Pursued. Tracy Wolff

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Pursued - Tracy Wolff The Diamond Tycoons

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be standard operating procedure for him. Which was fine, she told herself, despite the sinking feeling in her stomach. One-night stands weren’t SOP for her—far from it—but that was what she’d expected, what she’d wanted, when she’d come home with him. Deciding in the middle of it that she wanted something more wasn’t okay, no matter how much pleasure he gave her or how much she enjoyed sitting here, teasing him.

      “So, favorite movie is off the table,” he said, after he poured another round of pancakes onto the griddle. “How about favorite song?”

      She forked up another bite of pancakes under his watchful eye, took her time chewing it. “What’s with all the questions?” she asked after she finally swallowed it.

      “What’s with all the evasive answers?” he countered.

      “I asked you first.”

      “Actually, if you think about it, I asked you first. About your favorite song. And I’m still waiting.”

      “You are a persistent one,” she said, narrowing her eyes at him.

      “I believe the word you’re looking for is charming.” He crossed to the fridge, took out a bottle of champagne and a quart of fresh-squeezed orange juice. “Debonair. Maybe even…sexy?”

      He wiggled his brows at her then, and it took every ounce of concentration she had not to burst out laughing. “Sexy, hmm. Maybe. And here I was thinking humble.”

      “Well, obviously. Being humble is what PR professionals the world over are known for.”

      “Is that what you are?” she asked, intrigued by the rare glimpse into his real life. “A public relations guy?” It would explain the gorgeous house and even more gorgeous artisan decorating scheme.

      He shrugged. “In a manner of speaking.”

      “That isn’t an answer.”

      He faked a surprised look as he slid a mimosa in front of her. “You don’t actually think you’re the only one who can dodge questions here, do you?”

      She did laugh then. She couldn’t help it. He really was the most charming and interesting man she had met in a very long time. Maybe ever.

      She reached for the champagne flute he’d put in front of her and took a long sip. As she did, Nic took advantage of her preoccupation and grabbed her smartphone off the counter.

      “What are you doing?” she demanded as he started pressing keys.

      “Programming my number into it, so you can call me whenever you want.”

      “What makes you think I’m going to want to call you when tonight is over?”

      He gave her what she guessed was his most unassuming look. “What makes you think you aren’t?”

      “Are we seriously going to spend the rest of the night asking each other questions and never getting any answers?”

      “I don’t know. Are we?”

      She rolled her eyes in exasperation. But before she could say anything else, his phone started buzzing from where it sat next to the stove. He made no move to answer it.

      “Aren’t you going to get that?” she asked, partly because the reporter in her wanted to know who was calling him at two-thirty in the morning and partly because he was standing just a little too close to her. They weren’t touching, but she could feel the heat emanating from his body, and it was making it impossible for her to think—and even more impossible for her to maintain the distance she was trying so desperately to cling to.

      “It’s just me, calling from your phone. So now I’ve got your number, too.” He looked her in the eye when he said it and there was something in that look, something in his voice, that made her think he meant a lot more than the ten digits that made her phone ring.

      Suddenly she was taking far too much effort not to squirm.

      She didn’t like the feeling any more than she liked the vulnerability that came with the knowledge that he could see more of her than she wanted him to. And so she did what she always did in situations like these—she went on the offensive. “What if I hadn’t planned on giving you my number?”

      He raised a brow. “You don’t want me to have it?”

      “That’s not the point!”

      “It’s exactly the point.”

      “No, it—” She cut herself off. “You’re a piece of work, you know that?”

      “I have been told that a time or two.” He paused, then said, “So I’ve got a proposition for you.”

      “Uh, no, thanks.” She moved to stand up, but he pressed her back into the seat.

      “You haven’t even heard what I was going to say.”

      “Yeah, well, when a guy says those words to a girl he hardly knows, it usually ends with her chained in a basement somewhere while he maps out patterns to make a dress from her skin.”

      “Wow!” He cracked up. “Suspicious much?”

      “I’ve seen Silence of the Lambs. I know how these things work.”

      “It appears that you do. But, sadly, I have no basement. And no handcuffs. And no deep-seated psychopathology, at least not that I know of. Also, I don’t have a clue how to sew. So, you’re probably safe.”

      “I’ll be the judge of that.” She eyed him with mock suspicion. “So what exactly is this proposition of yours?”

      “That I keep your phone number, even though you aren’t exactly overjoyed that I’ve got it. And I promise that I won’t call you until you call me first. Fair?”

      “What if I never call you?”

      “Then I’ll be very sad, but I promise I won’t bother you with harassing phone calls. Deal?”

      She thought about it for a moment, thought about whether or not she would ever want to talk to him again once this night was over. And decided, what the hell. She might as well leave the option open. If she didn’t want to use it, well, then, he was giving her the perfect opportunity to walk away, no harm, no foul.

      “Deal,” she told him.

      “Excellent.” He smiled, then reached a hand up to rub the back of his neck. Involuntarily, her eyes were drawn to his very enticing six-pack and the V-cut that peeked out of the top of his low-slung jeans. She locked her jaw and, for the second time that night, tried not to drool.

      She must not have been very successful, though, because his voice was amused a few seconds later when he asked, “See something you like?”

      “I like you.” The words were out before she had a clue she was going to say them. The second it registered that she’d actually spoken what she’d only planned to think, she clapped her hand over her mouth in horror.

      She wanted

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