She couldn’t have looked him in the eye if her career depended on it. Her gaze wandered a slow path upward from his long feet to his lightly furred calves. His muscular thighs to his…swimsuit. The rippled plane of his stomach to tightened male nipples.
A memory of tasting his flesh in that very spot prompted her to lick her lips.
“Mitch.” She breathed the word, unable to find her voice now that she stared into familiar gray eyes that had long dominated her fantasies.
“Hello, Tessa.” His voice raked over her senses like fingernails on a lover’s back. “Welcome back.”
The steam from the hot tub seemed to kick up a few sultry degrees. It took all of Tessa’s restraint not to loosen the belt of her trench coat.
“I didn’t expect you here until tomorrow,” she remarked, wishing she hadn’t allowed herself such a long survey of him. She’d already catalogued way too many enticements. “I thought you moved to Tahoe,” she blurted, needing to fill the sexually charged air around them with something besides her heavy breathing.
He grinned as he bent to retrieve her fruit. “Been checking up on me?”
Heat climbed her cheeks. He still possessed that slow, sexy smile. The one that had made her heart do back flips and her mouth go dry.
“Hardly.” She knelt beside him and carefully avoided any random hand brushing as they picked up her oranges and put them in the sack. “I read about your accident in the papers, and they mentioned you were moving back to the States to recover.” She wouldn’t mention she’d scanned several articles to glean that much information, or that she’d been panicked when she heard he’d taken a bad fall down some Alpine mountain. “Are you okay?”
Now that they’d finished gathering her oranges, she and Mitch both stood.
Tessa tried not to stare at the broad expanse of his glistening chest.
“I’m better now that you’re here.” He reached for a towel and slung it around his waist. “Shall we head over to my office to talk?”
She had no choice but to agree. If they were going to plow through a week’s worth of business, she couldn’t afford to avoid him. But the temptation of she and Mitch in a private place sounded very dangerous for her dare…and her peace of mind. “I’m ready when you are.”
Closing her eyes to shut out visions of Mitch’s tanned skin, she sent up a prayer for some major inhibitions.
MITCH THANKED GOD he’d found a towel when he had, or Tessa would have seen rapid evidence of just how much he still wanted her.
He hadn’t expected her until tomorrow or he never would have let her catch him lazing in the hot tub with the latest batch of bubbleheaded college girls to descend on the hotel. He’d snuck in when the pool was empty to give his knee some much needed therapy time. Could he help it if the coed crowd cornered him?
Some timing for Tessa’s arrival.
He took her elbow and propelled her forward through the bar before she had a chance to protest. He had to do something to break that provocative, lingering stare of hers—the one that turned him on as much as if she’d touched him.
Even now, electricity zinged from her body to his hand, no matter how slight his touch.
She pivoted on her heel, swinging the sack of oranges into his shin. “Sorry!” She flashed him an apologetic smile.
He relieved her of the bag before she hurt someone.
“Those are for you, anyway,” she informed him as she handed over the fruit. “Sort of a hello from the Sunshine State.”
The Sunshine State had already been more than generous to him today. “Thank you.” He took a step forward, eager to retire to the privacy of his office.
Not that he minded traipsing around the Hearth-side in swim trunks—it certainly wouldn’t be the first time—but he wanted to go somewhere quiet to talk to her, stare at her, convince her to have dinner with him…
She didn’t follow his lead. Her feet remain rooted to the hardwood floor. “Would you rather just wait to talk until tomorrow?”
He shook his head. “Now is a great time.”
Those bright green eyes of hers took a quick voyage south. “Wouldn’t you like to, um, dress?”
He bit back a grin and the urge to give her the extended tour. “Only if you find me a distraction.”
She straightened, then charged down the hall ahead of him in a staccato of clicking heels. “Not in the least.”
He didn’t know how she knew where she was going, but Mitch walked behind her, enjoying the view.
He’d bet Mogul Ryders she still had a killer body under that monstrous trench coat. Trim little ankles peeked out from the long hem. The belt around her middle nipped a tiny waist. Her face was more interesting than pretty, with full lips and a slight crook in her freckled nose. But somehow it all worked. She was the hottest thing Mitch had laid eyes on since she’d skipped out of his life nearly a decade ago.
He also happened to know she was a single woman, courtesy of her boss at Westwood. He’d been absurdly glad to learn that piece of information.
Not that he had any intention of claiming her forever. He wasn’t any closer to being the stable kind of guy she wanted now than he had been eight years ago.
Still, he couldn’t help but hope he could claim this next week.
She paused outside his door and stared at the brass nameplate. “They let you put the name on the door?”
He opened the door to usher her inside. “What do you mean they? I bought this place two years ago.”
She gaped at him while he edged past her. “You own the Hearthside?”
“Long way up from pro-shop manager, huh?” He had to laugh. He still couldn’t believe he’d wrangled this prime piece of real estate from its former owner. But he had, and this business belonged to him as much as Mogul Ryders.
“I’ll say. Congratulations.” A new light glimmered in her green eyes. Respect. “I never would have taken you for the type of person who would spend enough time in one place to run a hotel.”
That single comment brought back a wealth of memories on why they hadn’t stayed together. He flipped on his computer screen and avoided her gaze. “A management group takes charge when I travel.”
“Oh.” She apparently thought his globe-trotting ways were as irresponsible as ever.
He flicked on the gas fireplace to heat the rooms. The temperature had definitely dropped a couple of degrees since they’d walked in his office. He thought of other, more pleasurable ways to generate some warmth, but they had to talk business first. With more than a little regret, he reminded himself he needed her brains more than her body.
For now.
“Have a seat.” He pulled a dry towel off the back of his desk chair and flung it on the seat so his suit didn’t soak the upholstery. “I appreciate you coming up here, Tessa. When I started searching for marketing help, I wasn’t expecting to find you. You’ve sure made your mark.”
Tessa had told him eight years ago that she wouldn’t travel with him because she wanted to do just that. Make her mark. He wondered if she was happy now that she’d achieved her goal.
She folded her coat carefully around her and took a seat across from him. “I travel a lot for my job. The trip wasn’t a problem.”
“I mean because of our history.” He wasn’t willing to act as if nothing had happened between them. She’d affected him too much for that.
Her eyes widened just a little, but she maintained her cool. “I assumed it wouldn’t be an issue.”
“Great. How about we get together for dinner later and we’ll go over Mogul Ryders’ business plan?”
She opened her mouth, but no words issued forth. On the second try, she managed, “Tonight?”
“The sooner the better, don’t you think?”
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