On Thin Ice (5 page)

Read On Thin Ice Online

Authors: Eve Gaddy

Tags: #Romance, #General, #Suspense, #Contemporary, #Fiction

Her smile softened the angles of her face. “Not exactly, but she’ll fill out. We had a rash of burglaries a few months ago, and I decided to get a dog. The people at the shelter said she’d be a great watchdog. I must have sucker written on my forehead. So far she’s been worthless. She sleeps like the dead and barks at everything in sight.”

“You don’t look like a sucker to me.”

“Only for certain things,” she said.

He wondered what those were, besides animals. “Maybe she’ll improve with age.”

“I suppose there’s always that hope.” She sounded doubtful. “Do you want a glass of wine?” Opening a cupboard, she looked over her shoulder at him.

“Sure. Here, let me get it.” He reached toward the top shelf at the same time she did. Their hands collided, and one of the glasses fell, shattering on the white tile floor.

“Damn.” Surrounded by a field of glass shards, she grimaced as she surveyed the mess.

“Sorry.”

She shrugged his apology aside. “It wasn’t fine crystal. Just one step up from jelly jars.”

“You’d better let me clean it up. You’re barefoot.”

“Don’t be sill—”

He picked her up in midsentence and set her on the counter. Enjoying her startled gasp, he let his hands linger at her waist. Tension shimmered, stretched tightly between them as they stared at each other. Slowly, he became aware of the soft feel of her beneath his hands, of her scent, faintly sultry, luring him closer.

His gaze dropped to watch her tongue dart out and moisten her lips. Was it an unconscious gesture? He couldn’t be certain, but it sure as hell tempted him.

He leaned closer, until their mouths were only a few inches apart, and purposely lowered his voice to an intimate level. “Where’s your broom?”

“My . . .”

“Broom,” he supplied, watching the dazed expression leave her face.

Her eyes flashed with a murderous gleam. “In the pantry.”

He grinned and began to think seriously on the merits of seduction.

“So, we’re clear
on the initial division of the research,” Devlin said some two hours later. He sifted through the papers spread out over the coffee table, sticking a few of them in his briefcase.

“Yes.” Gabrielle picked up one of the heavy law books from the floor in front of the couch and thumbed through it. “I’ll tell my team tomorrow to start checking out the eyewitnesses.”

When they first sat down to work, Gabrielle had pulled out a pair of brown horn-rimmed glasses. With that action, all traces of a space cadet had disappeared. Devlin decided she used that air-head attitude to throw people off guard. It was an effective strategy and heightened his curiosity about what made her tick.

“Take a break,” he suggested. “We’ve done everything we can for tonight.”

“Talked me into it.” She took off her glasses and laid them on top of the papers on the coffee table, then groaned and rolled her shoulders.

Devlin stretched his arm across the back of the couch, brushing his fingers over the nape of her neck. “You’re the jumpiest woman,” he said at her start of surprise. “Are you always that way?”

“I’m not—” She shivered when his fingers found a tight muscle and squeezed gently. “Jumpy. What are you—Hmm?” She stretched like a cat as he massaged her neck. “Don’t . . . I don’t think you should do that.”

He smiled and continued flexing his fingers into the soft skin of her neck and shoulders. If she were as indifferent to him as she pretended to be, she wouldn’t sound so wary. “Relax. It’s only a neck rub.”

“Sinclair, this is a business meeting,” she said, but she didn’t move away. Her eyes drifted shut and her head bowed as she relaxed beneath the subtle pressure of his fingers.

“We’re through for the night, remember?” The tension started to ebb from her muscles. His gaze lit on the piano, reminding him of a question he’d meant to ask her earlier. “What kind of music do you play?”

“Bach, Beethoven . . . Mozart.” Her voice sounded dreamier. “Schubert, Handel . . .”

Classical. That suited her, he thought. He found the image of her playing the piano surprisingly erotic. Maybe it was the idea of her hands gliding over the keys. “Do you play other music, as well?”

“Some.” She paused and added, “But I like classical best. It’s the most . . . satisfying to me.”

“Are you any good?”

She tilted her head up, shooting him a challenging look over her shoulder. “What do you think?”

He smiled and shifted closer, keeping his hands on her shoulders. “I think you wouldn’t play if you weren’t any good.”

“Probably not,” she said, and laughed softly. “When I was younger I wanted to be a concert pianist.”

“What changed your mind?” She was almost fully relaxed now, and the feel of her smooth skin was tempting the hell out of him. He told his hands to stay put. “What made you choose law instead?”

Her shoulders tensed. “I grew up. It’s hard to make a living as a pianist. Law seemed . . . safer.”

Safer, he thought. An odd choice of words. “Do you ever regret it?” His hands skimmed down to her back, kneading as they talked.

“No. I still have my music. Only now I’ve got a law career as well.” She was silent a moment. “That’s not my neck.”

“I know. Your back’s tight too.” She turned to face him. He slid his arm around her waist and eased her close, his hand resting on the small of her back.

“Forget it,” she said, slapping a hand on his chest.

He bent his head, his mouth a heartbeat away from hers. “Why? It’s just a kiss, Gabrielle. Perfectly . . . safe.” He tugged the banana clip out of her hair and slipped his hand into the thick brown waves. Her eyes turned a deep jade green as alarm and another more carnal emotion filled them. Desire. He’d kissed enough women to recognize that look in her eyes.

He smiled. Let her deny the attraction now. It simmered between them and tingled in the air. There was no way he’d believe she didn’t feel it too.

“That was a move tonight in the kitchen,” she said. Her voice had turned husky; it rippled along his skin and lingered like a caress.

Slowly, he shook his head. “No, that wasn’t a move.” He smiled again, and his own voice deepened. “This is a move.”

His mouth lowered until it just touched hers, sipping, nipping, cruising gently over her lips. He felt her surprise in the way she relaxed and opened for him. As he slipped his tongue inside, hers came out to touch his, tentatively at first and then growing bolder. She tasted faintly of wine and warm, giving flavors.

Devlin stroked his hand up her back and deepened the kiss. Her arms lifted to wrap around his neck. Bewitched by the soft pressure of her mouth, he forgot he’d had an objective in mind when he kissed her. A fist of need slammed hard into his belly as she heated to a blaze in his arms. He slid his tongue inside her mouth, withdrew, slid in again in a slow, primal rhythm. She moaned and wrapped herself up in him, answering the motions of his tongue with hers.

A tiny portion of his mind told him to back off, that this woman was dangerous. Then she nipped at his lower lip and pressed against him, her breasts crushed against his chest. She moaned again, a full, throaty sound that made him want to strip her out of her clothes and see what those long legs felt like wrapped around him.

Devlin tore his mouth from hers. If he hadn’t, he’d have had her flat on her back in another thirty seconds. And while that had seemed like a great idea before he kissed her, he wasn’t so sure now. A woman who went up in flames the minute he touched her and who blasted his self-control to smithereens with a kiss deserved to be handled with extreme caution.

She shoved hard at his chest. “Let go of me.”

Her voice was shaky, which didn’t gratify him as much as it might have, since he suspected his own voice might not be quite steady either. He released her and moved away, taking two mental steps backward as well. They stared at each other in silence.

It was just a kiss, he thought. What the hell was wrong with him? He felt like he’d been in a war zone. She looked like she had. Her mouth was red, her lips swollen from kissing him. He wanted, quite badly, to kiss her again.

“I don’t get involved with my coworkers,” she said.

“Okay. We won’t get involved.” Mindless, fantastic sex sounded good to him.

Her eyes narrowed. “I mean it. Don’t kiss me again.”

Regaining some of his accustomed cool, he smiled at her. “Gabrielle, you know as well as I do that I’m going to do a lot more than kiss you.” His smile broadened. “But not tonight.”

She looked like she wanted to throw something at him. “You’d better have your back checked out, Counselor. Even the strongest will break under a two-ton load of ego.”

Ego, was it? He didn’t think so. “That kiss wasn’t all on one side.”

“Go away,” she said through gritted teeth. “Far away.”

“For now, I will.” But he’d be back. When he’d figured out how she blew his cool so easily.

She pointed at the door. He gathered his papers together and stuffed them in his briefcase, holding her gaze as he did so. He’d proved one thing anyway. She sure as hell wasn’t indifferent to him.

Devlin picked up his briefcase and strolled out, pausing in the doorway to give her a last wicked grin. “See you in court, Counselor.”

She barely missed his fingers when she slammed the door shut.

You are a fool,
Gabrielle told herself as she sank onto the couch after Devlin left. What in Hades was the matter with her? Her life was one step away from blowing up in her face. Her arch rival was now her partner in the case that could wreck her career. One whisper of her past, and Devlin Sinclair would use her back as a stepping stone in his quest for a partnership.

And what was she doing?
she asked herself, viciously gathering her papers and slapping them into a pile. Trying to find a way out of the tightest spot she’d ever been in? Applying all her energies, her logical, legally trained, supposedly bright mind to saving her endangered butt?

No, she was thinking about sex. Hot, mind-blowing sex. With Devlin Sinclair.

She had to be crazy. First of all, she barely knew him. And she wasn’t the type to flip over a pretty face. She’d learned that lesson well years before. Tonight, though, she’d reached a new level of insanity. The fact that she hadn’t been involved with a man in a long time was no excuse for her stupidity.

Still, it was just a kiss. No reason for her to turn herself inside out, even if it had been an incredible kiss. She would simply be very careful that he didn’t touch her again. Then this . . . urge would die a natural death. She hoped.

Gabrielle consoled herself with the knowledge that tonight she’d been especially vulnerable. Her weakness had allowed a simple chemistry to get out of hand, to take on more importance than it merited. Two glasses of wine were enough to lower her guard. Added to that, she’d been in the midst of a flood of memories when she’d answered the door to him. That smooth, good-looking devil had been a welcome diversion from memories she didn’t want to face.

Memories, she thought. Franco. She had to decide what to do about him. Damn the man, why did he have to show up now, after all these years of blessed peace? One word from him and her career was history. No reputable firm would have her if they knew the truth about her past.

Was Franco only after a good lawyer, like he’d said? Surely to God he didn’t still want . . . her. The idea made her skin crawl. Shuddering, she tried to push Franco’s image from her mind, but the trap of memories yawned open its gaping jaws. Fourteen years later she could still hear the voices. Past and present merged as she relived the scene in her mind.

Other books

Cast In Fury by Sagara, Michelle
The Courier's Tale by Peter Walker
Capturing Peace by Molly McAdams
Scotsman of My Dreams by Karen Ranney
Dare to Trust by R Gendreau-Webb
The Ward by Frankel, Jordana
Regius by Nastasia Peters