun factor even lower. Finally, he said, “How about taking a break?”
She looked wistfully at the other dancers, but said, “Okay. Let's bag it for the night. Want to come back to the apartment and watch a movie? It's still early.”
Actually, what he really wanted was to go home and feel grumpy. But that was dumb, so he said, “Sure.”
They were halfway to the truck when fat rain droplets began to pelt them.
“Oooh, my hair,” wailed Bobbi, and pulled her red jacket up over her head. She huddled in close and hugged Jason, as if for warmth.
That female softness next to him swept away the sudden question of how she survived activities in the great outdoors if she hated getting her hair wet.
Hope was at the apartment when they arrived. She'd changed into sweats and was curled up on the loveseat with a book.
“We thought we'd watch a movie,” Bobbi said to Hope. “Want to join us?”
The idea of hanging with them seemed to make her uncomfortable. “No. I think I'm just going to go to bed and read.”
“It's only nine,” Bobbi protested.
“Don't let us chase you off,” Jason added.
“I'll be fine,” Hope said quietly.
Jason suspected she was leaving to give them privacy. Well, he sure wasn't going to do her sister with her in the same apartment. “Stay,” he urged.
She bit her lower lip, considering.
“I just got the latest James Bond from Netflix. We can watch that,” Bobbi said, pulling a package of Oreos from a cupboard. “Come on,” she urged her sister. “You can read anytime.”
Hope surrendered, positioning herself in an old, overstuffed chair and leaving the loveseat for Jason and Bobbi. Bobbi set cookies on the coffee table, and then moved to the TV to put in the DVD. Jason took a cookie and idly picked up the Jane Austen book sitting on the coffee table.
Hmm
. The bookmark hadn't moved since the last time he was here. It was still on page two. It seemed like slow progress for a smart woman who loved to read.
“You guys are going to love this movie,” Bobbi said, and snuggled in next to Jason.
Maybe he would have loved the movie, if he'd been able to concentrate. But he kept thinking about that bookmark. And his and Bobbi's dance incompatibility. And, after the movie, after she'd walked him to the door and given him a kiss that should have fried
his memory chip completely, he walked to his truck thinking about something else: the look he'd seen flash between her and Duke.
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BOBBI FLOPPED ON
the loveseat and helped herself to another cookie. “I swear, I could have eaten this whole package, but I didn't want to look like a pig in front of Jason.”
Hope was looking at her in disapproving shock. “
Now
you think about what you look like in front of Jason?”
“What's that supposed to mean?” Deep down she knew, but the last thing she wanted to do was admit it to her big sister, who was acting very much like a big sister.
“Do you want this man or not?” Hope scolded.
“Of course I do.”
“Then maybe you shouldn't be looking at his friend like you're on a diet and he's Boston cream pie.”
“I was not looking at him like that,” Bobbi protested. She could feel her cheeks flushing.
“Jason saw it, too,” Hope said. “And I don't think he was very happy that you left him to dance with Duke.”
“We got that all straightened out. I said I was sorry.”
Hope shrugged and picked up the package of cookies, returning it to the kitchen.
“He was fine with it,” Bobbi insisted, clinging to the arm of the loveseat.
She could feel panic starting to rise in her. She couldn't afford to lose the perfect man. Damn that Duke anyway. Why did he have to come along and make her mess up? “What am I going to do?” She realized she was wringing her hands. She forced herself to stop. This was silly. Things were fine with Jason. Hope was making her panic for nothing.