Authors: Natalie Anderson
“It doesn’t matter.” She turned to pull one from the fridge, when she turned back with it he’d put a bill on the bar.
She frowned. “I’ve closed the cash register.”
His eyes narrowed. “I don’t want you to feel like you owe me anything.”
“I won’t owe you either.” She pulled out her own wallet and gave him the change from her pathetic coin collection. “I’ll square it with the register tomorrow.”
As she flipped the lid on his bottle, she saw something flare in his eyes. He took a long swig as soon as she handed it to him.
“You’ve been working on the slopes?” she asked.
His gaze shot to her, surprised. His eyes narrowed. “Today, yeah.”
“You like it up there?” Wasn’t he the mountain king? A slope-style champ or something? She wasn’t really sure of the terminology, before coming here, snow hadn’t really been her thing.
“Doesn’t everyone?” His lips twisted.
Not everyone, no.
“It doesn’t bother you?” he suddenly asked. “The way they talk?”
She shrugged. “I don’t let it.”
“I don’t like it.”
“It’s not your problem.” She fell silent at the look in his eyes. Her stupid pulse sped up.
“Will you tell me your name?” he asked.
“Does it matter?”
“Maybe not.” His smile was wry. “You don’t want to know mine?”
“No. I don’t.” She definitely didn’t. She didn’t want to know anything more about him… right?
“Have a drink with me.”
“Not while I’m working.”
Keep it together, Savannah. Keep as cool as ever.
“Bar’s closed now,” he pointed out. “Anyway, it doesn’t have to be alcoholic. Isn’t it your duty to keep the customer happy?”
“As the bar’s now closed, it’s no longer my duty,” she countered, unable to hold back a small smile.
“Choice then. Will you choose to stay and talk to a lonely customer?”
“Lonely or alone?” she asked lightly. “There’s a difference. You seemed happy to be alone and uninterrupted not so long ago.”
His lips twisted. “My job sometimes makes me unpopular.”
Why, did he have to ban people from using the chairlift? And that took time to get over at the end of each day? The ironic thing was she understood—when you worked serving people all day, at the end of it all you wanted was some alone time.
“They like watching you,” he laughed softly. “How long have you been working here?”
“Almost three weeks.”
“And you’ve made such an impression on the customers already.” He waggled his eyebrows, teasing.
“
Some
of them.” Heat simmered in her belly. She’d been left utterly cold by those guys. By
all
guys these last few months. But here she was on total defrost. All because of an unexpected sense of humor and blue, blue eyes.
“You do the lifts?” Her voice rusted.
“Only for today.”
Her pulse flitted faster. Was he leaving?
That heat climbed the rung to sizzling.
Possibilities
raced through her mind. The kind of possibilities she’d never entertained before. “You’re finishing up?”
“Other things I have to do.” He nodded.
Other places to
go
. He had that restless look in his eyes. And that was a good thing, right? Because Savannah didn’t want any distractions. Didn’t want anything else to think about—but for this one moment?
“I don’t agree with them, by the way,” he said.
Some how he was closer. Quieter. Somehow he
knew
.
She raised her eyebrows, she’d keep cool to the end.
“About what you need,” he clarified.
She swallowed.
“You don’t need it hard up the ass, or in your mouth or where ever the hell else they want to stick their tiny dicks.”
She stifled a laugh. “No.”
“I’m not saying there’s nothing you need, though…” He cocked his head, looking into her eyes.
“What do you think I need?” She braced herself for the obvious.
His lips softened into that unexpectedly warm smile. There was heat in his eyes, yes, but humor in his mouth. And easiness. And it was so unexpected. “Maybe some fun,” he idly mused. “Maybe some release. Maybe some…” he paused, his gaze sharpening. “Pleasure.”
That heat rippled out from her belly, cascading through her body, crawling over her skin. Good lord, she was
blushing
.
“Yeah.” His smile broadened, warmed. “Pleasure. Whatever is
your
pleasure. Plenty of it.”
She melted. Speechless.
Just from that.
What was wrong with her? Usually she’d have slammed him down with a sharp-edged comment and her best bitch face. For so long she’d been too uptight to let go. Too bound by her family’s scandals. Too scared of being swept away—like her mom with her insane affair that had screwed the lives of too many people.
Like her father who’d gambled literally everything away.
It was so long since she’d allowed herself to enjoy any kind of intimacy.
And she wasn’t going to now either. She was here only for payback. To hunt out the Hughes men and let them know just how much they’d hurt her family.
He was watching her closely, shaking his head a little. “What you need,” he lectured, gently persuasive. “Is satisfaction. And then you can enjoy that sweet dreamless sleep.”
Dreamless. Yes.
Please
.
She hadn’t had a decent, dreamless sleep in so long. Hadn’t come in over a year. Not even on her own. But how did he know she suffered that restlessness at night?
“You know what else I don’t agree with?” he said.
She shook her head, unable to speak, still trying to process—and control—her reaction to him.
He lifted his hand and very lightly traced the tip of his bound forefinger along her cheekbone. “You’re not a bitch.”
He was so wrong.
He smiled. “And I sure as hell don’t believe you’re frigid.”
Chapter Two
Savannah Nash didn’t know who he was and Connor Hughes knew he’d better tell her. Except she didn’t want to know and oddly he didn’t want to do anything she didn’t want him to. Odd—because Connor generally did whatever he wanted.
Okay, so
he
didn’t want to tell her. Not yet.
How he’d so quickly gotten over the tiredness and anger that had been hounding him all day, he didn’t know.
“I need to finished clearing that up.” She strode away from him and bent to finish sweeping the glass fragments into the dustpan.
Okay, he did know. In her long, sleek black skirt and her starched white linen shirt with the sleeves rolled to expose slender wrists, Savannah Nash looked like a strict school ma'am from last century. Sexiest school ma'am ever. He’d checked her hands, wrists, neck, and knew she wore no jewellery.
No ring, no chain.
No claim
.
She was single, of that he was certain. But whether she was
available
was the unanswered question.
He shifted on the bar stool, trying to ease the way his cock was straining tightly against his clothing as the beautiful bartender straightened.
Stand. Touch
.
Take.
His body screamed at him. He tried to fight back with his brain. He shouldn’t be doing this. He ought to be home and checking the day’s notes from his stand-in manager. There were a zillion things he ought to be doing instead of sitting like a mesmerized fool just watching a woman.
But man, what a woman.
Well, if he was going to stay, then he should talk to her. Find out her agenda. But other things were distracting him from that purpose. Her brown eyes for one. Velvety, deep, secretive. And her long dark hair. He’d have thought it’d be easier for her to have it tied back somehow, out of the way while she worked. Instead it hung in a glossy curtain down her back, immaculate and smooth. In her appearance, and in her work, she was all cool, perfect precision.
But something simmered within her.
He knew why those jerks couldn’t resist trying to bait her. She was beautiful. And cold.
She was also tired. And perhaps, not that cold at all. When he’d watched her take down that tall asshole a few nights ago, Connor had stood, stepping in close, in case she’d needed help.
She hadn’t.
She hadn’t remembered he’d been there until he’d just told her. Until then there’d been nothing in her eyes but cool defiance. A denial of any need.
But there
was
need.
Very, very slowly he sipped his beer. He needed it now more than when he’d first walked in riled from the day and keen to question her motives. He knew she was Savannah Nash and that she came from Belle, Louisiana and that her father had attended several of Rex’s talks. Only he’d been spectacularly dissatisfied once he’d put Rex’s throw-away ideas into action. And he’d wanted to complain.
But Connor wasn’t letting anyone cloud Summerhill’s reputation.
Just like taking to the slopes, playing the stock market was always a risk. People had to research, make their own calculations, take responsibility for their own actions.
Which wasn’t to say Connor didn’t like to offer a helping hand if someone was struggling.
Because he was a man of action,
not
jumping in sooner tonight to tell those assholes where they could stick it had taken more self-control than he’d thought he had. But he knew if he was to have any chance with Savannah, he’d have to stand down and let her get on with it. Getting all he-man hero in her face would only backfire, he’d learned that from the other night. This was a woman who wanted to feel in charge. So he’d waited ’til she’d stepped out before getting rid of them.
By just looking at her, the heat in his blood had turned from anger to attraction. Raw, unstoppable attraction of a force that stole his breath. It didn’t matter that he questioned her reasons for being here. That he didn’t trust her. Because something had changed within
her
. That cold, cold veil of professionalism had lifted and he’d seen warmth. Warmth when she’d looked at
him
.
All his pre-planned questions vanished. All that mattered was holding that look within her. Keeping her like that, hotter than a naked flame. And damn if he just wasn’t an itty, bitty moth.
The way she’d gently tended to his cut, despite that veneer of impatience? For a second he’d thought she was going to kiss him. He’d held his breath, held utterly still, aware that something as small as a smile might make her pull away. But she’d pulled away anyway. A stunned expression crossing her face, like she couldn’t believe the impulse within herself.
He couldn’t believe it either.
There was no way he was leaving her yet.
She stopped what she was doing and looked at him. A frown creased her perfectly made-up face. He braced himself in delight—she was back to the cold-as-snow bartender?
“What?” he asked, unable to stop his smile now. He did like the daggers in her eyes. Her death-look was way better than his.
“I don’t appreciate you looking at me like I’m a piece of meat,” she said sharply. But color mounted in her cheeks.
How could such acidity tumble from such soft, full lips? They looked so kissable. Yeah, she was so freaking
edible
.
Sugarlips.
He wanted to bite. Hard. She was trying to put him off, all it did was make him want her more. He hadn’t tasted, hadn’t felt his sex drive soar like this in a long time. He never allowed distraction of any sort. Seeing the mess his father Rex had made with his countless affairs… and then his brother Logan, with his sexual performance plastered all over the internet…
no thanks. He put one hundred percent of himself into
work
. This mountain, the home he would never leave, was all that mattered. He’d had to save Summerhill. He’d
always
save Summerhill. The mountain came first, he was bound to it by his own blood.
And finally he had everything the way he wanted. The company was his. They’d even had the official party to celebrate it before his parents went away.
It was exactly as he’d masterminded it. He’d been working for this moment for years.
But damn if it wasn’t enough already. He’d had to spend the last couple of days out in the snow rather than in his office, trying to let the wind clear his head. Trying to snatch back the peace that should be his.
Yet only now did he feel something other than anger and tiredness and irritation. Only now, squaring off to Savannah, did he feel even slightly fulfilled.