Best of all, it smells incredible.
“Mr. Hunter, so good to see you again. Your usual table?”
“Not tonight, Stephen. The lady and I would like some privacy. Is station twelve available?”
“It is,” Stephen says, and he leads us to a round booth in the back of the restaurant from which we can see the rest of the room, and yet we still feel secluded. It is, I think, the perfect date table.
Ryan orders wine and oysters on the half shell, and Stephen nods in acknowledgement before leaving us alone.
“If this isn’t your table,” I begin as soon as Stephen is out of earshot, “where do you usually sit with your women?” I add a teasing quality to my voice, but the truth is that I want to know. I am not jealous—not really. But my curiosity borders on intense.
“I’ve never brought a woman here,” he says.
“Because you’re always working when you come to Starfire?”
“No,” he says. “I have access to the suite anytime.”
“Oh,” I say, finding that tidbit of information extremely fascinating.
He leans over and brushes a kiss over my lips. “I haven’t brought a woman,” he says, “because there’s never been a woman I wanted to bring.”
I force myself not to grin like a fool. After all, Ryan’s dating history shouldn’t be of any interest to me. Not now. Not with me just days away from returning to Texas.
All true, and yet I can’t deny the fingers of delight that dance along my spine, making my body tingle with the knowledge that, at least as to this one small thing, I am unique and special to him.
I clear my throat so as not to show my pleasure. “I didn’t realize you’d been celibate before me,” I tease.
“Are you fishing, Ms. Archer?” he asks. “Should I be flattered?”
I frown. “Flattered?”
He slides his hand along my leg, making the silk of the dress rub provocatively over my skin. “That you’re jealous of the other women I’ve dated.”
I lick my lips, my legs now warm, my sex now tingling. “We’re not dating.”
“You’re right. I’ll rephrase. Are you jealous of the other women I’ve fucked?”
What the hell, I think, and then answer. “Yes,” I say boldly. “I am.”
His smile is triumphant. “Good.” He tightens his fingers on my thigh then leans over and kisses my cheek. “I’ll tell you a secret, kitten. I’ve been with a lot of women. You’re the only one who has truly gotten under my skin.”
I feel a rush of cold at his words, like a victim going into shock. I don’t think this is fear, though. I think it is hope. Sweet, delicious, terrifying hope. “Be careful,” I say quickly before he has the chance to study my silence. “You’re going to break the rules. You’re going to knock me off-kilter.”
“I wouldn’t dream of it,” he says. “But I wonder if I should be the one who’s jealous?”
“Maybe you should,” I say flippantly. “I’ve fucked a lot of men.”
The words come easily. Hell, he’s easy. Maybe it’s because I know that this is a temporary thing that will end when we reach Dallas. Maybe it’s because he’s Ryan.
Maybe it’s because we started as friends even if, in some secret deep part of myself, I want to end up so much more. All I know is that this is comfortable.
He is studying my face, his expression inquisitive. “How many of them meant something to you? These men you fucked?”
“Three,” I say easily. “The first because he was a genuine friend, and we never should have been so stupid. The second I thought was real, but I was mistaken. I thought he broke my heart, but all he really did was wound my pride.”
“Your friend Ollie,” he says. “And the second is the asshole movie star?”
“Yup. Bryan Raine. Creep extraordinaire.”
“And the third?”
I look at him, but I don’t answer. Instead I just smile and sip my wine.
I think he understands, but his expression is almost sad when he says, “You burn through men like you’re on a quest, kitten. What is it you expect to find?”
I shake my head. “I don’t know,” I say. What I want to say is you.
A waitress arrives with a bottle of wine, and after Ryan samples it, she pours us each a glass. I desperately want a sip, but before I can take one, Ryan twines his fingers with mine. “Maybe you don’t need Texas or your plan. Maybe you just need to find a man who grounds you.”
“Maybe.” I shrug. “I don’t know. I make bad choices.”
“In the past, yes,” he says. “But how long are you going to keep using that excuse as a Band-Aid on your fear?”
My head snaps up. “I’m not afraid.”
“The hell you’re not. You’re afraid of me. You’re afraid of staying.”
I look away because he is right. “That’s different.”
He doesn’t answer, probably because he knows that he’s right, and my excuse is just bullshit.
I tug my hand free and then sip my wine.
“My looks are the thing that scare me the most,” I say. It’s not the kind of thing I usually share, but I want so much to be close to this man. Foolish, since I’m about to leave him, but I can’t argue with what I want.
His smile is sweet and genuine. “There’s nothing scary about your looks, kitten.”
I return the smile because I know he’s just putting me at ease. “I know you think I’m pretty,” I say.
“Beautiful,” he corrects.
“All right. I don’t mind that either because I really do believe you see me. But most people...” I trail off with a shrug. “I used to be afraid that no one saw me at all. They just saw the trappings.” I take another sip of wine. “I got hurt by a lot of guys once I realized they didn’t give a crap about what was in my head. They only wanted my face and my tits and my body on their arm.”
He reaches for my hand, then squeezes.
I shrug. “It’s okay. I figured it out fast enough. And then I turned it around. Turned it into a tool. They never saw the real me anyway, so I finally decided that if I had it, I might as well use it.” My smile is thin. “I believe in being pragmatic.”
“Maybe so, but there is no escaping reality. And the reality is that you are beautiful. It’s not a curse. It’s not a tool. I’ve seen some of the pictures Nikki has taken of you. And captured on camera, you are truly exceptional. But it’s not because you have those incredible cheekbones or the kind of mouth a guy wants to see wrapped around his cock,” Ryan says, making me smirk. “You have a light, Jamie. You shine. You walk into a room and—”