Thousand Yard Bride (6 page)

Read Thousand Yard Bride Online

Authors: Nora Flite,Allison Starwood

BOOK: Thousand Yard Bride
4.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Listen up, Standard!" he bellowed. "I’ve got a massive suite just below where we stand now. Everyone’s welcome to come down and keep this party going!”

So much for an easy night.

I approached Hunter with a soft hand on his arm and a whisper in his ear. “Are you sure that’s such a good idea? Things have been going so well.”

“For you," he said, cutting to the quick.

"Yes. For me. Which is good for
you,
Hunter."

Rolling his eyes, he gestured at the people who were already parading off the roof. "Come on, Jo. The stuffed shirts are gone, we can finally relax. Look, you did a great job tonight. I didn’t fuck up. It’s a first, and I think we need to celebrate that.” There it was again, his winning smile. Did everyone fall for it? “How about you come down for just one drink? I can control myself at my own after party. Give me another chance to impress you. I want to.”

His gaze held me, all soul and none of his usual arrogance. He was a different man.

That, or I'd just fallen under his spell like a damn idiot.

“Ok," I said hesitantly. "But just one drink. And
you
better stay true to your word and behave." I pushed my fingertip into his chest. I'd meant it for emphasis, to show him I wasn't joking around.

Under my touch, I felt his hard muscles—how his heart ticked just a bit faster when I came in contact. Hunter was already watching me closely, his amber irises rolling with a beautiful darkness that seemed to shock him as much as me.

Yanking my hand away, I darted my stare from his eyes, to his lips, then back again. Hunter was no longer confused. He wasn't the sort of man who usually was, if I had to guess. This creature of strength and passion knew when he wanted something.

And as I stood there, my brain dizzy and my core roiling with wicked heat, I knew exactly what he wanted.

Me.

Hunter Daniels wanted me.

3
Jo

T
he after party
at Hunter’s suite was not that much smaller than the party on the roof of The Standard. There were people there who hadn’t even attended the rooftop party. I’m not sure how Hunter pulled off that trick, but I figured that maybe I didn’t want to know.

While everybody else let loose, I had to focus on keeping everything remotely PG-rated. Hunter spent most of his time in an armchair relaxing with a drink, taking audiences with his various admirers as they came up to him and vied for his attention.

Hovering by a wall, I found myself focusing intently on the women who sidled up to the football player. Whenever they bent close, giggling or flipping their hair, a sharp
something
inside of my heart would start to dig its way free.

This isn't like me,
I thought in despair.
Why does it matter if these girls fight for Hunter's attention?
I tried to shake off the heavy shroud of budding jealousy, convincing myself I only cared so much because it was my job.

Even with the one drink I'd agreed to have muddying my brain, I couldn't quite fool myself.

I thought the party would never end, that I would never sleep another wink in my life. Hunter sent more drinks over to me—which I ignored—all the while staring me down with that damn smirk of his. He was getting off on teasing me.

The worst part was he wasn't alone in this game. Jam, another member of the Kings Club, came up to me and started dancing. His huge arms swung like axes in a battle; it didn't entice me to get very close to him.

“Hey," he laughed, winking down at me. "You’re Jo, right? I’m Jam. Hunter told me you love to dance.”

That son of a bitch. “Oh," I said sweetly, "Did he?”

“Yeah, he said you couldn't get enough dancing or drinks in your life. Check this out.” Jam put his hand behind my ear and then showed his palm to me. In it were two airplane bottles of vodka. The stupid trick was actually cute, especially coming from a huge football player.

I folded my arms in the hope that he'd get the hint—I wasn't down for more drinking. "I don't know many football players who are also magicians."

“I'm a rarity, baby. Magic both on and off the field,” Jam said.

“Does that line ever work with women?”

“Of course it does.” Straightening up, he corrected himself. “Ok, not really.” Jam flashed the bottle of vodka again. “So, want that drink?”

I started to say no, but to my surprise, I reached for the bottle. "Actually," I laughed, breaking down and rolling with my own honesty, "I do." It had been one long, exhausting day, and fighting the party lifestyle was starting to lose its gloss.

Plus, I was a grown ass woman—what was one more drink?

I unscrewed the top of the little bottle and downed it all in one gulp. It burned, but I managed to say, “Thanks, Mr. Magician."

“My pleasure. How about a little dancing, then?”

I don’t know if it was the shot or the smug look that Hunter was shooting me across the room as he danced with some flawless supermodel, but something possessed me to rise to the challenge. “I guess I could fit that into my job description.”

Jam led me deeper into the room, and even though he had no rhythm at all, I bounced along with him to the sweat-inducing club music. My skull felt mushy, the vodka pressing against my nerves and numbing my senses.

In the middle of swaying to the third song, Hunter appeared behind his friend. He was shooting heated magnetic energy at me; I pulled up short, losing my balance. There was a big glass of something with ice cubes and a salt-crusted rim in his grip. “Jam, you taking care of my girl, here?” His eyes darted between us both.

Unless I was crazy, that was the stare of a jealous man. I had to hide my triumphant smile.

“She's got swagger! She’s all right with me,” Jam said.

“Yeah, she’s all right,” Hunter said, muscling Jam’s gyrating hips away from me. “Mind if I steal her for a minute?”

“Sure thing, Hunt. Wait, actually, let me get a picture of you two.” Jam ripped out the most beaten up smartphone I'd ever seen. Did he run it through a damn trash compactor? I rolled my eyes, but smiled for the photo anyway.

Hunter crammed against me, his arm like steel where it caught me around my shoulders. The tips of his fingers brushed my bare collar bone, and I knew my smile had broken away a second before the phone flashed.

"Thanks, guys!" Jam said, spinning away and staring down at his phone.

Still flustered by Hunter's possessive hold, I didn't fight him when he pulled me into the center of the room. His almost-hug turned smoothly into a solid squeeze of my hips. The player rocked me, making me dance with him in front of everyone.

"You having fun?" he asked, his body creating a deep shadow over me that made me feel so strangely small.

Swallowing down a dizzying wave, I considered my answer. Hunter was doing what he'd been trying from the moment we'd met; he was determined to fuck with me. It was probably how he got his rocks off, just making women feel like they couldn't predict him—couldn't control him.

Biting my tongue, I put my hands on his shoulders. Two could play this game, and by the way Hunter's smile twitched, I had a feeling I'd just won some points. "Lots of fun," I said, grinning. "And so far it's been peaceful."

"Boring, you mean," he chuckled.

"Sometimes boring is the best outcome, Hunter."

Wrinkling his nose, he swung me around. "Agree to disagree."

I don’t know if it was the DJ playing a beat-heavy remix of
Tainted Love
, or the clean smell of Hunter’s sculpted body so close to mine, or maybe just that everyone in the suite was having such a good time, but pretty soon I stopped checking my watch. It was crazy how great I felt, how my work stress had melted away. Lanie would have been so proud of me.

After a while, my sassy new heels started killing my feet. "I need to take a break. Dance on without me." Stepping back, I was surprised by how his grip tightened on my forearm. Then he released me, hunching his shoulders and backing into the crowd.

What the hell was that?

Staring after him, I watched the bodies swallow him up. It was unsettling, and I felt relief when he appeared again in a corner, a new drink in his fist. The man had an uncanny talent for pushing my rules. My feet were throbbing too much for me to chase him down and ask him to quit, so I stumbled to a chair and dropped into it with a big, satisfied sigh of exhaustion. This partying stuff was no joke.

Finally, people started leaving. I counted them for fun, like they were sheep—but that was a terrible mistake, because it made me sleepy.
No,
I thought in a panic,
This isn't just sleep. I drank too much. Shit shit shit.
I immediately texted my sister:
Lanie, I cannot drink like I did in college!! Sooo tipsy.

Lanie responded:
Oh, like you ever partied hard in college, lightweight. Drink water. Take a deep breath. You’ll be fine.

I took my sister’s advice and grabbed a bottle of water from the suite’s bar. But what I really needed was some fresh air. I made it to the sliding glass doors without stumbling too badly in my new shoes, but once I got out there I realized that Hunter was already on the balcony.

He also wasn't alone.

While I'd been sure I'd counted the last party-goer as they exited, he was standing next to the jacuzzi talking to a tall blonde in a bandage dress who was practically drooling all over him. She kept touching his arm while tilting her head back and exploding into drunken giggles.

Then she leaned
really
close, and I was terrified she'd kiss him and that I'd have to
see
her kiss him. Acting on impulse, I shouted, "Wow! What a view!" They both startled, staring at me with mixed emotions.
Real smooth, Jo.
“Fancy meeting you out here,” I said, trying to sound as put-together as possible.

Hunter wasn't smiling, his voice brittle on the edge. Had I pissed him off by interrupting him? “I needed to get away from everything. I could use a break from all the socializing, you know?”

“I
totally
know,” the blonde gushed. Hunter shot me a pained expression, and I noticed his body was angled away from her, his intense eyes not breaking contact with mine.

Finally, I caught on. He wanted the girl who was out there with him to leave. And as his official handler, I knew exactly what to do.

Swaying towards them, I said, “Hi there, um, what’s your name, again?”

“Christina,” she slurred.

“Christina, are you staying at the hotel?”

“Uh huh,” she giggled.

“You know, you look tired. Are you tired?”

“I—”

“You do look tired,” Hunter cut her off. “But you gave me your number already, right?”

“Uh huh,” she nodded.

“Great!” I said. “Let’s get you to your room so you can get some rest.”

“But Hunter and I . . . ”

“Hunter is tired, too. Time to call it a night.” I led Christina back into the hotel room. Then I dialed down to the front desk to send someone up to make sure she got back to her own room safely. A few minutes later, a concierge knocked.

Gently, I guided Christina out into the hall, tipping the employee a twenty as she whisked the blonde away. Done and done.

I went back out on the balcony and looked around. Shit. I’d lost Hunter. For a moment I panicked, wondering what sort of shenanigans he’d probably gotten himself into while I was distracted from my post, then wondering with growing horror if the whole thing with Christina had been a distraction so he could sneak away and raise hell out in the wilds of Los Angeles in front of a few camera lenses.

His voice came from behind me, low and gritty. “Hey, Jo.”

I whirled toward the sound. There he was, shirtless, lounging in the hot tub. My breath caught in my throat. The glittering LA skyline was spread out behind him, but all I could focus on was his hot, wet body.

Hunter was covered in ink, the harsh blacks and orange colors highlighting the cutting edges of his muscles. With his arms stretched behind him, elbows high, he made it easy to see the long and deep crevice between his pecs and abs.

“What are you doing?” I asked him, mouth dry.

His eyes locked with mine, one brow quirking. “Trying to relax. Thanks for taking care of that girl. Contrary to popular belief, I don't bang everything that walks.”

“I never said you did,” I countered, suddenly on guard at his defensive tone.

“You didn’t have to. I can tell that’s what you think of me." He dipped underwater, coming back up so quick that the water ran in rivulets down his nose and ears. He pushed his hair out of his face. “Did you at least have a little fun tonight?”

I bristled, because his implication was clear: he thought that
I
thought he was a walking mindless fuck machine, and that in contrast, I was bland and humorless. “Yeah, I did. A little. And don’t worry. I made sure no one took pictures of anything . . . untoward,” I said, trying to sound like I was still doing my job to the best of my abilities.

"Untoward?" he asked, grinning with one side of his mouth. "Like when we were dancing together?"

The memory had my lower belly tingling. I was sure that while we'd been grinding together, I'd felt the hard shape of his hungry cock. Clearly, I hadn't imagined the chemistry between us. I had to shut this down—I couldn’t be crushing on my new client! Both our careers were on the line.

"It wasn't serious," I mumbled. "It meant nothing. No one will think we're having sex or something so messed up."


Messed up?"
he spat. "That's really how you think of me. I’m just some manwhore who'd sleep with anyone." He sounded legitimately annoyed. “Don’t you think I get enough shit from my parents? Despite what you’ve heard to the contrary, I
am
an adult.”

“No, that’s not what I meant. I'm just trying to point out no one will think badly of either of us from some silly dancing,” I argued. “I'm trying to say I did my job. I don’t think that you're a . . . a manwhore.” My eyes slowly traced the hard lines of his bare chest, and I had to fight back an involuntary groan of appreciation. “I think you’re very, very—" What had he said? "Adult.”

Hunter didn't speak. Like a crocodile waiting to strike, he hung low in the water and studied me. Then with patient precision, he made his way out of the jacuzzi towards me, drops of water rolling down the taut lines of his figure.

No one should be so gorgeous or so dangerous. It made no sense to my frazzled brain that he could be smiling at me while his black pupils ate me up and spit me out. I froze, wondering what he was going to do to me right here, right now—and undecided whether it would be my greatest wish come true or the worst thing that could possibly happen.

"I'm glad you agree that I'm not a monster," he whispered, hovering over me so that a single drop of water dripped onto my cheek.

What I saw in his gaze wasn’t just the pure animal lust I’d expected. It was desire, yes, but also a kind of vulnerability, a need to be seen. He suddenly seemed more real to me, more human.

“Hunter, of course you’re not a monster. I see that. And I honestly want to help you deal with all of this media nonsense. You deserve for people to see the real you. You’re so talented, and focused, and hard working. That’s what I see. Really.”

My words seemed to have the opposite effect than the one I’d intended. Hunter turned away with a sneer, looking out at the city lights. He spoke fast and with purpose, like he was letting something out. “Yeah, yeah. So talented and about to waste everything. People think that I was born some star athlete just because my dad was a multiyear MVP. It wasn't that easy for me.

"When I was a kid, I wanted nothing to do with football because I saw what it did to my parents. My dad was always cheating on my mom, and she stuck by him, for me or for some other stupid reason." He barked out a hollow laugh. "And the worst part is, she never even called him on it. Everyone always treated him like a god, and he really thought he was one. Still does."

The flutter in my chest became a hard elastic ball. Hunter was pouring out a part of him that I had no right to hear, we barely knew each other. For some reason, though, he'd decided to grace me with some honesty.

Other books

The Smoking Mirror by David Bowles
Changed: 2 (Wolf's Den) by Aline Hunter
About Schmidt by Louis Begley
Naked Dragon by G. A. Hauser
Castro Directive by Mertz, Stephen
The warrior's apprentice by Lois McMaster Bujold
In Plane Sight by Franklin W. Dixon
The Golden Vanity by Isabel Paterson