Phae carefully lifted the lid and placed it back on the table. Her hand rested on the tissue paper. With her other hand, she negligently pushed back a shining lock of hair that had escaped from her loose ponytail.
She smiled at him. “Give me a hint.”
“Nope. See for yourself.”
She pulled back the paper and lifted out the dress. Holding it up by the thin straps, she cocked her head sideways and her finely shaped brows drew together. “What is it? A leg warmer?”
“No. It’s a little black dress.”
“You’re kidding.” She continued to inspect the garment.
He leaned forward and took the dress. He’d thought she’d be reticent about wearing it, but this was ridiculous.
He grasped the sides of the dress and pulled. “See? It only looks tiny. It stretches.”
Phae grinned and retrieved the dress. She slid her hands inside and stretched the garment. “From what I can see, it doesn’t stretch far enough.”
“Try it on and see.”
“Um, it’s not only too narrow, it’s too short.”
“No it’s not. Women in cities wear this type of dress all the time.”
“Yeah, on street corners.”
Kent frowned. “It’s not that revealing. You’re out here in the country and not aware of what’s in fashion.”
To his surprise, Phae smiled. “I get it. This is a joke.” She tossed the dress back in the box. “Good one. I actually thought you were serious for a second.”
“I am serious about it.” Kent tried to think of a way to persuade her to try it on. He gave her his best wistful look. “I hoped you’d wear it when I fix dinner for you. I thought a new dress would make the evening more special. I suppose the dress might be a little small, but I didn’t know your size and had to guess. At least try it on.”
Phae’s brows lowered. “No way. I don’t dress like a tramp for anyone. Especially not someone who thinks he can manipulate me so easily.”
“I don’t know what I was thinking. Nothing’s ever easy with you, is it? Never mind. I didn’t mean to offend you. I hope you won’t cancel our dinner because of this misunderstanding.”
She shook her head slowly. “No. I won’t cancel. But I won’t wear that dress, either.” She covered her mouth and yawned. “It’s late, and you should go now.”
He rose from the sofa. “Guess I’ll see you tomorrow night then. Is six too early?”
“Not tomorrow,” she said quickly, too quickly in Kent’s opinion.
“Why not?”
“I have plans. A class. I take a martial arts class in Rollinsburg.”
She was lying. He knew it. She’d lifted her chin the tiniest fraction when she spoke. It was exactly what she’d done at the fair last week when she tried to save face by telling him that their kiss hadn’t affected her.
“Oh,” he said. “But we were at the fair last Friday and you didn’t have a class then.”
Her chin tilted upward. “I cancelled,” she said smoothly as she opened the door for him. “That’s why I need to go tomorrow. I shouldn’t cancel two weeks in a row.”
“Then I guess we’ll have to make it Saturday.”
“Sounds great. Call me and tell me what I need to buy,” she said with a genuine-looking smile.
“No. I’ll get it. Do you have enough cookware in there for me to cook the lasagna?”
She looked thoughtful. “Probably not.”
“I’ll bring what I need, then.”
He studied her, standing tall and proud in her dumpy little apartment. She was magnificent, but he reminded himself, she was also hiding something.
“See you Saturday at six,” he said gruffly as he walked out the door.
“I’m looking forward to it.”
He raised his hand in a curt gesture of farewell and headed to his car. He heard her softly close the door.
As he drove back to his aunt’s house, he thought of how Phae had lied about taking a class Friday night. Although he didn’t have any actual proof that she was Captain Nice Guy, she certainly hadn’t given him any reason to think she wasn’t.
One way or another, he intended to uncover the truth. He’d be watching her tomorrow night. That much was certain.
“Your lies just earned you a shadow, Phae Jones,” he vowed.
Chapter 11
PHAE WAITED UNTIL SHE COULD no longer hear Kent’s engine before she breathed easily. He’d seemed upset when he left, but she didn’t know why. Her refusal to try on the dress seemed the probable cause, but she didn’t think that was it.
She glanced around the living room. She’d ignored everyone’s admonishments about her monkish style of life, but seeing her home through Kent’s eyes had been different.
He’d been shaken by the place, and his reaction affected her in a way no one else’s had. Suddenly, she could see how shabby the furniture truly was.
She walked to the easy chair and ran her hand over the worn upholstery. When she moved into this apartment nearly three years ago, she couldn’t afford new furniture so she’d raided her parents’ storage shed and found the chair, sofa, coffee table and even the old rag rug.
It seemed in fine enough condition back then. Besides, these were furnishings from her childhood. How could she be expected to see them as they actually were?
She sank into the chair. She’d been so nervous the past week, thinking and rethinking about what had happened between her and Kent at the fair. She’d gone on a cleaning binge to distract herself.
Her living room didn’t look this bare a week ago. In her cleaning frenzy, she’d thrown away magazines, old paperback books and anything else for which she couldn’t find a future use. She’d done the same in the other rooms of the apartment.
Still, she hadn’t dragged all that many bags out to the dumpster. Maybe her mother was right and Phae should buy some pictures and knick-knacks to brighten up the place.
No. She wouldn’t do it. She liked her apartment this way. It was too tiny to clutter up with junk, and the less stuff in it, the bigger the place felt. She refused to destroy her well-being to placate a man.
She picked up the little black dress. She smiled wryly as she surveyed the scrap of stretchy fabric. It was hard to believe that he actually thought she’d wear the thing. If she wore it out in public, she’d get arrested for public indecency.
As she picked and pulled at the thing, she doubted she could even get it over her head let alone the rest of her body. When was the last time she’d worn something sexy? Chicago, probably. That was how long ago it had been.
The morning she’d left the city, she’d so desperately wanted to destroy all evidence of her life in Chicago that, except for a few pairs of jeans and a couple of sweaters, she’d given all her clothing to Goodwill.
When Grandma Jones died, she’d had
to purchase a dress for the funeral, and it remained the only nice piece of clothing hanging in her closet.
Phae tossed Kent’s ridiculous gift back into the box. She should throw the thing away. She gathered it all up and stomped to the kitchen.
The box was halfway into the trash can before she stopped herself. The dress had probably cost a fortune, and besides, Kent had given it to her, so she should save it if for no other reason than a sentimental one. She retrieved the dress then discarded the box.
By the time Phae entered her bedroom and flipped on the light, she’d managed to convince herself that she should at least try on the thing before condemning it to a long, light-deprived life in her closet.
There was no way it would fit, she reminded herself. Over the head or over the hips? She wrestled with the garment. Definitely over the head.
She yanked and jerked and stretched the dress, then yanked and jerked and stretched some more. Finally, with a loud grunt, she pulled it down over her hips.
Trying to push more of her bosom into the top cups, she stepped in front of the bureau mirror. She stopped cold. Her hands dropped to her sides.
Was that woman in the mirror really her?
She ran to her exercise room, snatched up her small stepper bench, then returned to her bedroom. Standing on the bench, she could better see her whole body.
She looked incredible, if she did say so herself. Her legs were sleek and long, her stomach flat under the stretchy fabric, her hips softly rounded, and her waist was smaller than she remembered.
Her defined, yet feminine shoulders were accented nicely by the thin spaghetti straps. And talk about cleavage. The dress was so tight across her chest that it looked like she’d spill out if she took a deep breath.
When had this happened? She hadn’t looked this good in Chicago. She used to avoid any type of clingy fabric, but not because of her weight. In fact, she weighed about ten pounds more now than she did then.
Muscle tone. That was the difference. Back then, she’d been working seventy to eighty hours a week at Fullerton and had no time to even think about exercising.
It was unbelievable. She hadn’t paid attention to how she looked the past several years. During all those hours she’d spent working out, she’d worried more about strength and endurance than appearances.