Charlie All Night. Jennifer Crusie

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Charlie All Night - Jennifer Crusie Mills & Boon M&B

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in to dinner. Wonderful seeing you again, Mark.”

      Mark leaned forward to kiss her goodbye, and she tripped backward to get away from him.

      Charlie caught her. “Falling for me all over again, huh?” He tightened his arm around her automatically. Allie was soft and round against his shoulder, and she smelled like flowers. He was in no hurry to let go. “Try to restrain yourself,” he told her. “We’re in public.”

      She looked into his eyes and swallowed hard. “It’s your animal magnetism. I’m restrained now. You can let go.”

      “I don’t think so,” he said, and kissed her.

      He’d only meant to kiss her quickly and let her go, mostly to annoy Mark and, all right, because she had a great mouth. But she clutched at him in surprise and fell into his arms so the kiss was a lot more than he’d planned, a lot more warmth and softness and weight, and her mouth was cool and sweet from the cream. He was a little dizzy by the time he remembered where he was and came up for air.

      “What are you doing?” Allie sounded more breathless than annoyed when she pulled away from him.

      “Making my move. Come back here.” Charlie reached for her, and she stepped back.

      Mark looked disgruntled. “Well, really, Allie, you’re in public.”

      “That’s lust.” Charlie smiled at him happily. “She can’t keep her lips off me.” Allie took another step back, and Charlie stood up to follow her. “Well, it looks like we’re moving on,” he told Mark. “Tell Lisa we said hi.”

      When they were in the hallway, Allie shook her head. “Who are you really? Satan? I’m being punished, right?”

      “I’m Charlie Tenniel.” He held out his hand. “I work with that stuffed shirt you used to date. I assume all you did was date. I’d hate to think that any woman I’d kissed in a bar actually went to bed with somebody like that.”

      She looked down at his hand and sighed. Then she took it and shook it once and dropped it. “I’m Alice McGuffey, your producer at WBBB. It was nice meeting you, and thank you very much for helping me with Mark, but I have to go now. We can talk again tomorrow at the station.”

      She turned to go into the restaurant, and Charlie stepped around her to block her. The last thing he wanted now was to get dumped. There were too many things Allie could tell him about the station. He could probably get the information from other people, but other people didn’t have Allie’s voice. Or Allie’s mouth. “Where are you going?”

      “To dinner.” Allie gestured to the dining room. “With my dinner date. The only perfect man I know.”

      “Ah.” Charlie nodded at her encouragingly. “Your father. We should meet so he can see the kind of guy you’re working with.”

      “No.”

      “No, he shouldn’t see?”

      “No, he’s not my father.”

      “No?” Charlie thought faster. “Gee, I’ve never met a perfect man.” He tried to look wistful. “I’ve always wanted a role model.”

      Allie looked at him with disapproval, but he smiled at her and finally she gave up. “Okay, I owe you. You want to eat dinner with Joe and me? If you can’t, it’s perfectly all right.”

      “Thank you.” Charlie held the door to the restaurant open. “I can’t wait to meet Joe, the perfect man.”

      “Terrific,” Allie said.

      Charlie followed her into the restaurant, a big room with too much mahogany and not enough light. Allie looked around the dimness and then smiled when a man across the room stood up and waved at her.

      Charlie narrowed his eyes a little. This guy might actually be the perfect man. He was tall, even taller than Charlie’s six-two, and classically handsome without being obnoxious about it. His jaw was strong, his blond hair gleamed, his blue eyes were warm and the smile he had for Allie was real and loving.

      “Your brother?” Charlie asked, and Allie said, “No,” and walked away from him. He followed her, trying to find something about Joe that wasn’t perfect and feeling vaguely annoyed.

      Allie introduced them at the table. “Joe, this is Charlie Tenniel, the new ten-to-two DJ. I’m producing his show.”

      “I heard. Karen called.”

      Joe shot Allie a look that appeared to be sympathy, but Allie had already turned back to Charlie. “Charlie, this is Joe Ericson, my roommate. He’s the station’s accountant.”

      She sounded like a well-behaved child, but she didn’t look like one. Charlie began to wonder what Allie was like when she wasn’t behaving well in public. No. That sort of thought would add those complications he’d been avoiding.

      “Charlie Tenniel.” Joe’s smile was open and admiring as he held out his hand. “Are you the one they call Ten Tenniel?”

      Ouch. He hated lying, but it was better than “No, that’s my brother, the drug-dealing DJ.” He shook his head. “Call me Charlie.”

      Joe kept going. “I’ve heard about you. I’ve got a friend down in Lawrenceville who was very upset when you disappeared. I’m looking forward to hearing you myself now.”

      His smile was genuine, and Charlie liked him.

      “Who in Lawrenceville?” Allie had already seated herself and picked up the menu. “I’m starving.”

      Joe sat down next to her. “Rona. Remember? From that seminar we took?”

      Charlie took the chair across from her so he could watch her.

      “Right. You kept in touch with Rona?” Allie ran her finger down the menu list. “Pasta.”

      “I keep in touch with everybody.” Joe tapped Allie’s menu. “Not pasta. I’ll do pasta tomorrow night. Get something here that’s a pain in the butt to make. You like pasta, Charlie?”

      Charlie started. Joe and Allie were so in sync in their conversation, he was a little surprised to be suddenly included. “Yep.”

      “Come to dinner tomorrow night.”

      Charlie beamed his best smile at him. “Thanks.” Another contact at the station. First Allie, then Mark, now Joe. And he’d only been in town a couple of hours. God, he was good.

      Allie glared at Joe.

      Joe mock-glared back. “Don’t look at me like that. I want to get to know Ten Tenniel.”

      “Charlie,” Charlie said. “Just call me Charlie.”

      ALLIE WASN’T SURE how she felt about Charlie. He’d done a nice job of saving her from Mark, but he’d laughed the whole time he was doing it, which made her feel like a dweeb. Of course, he had a point: panic was not a good look for her. Don’t do that again, she told herself and turned back to the problem at hand.

      She

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