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Authors: Amelia Hart

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BOOK: The Passion Play
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"Maybe we do need it. We should get a smart woman like you on the job. What is it they say? If you want something done, give the job to a busy woman?"

"I'm the last person in the world to do something like that. You'd need someone with a good track record in relationships." And with that, unintentionally, they were back to seriousness.

"Aw, that sounds like you're beating yourself up. There's more wisdom to be had from making mistakes than succeeding every time."

"Would you rather listen to an expert proved successful, or a proved failure?"

"Don't know as I'd pick one over the other. I think it depends on the subject. But best of all is probably the person who failed first, then succeeded later. They're the one who knows the pitfalls. They've got more compassion for the others who make mistakes. Getting things wrong teaches you compassion."

"I suppose I'm on my way to becoming more compassionate, then."

"You saying you're used to getting everything right?"
When she opened her mouth to reply, he held up a hand to halt her, his eyed crinkled attractively at the corners. "Don't answer that. I can tell you are. Pretty near perfect, if I'm any judge. You're allowed to get some things wrong."

But this hit too close to home, and she scowled at him. "Thank you so much for your approval."

He just went on smiling his genial smile, endlessly casual. "No worries. I could tell you were anxious about it. Didn't want you fretting."

"You're so generous."

"Or compassionate, maybe. It's all those mistakes I've made, you see? That's compassion in action, for sure. I'm here for you, I'm feeling your pain," he ticked off items on his fingers, "I know it's tough but I have faith in your resilience. See? I'm either a genius or I've got this stuff wrong before too."

And now, though the
humor was still there, he had segued to a point of vulnerability and sat there looking at her with his warm hazel eyes that told her he understood, did not pity her but really saw her, his half-emptied plate pushed a little away so he could prop his forearms on the table.

She wanted to cut him off, to deny the connection he established that seemed too personal, too intimate. She looked away from him, down at her plate, and poked at what remained of her mound of coleslaw.  "Maybe you're right. I'll get on that questionnaire right away. Create it and hand it out."

"Copies to every single person. I'll expect mine in the post."

"Complete it right away," she said absently, assembling her next mouthful.

"Yes ma'am. And get it straight back to you," he said softly, and she looked up, startled, caught suddenly in a meaningful glance she had not wanted to share.

The implication was too much, even in teasing. They were not dating. She did not need to know a single thing about his expectations for a life partnership.
For marriage. She opened her mouth, unsure what she would say to tell him how wrong he was, how he encroached too much on her.

But perhaps he already knew it, because he inclined his head respectfully and rose before she could find words. "I'll be getting on now, but I'm looking forward to Friday night. Catch you later."

He went and left her gaping after him, as he took another seat within sight of her, next to other people talking animatedly, sat down and slotted easily into the conversation.

A moment later he glanced her way and when he found her still looking at him, he winked.

She pressed her lips together and glared at her plate, then began to furiously attack the remaining food, eating and fuming.

"He's so nice, isn't he?" said Eleanor, making her
twitch in surprise.

"Who?" she asked as if she had no idea what Eleanor was talking about. But the other woman sat and nodded in Luke's direction, her dark hair gleaming
in wings on either side of her face. Her eyes held a fondness.

"That Luke.
He's such a sweetie."

"Is he? I don't really know him that well."

"Definitely. Single too, if you're looking. Though maybe it's too soon for you. And truth be told, I guess he's very picky. I've never known him to go out with anyone and he's been here more than a year."

"Oh?" said Felicity, trying to sound offhand.

"My friend Maya asked him out and he kind of ducked the invite as if he hadn't quite got what she meant. It made me laugh, I have to say, because Maya's used to getting her own way with men. Not that I told her that. And he did it well, too. Or maybe he's gay."

"I wouldn't have thought so."

"Neither would I, actually. He definitely doesn't give off the vibe."

"No."

The two women sat and looked at Luke Barrett for a long moment, then at each other, Eleanor with a conspiratorial air. "Definitely not. So he must just be picky. You should give him a try."

"Should I?" Felicity felt a little resentful of this advice. As if she was not complete and sufficient without a man.

"Yeah. He's the kind of guy who'd be good for the soul, I think. He's so nice. Like the best sort of medicine for a broken heart."

"Who said my heart was broken?" Felicity asked with a slight edge.

Eleanor's eyes widened and she backed up immediately, her hands half-raised to pat the air between them. "But of course you- I just thought- Don't mind me. I'm just chatting. You know what it's like. And I hate to see you sad. You're good people, too. Someone like you deserves someone like Luke. But not if you're not ready."

Felicity closed her eyes in a slow blink, suddenly feeling exhausted by the evening, by trying to act normal among too many people. She fixed a reassuring smile to her face.

"Thanks. That's kind of you to say." She paused, let Eleanor read her expression and see she had not caused offense, then lowered her gaze to her plate, carving away in determination at the last morsels. It was time to finish it and go home. Enough effort for tonight, and a new, better day tomorrow.

 

CHAPTER ELEVEN

 

The rest of the weekdays passed slowly. Her routine had settled into its new shape, and she found it disconcerting how little her life actually changed following the end of her marriage. She had less work to do around the house, the meals she cooked were simpler and she had no one but herself to tidy after. Most of her errands were gone, and there were places she simply did not go anymore, like the stadium.

Honestly there was nothing she missed, except maybe the team a little, though she would see quite a few of them socially anyway. It was quietly horrifying how little real impact Dan had had on her world. He really had not added anything. How had she not seen that?

She had been willfully blind. The fact of her marriage had meant more to her than the truth of it. It said something pitiful to her about her need to get things right, to be conventional and proper. She had been obsessed with the outward appearance as if that would make the whole perfect.

It made her doubt her own judgment. Without question, it was the right choice to stay casual, single,
emotionally unavailable.

 

Getting ready to go out dancing on Friday night – dancing with Luke – was odd. She was dressing up the same way she for going out solo, but planning to dance with Luke had her feeling like this was a date. She did not want a date. She wanted an excuse to get physically close to him, not to get to know him better.

He was exactly on time, halfway to the door when she - watching out for his arrival - opened it.

"You look beautiful," he said, wearing a beaming smile and offering her his arm. She felt the trammels of a 'date' snap shut around the evening in an inescapable grip. Obviously that was how he thought of things. It made her uncomfortable. She did not want to raise false expectations. She was not ready for a relationship and even if she had been she would not have picked him: too young for her, a jock, not clever enough.

She wondered if she should explain any of that to him, and decided it would be too rude. For now she let it slide.

He opened the door for her and she slid into the passenger seat of his car, feeling a stir of interest about it. Luke drove an old sedan, similar to the one her parents owned.

"So tell me about this car," she said, inquisitive as always about how people were spending their money. The tale of a person's spending was the tale of how they made their life choices. The overwhelming majority lived for the moment.

He shrugged. "Not much to tell. I bought it at the end of school from my parents when they upgraded to a new one. They serviced it regularly so it was in great condition. I've done the same and it's lasting well."

"You haven't thought of replacing it since you've gone pro?" Every football player she had ever known owned a flashy, powerful car. For many of them it was the first thing they bought with the huge leap in income that came with turning pro.

"No. No way. That money's for my future."

"That's . . ." unexpectedly wise, were the words that popped into her head and she held back. She did
not want to sound patronizing. She was well aware delayed gratification was a sign of intelligence, but congratulating him on it was almost a put-down, ". . . unusual," she finished cautiously.

"I figure I only get a few years playing, and if I can stick it all in the bank it'll give me a good start on the rest of my life."

"Hmmm. As a financial analyst. I can tell you that attitude's pretty rare. I bet the other team members hassle you about this car."

"Some do."

"And that doesn't bother you?"

"Nah.
I'm the secure type. Don't need a big hunk of metal to assert my machismo."

"Great. So . . . uh . . . what do you do when you're not training or playing?"

He glanced at her, his eyebrows raised. "Hobbies and such?"

"Yes.
If you have any."

"I hang out with friends, mostly. Read a bit. Watch sport. Since I came here, that is. My last place I had a garden but here I'm in a condo."

"You like to garden?"

"Yeah."

She inspected him, trying to make this fit with her image of the typical footballer. The sex, drugs, rock-and-roll lifestyle of the professional athlete – especially those who were single. Gardening. That was a surprise. "So you don't get to do that anymore?"

"No. I miss it.  I thought it would be a good idea to buy the condo. It's a great building, no maintenance issues and I wanted to work hard when I was at work,
then relax when I wasn't. But now I know what I'm doing on the field I miss having my fingers in the soil. Next off-season I think I'll look around, get a place with a bit of land, turn it into something nice."

"So quite a creative process, then?"

"Yeah. I like to make things. Work with my hands."

Directed by the comment, she glanced at his hands where they gripped the steering wheel, broad and capable. They were well-shaped, too.
Attractive hands. She remembered the feel of them on her body, strong and gentle, and how his touch had made her wild. Yes, he was good with his hands, and then some.

The thought made her feel flushed with heat. Perhaps he would touch her again tonight. She hoped he would.  That he would use those big hands on her and she could stop thinking and just be young and vital and alive. "So are we going to the same place tonight?"

"I'm happy to, since I guess you like it."

"How can you tell?" she asked dryly.

He slanted a laughing glance at her, obviously seeing the trap she was laying to get him to acknowledge following her. "You were having so much fun on the dance floor. All those college boys."

"College boys!
They were older than that."

"I don't think so. Just kids, really."

"Didn't seem very childish to me."

"No? Well perhaps that's in the eye of the beholder."

"Oh, because of course you're so terribly mature yourself."

"I've been around the block a time or two."

"You're only – what? – twenty-five?"

"Twenty-seven."

"Ancient."

"Old enough to know a college boy when I see one."

"Nonsense."

"They were probably there on fake IDs. You made their night.
That one in particular."

"I doubt it."

"I saw his face when he was walking away. He was smug. He had reason to be, of course."

"Not that much reason."

"Reason enough."

"Not as much as you," she said impulsively, then blushed as he looked at her again, his eyes warm.

"That's true. I did hold you longer, kiss you longer."

"That's not what I mean." He raised an eyebrow, and after a moment she pushed herself to go on. "More that you were a much better kisser."

"Oh ho. Well, you know, college boys. What do they know about anything?"

"Apparently not enough."

"Apparently not. Of course if you'd kissed me like that when I was that age I'd have learned damned quick."

"Fast learner, then?" she teased him.

"Excellent motivation."

"So you're saying I didn't motivate him enough?"

"He was a slow learner."

She laughed softly. "I think your logic is flawed."

"Maybe a little skewed in your direction." He stopped at traffic lights, tilted his head towards her, a small smile of enjoyment curving his lips. "Your ability to be real compelling. If he didn't learn under those conditions there's no hope for him. You've got what's known as natural favoritism."

"Natural
favoritism?"

"It's one step further than natural selection. It's when nature selects someone and then bestows an unnatural number of gifts on her."

"Now you're claiming to be nature's gift?"

He gave a startled laugh. "Uh, no, I hadn't gone as far as thinking nature had a hand in bestowing me on you. But I could be yours if you wanted it." His grin made the comment
lighthearted. The signal changed and he pulled away.

"Very generous."

"Well that's how it is when you're one of nature's favorites. Everyone wants to give you something."

"You want to give me something?"

"And then some."

"Well." She shifted in her seat, heated and off balance.

"Well indeed."

He started to
maneuver his car into a parking space and she realized she had not even noticed the journey. Maybe he was not always as monosyllabic as he had seemed when she first met him. Had she rushed to judge him? Surely not too much. Perhaps he brought his A-game to dates.

 

As they walked to the club he took her hand in his, casually, and she felt the frisson of awareness all the way through her, making her wide awake and tingling. Such an intense physical reaction she had to him. So strange. So exciting.

The music was pumping at the club, but the dance floor was still empty, though the crowd was building, clustered around the edge of the dance floor, talking and laughing.

Luke was not shy, though. Without hesitation he led her out into the middle of that empty space, already moving to the beat. She took a deep breath and steeled herself to join in, not one of nature's performers. She did not like to be the center of attention and at the moment she was, though it was only seconds before others joined them, dispersed in loose knots across the floor that had been clear. Obviously they had been waiting for the signal the business of the night had begun.

With plenty of space around them, Luke gave her space too. He had a quirky sense of
humor when he danced, riffing off what she was doing, going retro and laughing over moves like 'the robot' or 'moonwalk' that made her laugh too because she remembered kids practicing those at school. It was funny watching this big, cool athlete break out the old school stuff. Geeky and appealing. Particularly when underneath it was such a great ability to really dance, to capture the rhythm and make it his, that fission of physical ability and sex appeal.

She relaxed, loosened up, began to enjoy herself, his clowning giving her permission to get it wrong or strange or a bit nerdy. She did not have to impress him. This was delightful. He flirted with her, close then further apart, brush
ed against her as if by accident, moved away then returned.

She felt each touch far too intensely, frightening and wonderful.

As the club filled and the pack of bodies became dense they came nearer and nearer and the atmosphere began to heat. She watched him under her lashes, how his body moved, how it was put together so beautifully, a magnet for her eyes. She remembered how bold she had been the first time she danced with him, how it had been easy to just let him know she wanted him. The desire to put her hands on him rose up in her again but now she hesitated. His rejection had been humiliating. She knew why he had turned her down. She knew the end of her marriage – mutually acknowledged – made anything possible, but still instinct was difficult to master. As the mood changed she could not make eye contact anymore.

Eventually it was he who stepped forward into her space, so close she had to look at
him, there was nowhere else for her eyes to rest. So she did, giving him a sultry smile meant to hide her uncertainty. He wore that intensity she had seen in him before, the look that said she was the only thing he saw, that he was captivated by her.

It was a heady feeling, receiving that look from a man like him, so fit, so healthy, such a supreme male animal. It made her want to sigh and flutter, to be the softest, sweetest cotton candy of a girl, all willing surrender to that masculine power. It said he wanted to possess her, and her body said 'yes. Oh, yes.'

She had to fight a mental battle to allow herself, though. The hint of dominance awoke her new defenses. She was not willing to be ruled by a man again, to lose herself.

But it was only sex. Not a contract for more. Not ownership of any sort. It would be okay to be
herself sexually, to yield, so long as she kept her boundaries in place. Just sex, just fun, casual sex.

So she fluttered her eyelashes, sashayed a little, deliberately, delicately provocative. He put his hand in the small of her back, his other hand between her shoulder blades, stepped in close and dipped her in a way that owed much more to Latin dancing than their more modern moves. She gasped and clung to him, came up laughing with a 'Wow
’ on her lips.

He spun her around in a tight circle, careful not to knock her into anyone. It was dark and crowded and no one was watching them play. No one saw the way he welded them together from thigh to chest, and only she knew about that hidden response of his body pressed between them, already becoming familiar. Only she knew how her heart raced in response, caught breathless between fading laughter and the urgency of desire.

She took a sobbing breath and wanted quite suddenly to be alone with him. She wanted his clothes off, wanted his skin on hers, to feel the male roughness of it. She wanted to wrap her hand around his erection, feel the silky hot length of it, all for her. She eased a hand between them, sucking in her stomach, rubbed against the denim of his pants and saw his eyes open wide in shocked pleasure.

BOOK: The Passion Play
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