Touch of Fate. A.C. Arthur

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Touch of Fate - A.C. Arthur Mills & Boon Kimani

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he finally managed when he realized he was standing like a mute.

      “I was just getting a glass of water,” she said then turned back to the cupboard where she was reaching for a glass.

      They were on the highest shelf and he thought, thank you, Lord, as the hip-riding shorts she wore over her bathing suit bottom didn’t reach upward with the rest of her body. The butterfly he’d first noticed, which was strategically located just above her buttocks, was again noticeable.

      He could hear his cousin Trent saying now, “There’s nothing hotter than a tramp stamp.” That’s what tattoos in this particular location on a female were called. And right about now, no matter how rare an occasion it was that he actually agreed with Trent, Max felt his cousin’s words were the honest truth.

      Not only was this tattoo hot, but the tight little body it was attached to was pretty damn spectacular as well. She wasn’t tall, maybe five feet four inches. But she was shaped like a woman definitely familiar with a gym. He noted her toned legs and well-defined arms. Her bottom was tight and round and his mouth was watering.

      Clearing his throat, Max reminded himself that he was thirty-five years old, not sixteen.

      “It’s late,” he said finally.

      She was turning on the faucet, sticking the glass she’d retrieved from the cabinet beneath it. Turning back to face him, she folded one arm over flat abs left bare by the bikini top she wore. Lifting the glass to her mouth she gave him a quizzical look. “I know. Couldn’t sleep. Since you’re standing down here with me at this late hour I have to conclude that you can’t either.”

      “True,” he responded with a nod. “How long have you been here? At the resort I mean, not in the kitchen?”

      She smiled and Max thought maybe the sun was coming out early.

      “Just a couple of days. I’m Deena Lakefield,” she said offering her free hand to him.

      Closing the distance between them, he took her extended hand. Petite would seem like the right word for her. Still, he had an idea there was much more to her than her slight size.

      “Max Donovan. I’ve been here a couple days, too. Wonder why we haven’t met before now.”

      She shrugged. “I’ve been working a lot from my room.”

      “What type of work do you do?”

      She paused, like she was considering her answer, then with a tilt of her head said, “I’m a writer.”

      “Really?” He would have placed her in media or something where she could talk and smile. It seemed she liked to do both. He liked to see and hear her do both. “What do you write?”

      Her brown eyes brightened, her grin going from cordially nice to sensually soft. “Romance,” she said, her voice lowering slightly. “Know anything about that subject, Max Donovan?”

       Chapter 2

      Was she flirting with him?

      Of course she was. He was, hands down, the finest man she’d ever seen. And because she’d gotten into boys early—at around ten was when she had started noticing the opposite sex—she’d seen her fair share of good-looking men.

      But this man was like a walking god. All right, that was probably cliché, she’d blame that on the romance writer’s mind. Still, she couldn’t argue the facts.

      He was tall—damn, she loved tall men—over six feet, like a good couple of inches above it, she concluded. His skin was the color of melted caramel, his eyes some dreamy toss-up between green and gray. It was hard to tell in this kitchen with the not-so-great lighting. He was muscled and sculpted and just basically existing as if he were meant to be painted, put in a frame and thoroughly enjoyed. His hair was great, she surmised immediately. Thick, a sandy-brown color and long. Not down his back long, but not close-cropped either. Actually, it looked as if he may have at one point had dreads or twists, because the two- to three-inch length looked wavy and soft. That was really the clincher for her since her own hair was worn in shoulder-length twists. She loved natural styles and applauded men for stepping outside the box and wearing their hair differently as well.

      She wanted to lick him, like a caramel lollipop. That made her sound like a slut with a sweet tooth.

      Yet, it was so true.

      Standing here in this old-fashioned kitchen with its linoleum floor and Formica countertops with the moonlight spilling through the windows was the perfect prelude to hot summer sex.

      And her imagination was on total overload.

      “You write romance novels? Hmm, wouldn’t have pegged you for the fairy-tale type.”

      He was talking.

      Stop ogling him and talk maturely, she warned herself.

      “Why? What’s wrong with fairy tales?”

      “Reality’s better,” he said and she knew he was being honest. She liked that in a man.

      “A fairy tale can happen in real life. It’s all about the imagination. Prince Charming can come in many forms, a millionaire businessman, a talented NBA player, a suit-and-tie corporate type, the cable guy,” she said, ticking off her answers with her fingers.

      He smiled. His eyes changed when he did, becoming a little lighter, she thought.

      “Come on, would you really consider the cable guy a Prince Charming?”

      “If he provided the heroine with everything she needed or desired, yes. It’s not about the wrapping, it’s what’s beneath that makes the package worth while.”

       There, chew on that a minute, Mr. Nonbeliever.

      He shrugged. “Okay, I guess you can rationalize your opinion. So what brings you here? Are you from South Carolina?”

      “No.”

      “I didn’t think so. No Southern accent.”

      “I’m from New York. My family runs an art gallery there.” She wasn’t sure why she’d told him this. She never used her family background to impress men. Ever. Was she trying to impress him?

      “What do you do, Max?” she asked, loving the way his name rolled off her tongue.

      “I’m in real estate,” he responded. Then, with a nod of his head, he signaled that they should have a seat at the big table across the room.

      The chairs were wooden, as was most of the furniture here. But she liked the kitchen, with its big windows and open floor plan. Cabinets lined the better part of two walls, with windows decorated with eyelet curtains at equal intervals. The floor was bright white with little blue flowers, an old design but it worked in here. Pulling out a chair, she almost smiled at the heavy feel against her hands. Old furniture, antiques, had that feel. Weathered. Used. Loved. She liked it, so she sat down.

      “That’s a vague answer. What do you do in real estate? Buy? Sell?”

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