Pink Champagne (4 page)

Read Pink Champagne Online

Authors: Nicole Green

#

After Caleb dressed, he joined them in the living room.

Just when she’d been thinking of hot guys and leaving them
be
, there was enemy-to-her-defenses-number-one. Quenby hoped her guilty conscience wasn’t written all over her face. Ever since he’d come out of the bathroom, she’d been picturing the two of them showering together. Her soapy hands running across his chest and down, down…Him lifting her onto his hips. Her wet legs wrapped around his slick body. She couldn’t help herself.

“As soon as Macon gets back, we’re going to brunch,” Quenby found herself saying. “You want to go?”

Caleb’s face broke into a grin. “Sure.”

Adia threw her a look.

She smiled, shrugged, and said, “Let’s call Macon and see where she is.”

“Quenby,” Adia said.

“What?” she asked innocently. “We all have to eat.”
Among other things.

 

 

 

Chapter 5

When Macon returned to Adia’s place, they went to Restaurante Cuyo. It was an Argentinian place with a great brunch on weekends. Cuyo had fantastic mimosas, but Quenby couldn’t think about champagne at the moment.

The group sat out on the patio at a long wooden picnic table covered by a light blue and white tablecloth.
Quenby’s friend, Ron, sat next to her.
When he went to the restroom, Caleb walked around the table and slid into that space. She picked at the remains of her steak and eggs.

Quenby had invited him, and she wanted him there, but she was suddenly nervous at the thought of having a one-on-one conversation with him again. She didn’t know how to start a conversation with last night hanging between them. From what she remembered, they hadn’t had much to say to each other at the club, either. It’d been too loud, and they were—otherwise preoccupied. Or at least she’d been.

He gave her a smile that just melted her. “Hi.”

Uh-oh. Here it went. That heart dropping, sweaty, shaky kind of reaction. She swallowed hard. “Hi.”

“Sorry if I pissed you off this morning with something I said. Sometimes I think I’m funny, and I’m really not.” Everything he said was charming in that Georgian accent with that deep voice. He could have been reading the menu to her, and she would have been a puddle at his feet.

She laughed, tucking a few stray strands of hair behind her ear. “No problem.” The previous night kept coming back to her in flashes. “Did you carry me last night?”

He nodded. “From the club to your car to your condo all the way to your bed.”

“No,” she moaned, clapping a hand to her forehead. “I really am sorry about last night.”

“Why? You didn’t do anything you need to be sorry for.” He leaned toward the picnic table a little.

“I acted like a drunken sorority girl on Girls Gone Wild.”

“What’s wrong with going wild every once in a while?”

She laughed.

“You have a really pretty laugh.” His hazel eyes were intent on her.

Quenby’s heart jumped so hard, she expected it to leap right out of her chest. “Thanks.” Her face warmed, and she looked down at her hands. Her chipped thumbnail was suddenly very interesting.

“I meant what I said yesterday. That man was crazy to do whatever made you leave him at that altar. But he sure did some lucky man somewhere in your future a huge favor.”

She could barely swallow. She shifted down the bench as he moved his hand toward her shoulder.

“Quenby,” Caleb said. Her name on his lips sent chills down her spine. She looked up and forced herself to focus. That deep Southern accent was making it difficult.

“I could be a horrible person. You barely know anything about me. This is only the third conversation we’ve had.” She looked at him as if he were speaking another language.

Caleb smiled. “Fourth. And I highly doubt you’re a horrible person. But you’re right. And I was hoping we could get to know each other better. I know we don’t have very much time left, but I’d like to spend every minute of it learning about you.”

Quenby returned the smile. “Would you?”

“Yeah.”

“What would be the point? Your plane leaves in a few hours.”

He moved closer and his voice became softer. “Why does everything have to have a point?” His lips were almost at her ear when he said, “Quenby. I like it. How’d you come across that name anyway?”

Good. She could tell the story of her name.
Something to distract her from all the very dangerous feelings flooding her at that moment.
Talking in a voice that was a little too loud and a little too high, she said, “It’s always a good ice breaker, you know. My name. Anyway, when my mom was pregnant with me, she couldn’t get enough of Beverly Cleary’s Ramona Quimby novels. This grown woman, right? I guess she got book cravings in addition to food cravings. Anyway, she was completely in love with them and she really liked Ramona’s last name. So she decided to give it to me with a slight variation. And so…I’m Quenby.”

“Sounds like an interesting lady.” Caleb said. Mercifully, he pulled back a little, and she felt a little less like she was going to die if she didn’t jump into his lap. “I’d like to meet her.”

Quenby didn’t quite know what to make of that statement.
Remember, you’ll never see him again after today
, she told herself.

Caleb glanced over his shoulder. “Sorry, man, I guess I took your seat.”

Startled, she looked up. She hadn’t realized Ron had returned to the table. She’d also tuned out everyone at the table; for a moment, she’d forgotten that she and Caleb weren’t the only ones there.

“No problem. I’ll just grab a seat over there,” Ron said.

“No.” Quenby blurted it out before she could even think about
it,
earning the strange looks they both gave her. “I mean…your steak—you’re not finished.” She didn’t know if she should be left alone next to this too-attractive, smooth talking, loafers with no socks wearing man.

He chuckled. “You’re right. Can you pass me that plate, man?”

“Here, I’ll just switch ‘em across the table,” Caleb said. “Y’all excuse my momentary lapse in manners, reaching across the table like this. Don’t tell my mama, she’d kill me.” Caleb smiled at Quenby before switching the plates.

“Thanks.” Ron headed for the other side of the table.

“No problem.” Caleb turned back to Quenby. “In a hurry to get rid of me?”

“I just—um.” Quenby tried to think of something to say. “I don’t want to be in a relationship. Or date. Or any of that right now.”

“Hey. It’s cool. I understand. After all, I leave for Georgia in a few
hours .
Remember?” he said. “You just said it yourself. I just want to be a friend. A person could always use another friend, right? That’s the way I feel about it anyway.”

“Yeah.” She knew she had no business thinking about that man, but as much as she knew it, she couldn’t help thinking how nice it would be to have a friendship and so much more with Caleb.

He ran a hand through his golden hair, and she wanted her fingers running through it instead of his. She’d certainly done enough of that last night. She tried to remember if she’d asked him to sleep with her. She couldn’t remember if she had or not. Suddenly, it seemed important for her to know. Even though she dreaded getting it, she needed some idea of what kind of impression she’d given Caleb last night. “I’m surprised I didn’t find you in bed next to me when I woke up this morning.” She didn’t add that she wouldn’t have minded that.

“Really?” He tapped his long, thick fingers against the top of the table as he spoke, matching the beat to the music that spilled out of the outdoor speakers set up nearby.

“I mean
,
it’s not like you didn’t have an invitation. I don’t exactly remember making one, but I’m sure I did at some point.”

“If you were sober, it would’ve happened in a heartbeat.” He looked her dead in the eye, and her stomach dropped. “Don’t think for a minute I didn’t want to. But I don’t do things like that with women who are pass-out drunk. I want you to want me, and know you want me, and
be
aware of every second we share. When that sort of thing happens.” He reached up to caress one of her gold teardrop earrings before moving his thumb to the sensitive ridge of skin at the top of her ear. She shivered. The rest of the world dropped away. Every time he touched her, she was in greater danger of jumping into his lap.

She pushed aside thoughts of how she wanted to spend the few, precious hours between then and when Caleb had to go to the airport. No way could she let any of that happen. Those fantasies were better left in her head no matter how hard she was rebounding. And this was just rebound talk. Right?

She needed something safe to talk about. What was safe?

Luckily, Caleb came up with something. “So Adia told me this morning that you work at a community bank near downtown. You’re a branch manager?”

“Yeah.” Quenby wanted so badly to reach for him, but she knew that wouldn’t be right. “You’re, uh, you’re in school down in Georgia, right? Where?”

“I was at UGA for undergrad, and I’m at Emory now for med school.”

“How do you like it?”

A slow smile crossed his face. “It’s okay. Something to do anyway.” He reached out toward her. It seemed for a second like he was going to touch her again, but then he grabbed his fork and started tapping it against his plate.

“So what made you want to be a doctor?”

“I want to help people. I can’t remember ever wanting to be anything else to tell you the truth. It makes me feel really good when I can help other people feel better.”

A thrill went through Quenby as she remembered kissing him by the pond. He had certainly made her feel better.

“What I really want to do after school is join Doctors Without Borders.”

Quenby nodded and said, “It’s good to know what you want and go for it.

Caleb’s eyes burned into hers. “Yeah. It is.”

Quenby looked away, every inch of her on fire.

“That’s the deal I made with Dad,” he said. “He’s footing the bill for med school. I’m doing Doctors Without Borders for a few years after my residency, and then I’ll join his practice group.”

“Your dad’s a doctor, too? What kind?”

“Surgeon.”

“Wow.”

He grimaced,
then
quickly changed his expression to a smile. “He’s one of the best. Makes sure everyone knows it, too.” After a brief silence, he said, “So, how you feeling after your night last night?”

She laughed dryly. “Marvelous.” Feeling like they’d stumbled into territory they needed to escape, she decided to turn the conversation elsewhere yet again.

Sports. She always defaulted to sports. Just the way her brain worked, she guessed. Asking him what he thought of the Redskins’s new quarterback, she felt like she was out of danger.
At least for the moment.

 

 

 

Chapter 6

After brunch, the three of them went back to Quenby’s building. She’d volunteered to take them to the airport when it was time for their flight, so they decided to hang out there for a while. Macon didn’t follow Quenby and Caleb upstairs to Quenby’s condo right away; she stayed in the car a few minutes to have yet another conversation—read argument—with Adia on her phone. Whenever Macon and Adia tried to talk out their issues, things inevitably ended in a fight. Quenby had learned to leave Macon alone when it came to not getting past her breakup with Adia. It was either that or
forget
about her friendship with Macon.

Quenby unlocked the front door, and Caleb held it open for her. His arm brushed hers as he did. She tripped over her own feet stepping over the threshold. Caleb put his hand on the small of her back to steady her. She looked up at him, her heart pounding and her skin on fire from his touch even though the fabric of her blouse separated his hand from her flesh. Ever since brunch, all she could think about
was tasting
him again.

He bit his lower lip in an obvious attempt to suppress a grin. “You okay?”

“Yeah,” she murmured, stumbling away from his touch. She still couldn’t make up her mind about whether she wanted this rebound fling or not. So much could go wrong. What if she realized she wanted more than a few hours with him while he was sitting on a plane that was taking him back to Georgia? She already felt a pull to him. She should quit now while she could.

“Let’s go inside.” His voice was husky and low, and it did nothing to stop the dirty little thoughts running through her mind.

“Okay.”

Once they were inside, he shut the door behind them. He pulled a few strands of her hair between his fingers and played with them.

“I had a great time talking with you at brunch,” Caleb said, moving his other hand to the back of her neck. She shivered when he trailed his fingers over the fine hairs there.

“Caleb, this isn’t the right time for—” She broke off when his hazel eyes bore into hers.

Other books

Broken Play by Samantha Kane
Johnny Angel by Danielle Steel
Infinity by Andria Buchanan
Portrait of a Love by Joan Wolf
Prey by Stefan Petrucha
Relentless by Lynch, Karen
Mr. Right Now by Knight, Kristina
Open Water by Maria Flook