Read Have Bouquet, Need Boyfriend Online
Authors: Rita Herron
Tags: #Contemporary, #Romance, #Erotica, #Fiction, #General
ready to make love with him, when he had just left another woman?
By noon the next day, Thomas had enough food for an army. Everything
from black-eyed peas and collard greens to fried chicken and homemade
apple pie. But not one dish had come from the woman he’d left behind the
night before.
What had he been thinking, almost making love to Rebecca in an exam room
with a metal table pressing into her back?
He hadn’t thought, he realized. He’d simply been reacting. Letting his
body think for him.
Rebecca might hate him now for his abrupt withdrawal, but when he left
town, she would be glad he hadn’t followed through and taken her to bed.
Then some other man would be her lover….
He pumped the weights harder, desperately trying to alleviate his
anxiety and purge himself of the irrational jealousy the images brought.
His body ached from lack of sleep and his unsated desire for her, but he
hadn’t been able to rest last night after he’d left Rebecca.
Had she dreamt of holding him the way he’d dreamt of sleeping with her
in his arms?
Rebecca woke from a deep sleep and sat up, her body shimmering with
perspiration. She glanced around the dark bedroom to make certain she
was alone. That she had indeed been dreaming.
Of course she’d been dreaming.
She’d been in Hawaii on a moonlit beach with a
housand stars glittering above an inky sky. And she’d been doing the
hula dance completely naked.
In front of Thomas.
Pulling her velour robe around her, she glanced at the hope chest and
wondered if her dream had any significance, if the hope chest had
somehow triggered these wild dreams she’d been having.
Curious, she scanned the book on dream analysis until she discovered two
notations. According to the book, dreaming about being naked was
supposedly a good omen.
“Performing the undulating dance form of the hula means you’ll have
exciting romantic adventures in your future.”
In light of the night before and her close encounter with Thomas, she
laughed at the dream interpretation.
Confused and still tingling from wanting him, she lay back on her
pillows and tried to plan her day. It was a new year. She should set her
goals. Start over with a fresh attitude.
The sooner she finished the murals the better. Then she wouldn’t have to
see Thomas any more and be tempted to beg him to finish what they’d begun.
Her heart squeezed at the thought of never having his lips touch her
again. Of never having his hands trail over her.
The phone rang and she stared at it for a long moment. Maybe Thomas
would suggest they meet and continue their romantic interlude from the
night before.
No, it was Suzanne.
“I hope your New Year’s Eve was better than mine,” Suzanne said.
Suzanne sounded as if she’d been crying.
“What’s wrong?”
“Nick.”
“I thought you two already broke up.”
“We did.” Suzanne sniffed. “But we’ve been on again for a couple of
days. It’s definitely over now.”
Rebecca pulled at a loose thread on the afghan at her feet, weaving it
back into the pattern. She only wished she could smooth out her own
problems as easily. “Did you love him, Suzanne?”
Suzanne sighed. “I don’t know what I felt. But I’m so tired of the
dating game. And my job…it’s so demanding.” Another long sniffle.
“You’re so lucky to be living in that small town. You have Hannah and
Mimi and Alison there. Everyone knows you and loves you. I bet that doc
is already planning to propose.”
Ha! “I wouldn’t say that.”
“Why not? Didn’t you two get together?”
“Not exactly.” Rebecca sighed. “Look, I’m not like you. You’re good with
men. For heaven’s sakes, you’ve been entertaining Dad’s colleagues since
you were a teenager.”
“I only took over the entertaining because you hated it,” Suzanne said.
Rebecca frowned into the phone. She had hated it, but she’d always
assumed Suzanne enjoyed the attention.
“It was obvious you were mortified by all those people in the house,”
Suzanne continued, “but you were great in the kitchen, so I just jumped
in and did what I do best. Talk.”
Rebecca laughed. “You are good at conversation.”
“Yeah, so why can’t I hold a guy?”
They both lapsed into silence. Rebecca felt a closeness to her sister
she hadn’t felt in years. Why had she spent so much time being jealous
of Suzanne?
“Now, tell me about Thomas.” Suzanne made an exaggerated sound. “I know
he has the hots for you. What on earth is holding you back?”
For the first time in her life, Rebecca told her sister her problems.
Relaying the painful story from the night before only magnified her
doubts, though. “He keeps getting close, then pulling away. I don’t know
how to handle the situation.”
Suzanne let the silence linger for a minute. “Well, if you want my
advice, you should go after him. He probably thinks you won’t sleep with
him without a ring on your finger, and he’s not ready for a commitment yet.”
She would like a ring and a commitment. But heck, she’d almost given in
to passion in an exam room the night before. “He did say he can’t make
any promises.”
“There you go. You need to be assertive, Rebecca. Let him know you want
him and that you’ll accept the relationship on his terms for now.” She
whistled. “Of course, sooner or later, you’ll warm him to marriage, but
just let him know you’re not pushing too hard too fast.”
“But I thought I did that last night, then he started acting all noble.”
“Seduce him,” Suzanne said matter-of-factly. “Be bold about it. Show up
wearing nothing but a raincoat. Then he can’t possibly turn you down.”
Rebecca wasn’t so sure.
“Oh, and don’t forget to take protection. The last thing you want to do
is end up pregnant.”
She didn’t want to end up pregnant?
How little her sister understood her, Rebecca thought, as she primed
herself with Suzanne’s encouraging words while she worked on the mural.
By dinner she’d nearly completed the waterfall scene and rallied her
confidence and determination.
It was a new year. The beginning of a new attitude. The start of a new
life for her.
A new Rebecca was emerging.
Out with the shy, dowdy girl and in with the bold,
go-after-what-you-want woman!
So, why was her stomach sitting in her throat and her knees shaking so
badly she thought they might literally pop in two like thin twigs?
Because she was naked beneath her dark-blue raincoat, and she was
sitting in front of Thomas’s house, knowing he was only a few hundred
feet away. And she was deathly afraid she’d make a fool out of herself
and he would order her to go home where all good girls belonged.
He was such a nice, intelligent, decent man. Would he think she was
crazy for doing such a drastic thing?
No, he had admitted last night he wanted her. He was trying to be
honorable because he couldn’t commit. She would show him that he didn’t
have to commit right now. That she was a modern woman, not some
old-fashioned girl who required a ring on her finger before she’d let a
man touch her.
She’d prove she could take a chance on a great guy like him and wait for
promises of a permanent relationship. After all, would she ever find a
man if she didn’t take chances?
Snow fell in a light blanket around the massive brick house, dotting the
thicket of evergreens and thick grass. The cloud cover painted pale-gray
lines in the sky while the wind whistled a soft melody through the
trees, adding to the romantic atmosphere.
Believe in yourself. Follow your dreams.
She inhaled, took a deep breath and pushed open the door. Grabbing the
bottle of wine with one hand and checking for the condoms in her pocket
with the other, because, although she did want a baby, she refused to
trap a man without his knowledge, she wobbled on the new gold heels that
Mimi had insisted she buy, up the azalea-lined sidewalk to Thomas’s
house. She had never been there before, but her stomach was twisting and
turning so badly that she couldn’t quite appreciate the porch entrance
or the impressive arched doorway or the elaborate Palladian windows in
front.
He lived here alone?
Passages from the erotic poetry book Grammy had given her flitted
through her mind.
Hands gently gliding across bare skin, fingers teasing, lips tasting,
one body offering bliss….
She wanted to experience that bliss with Thomas. Releasing a labored
breath, she raised her shaking hand and punched the doorbell.
It bellowed out like a gong, reverberating through the huge house and
echoing in her mind like a siren.
Goose bumps shimmied up her arms and legs. She could not go through with
this. He would take one look at her and laugh, especially when she
removed her coat and he realized there was nothing beneath.
Nothing but bare flesh and a scared, lonely girl who loved him. As much
as she didn’t want to admit she loved him, she did.
Wishing her nerves would dissipate like the fallen snow that wouldn’t
quite stick to the ground, she turned to run but caught her heel in a
crack between the bricks. She was stuck.
Suddenly the door swung open, and Thomas stood on the other side,
wearing gym shorts and a sleeveless muscle shirt with dark hair covering
his chest and legs and a light coat of perspiration dampening his
glorious body.
Thomas had avoided answering the door all day.
He’d also avoided the clinic because he’d suspected Rebecca would be
there painting. Instead, he’d read his journals and did some research on
the Internet, holding thoughts of Rebecca at bay.
Now she stood on his doorstep with light snow falling around her like
some kind of angelic vision that had drifted down from the clouds.
“Rebecca?”
She shivered slightly, and he realized she must be cold.
Logic warned him not to invite her in, but she
looked so damn nervous and he didn’t want to hurt her feelings.
“Come in. I…I wasn’t expecting you.”
“I know.” She lifted her hand in offering, and he immediately thought of
chicken casseroles. Instead, she held up a bottle of Chardonnay. “I
finished the waterfall mural and thought I’d drop you off a New Year’s
Day gift.”
“Thanks.” He took her arm to guide her inside, but she squeaked a reply,
and he noticed her shoe wedged in the bricks. He stooped to loosen it,
his hand brushing bare leg as he yanked her heel from the crevice. He
silently groaned. Trying to forget the way her bare leg felt on his hand
and the allure of those sparkly shoes, he stood and ushered her in out
of the cold. What was she so dressed up for? Did she have a date after
she dropped off his gift? “Can I take your coat?”
She hugged her arms around herself. “No… not yet. I’m still a little
chilly.”
Hell, who was he kidding? He had wanted to see her all day.
“Come over by the fireplace.” He led her to the great room with its
cathedral ceiling where he’d been working earlier and onto the
overstuffed throw pillows on the floor by the brick fireplace. “This
should warm you up.”
“Thanks.”
“You want a glass of that wine?”
“Sure.” She darted a glance around the room. The roaring fire. The
overstuffed leather sofa. The oil painting of some Civil War figure. The
TV blaring a football game. What was she thinking about his lifestyle?
Did she like his house? Was she comparing it to her homey, artsy little
abode? A place that was so full of Rebecca….
“Listen, I’m all sweaty from working out, let me hop in the shower while
you warm up, then we can talk. Unless you were on your way somewhere.
You look like you’re all dressed up.”
Her face colored slightly. “No, I’ll wait.”
He opened the bottle of wine, poured her a glass, then handed it to her,
their fingers brushing. He could have sworn her hand trembled as she
gripped the glass and sipped. His heart pounding, he jerked his eyes