how about you? How’s that design going?”
“I finished it—and it is brilliant, if I do say so myself.” He grinned over his glass of wine. “The clients are flying in tomorrow to see it, so I’ll know for sure then. But Reece thinks we’ve knocked it out of the park.”
“That’s fabulous.” She took another bite. “And really, so is this lasagna. How did you learn to cook like this?”
“I grew up with three sisters and my mom always believed that I should learn whatever the girls learned, and vice versa. So when she taught them to cook a few recipes, she made sure I was in the kitchen right along with them—even if I would have preferred to be playing football or basketball.”
“I can just see you—a cute little boy with big eyes peering into his mother’s spaghetti-sauce pot.”
He snorted. “More like a surly preteen whining about how I’d never need to know how to cook because when I grew up I was going to live on pizza and hamburgers.”
“Well, I’m glad your mother didn’t listen.”
Their eyes met across the table. “So am I.”
Her smile turned soft, intimate. It was one of the things that had attracted him to her when they’d met a few weeks before—that and her softly rounded curves. Camille had been all angles and mile-long legs and it was nice to hold on to a woman who wasn’t so…sharp. Add in Ariane’s sense of order and dedication to the University of Texas’s football team—she was a Longhorn, too—and he’d been sold.
“You know, Matt, I really like you.”
“I like you, too, Ariane.” His heart beat a little faster in anticipation. “Very much.”
She pushed her plate away. “Then maybe we should skip dessert…”
There they were, the words he’d been waiting to hear for weeks. He’d expected his body to respond right away, but now that she’d extended the invitation, he wasn’t nearly as interested as he’d expected to be. Still, she was a beautiful, intelligent woman and would make a great girlfriend.
Without giving himself any more time to think, Matt slid his chair back and reached for her plate. “And what would you like to do in lieu of dessert?” he asked, making sure to keep his voice low and teasing.
She stood, as well. “Oh, I’m sure we can think of something.”
He reached for her hand, but a knock at his front door stopped him before he could pull her against him. “Why don’t you go into the family room? I’ll join you as soon as I answer that.”
“Don’t be long.”
“Believe me, I won’t be.” He strode to the door, pulled it open with a yank. Then froze as he came face-to-face with the woman who had haunted his dreams for nearly three long months.
For a minute, the whole world stood still while he soaked in the vision that was Camille. Her black hair was shorter and sassier than it had been when she’d left, but everything else was the same.
The flawless expanse of golden skin her halter dress showed off.
The wicked curve of her sexily uneven mouth.
The killer legs that had had him waking up hard and sweaty and frustrated as hell for weeks after she’d left.
She’d come back, he told himself as his traitorous body responded to her proximity. Even after everything she’d said, after ignoring his text messages and phone calls for months, she’d come back.
How pathetic did it make him that he was excited by that fact?
She stepped a little closer, leaned against the doorway, and her signature scent—lavender and brown sugar and sweet, ripe strawberries—wrapped itself around him. He went from semiaroused to rock hard in an instant.
Still, he didn’t say anything. Didn’t touch her, though every instinct he had demanded that he grab on to her before she pulled another vanishing act.
The thought had the same effect as a freezing shower, and the connection between them shattered. He couldn’t hold her tightly enough to keep her from leaving again—she was like the wind, blowing from one place to another with little thought to the destruction she left in her path.
He wasn’t going to be part of the fallout again.
“What are you doing here, Camille?” he demanded, forcing a calm into his voice that he was far from feeling. But she was an expert at power games and there was no way in hell he was revealing a weakness. Not when she was so good at drawing first blood.
“I was in the neighborhood.” Even the slow, honeyed drawl was the same. “Thought I’d drop by.”
“Long walk from Italy.”
She shrugged, unconcerned. “Yeah, well, Florence is overrated.”
“Really?”
“No. But you know me. I get bored if I stay in one place too long.”
“I remember.” He kept his voice cool, made sure none of the confusion—or desire—he was feeling leaked through.
“Can I come in?”
“Now’s not really a good time.”
Uncertainty flashed across her face—was there and gone so quickly that he told himself he’d imagined it. “It won’t take long. I just wanted to talk for a few minutes.”
“Talk?” This time he let her see his skepticism—and a little bit of the anger he thought had dissipated in the weeks since she’d walked out. “Since when do you want to talk about anything? I thought action was more your thing.”
As soon as the words were out, he wanted to call them back. Her smile had turned predatory, those amethyst-colored eyes running over him from head to toe. It was as if she was cataloging each one of his flaws and weaknesses, and he’d never felt more vulnerable. “Bitter much?”
“I wouldn’t call it bitter.”
“No? Then what would you call it?”
“Smart.” He grabbed the edge of the door, made as if to close it. “Now, if you will excuse me—”
“I really do need to talk to you.”
“Yeah, well, I really needed to talk to you all those times I called you.” Shit. He did sound bitter.
She sighed heavily, as if he was just too high maintenance for her. It was like setting a match to dry kindling and all the emotions that had been seething in him for the past few months came roaring out.
“Look, Camille, I don’t know what kind of game you’re playing, but count me out.”
“I thought you liked games—at least, that’s what you told me the night we met.”
“I did—until you kept changing the rules without warning.”
“I wasn’t the one who changed the rules, sweets. You were.”
He started to snap back, but how could he when she was right? She’d told him up front that she was only in town for a few weeks, that the thing between them couldn’t go anywhere. He was the one who hadn’t listened.
He was the one who’d gotten burned.
But at least he’d learned his lesson—he was done playing with fire.
“I’m tired, Camille, and I have company. Either say what you came here to say or leave—I really don’t care. But I don’t have the time or the inclination to stand out here all night shooting the breeze. I’m letting bugs in.”
Her smile drooped a little at the edges, and she didn’t answer for long seconds. Guilt slinked through him. Maybe he’d been too harsh. He could have said things more nicely, could