Khalid looked around the room. "Please tell me you hired someone to decorate this monstrosity. " He shuddered in a mock attempt at fear. "Otherwise, I'm going to fear for your sanity. "
"Start fearing," Chase muttered as he stepped around the tree, studied it, and stepped back to the front. "Okay, it's straight. We can start on the lights. "
Khalid appraised him coolly. "You may start on that alone. I believe I'll grab a beer and merely watch. "
"Fine, I'll yell at your chauffeur and his little coffee sidekick and see if they want to help me. "
Khalid paused.
"You wouldn't be so cruel. "
Chase grunted at that. "You know, Khalid, you're getting lazy," he pointed out. "A Christmas tree wouldn't have fazed you last year. "
"Not lazy, merely more efficient. " Khalid smiled and stared at the tree. "Perhaps I'm allergic to evergreens. "
"I'll get you some antihistamine," Chase promised, entirely unconcerned. "Now, where the hell do we start on these lights?"
"This will have benefits, correct?" Khalid bent and plucked a twig off the floor. "A nice Christmas present? Something besides your normal can of cookies that you present each year?"
Chase frowned. "They're good cookies. "
"They're cheap cookies, Chase," Khalid pointed out. "I priced them. Under five dollars. It's an insult. "
"Beats that lump of coal you had wrapped in the box you gave me last year," Chase snarled. "And what the hell are you doing pricing my Christmas presents?"
Khalid's brow lifted. "I, of course, need to know whether or not to purchase the coal, which, I will remind you, now costs more than your can of cookies, or whether I should get more extravagant and actually put myself out in the choosing of your present. " Khalid made a pretense of studying the ceiling.
"Don't put yourself out," Chase said irritably. "You might strain something. "
Kia was on the verge of giggles. She couldn't help it. She couldn't believe the two of them. Staring at that tree, obviously procrastinating, dreading the work of arranging the lights so much that they were arguing instead.
Enough torture was enough, though.
"I know how to put the lights on. " She stepped around the corner, dropping her purse on the table by the doorway and grinning back at them.
Tension immediately filled the room, and it wasn't just sexual.
Khalid, casually elegant in dark silk slacks and a shirt, tensed, almost dangerously. His black eyes hardened for a moment, his expression tightening as Chase turned quickly to her.
Something wasn't right.
She stared back at the two of them, feeling dread creeping inside her. There was an air of something here, something she could see in Chase's eyes that could hurt her.
Foreboding swept over her. Had she been reading him wrong? Had she somehow mistaken his lust for something deeper, after all?
He had told her he loved her, just that morning. Surely he hadn't changed his mind, no longer than it had taken her to go shopping?
She straightened her shoulders and lifted her chin.
"Well, perhaps I should have eavesdropped a bit longer. " She stepped fully into the room. "How is it that a woman always knows when a man, or men, as the case may be, are hiding something?"
She didn't back down when it came to Chase. She had always backed down in her marriage, always given Drew his way. She didn't do that with Chase. She wasn't going to start now.
Chase grimaced. "I'm not hiding a damned thing except your Christmas present. " He shot Khalid a warning glance as the other man moved to the kitchen and pulled one of the horribly expensive beers he preferred from the refrigerator.
"It's a very nice present, too," Khalid said in an attempt at humor that fell ridiculously fiat. "Much better than a tin of cookies. "
He stared at the beer before lifting it and taking a drink.