Bitter Spirits

Read Online Bitter Spirits by Jenn Bennett - Free Book Online

Book: Bitter Spirits by Jenn Bennett Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jenn Bennett
Ads: Link
illustration. “There’s a trust between them. She enjoys him watching her. Oh, and would you look at that? She’s got freckles just like you. How interesting.”
    Aida’s eyes flicked to the bulky arms flanking her shoulders. She twisted inside his trap, defiantly faced him, and shoved at his chest. A useless act against someone built like a mountain; he didn’t budge.
    She drew back. He leaned forward, erasing the distance. Their combined weight pressing against the lamp table caused it to slide a few centimeters. A frightening, almost unbearable intensity darkened his eyes. She could no longer tell which pupil was bigger, because both were enlarged beneath languid, drooping eyelids.
    â€œDo you like people watching you onstage, Aida?”
    The question was, at best, rude, and paired with the postcard, the insinuation behind it was downright vulgar. But it was her name on his lips that unexpectedly triggered lust to uncoil low in her belly. It sounded so startlingly intimate, and he was so close. So close, so big . . . so intimidating. She was overawed and overexcited, all at once.
    His gaze dropped. Hers followed, only to find the hands that had shoved at his chest were now grasping his necktie, either in an attempt to choke him or pull him closer.
    Maybe both.
    â€œChrist alive,” he whispered thickly.
    Her thoughts exactly—what on earth did she think she was doing? Rattled by her own lack of restraint, she released the necktie and ducked under his arm, then took several quick steps to put some distance between them.
    â€œSorry,” she mumbled with her back to him. “I’m not sure what came over me.”
    He didn’t answer. God, she’d rattled him. Probably a first. And now that her foggy brain was clearing, she was uncertain about his intentions.
Do you like people watching you onstage, Aida?
Maybe she’d misread this completely. Perhaps he’d only been trying to intimidate her after she’d rudely plowed through his personal things, and she’d only been
hoping
he didn’t mind the freckles. Maybe she’d just been fooling herself because she wanted him to want her as much as she wanted him.
    But wants and needs aren’t interchangeable, and what she
needed
right now was to cool down and gather her wits. She exhaled heavily, and the breath that rushed out of her mouth was a chilly white cloud.

SIX

    IT TOOK SEVERAL MOMENTS FOR WINTER TO COMPOSE HIMSELF enough to turn around. He was uncomfortably hard, aching and straining against the front of his pants. The fact that she provoked such an immediate response in him wasn’t a surprise—he had, after all, spent the last few nights conjuring images of her while he stroked himself to sleep. Thank God she hadn’t flipped one more page in his postcard collection, or she’d have seen the program he’d taken from Gris-Gris, folded inside out with her photograph bared.
    But really, could he be blamed for that? She was beautiful, vivacious, and carefree. Of course he wanted her. It was
her response
that had him thrown for a loop. Because unless the blood now pulsing inside his cock had emptied his brain and made him daft, he suspected she wanted him, too. How was that possible?
    The only women who showed him any interest these days were gold diggers who lusted after his money and the perceived excitement it could provide, or fallen socialites who’d become accustomed to a lifestyle that was slipping from their grasp. Women who once knew him before the accident now looked at him with pity. Strangers acted uncomfortable when they saw his scars.
    So why was Aida flirting with him?
    And the more he thought about it, the more he was certain she really
was
flirting, despite it having been years since anyone had shown interest in him without an agenda. She had no reason to need anything from him. She was independent, earning her own money, and successful enough at it.

Similar Books

Nine's Legacy

Pittacus Lore

Time to Fly

Laurie Halse Anderson

Rev Me Twice

Adele Dubois

Superego

Frank J. Fleming

The Last Thing I Saw

Richard Stevenson

The Book of Joby

Mark J. Ferrari

Angel Fire

L. A. Weatherly

Fair Game

Stephen Leather