A Memorable Man. Joan Hohl

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act of discarding her napkin.

      After signing the check and tipping the waiter, Adam escorted Sunny from the restaurant and directly to the elevators.

      In a silence fraught with questions, doubts and a building desire he could not deny, Adam stood beside her during the brief ascent to his floor and walked beside her along the hallway to his suite.

      Tension crawled along his nervous system as he pulled shut the door behind them, enclosing them in privacy. A wry smile touched his lips at the thought that at least the bed wasn’t the first thing they saw on entering the sitting room.

      “Very nice,” she murmured, glancing around the room before raising teasing eyes to his. “Do you always take a suite of rooms when you travel?”

      “No.” Adam shook his head. “I usually don’t spend enough time in the room to care, either way. I took this suite simply because it was all that was available.” He flicked a hand to indicate the cozy grouping of settee and two chairs. “Make yourself comfortable.”

      “In a moment,” she said, tossing her cape over the back of a chair as she crossed to the wide window, framed by the open drapes. “The pool area looks rather desolate,” she observed, turning her head to smile at him. “Doesn’t it?”

      “Yeah,” he agreed, wondering how much time she would waste on small-talk inanities before getting around to meaningful explanations. “But, then, despite the mild weather, it is December, isn’t it?”

      “Yes.” She turned her back on the window, as if dismissing the scene beyond the pane. “Less than two weeks to go until Christmas.”

      “Hmm.” Adam nodded; one subject closed. “May I get you a drink? There’s a good selection in the mini bar.”

      Sunny started to shake her head no, then appeared to change her mind. “Yes, why not. I have a lot to tell you. It’ll keep my throat moist. I’ll have the white wine...” She paused to smile. “You may have the red.”

      So, she wasn’t planning to procrastinate, he thought, going to the small drinks cabinet while Sunny settled into one corner of the settee. Breaking the seal, he unlocked the cabinet, removed two small bottles, then emptied the contents into the stemmed glasses set on a tray atop the cabinet.

      After handing one of the glasses to her, he settled into the other corner of the settee.

      The way Sunny sat, knees together, legs turned into the settee, gave him a tantalizing view of her shapely calves and trim ankles, revealed by the gap in her side-slit skirt. The sight both excited and amused Adam. Here he was, unbelievably turned on by the everyday look of a woman’s legs below the knee. Incredible.

      “Your health,” he murmured. Suddenly very thirsty, he raised the glass to her before bringing it to his lips to sample the dark red liquid.

      “And yours,” she said, following his example.

      Adam was barely aware of her response; he was too distracted by the sudden realization of having chosen the wine, a cabernet this time, instead of his normally preferred can of light beer.

      Weird. And yet...

      The astounding thing was, he found himself savoring the rich, full-bodied flavor of the wine.

      Weird, indeed. But then, weird seemed par for the course ever since his first encounter with Sunny, when she had appeared to recognize him and called him Andrew.

      Sunny took a sip of her wine, then glided the tip of her tongue over her upper lip.

      A deliberate, seductive maneuver? Adam wondered. A flickering coil of heat in the foundation of his manhood gave ample evidence that if it was a deliberate ploy, it had definitely succeeded. He was experiencing the discomfort to prove it.

      “Before I begin,” she began, “I would like you to answer a question for me.”

      What game was she playing, anyway? Adam took another swallow of his wine to conceal his cynical smile.

      Nevertheless, cynicism or not, he decided to play along with her—for the moment.

      “Ask anything you like,” he invited expansively. “I have nothing to hide.”

      If Sunny noticed the emphasis he’d placed on the “I,” she chose to ignore it.

      “From your mention of friends having recommended restaurants to you and your reaction to the wagon on the street earlier, I presume that this is your first visit to the restored area of Colonial Williamsburg.” She raised her delicately arched eyebrows. “Am I correct?”

      “Yes.” He frowned. “Why?”

      “And...” She smiled. “You’re obviously alone.”

      “Yes.” His frown deepened. “Why?”

      “That’s what I’m getting at.”

      “Excuse me?” Adam made a production of exhaling. “I’m afraid I missed something. You want to back that up and run it by me again?”

      “You are here alone.”

      Impatience scraped against Adam’s nerves. “I thought I had made that clear.” His voice and the muscles in his jaw were tight. “Yes, I am alone.”

      “Why?”

      When had their roles switched? Adam asked himself, striving to hang on to control. When had Sunny become the interrogator and he the interrogatee?

      “Why am I alone?” His voice had a grating edge.

      “Why are you here... alone.” Sunny gave a quick impatient shake of her head. “Why did you come here alone?”

      Good question, Adam conceded. Too bad he didn’t have a good answer. He pondered a response for a moment, then with a mental shrug, decided to go with the unvarnished truth, odd as it might sound.

      “Believe it or not, I’m here, at this family time of year, because of a whim.”

      “A whim,” she repeated, her wry tone giving evidence of disbelief. “Of course.”

      “A whim,” he repeated, adamantly.

      “You have no family?”

      “Yes, I have family,” he answered. “Two brothers and a sister, all younger and all unmarried...” He paused a beat before adding, “As I am.”

      “No wife or significant other?”

      “No wife or significant other,” he echoed, grimacing at the current term for girlfriend or lover. He hesitated, almost afraid to ask the next logical question, yet aware he had to know the answer. “Do you have family somewhere, your parents, siblings...a husband?”

      “Parents, yes, and a brother and sister, both older, both married, with one child apiece, all living in northern California.”

      “No husband?” He arched his brows. “Or significant other in your life?”

      “No.”

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