abs, she could certainly vouch for. That is, until sheâd suddenly jolted from bed.
âBelieve me. Iâd gladly trade places.â
âI wouldnât.â She heard the smile in his voice, the concern, too, but couldnât face him. âIâve done my time. Thought Iâd let you have your privacy here. You sure youâre all right now?â
She cleared her throat, her voice shaky. âIâm fine.â
âYou look kind of grayâlike a battleship.â
âHow flattering.â
But then, forget the closet mirror last night. Probably her wide behind spread over half the floor in this position. Tightening her muscles, she shot a glance in his direction. A better view, for sure. Bare chest, flat belly, jeans zipped but not snapped. And, oh dear lord, there was that heavy bulge again behind his fly. What kind of man got an erection looking at a sick woman? But Darcieâs face flushed with heat, and memory. Her own fingers twitched. She couldnât keep her hands off⦠it â¦all night. Was half a memory better than none? She couldnât recall much else.Maybe she didnât need to, and eightâpossibly nineâfully packed inches was sufficient. Or whatâs a heaven for?
Darcie groaned inwardly. Her thighs tingled. The depths of depravity to which sheâd sunk since crossing the Pacific a day agoâor was it three?âcontinued to amaze her. Thirteen-plus hours on a jet from San Francisco with a good tail wind and sheâd turned into a slut. A drunkenâ¦what was the Aussie term heâd taught her sometime during the night?⦠bit of a brothel. A mess, all right.
After this interlude on her knees, how could she feel aroused by even a sunbrowned, muscled god of an Outback male? A cowboy, no less. The sudden image of his slate-green Akubra hatâ what the hell had they done with that in the throes of their one-night stand passion? âflashed through the remnant of her mind. And she hadnât even passed the city limits of Sydney to fall under his spell.
As if he could have any interest left in her now. Sheâd picked him up in the Westin barâ¦practically dragged him to his own room. She could feel him watching her, most likely wondering whether to call the local version of those little men in the white coats. Or the vice squad. A doctorâ¦but he had his own diagnosis.
âIt must have been the beer. Youâre not pregnant. Are you?â
âPregnant? Me? â
Her gaze shot to him again. His dark eyes clear and directâno hangover for him, no matter how much he drankâhe shifted his weight against the door frame. Early sun shafted through the bedroom window that overlooked Darling Harbour blocks away, penetrated the clear glass wall into the bathroom like a lover, and gilded him in soft rose-gold light.
âI donât mean from last night, darlingââ in the mirror his eyebrows, darker than his hair, lifted ââbut what about before?â
âNot a problem, I havenât had sex since 1985.â
When she finally turned, he was scowling, perplexed. Darcie figured the teasing lie was payback for his comments about tucker.
âHow is that possible? You said you were a virgin till you were twenty-three. Six years, that would beââ
âA joke.â
âWhich thing?â
âBoth.â
He didnât look like he believed her. Not the brightest bulb in the pack, sheâd decided, but that body of his simply wouldnât give up. Maybe, after Merrick, it was enough. She stared at him, her bout of nausea forgotten, then stared some more.
To her utter disgust, fresh, fierce desire snaked through her. He followed her inspection with his eyes.
âSee something you like? Again?â
Darcie gave in. What the hell. An ounce of Scope and sheâd be good as new.
Almost.
Rising, she swished out her mouth then crossed the room to him on shaky limbs.
Eric J. Guignard (Editor)