Secrets of a Perfect Night (32 page)

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Authors: Stephanie Laurens,Victoria Alexander,Rachel Gibson

BOOK: Secrets of a Perfect Night
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“Oh yeah.”

“We were in grade school!”

He shrugged. “I don’t have any sisters, and after your swimsuit fell off that one time, I was curious.”

“You were a little pervert.”

A cloud passed across the sun, and from behind the
dark lenses of his glasses, she felt his gaze on her, looking as if he could see beneath the blue ski suit. “You have no idea,” he said, and something hot and liquid curled in her belly. Thomas Mack had wanted to see her bum. He hadn’t been the harmless little friend she’d always thought. Not quite the innocent boy whom she’d helped build a tree fort near the old forest service road not far from his house.

The chair lowered and approached the top of the lift. Thomas raised the safety bar. “Do you remember how I told you to get off the chair?”

She transferred her poles to her inside hand.

“The most important thing is to make a wedge like we practiced at the bottom of the hill.”

She nodded as her skis slid along the snow and she stood. The edge of the chair pushed her forward and for a few brief moments she thought, I’m doing good. Then the ramp dipped and curved to the left. Brina continued straight forward and picked up speed.

“Point your skis in the direction you want to go,” Thomas yelled from somewhere behind her.

“What?” She frantically dug her poles into the snow to stop, but it was no use. She slid straight off the ramp and into orange plastic netting that had been strung up like a fence to keep skiers out of the trees. The tips of her skis poked through the holes in the orange plastic as she grappled with it. She didn’t fall, but only because she’d grabbed the top of the fencing and held tight.

“Brina.”

She looked over her shoulder.

“Are you okay?”

A little girl no taller than Brina’s waist swished past
on a pair of tiny skis and shook her head as if to say, “What a doofus.”

“How do I get out of this?”

Thomas moved behind her, grabbed ahold of her belt, and pulled her free. He moved on the downhill side and informed her of the new plan. “Hold on to my pole and I’ll ski in front of you. Use your wedge and I’ll steer.”

Brina had her doubts, but the new plan worked pretty well. On the slight incline of the cat track, he controlled their speed, his skis perfectly together, the tails moving effortlessly from side to side, making an elongated pattern like a snake in the snow. She held her poles in one hand, the basket of his in the other, and instead of watching the pines or other skiers who passed, she studied the backs of Thomas’s powerful thighs. He made it look so easy.

They stopped at a trail marker, their skis horizontal, and Brina looked down the mountain.

“I thought we were going to ski down a beginner run.”

“This is.”

She wrapped her arm around his to keep from sliding. Beneath the layer of his coat, his muscles felt rock-hard. “It looks like Mount Everest.”

He glanced down at her. “Are you scared?”

“I don’t want to break my leg again.”

“Let’s try this,” he said as he removed her arm from his. He slid her in front of him and transferred his poles to one hand. “I saw this at a ski school for little kids.” He came up behind her, his skis on the outsides of hers, the tips pointed inward. He pressed his palm
into her stomach and pulled her back against his chest. The insides of his thighs brushed the outsides of hers, and the top of her head fit just beneath his chin.

Brina looked up at him, her mouth a few inches from his. The scent of musky shave cream and of crisp mountain air and of him clung to his skin. Their breaths mingled and hung in the air and got trapped in the top of her lungs. If he lowered his mouth just a little, their lips would touch. She wanted them to touch. She wanted to rip off her glove and lay her warm palm against his cool cheek. She felt the heat of him through their nylon and Gore-Tex ski pants. Impossible, yet through all those layers he warmed her back and behind, her thighs and low in her abdomen. “What do you want me to do?” she asked her reflection in his glasses.

“Put your poles together and hold them about halfway down, straight out in front of you like you’re a waiter.”

“Why?”

“Don’t really know.” He shook his head and his chin brushed her temple. “I saw an instructor make a class of little kids do it. I think it might have something to do with balance. But I want you to do it so you don’t stab me in the leg.”

She laughed and did as he asked. “Anything else?”

“Let me do the driving. And relax,” he added, just above her ear. Then he turned their skis and they slid down the mountain and made elongated Cs.

Relax
. She tried, and if it hadn’t been for his pelvis pressing into hers as he pushed out the tail of his ski to slow them down, or thighs pressing inward to speed up, relaxing might have been possible. She might have
actually relaxed enough to enjoy the wind in her hair and the cool breeze on her cheeks, or the knowledge that she was actually skiing. But she was much too aware of the subtle pressure of his groin against the small of her back. She dropped her hands and pressed her ski poles into her hips.

“Are you okay?” he asked over the sound of their skis sliding across snow.

“Yeah.” But she wasn’t so sure. As Thomas pushed out the tails of his skis, preparing for a turn, he instructed her on the use of her edges. Instead of paying attention, she was thinking about that morning, when she’d stuck her hand in his pocket, and she recalled the heat of his semierect penis against her fingertips. Beneath her clothing, her breasts tightened, and the abrasion of her sheer bra against the nylon suit irritated her sensitive skin. He calmly continued to instruct her while she continued to picture him naked. She felt guilty and perverted, and suddenly, she was no longer as afraid of falling down as she was afraid of falling for Thomas Mack.

He spread his fingers across the front of her suit and spoke next to her ear. “Your hair smells like a piña colada. In high school you smelled like baby shampoo.”

The warmth of his words slid down the side of Brina’s neck and the tips of her skis crossed. The heels of her boots lifted, and she pitched forward.

Thomas made a grab for her belt. “Damn,” he swore as they both went down in a tangle of arms and legs, skis and poles. He landed on top of her, the air whooshed from her lungs, and they slid about ten feet before skidding to a stop halfway down the mountain.

“Brina?”

She lifted her face from the snow. “Yeah?”

“Are you hurt?” he asked as she felt his weight lifted from her.

She’d lost her poles and skis somewhere, and she turned onto her back. He hovered just above her, and her elbow bumped his chest. He’d planted his hand in the snow by her shoulders, and his thighs straddled her hips. He’d lost one of his skis and the remaining one crossed over the toes of her boots. He’d shoved his sunglasses to the top of his head.

“I’m okay,” she answered. “I just got the wind knocked out of me a little bit.”

He smiled and creases appeared in the corners of his blue eyes. “That was a pretty good header.”

“Thanks. Are you hurt?”

“If I am, will you kiss it and make it better?”

“Depends.”

“On what?”

“What I have to kiss.”

His quiet laughter touched her face. “Forehead,” he said.

Brina placed her gloved hands on his cheeks and kissed him between the brows. “Better?”

He looked into her eyes and his lips brushed hers as he nodded. “Much.”

Brina’s breath got stuck in her chest, her mouth parted, and she waited for his kiss. Instead he pushed himself to his knees and glanced at the three teenaged girls who skied past. “You’re lucky,” he said, dug the toe of his boot into snow, and stood.

Crisp air and disappointment cooled the hot antici
pation spiking her blood pressure. He’d been about to kiss her. Hadn’t he? “I know,” she said, hoping he mistook the confusion in her voice. “I could have broken my leg again.” She sat and looked for her skis.

“That isn’t what I meant.” He lowered his sunglasses onto the bridge of his nose and covered his eyes. “I’ll get you gear.”

While Thomas rounded up their gear, Brina dug snow out of the wrists of her gloves and wondered what he had meant—exactly. The more time she spent with him, the more confused she became. He helped her with her skis and poles, and when they were ready, he skied beside her this time. He told her when she needed to start her turns, and when they reached the bottom of the mountain, she’d only fallen twice more.

As they waited in line at the chairlift, Thomas gave her instruction on how to better use her edges, and he entertained her with a story about the time he hit a “death cookie” and rolled “ass over elbows” down the side of a mountain. They eased into comfortable conversation, the kind shared by two people who’d known each other well, but who’d changed. They’d grown in different directions but were still connected, deep down where visceral memories were kept like wonderful gifts just waiting to be reopened. Brina listened to the sound of his voice and deep laughter and thought she could probably listen to him forever. For the first time since he’d walked into her hotel room that morning, she relaxed completely.

Until Holly Buchanan raced up to them like an Olympic downhill skier and sent up a cloud of snow when she stopped. Holly’s skintight stretch one-piece
hugged her Barbie-doll curves. The suit was the same color as Brina’s, and they both resembled bunnies. Only Holly looked like the kind that got to hang out with Hugh Hefner, while Brina looked like she should be delivering dyed eggs.

“I thought you were going to meet us on the back side.” Holly spoke to Thomas without sparing Brina a glance. Ten years had passed, but some things hadn’t changed. Brina had a life she loved and a career she enjoyed. She was happy and successful, but standing next to Holly still made her feel insignificant.

“I’m teaching Brina to ski.”

Finally, from behind the lenses of Holly’s blue goggles, she turned her attention to Brina, and Brina felt like she was back in the seventh grade. Perfect Holly Buchanan was looking at her and finding absolutely nothing worth her time. And like in seventh grade, she almost expected Holly to look down her nose and ask Brina if she bought all her clothes at Sears.

“Mark told me you’d changed,” Holly said, then turned her attention back to Thomas. “You should come. Everyone is over there. Someone set up gates and we’re slalom racing.”

“Maybe later,” Thomas told her as he and Brina moved forward in the lift line. Holly moved with them.

“Oh, okay.” When she gazed at Brina again, it was like she was finally looking at her and seeing something unexpected. A threat. “It’s a lot of fun. You should come too.”

Brina shook her head. “I don’t think so.”

She and Thomas moved in position to grab the next chair. She transferred her poles to her inside hand and
looked over her outside shoulder. The chair scooped her and Thomas up and lifted them off the ground, leaving Holly behind.

“Wow, that was some outfit,” Brina said as Thomas lowered the safety bar. She wanted reassurance. She wanted him to tell her Holly was a horrible person. She wanted him to lie and say she was fat and ugly.

“Yeah, all that yoga pays off.”

Irrational anger pushed Brina’s brows togther and she shoved her hand through her pole straps. “You don’t have to ski with me anymore. You can ski with her if you want.”

“I know I can.”

She turned her face away and studied a passing pine. She wanted him to tell her Holly was a lousy lay. “So did she really get all freaky like a goat?” When he didn’t answer, she looked at him. He gazed straight ahead like she hadn’t asked him a question. “What’s the matter? Are you embarrassed?”

“Why would I be embarrassed?”

“Because you had some sort of freaky sex with Holly Buchanan. I’d be embarrassed if I were you.”

“Why? Are you a prude?”

“No.”

“Have you ever had freaky sex?”

She wasn’t sure. One time she’d done it in a public rest room with an old boyfriend. “Of course.”

He finally looked at her, but he had his sunglasses on and she couldn’t see his eyes. “How freaky?”

She didn’t want to tell him.

“That’s what I thought. You’re a prude.”

“I am not.”

Over the top of his sunglasses, one dark brow lifted up his forehead.

“I’m not!” she insisted. “I can get freaky.” For emphasis she added, “Extremely freaky.”

His other brow lifted. “Tell me.”

“No.”

“If you do, I’ll tell you what you want to hear about Holly.”

“Bathroom stall at the Rose Garden.” She didn’t mention that her boyfriend had worked there, the Trail Blazers had been on the road, and the stadium had been virtually empty. “Twice, now it’s your turn.”

He waited a few moments before he asked, “Do you want all the juicy details about Holly and me?”

She wasn’t so sure she wanted to know anything anymore, but she’d come too far to back down. “No. I just want to know what the goat position is.”

“I don’t know. I didn’t have sex with her.”

“What?”

“That’s what you
really
wanted to hear, isn’t it? That I didn’t have sex with the girl who used to torment you.”

That was exactly what she wanted to hear. “Are you serious? You didn’t spend the night with her?”

“No.”

“Why did you tell me you did?”

“I didn’t, you just assumed.”

But he purposely let her assume the worst. Why, she didn’t know. There was a lot about the grown-up Thomas she didn’t know. Basic stuff. “Where do you live?” she asked him.

He pulled at his gloves. “Not really anywhere at the moment. Several months ago I sold my house in Seat
tle, and I moved into my condo in Aspen for a while. But unfortunately, I’ve had to spend a lot of time in Palm Springs with my grandparents.”

“Why unfortunately?”

He glanced at her, then away. “My grandfather has health problems,” was all he said. “Eventually I’d like to live in Boulder.”

“You can just pick up and move wherever you want?”

He shrugged. “I’ve been unemployed for a while.”

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