Don't Tempt Me. Lori Foster
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“Dare I hope you’re breathless for a good reason?”
“Painting.”
Lexie blew a loud raspberry into the phone. “Not a good reason at all, damn it.”
Honor shook her head. Lexie, more than anyone else, knew just how seldom she got breathless for the “good” reason. “With all this rain I haven’t been able to get much done outside, so I’ve been painting everything inside. I have most of the rooms done now and tomorrow I’ll start on the baseboards and doorframes. I want them to be a nice, bright white.”
“Uh-huh,” Lexie said, not real excited over paint ideas. “How’s that hunky neighbor of yours?”
“Which one?”
“Love it when you play dumb.” She laughed at her own joke. “One was too young for me to reference without feeling pervy, and the other was gorgeous but a complete pill. That leaves Jason.”
“You didn’t think Jason was a pill?”
“I thought Jason was awesomely concentrated.”
True, and it had intimidated her just a little. “Well, doesn’t really matter which one you meant, because I haven’t seen any of them.”
“Then you need to break something,” Lexie suggested. “Or buy something, stand in the driveway and look helpless.”
“In the rain?”
“What’s a little rainwater if he offers his help?”
Not in this lifetime. “I don’t think so.” Honor was all about looking self-reliant, not needy. That had been her core desire all along, but now, on top of that motivation, she desperately wanted to prove Jason wrong.
Unaware of Honor’s inner turmoil, Lexie said, “Well, you could just ask for his help. I’m sure there’s something around the house that he could assist with. Maybe something in the—” fake cough “—bedroom?”
“You’re impossible. Stop trying to be my pimp.”
“Pimps get paid. I just want to see you glow.”
A crack of lightning made Honor jump. She had to admit that Jason’s warnings had her spooked. For most of her life she’d been an insomniac, but after him predicting doom and gloom and making it sound like she was a sitting duck to all sorts of despicable crimes, she could barely doze. There were a lot of unfamiliar sounds in her house and even though she’d reinforced every entry, she still went on high alert every time she heard a squeak.
“You didn’t hang up on me, did you?”
“Nope.” Honor climbed down off her stepladder and set the brush across the top of the can. “But you already know I don’t want to ask for his help.” Jason thought she was trouble, assumed she’d fail and expected her to somehow cause problems.
“C’mon, honey. Think about how much quicker you’d get things done.”
She’d also prove Jason right, that she couldn’t handle it on her own. No, thank you. “I’m happy doing it all myself.”
Lexie blew out a breath. “That’s a shame, because I was planning to visit tomorrow and lend a hand, as I’d promised. I’d have been there sooner, but we were restocking this week.”
“I don’t want to work you, but you know you’re more than welcome to visit.” Luckily Lexie lived and worked only half an hour away, in the downtown area. The salon where Honor worked was in the opposite direction, but not very far at all. “I wouldn’t mind chatting with you while I get things done.” Lexie was the ray of sunshine in her otherwise dull world.
“I promise to actually assist. What time will you get home?”
For too many years now, Lexie had been fighting her way around Honor’s barriers. She knew from experience that it did her no good to resist.
Smiling, Honor said, “Around six—” and then her phone beeped. When she glanced at the screen, dread went through her bloodstream. “Shoot, I have to go. That’s the facility.”
“Of course it is,” Lexie groused. “Don’t let them wear you out. I’ll see you tomorrow at six-fifteen.”
Honor switched over the call, and while she listened she headed to her bedroom to change. She already knew what the call meant, what she’d have to do.
Looked like she’d be making a trip out in the downpour. The painting would have to wait. It’s only paint, she reminded herself.
But it felt like so much more.
It felt like...her future.
* * *
Her curtains did nothing more than tease. Jason stood at the window, watching the storm. Or at least he had been. But as soon as Honor’s bedroom light came on, his gaze shifted from the dark sky to her shadowy form...undressing.
The woman kept the strangest damn hours, heading out for work in the early morning, coming home after six, then regularly leaving again, sometimes in the middle of the night. On the quiet street he often heard her car door open and close. Other than those times, with the storms keeping everyone inside, he hadn’t seen her.
Would her roof leak? Were the windows sealed? His gaze shifted to one of the big trees in her backyard. The wind pulled at dead branches that could do a lot of damage if they landed wrong.
So much for her to do, and yet it seemed she was never home long enough to get to any of it.
“Spying again?”
Jason didn’t bother to turn to Hogan. “It’s really coming down.”
“Right. Never knew the rain fascinated you so much.”
“The creek might flood.” He glanced at his brother, took in his clothes and knew the answer even before he asked. “Going out?”
Hogan rolled one shoulder. “Yeah.”
Running. Always running. From one meaningless date to the next. Jason understood, at least to a degree. The past year had been hard on his brother.
But damn it, it had been hard on Colt, too.
He didn’t want to judge, but right now it seemed Hogan had his head up his ass and was blind to everything except his own damaged ego. A million dates with easy conquests wouldn’t fix anything. But how did he tell Hogan that?
He couldn’t. Not yet anyway. So instead he concentrated on other, more tangible and less emotional issues. “How’d the interview go?”
“Same as the others. I’m fucked.”
It was an awkward thing, being in the position of advising his older brother. For so many years Hogan had been the settled one. Gorgeous wife, check. Awesome son, check. Nice house, nice bank account and respectable job with benefits, check.
But