One Tough Cookie (11 page)

Read One Tough Cookie Online

Authors: E C Sheedy

Her retort was sharp. "I am not
floating
around Europe. I was trying to tell you—''

"I don't know what you'd call it then. No visible means of support, no career, and no ambition to have one. And it seems no fixed address. You've been hanging around Puerto Banus as if you have all the time in the world. Sounds like floating to me." Taylor started back to his abandoned manicotti, knowing full well he was goading her and not sure why.

"I came to Europe for a reason, and I'm in Puerto Banus for a reason. Neither of which is your business. And for your further information, I have an apartment in Madrid. And like I keep telling you, how I earn my living is my affair. Not yours." She stirred her fork wildly through her spaghetti.

"You're right. It isn't. If you want to be a drifter, it's your business."

Willy's fork fell to her plate, its tines plumped with spaghetti. "I've never drifted in my life!" she fumed, not absolutely sure if she were telling the truth or not. Maybe she had drifted—a little. But she wasn't drifting now. Now she had a plan. And traveling with Dan to do the cookbook could hardly be called drifting.

Taylor shrugged. "Like you said—not my concern."

"For a man who wants to have sex with a woman, you're going about it in a damned strange way." She could tell by his sharp look her comment caught him by surprise—just not for long.

"That was before." He took a mouthful of pasta, appeared to savor it.

"What was before?"

"My wanting to have sex with you. I've decided I'm not interested."

"Oh." The word plopped onto the snowy white tablecloth like a daub of oil. She tried to rally. "Well, that's okay with me. Better than okay. It's a major relief."

He gave her a wicked grin. "Liar," he added for good measure.

"You really are a—"

"Self-satisfied ass." He finished his manicotti and smiled at her. "I know. You already told me. I get the message."

"Good," she muttered. Lowering her head, she went back to twirling her pasta, amazed to find herself fighting a curious sense of loss. She'd been seriously considering having sex with Taylor—given it a lot of thought. Not that she'd made her mind up, but still… She was already chiding herself for being a idiot, when she felt two warm fingers lift her chin. Then two serious eyes, the color of rain-soaked grass, sought her own.

"Maybe I should clarify. I don't want to have sex with you, Willow. I want to make love with you. Long, leisurely, exhausting love. Love so hot the heat will last into the next century. But, unlike our French friend, Henri, I don't just want your body. I want more, much more." He pulled his hand back, held her eyes, then let his gaze sweep her mouth. Her lips trembled slightly. "And right now, I want to kiss you. I want to kiss you so bad, I ache. And I think that's what you want, too."

Willow's throat was dry, cramped with fear and need. She was hot and her eyelids were prickling. She couldn't describe what was happening in her stomach. Crazy. Mad. She had to think. There was no doubt in her mind, no doubt at all. This was the one. Her mother's sad voice…

You'll see, Willy. Someday he'll find you, and all your fancy arguments will crumble.

His electric gaze was still on her when she found her voice. "I, uh... excuse me. I'll be right back."

 

 

 

Chapter 6

 

"So the coward returns."

Taylor's words leaped from the blackness like sparks from an anvil. Willy stopped in her tracks, sandals hanging in one hand, bag in the other. What was he doing on her sofa? Two more steps and she'd have been sitting on him.

"It's four in the morning, Taylor. Why aren't you in bed?"

"I am in bed," he said. "Did you hear what I said?"

"I heard you." She couldn't see him, but she heard the creak of springs when he sat up. She blinked when he turned on the lamp beside the sofa even though the bulb was of such low wattage it barely cast shadows. She dropped her shoes on the floor and her bag on the nearby table.

Taylor ran a hand through his hair and looked up at her. "Then why don't you answer me?"

"It wasn't exactly a question. Besides you're right. I
am
a coward—figured
that
out two minutes after I left the restaurant." She slumped into the chair directly across from him and began unplaiting her braid. There was a tiny coffee table between them. Taylor's shadow darkened its surface when he leaned forward to reach for his abandoned beer. Willy finished with her hair, shook it out, and started picking at the frayed upholstery on the arm of her chair. "I'm sorry I skipped. I really am. I shouldn't have done that, left you there. If nothing else, it was rude."

"Hear. Hear," Taylor agreed, draining the beer. "What I don't get is why you ran off. It was you who wanted to talk. Right?" He looked to her for confirmation.

"Right," she nodded miserably.

"So?"

"So what?" she mumbled.

Taylor let the air out of his lungs in one long, exasperated rush, got to his feet, and came around the coffee table. She heard the empty beer can roll to the floor.

The next second he pulled her out of her chair and up against his hard body. "You're making me crazy. So if talking's off the table, why don't we try it my way?"

His mouth came down on hers. She had no time to breathe. All she could do was feel the wall of Taylor's bare chest, the surging strength of it pressed to her breasts, his firm hands on her shoulders. His mouth was stern, tense with frustration, and his fingers bit into her upper arms as if he expected her to pull away. But Willy knew it was too late for that, and when her hands, lodged tightly between their straining bodies, began seeking space to creep upward to his neck, Taylor knew it too.

He eased his grip, lifted his mouth, and slanted it to settle more perfectly on hers. When her lips opened in an unmistakable invitation, he groaned, and said a silent prayer that this time she wouldn't run.

Tread carefully,
Monroe
,
and maybe you'll have a chance with this woman, this nutty, wonderful, thoroughly intoxicating woman.
Pulling back, he brushed his lips over hers, giving her room to retreat if she wanted it.

But as he reined himself in, Willow let go. It was her tongue that ran enticingly along the seam of his lips, then flicked impatiently for entry. It was her fingers that twisted into his hair, her nipples hardening against the muscles of his chest.

But when she ground herself against his thigh, against his growing heat, it was him who gasped out the words, "Whoa... hold it here."

His hands reclaimed her upper arms, and he took a step back. Never had retreat been so painful. Every nerve, every muscle, every male instinct in his body fought him.

He swore softly and she looked up at him, her eyes dazed, then disappointed. Taylor's smile was shaky. "I'm getting that you're trying to tell me something. Am I right?"

Willow gazed at him as if through a fog, but her words were clear. "I guess so."

The vagueness of her answer made him frown.
Not good enough. Not nearly good enough.

"I think I want to... I guess we should, you know, do it!"

I think, I guess!
He let his hands drop from her arms.

"What's the matter? Don't you want to?"

"You mean don't I want to
do it?"
The high school language threw him off stride.

She gave him a nervous look and nodded.

"No. I don't want to
do it."
His denial swung in his head like a bell without a clapper.

"Oh…"

"What I want is to make love to you—with you. I want… oh, forget it." Desire clawed at him like a caged beast. Sure he wanted her—his body might as well have been a Times Square billboard announcing that fact. The adolescent in him was all for just
doing it
, finding a necessary release, but the man hesitated, oddly tenuous and uncertain. The truth was he wanted her to want him as much as he wanted her, and deep in his sex-addled brain fear hunched in a corner telling him that would never happen.

So quit playing with her, Monroe, before you're in over your head.

"But I don't want to forget it." Willow said the words so softly he almost missed them. "I want to make love with you, too, but I... I, uh, didn't know how to say it. I've never said it before. Mostly I'm too busy analyzing and second-guessing myself. But not tonight." She reached for his hand. "Tonight I want the kind of love you want. Hot. Leisurely and exhausting—like you said. I want you to break me in and wear me out, Monroe. Can you do that?"

His chest took the sexual punch. His lungs constricted, her words overwhelming him. She'd offered him everything. Almost. His libido was in chaos. The words
go easy, go easy
thrummed in his head like a chant. A warning for him or Willow. He didn't know. And at this point, didn't give a damn.

"Are you sure."

"Yes. Very."

"And afterward?"

She hesitated. "Don't know. Can we figure that out…afterward. See how we feel." Another bit of silence. "I do want this, Taylor."

She'd given him an
afterward
. For a man grasping for a grain of sand to stand on, it would do.

Before he could speak, she said, "I've shocked you,"

"Hell, I've been in a state of shock since we met. You're not the most predictable female I've ever met."

"You want me then?"

He pulled her flush to his aching erection. "More like need, Willow." He took her hand and placed it against his heart. "But what's up here is more like—"

Willow hastily clamped her hand over his mouth. He saw panic in her eyes. "For now let's stick to the, uh, lower down problem. Okay?"

Taylor grasped the hand covering his mouth, kissed it, even as he smiled. "For someone so new at this, you do have a way with words."

"I might lack experience, but I'm no shrinking violet."

"Thank God," he murmured, and taking her head between his hands, he lifted her face to his. "Thank God," he whispered again as his mouth found hers with a kiss hot enough to warp steel.

Willow folded into him, her heart stopped, breath gone, will tattered. Her tongue danced with his, and the heat of it awed them both. As one, they shuddered and parted.

Willy started to pull her dress off her shoulder.

"What are you doing?" he asked.

"I'm taking off my clothes. It is a prerequisite, isn't it?"

"Too bad you're such a shy little thing."

Her smile was both impudent and confident. "According to Henri, I've got nothing to be shy about."

He stayed the hand pulling at the dress. "On that score Henri is right, but there are some things a man would rather do himself."

"Oh. Right." She made a grimace. "Trying too hard, huh?"

"You're nervous."

"I'm not—"

He touched her lips to silence her and ran a hand up to her shoulder, returning the dress to its previous position. "You
are
nervous—and so am I. The difference is I've been down this road before."

"Would that be a back lane or Route 66?"

"Funny." He rubbed a thumb across her lower lip.

Willow smiled. "Pretty sure of yourself, aren't you?"

"Sure of myself, yes. You, no. You scare the hell out of me."

"Good. I wouldn't want it any other way." She wrapped her arms around his neck, pressed her long body to his, and smiled into his eyes. "Now, how about we test drive all that confidence of yours."

Taylor kissed her again, his mouth sweeping over hers with only whispers of seduction. His arms encircled her, held her close. Close enough their heartbeats were one. Rapid and pounding. The kiss was leisurely, his mouth coaxing as if he had all the time in the world.

Never had a kiss done such crazy things to her. Never had she been in a man's arms wanting more. And more.

She inhaled the subtle scent of his aftershave, leaves and leather, the even subtler scent of him. Taylor the man. Indefinable. With a soft murmur he moved his mouth to her throat, her ear. This was where her brain cut out, where she bent her head, exposing more of her neck—even as her knees went molasses soft.

Gently he drew her arms from around his neck.

"Not here." His voice had a new husky quality.

Weak from his kisses, she took a deep breath and followed him to the bedroom. Two steps in and her yellow-belly brain kicked in, started firing thoughts at her like shrapnel. Negative analytic thoughts. She fought back.

This is the right thing to do, so you can just shut up. I've thought it through. No need for second guesses. It's the right time. The right place and—oh boy, is it the right man! I couldn't not do this if I tried. It's not as if I've fallen in love with him or gotten all gaga. I only want him—temporarily. I can handle this. Brain sneered and said, you're being a dumbass, but go ahead. We'll deal with it later.

For a second, she tensed, and Taylor, sensing it, stopped near the foot of the bed.

"Second thoughts?" He lifted one brow to look at her.

Other books

The Daughter by Jane Shemilt
The Case Against Satan by Ray Russell
Flicker by Thornbrugh, Kaye
Everything I Don't Remember by Jonas Hassen Khemiri
Midnight All Day by Hanif Kureishi
Swimming Lessons by Mary Alice Monroe
The Nascenza Conspiracy by V. Briceland