And she felt like heaven in his arms.
He stopped thinking then and deepened the kiss, losing himself to sensation. His tongue slid into her soft, wet mouth. His hand trailed over the satin of her cheek, and his fingers threaded through the silk of her hair. At the sound of her throaty moan, Lucca’s passion blazed.
He wanted her. He wanted to strip away the barrier of their clothes and feel those full breasts of hers flattened against his bare chest. He wanted to explore her with his hands, to trace the taut stretch of her muscles, the feminine curve of her hip. He wanted to taste her. He wanted to see her. Badly.
Badly enough that he knew he’d better apply the brakes.
But, in a minute.
He needed just one more minute. One more endless minute to lose himself in the erotic pleasure of her kiss.
Because now her arms had lifted and twined around his neck, and her fingers played along the sensitive skin just above his collar. She was hot and trembling and when she purred, the sound vibrated through him. Now, Romano. End it now, before it’s too late.
He lifted his head and eased away, opening his eyes. The hazy light of dawn cast a golden glow across flushed cheeks and lips red and swollen. Her chest lifted and fell in quick pants. When her lids fluttered open and she stared up at him with soft, arousal-drugged eyes, it took all his willpower not to lower his head again.
He fought for something to say and came up with a stupid “Good morning.”
“Oh. Wow.”
It pleased Lucca to know that he wasn’t the only one suffering from stupid. “That’s a nice way to begin a day.”
“Yes. Yes, it is. Was. Nice. I enjoyed it.” Her chest rose, then fell with one big breath. “Not just the kiss. The entire night was special.”
With another woman, Lucca would have fired a comeback filled with sexual innuendo, but something about Hope caused him to simply say, “Yes, it was. I’m glad you shared it with me.”
And with that, their evening with the Perseids came to an end.
They hiked back to the truck in silence, Lucca lighting their way with the flashlight. On the way down the mountain to Eternity Springs, the mood between them felt awkward. He asked if she had a busy day ahead, which she did and had already told him about. She asked him what paint colors Maggie had chosen for Aspenglow’s interior walls. As if he’d paid a bit of attention because he did all his work around the place outdoors.
Lucca sensed that the kiss had changed something. She was pulling back from him. Just as he was pulling back from her.
He pulled his truck into the driveway between their two houses. They both climbed down from the truck and Lucca hesitated. Ordinarily, he’d walk a woman he’d just spent half the night with to her front door. But if he did that since he’d kissed her earlier, he’d have to kiss her again, wouldn’t he?
Have to, Romano? What a hardship you’re considering there.
Hope glanced at him. “Thanks again for including me, Lucca. The meteor shower was a spectacular show.”
What about the kiss? Maybe the fact she hadn’t mentioned it meant she wouldn’t go inside and call his sister and spill the beans. He’d dated one of Gabi’s friends in the past. He knew how all that worked. Once Hope told Gabi that he’d kissed her, he’d be dealing not just with Hope, but with Gabi and Mom, too. Madness. You need to take a big step back.
He cleared his throat. “It’s a good way to put a period on the summer. I’m headed to Boulder to visit my brother and by the time I get back, school will have started. You’ll be busy. I guess stargazing late at night won’t work for your schedule. I probably won’t see you much.”
She offered up a fake smile that made Lucca feel like a heel. “You’re right. I have no leisure time once school starts. If I were to try to fit something else into my schedule now, well, I would need to want it badly. I’m afraid stargazing will have to wait until the situation suits my desires. Have a nice trip to Boulder.”
Well, then. She’d put him in his place, hadn’t she? He shot back a smile just as false as hers. “Thanks. I intend to.”
She started toward her house, giving him a backward wave. “Bye. Today is trash pickup. Don’t forget to carry your can to the curb.”
Lucca stood watching her until she disappeared inside her house. “Carry my can to the curb?” he muttered. “Was that some sort of crack?”
He wasn’t certain, and it made him a little grumpy. Everything since the kiss had made him a little grumpy. As he grabbed his duffel and the quilt from the back of the truck and carried them into his house, he muttered, “Sleep deprivation. That’s what this is. It’s all it is.”
He’d take a little nap before heading out to see Tony.
But when he sprawled across his bed and buried his head in his pillow, thoughts of Hope Montgomery drifted across his mind like wispy clouds. Better for them both that they stopped before they ever really got started. He wasn’t looking for a relationship. Hell, he wasn’t even looking for sex. Go figure. Since that self-destructive stretch during his Latin American sabbatical when he went around nailing anyone who was interested, he’d lost interest in meaningless sex. But he wasn’t ready for sex to mean something, either.
Kissing Hope Montgomery had stirred him. Tempted him.
The memory of it plagued him when he tried to fall asleep.
After tossing and turning for twenty minutes, he gave up. He showered, dressed, threw a few things into a bag, and headed for Boulder.
He phoned his brother when he was twenty minutes out. Tony wasn’t through with work for the day. “I have another hour to an hour and a half here, and I didn’t have time for lunch. I’m going to want food the minute I’m free. Want to play tourist for a while, then pick me up and we can go to dinner?”
Lucca considered a moment, then said, “Weather is nice. How about I stop at the grocery store for steaks and fire up the grill at your house? I can have it ready when you get home.”
“Sounds great. Key is in the usual spot.”
When Tony had been an assistant coach in Boulder, he’d lived in an apartment near campus. After he’d won the head-coaching job, he’d bought a house up in the Flagstaff area that had a great backyard and an awesome view.
Lucca stopped at a grocery and purchased everything he would need for supper, knowing the chances that his twin had a stocked refrigerator hovered between slim and none. He arrived at Tony’s house, found the house key hidden on a rafter on the back porch, and let himself inside. By the time Tony drove up, Lucca had a salad made, baked potatoes ready, and two huge rib eyes ready for the outdoor kitchen grill.
Tony changed into shorts and a T-shirt and walked out barefoot carrying a bottle of Cabernet. He inhaled the aroma and exhaled with worshipful appreciation. With his gaze locked on the sizzling steaks, he said, “As of this moment, you are officially off the hook for the hundred you owe me.”
“I don’t owe you a hundred.”
“Yeah, you do. American League won the All-Star game.”
“Oh.” The brothers had a standing baseball bet. “I didn’t notice. Think I was taking in the sights on a nude beach in Brazil when that game was played.”
“Asshole. I take it back. You still owe me.” Tony decanted the wine and poured two glasses.
“Nope. Take-backs not allowed on bet settlements. Sit down and fill your face with rabbit food. Steaks will be ready in five.”
Both men were hungry, and they didn’t waste much time talking as they plowed through their meal. Afterward, they cleaned up, then Tony dished up two bowls of Rocky Road ice cream—their favorite—and carried them outside. Tony had a great backyard spot to watch the sunset.
Tony opened the conversation with a challenge. “I had hoped you might come by campus,” he said. “You haven’t seen the new practice facility. I’d like to show you around.”
Lucca understood that his twin’s offer involved more than a tour of a new basketball headquarters. He hadn’t gone near a basketball court since the day of his meltdown, and Tony was asking if Lucca had his head on straight yet. The answer was no. “Maybe next time.”
Tony set down his ice cream. “I’m thirsty. You want a bottle of water?”
“I’m good.”
His twin snorted as he stood and took a water from his outdoor kitchen fridge. He lifted the remote and switched on the television mounted above the bar area. He thumbed to a basketball game then defiantly sauntered back toward Lucca, who shifted his chair toward the sunset—and away from the TV.
Tony muttered an expletive, then asked, “So, what brings you to Boulder so soon? You’ve been in Eternity Springs, what, two weeks? Is small-town life proving too boring already?”
“Actually, Eternity Springs isn’t too bad. Mom wanted me to go to Denver to pick up some things she’s ordered, and I’m not going to come that close and not visit you. Besides, I need to talk some family things over.”
Tony stretched out, took another bite of ice cream, then asked, “You having trouble with Zach?”
“No. Not at all. I really like him.”
Once the facts about their mother’s adult “secret baby” had come to light, Lucca and Tony hadn’t been as certain as Gabi and their brother Max that Zach would end up being a welcome addition to their family. The way it turned out, he’d been just what Mom had needed to jerk her out of her depression after their father died.
“It’s Mom and Gabi,” Lucca explained. “Both of them are acting weird, and I want a second opinion on how to deal with the situation.”
Tony lifted his spoon in salute. “The doctor is in. What’s the trouble?”
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