Her Forbidden Crush (Love in London 2) - Page 5

She was on her back and her cute kitten pajama top had rucked up, revealing the smooth stretch of her stomach. In the bunched-up cloth he could see that a couple of pink buttons had come undone. He leaned a little closer, his eyes widening. She was literally playing peek-a-boob. Luke gritted his teeth. He shouldn’t look, he really, really shouldn’t.

Aw, hell. He was only human, wasn’t he? Yet he gazed for only a millisecond before glancing away, suddenly wishing that he could see her body in a different situation. Not surreptitiously and frankly wrong, like this. He wanted her to bare herself completely to him. For her to want to.

Her face was turned toward him, her cheeks flushed a deep pink. Her hair was swept to one side, a glorious river of color on her pillow. A sheen glimmered over all of her. Yeah, he knew she was hot in every way. Mango was nuzzled in to the curve of her hip. Damn dog. How could he be jealous of a dog?

He remembered her arrival so clearly. His parents had said they were getting an exchange student—a girl—for six months. All the way from New Zealand. He’d been completely uninterested—it wasn’t even as if she’d speak another language. He’d been hoping for some babe from Sweden or something. And then he’d seen her. Slim, slightly taller than Dani, her strawberry-blond hair swept back into a tight, high ponytail. At the airport pickup, for the briefest of seconds, her eyes had met his. Cat eyes. Green, gleaming, stunning. She hadn’t looked at him directly again—until her seventeenth birthday.

He’d been eighteen and in his last year of school—was already taking some college courses because he was so far ahead academically. He was two years older than Dani, and Lexie was right in between them. But because of the differences in their school systems, and her shyness issues, she went into Dani’s class.

At

first, he thought the attraction was because she was foreign. A novelty. But it was more than that. The more he’d gotten to know her—and that had taken some time—the more he’d been drawn to her. That gentleness in her manner, her compassion. And the humor she’d mostly kept hidden. In the end, to fight it, to cover up, he’d dated a different girl every week. Systematically working his way through the senior girls in his school—and the girls’ school down the road. Frankly, he’d been a slut.

None of them had lasted. None of them had been Lexie.

But Lexie Peterson had been out of bounds. Under his family’s roof, under his family’s protection. She was fragile, shy, sensitive. The whole reason she’d come on exchange was to build her confidence. He and Dani had been lectured—told exactly what they had to do and how to treat her. After the Ferris wheel incident, Luke hadn’t just been lectured. He’d been punished and threatened with far worse should he transgress again.

He hadn’t.

He knew she was the only child of older parents who’d kept her close. Until they realized that their darling daughter was so sheltered she was ill-equipped to deal with the real world—too timid. So, all credit to her parents, they’d bundled her off for six months to Luke’s family in Boston to have an overseas experience and gain some social confidence. For painfully shy Lexie, it had almost been too much. Luke remembered her wide eyes and pale features and the way she’d stoically tried to blink back nervous tears. But she’d bonded with Dani. At first Dani thought she had her very own doll to make over, but Lexie held her own, not letting Dani dominate. Doing that, she earned Dani’s respect and trust. They became unlikely best friends. Luke had heard them laughing so many times in their bedroom.

Seven years later, both Luke and Dani lived in London—he on an eighteen-month transfer within the global consultancy he worked for, and Dani because she’d fallen for a British guy she’d met at grad school.

And now pretty, all-adult Lexie was here too. Stirring in his bed. Gritting his teeth, Luke closed his eyes tight. He didn’t want to scare her off too soon this morning, and if she knew he’d seen her like this she’d be so embarrassed she’d scamper off faster than Mango with a cat after him.

He heard her movements as she woke. A sudden jerk bounced the bed. He tried not to smile as he imagined her expression as she’d realized she was showing some skin next to him. In seconds she’d slipped off the bed—quiet as the mouse she’d always been. Yeah, still easily embarrassed. Still completely gorgeous.

He feigned sleep for another fifteen minutes while he heard the shower run and then cease, and doors quietly open and close. Until there was no noise in the room at all. Then he got out of bed and stood in another ice-cold shower, dragged some baggy sweats over his bandaged knee, and didn’t bother with a T-shirt. He took in a deep breath before heading to the kitchen.

She was at the counter frowning at the coffee machine. She turned as he came in. He watched as color swept into her face faster than a hundred-meter-sprint star took off from the blocks. Cherry red. Excellent. He tried not to preen but he couldn’t help but be satisfied that she liked him half-naked. Yeah, it was sick how much he wanted her to want him.

“I’ll do the coffee,” he said huskily. His head had gone all woolly as he clocked her reaction.

“Thanks,” she said turning her back to him. “I’m hopeless with that machine.”

He chuckled. He’d forgotten she had a talent for killing domestic appliances. “How come you’re so good online and you can’t work gadgets?”

“Anyone can point and click. But I was really good at customer service.”

“Not too shy to talk anymore?”

“Over the phone and e-mail is easy,” she said crisply and glanced at him again. “You slept okay?”

There was still a trace of pink in her cheeks. Was she worried he’d seen her? “Like a log,” he answered honestly. “The painkillers knocked me out.”

“I’ll get out of here today then.”

Exactly what he didn’t want. “Where are you going to go?”

She swallowed.

“You can’t go to Dani,” he said calmly, handing her a cup of coffee. “She has her hands full bonding with her stepdaughter. And you admitted to me last night you don’t have any money. So admit the rest now—you don’t have anywhere else to go. Please don’t insult me by leaving.”

“You wouldn’t be insulted.”

“Absolutely I would.” He totally overdid puppy-dog eyes that would make Mango proud. “I’d be crushed.” It was no exaggeration.

She drew in a deep breath. “Just one more night. Maybe two. As soon as I get a job I’m out of here. And I’ll sleep on the sofa again.”

He chomped on the inside of his lip to stop from smiling. Like she’d slept on the sofa last night? “Sure.”

She turned toward the door. “If it’s okay with you, I’ll just grab the rest of my stuff from your room.”

As long as she was staying, anything was okay with him. Just as he’d been seven years ago, he was drawn to her expressiveness, her smile, the awareness that there was so much going on beneath her quiet exterior. This time around he wanted to get to know every last bit of her. Uh-huh, every inch. He sat at the table and poured himself a massive bowl of muesli. Maybe he shouldn’t be messing around like this, but damned if he could resist the temptation. He’d been living like a monk for months, and all work and no play made for a dull boy, didn’t it? And Lexie wasn’t the innocent she’d been back then. He’d seen that already in the way she’d sassed back at him a couple of times—and the way she’d looked at him. She could hold her own, and that made her all the more attractive. But he was going to have to be careful and make sure they were on the same page. He’d flirt and have a fling, but he was still decades off getting any woman a ring.

Twenty minutes later Lexie walked in, eyes widening when she saw him still sitting there taking his sweet time over his cereal. “You’re not going to work?”

“I’ve taken the month off, remember?” He answered in amazement. “I’m supposed to be training.”

“But you’re not anymore.”

“So you think I should just go back to work immediately? Injured and all?” Yeah, like that would be so much fun. He hadn’t had a holiday in ages because he’d been building up leave for Kate’s marathon. So he was damn well going to have a break now. He might even have a good time. A full-out flirt time. He leaned back and watched her, more openly than he ever had before.

“Well, no, I guess not.” She nibbled on her lower lip. “Are you going to stay home all day?”

He’d go insane with boredom on his own. Why—did she want him to go out? She didn’t want to be home alone with him? What was with the resistance—the reluctance to be alone with him?

Fed up with hiding how much she got to him, Luke looked across the table at her and thought of everything he’d like to do if she stayed home with him today.

Her eyes widened, deepened. Her mouth parted as if she were going to say something. Only she didn’t. And that pretty cherry-red color rushed into her cheeks again, and her lips.

Luke stilled. He might not have had a girlfriend in a while, but he knew the signs, and he was certain Lexie was having some lustful thoughts of her own. Oh yeah, there really is a God.

“What are you planning to do today?” he asked softly.

“Job hunting.” She sounded desperate for a breath.

Luke smothered his smirk, outrageously pleased she was bothered. That was good. He clamped his teeth together as the challenge drove through him. “No.” He shook his head.

“I have to.”

“You’ve been in London what, less than a week? Have you seen Buckingham Palace yet?”

She shook her head.

“The Tower of London? Hyde Park? The Tate?”

She kept shaking her head.

“That’s tragic. You have to see the sights. Isn’t that why you’re here?”

“I have to earn money.”

>

“Delaying the hunt by a day isn’t going to make much difference. Come on, I’ll take you on the best-ever tour.”

“You can’t—”

“Yes, I can. I’ve been here over a year already, know the place like the back of my hand. I’ve got ‘knowledge’ as good as any of those cabbies.” Total exaggeration, but hey, he was on a roll here.

“What about Mango? You can’t leave him home alone all day. He’s been traumatized.”

“We’ll take him with us.”

She looked skeptical.

“He doesn’t usually stay home alone all day,” he explained. “I take him to work. I have special permission.” He reached under the table and scooped up the midget mutt who had been lying over his left foot. Sensitive little critter seemed to know that his leg was in need of extra care. “He gets a lot of attention from the secretaries.”

“I bet he does.” Lexie glared at them both. “No wonder he’s so spoiled.”

Luke’s lips twitched at the less-than-subtle emphasis in her words. She thought he was spoiled by the secretaries? “Well, he’s so gorgeous, what do you expect?”

“So he’s turned into a total diva with constant outrageous demands.”

Luke laughed. “He’s used to getting his own way. Nothing wrong with that, right?”

“It’s not good for him.” She pulled a face. “Not good for anyone,” she added pointedly. “And you can’t take me on a tour anyway.” She suddenly smiled. “You can’t walk.”

Luke hauled himself to his feet and smiled way more genuinely than she just had. Because he was so used to getting his own way and this time he absolutely was. “I don’t need to walk.” Not on those open-top double-decker bus tours that went every twenty minutes.

In the end they didn’t take Mannie. By the time Lexie had gotten herself together the dog was curled in the middle of Luke’s bed again, blissfully snoring.

“I think he needs some quiet time at home to recuperate,” Luke said.

Tags: Natalie Anderson Love in London Billionaire Romance
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