Page 7 of Take Me Tender


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Jay narrowed his gaze, trying to figure out his friend. The six-foot, strong-as-an-ox businessman he’d known for the past five years looked as if he’d keel over if Shanna did so much as sigh in his direction. He shrugged. “If he can fix a sprinkler system, I’m sure he can tackle your faucet problem just fine.”

“Sí, sí.”

Shaking his head, Jay watched the other two head off in the direction of the marble palace next door. He pulled out his phone and flipped it open with his thumb, prepared to make his call to Nikki once he was alone. Then Shanna paused.

“Jay,” she called over her shoulder.

Uh-oh. That goose was back, climbing up the ladder of his vertebrae.

“Now that you have a new girlfriend—well, I’ll try not to bother you so much anymore,” Shanna said. “But tell Nikki I was happy to meet her and I plan on visiting her in your kitchen very soon.”

Hell. Decision finalized. Neither he nor his new cook girlfriend were going to get off so easily.

His lashes drifted shut, thinking of Nikki’s witchy eyes, the wink of dimple in her cheek, the amusing little trick he’d played on her. Lesbian. Hah.

But he was sticking to that story. If she was destined to spend her days in his kitchen, then he was all for coming up with obstacles to the two of them heating it up together.

On her first day of employment, in the quiet of Jay Buchanan’s kitchen, Nikki measured out coffee grounds then added a dash of freshly grated cinnamon stick before sliding the basket into the maker. As instructed, she’d let herself into the house and gone straight to work on breakfast preparation. If his bed-tousled look of the other day was any indication, he was a late sleeper and she decided to dislike him for it, even though she appreciated getting started without his presence to distract her.

The day of the interview she’d been broke, broken, and a little bit desperate. Today, she was broke, broken, and more than a little determined. With only a month to build the foundation of a new career, she refused to be diverted from that goal, no matter what Jay Buchanan threw her way. Though she was committed to acting both gay and girlfriend—and wasn’t that enough to make her brain reel—she was his chef first and foremost. Fact was, she worked for the man and no matter what other parts she was called on to play with him, she planned on maintaining a professional distance.

A businesslike detachment.

A private chef didn’t mean a personal anything—just the way she liked it.

At the thought, more of her tension loosened, easing out of her like a deep sigh. She closed her eyes. Even her bum knee seemed less painful than before, as if Jay’s seaside kitchen and the decision she’d made to take this job in it calmed her old injury as well.

“Morning,” a male voice said.

The interruption yanked the serenity from beneath her feet. Her eyes flew open and her leg wobbled as she spun toward the sliding glass doors at her left. The knee restarted its own painful heartbeat.

“You scared me,” she accused.

Jay Buchanan’s eyebrows rose. “Jumpy, much?”

Not that she wanted him to notice. Not that she wanted to notice him, but God, who could look away from a man so blond, so gorgeous, so ripped? He stood in the open doorway, shirtless again, his hair wet, his board shorts dragged low on his hips by the weight of the water they’d absorbed. One of his tanned forearms was braced on the jamb, and the pose made him look like a living, breathing ad for Hawaiian Tropic suntan oil or some exotic brand of rum. She swallowed, the movement as slow as the drop of saltwater rolling over his pumped pec and copper nipple. Dragging her gaze off it, she noticed the kayak and paddle he’d propped against the deck railing.

So he hadn’t been in bed after all. People who left their sheets at the crack of dawn to engage in athletic endeavors were more dislikeable than people who spent their mornings lolling between them.

But even a dislike was more personal than she wanted to get with him, so she tucked away her annoyance and reached for a mug. “Coffee?”

He wrapped a beach towel around his hips before stepping off the deck and into the house. “I thought I told you to dress like a girl,” he said, eyeing her from across the bar separating the kitchen from the living area.

“This from a man in a striped terry cloth skirt,” she murmured.

“I heard that.” He picked up the coffee she slid in front of him and sniffed at it, sipped, then took a longer swallow as he hitched a hip onto a barstool. “But great coffee isn’t all I need from you, cookie.”

She decided to ignore the nickname. In kitchens where she’d worked, she’d been called much worse.

“You can’t have forgotten already that you’re my woman.”

“Of course not. Last night I wrote a long entry in my diary about it in pink ink. With little hearts like champagne bubbles surrounding your name.”

He ignored the sarcasm. “Pink is exactly what I’m looking for, cookie. Tomorrow ditch those black-and-white checked pants and that starchy white tunic thing.”

His order irked her. It was as if no one had ever stood up to the man. Though, looking like that, probably no one had. Probably women fell all over themselves to make him happy. “There’s nothing wrong with what I have on. This is chef-wear. I’m your chef.”

“About that…”

Her stomach clenched. “Okay, I’ll wear pink. Fuchsia or baby?”

He seemed to consider. “It doesn’t really have to be pink, but it does have to show off your tits.”

Her mouth dropped.

“What?” he asked, as if surprised by her shock. “You’re supposed to be my girlfriend. My girlfriends like to show off their bodies to me. Are you telling me lesbians don’t look at each other’s tits? NYFM did a survey—”

“Let me guess. Ninety-eight percent of your readers, 98 percent of your readers who are male, are certain they know exactly what lesbians like to look at, or at least they’re certain they’d like to watch lesbians ‘looking’ at each other.”

His mug was halfway to his mouth and he toasted her with it. “You have been reading the magazine.”

Rolling her eyes, she turned away to face the cutting board. Her plan was a modified huevos rancheros using scrambled eggs and fresh mango salsa. “Will your cousin want breakfast?”

“I don’t know. She’s not here.”

“What?” Nikki tried ignoring the morning’s second little jumpstart to her heart. “Why?”

There was the sound of a shrug in his voice. “She’s already hanging out with her friends. I saw her on the beach from my kayak.”

“Oh. Well, then.” It wasn’t any of her business. Really, it wasn’t. Professional detachment, remember? But words were already tumbling out of her mouth. “Shouldn’t she be better supervised?”

She found herself facing Jay again, knife in hand.

He glanced from it to her face. “Um…Fern’s seventeen.”

She looked much younger. “Still, it’s so early to be already at the beach…”

“It’s Malibu. It’s summer. That’s the whole point of living here when you’re a teenager.”

Nikki forced herself to return to chopping mango. “Her parents must really trust you.”

He laughed. “Everyone in the family knows Fern is plenty responsible. As for me…”

She remembered the magazine’s motto. “Men are boys?”

“I’m the oldest and the only male cousin in the family. We’re a close-knit group. Fern’s mother and mine are twins who married brothers. Between the two families there are six girls—and me.”

“Which so explains your fabulous rapport with females.”

She heard the legs of his stool scrape against the floor. Then she felt him at her back as he came to stand before the coffeemaker. As he reached for the carafe, his elbow brushed against her arm and she abruptly shifted away, her starched cotton tunic tickling the sudden goose bumps it hid.

“I don’t seem to do that well with you,” he said.

“But that’s no cause for sulking, handsome.” She pretended to be kind as she ignored the wayward tingles. “We’ve determined I play for the other team, right?”

He was silent for such a long moment, she wondered if she’d pushed him too far. Damn, she knew distance and detachment were a better plan. She busied herself removing items from the refrigerator, then turned, only to find him blocking her way, his chest in her direct line of sight.

A smattering of golden hair glinted between his tanned pecs, and suddenly she imagined touching them, feeling them beneath the curve of her palms, the skin hot and smooth. Her fingers flexed and she started, realizing she’d nearly cracked the eggs she’d taken from the fridge. Flushing hot, she jerked her gaze away from his naked flesh. Lord, she thought, if she swore to showcase her own chest would he promise to cover his?

“Excuse me.” She sidestepped him, her shoulder grazing his biceps. Goose bumps prickled beneath cotton again and she coughed to clear her suddenly thick throat. Had her body betrayed her by unconsciously creating that “accidental” touch? There’d been plenty of room to bypass him, but he seemed to exert some unprecedented magnetic pull on her.

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