kind of girl who always has to show the boys up. I would think youâd want to try to drink us under the table.â
She arched her brow. âIâm way tinier than you. Iâm not drinking you under any table.â
âAll right, one Coke for you.â
He turned and headed toward the bar, and to his surprise, she followed him rather than going over to the table where her friends were already seated. âWhy are you buying me a drink?â
âI was hoping to trick you into getting drunk so you wouldnât be so uptight,â he said, because he always said what was on his mind where Kate was concerned. Neither of them practiced tact in the otherâs presence.
She sputtered. âIâm not uptight.â
âYouâre something.â
Kateâs lip curled upward. âNow I donât really want you to buy me a drink. I donât like your motives.â
âIâm not going to sneakily give you a rum and Coke. Iâm ordering you a soda.â
âBut it was not born out of generosity.â
âWill you please stop making it impossible for me to do something nice for you.â
âBut you arenât doing something nice for me,â she insisted. âYou were trying to...calm me. With booze.â
He turned, and Kate took a step back, pressing herself against the bar. He leaned forward, gripping the bar with both hands, trapping her between his arms. âYes, Katie, honey, I was.â
Her dark eyes widened, her mouth dropping open. Color rose in her cheeks, her chest pitching sharply as she drew in a quick deep breath.
He looked at Kate quite a lot. He saw her almost every day. But heâd never really studied her. He didnât know why in hell he was doing it now.
There wasnât a trace of makeup on her face, her dark lashes long and thick but straight rather than curled upward to enhance her eyes. There was no blush added to her cheeks, no color added to her lips. It exemplified Kate. What you saw was what you got. Inside and out.
And for some reason the tension that had been gathering in his chest spread outward, spread around them, and he could feel a strange crackling between them. He wasnât sure what it was. But one thing he was sure of. Heâd made a mistake somewhere between calling her âhoneyâ the first time, days ago, and the moment heâd pressed her up against the bar.
Everything he knew about her had twisted. The way Kate made him feel had shifted into something else, something new.
If it had been any other woman at any other moment, he mightâve called it attraction.
But this was Kate. So that was impossible.
And then the sort of dewy softness in her eyes changed, a kind of fierce determination taking over. She took a step away from the bar, a step closer to him, and reached up, gripping his chin with her thumb and forefinger, tugging hard, bringing his face nearer to hers. âLook, Jack,â she spat, hardening every syllable, âI think you need to back off.â
Her skin was soft against his, her hand cool. Her hold was firm, uncompromising, like Kate herself.
Unlucky for her, he didnât compromise, either.
He leaned in, closing some of the distance between them. Her lips parted, and for just one moment he saw Kate Garrett soften. But it was only a moment. Then the steel was back, harder than ever. He waited for her to back down, waited for her to step away and hiss at him.
But she didnât. She simply stood there, holding him fast, her breasts rising and falling with each indrawn breath.
The noise faded into the background, and the people around them turned into a blur as his focus sharpened on Kate. The only thought he had in his head was that this was without a doubt the strangest moment of his entire life.
They were playing chickenâhe knew her well enough to realize that. She was challenging him, and she thought he would back down.
That was fine. It was almost normal.
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