Read Flirting with the Society Doctor / When One Night Isn't Enough Online
Authors: Janice Lynn / Wendy S. Marcus
Tags: #Medical
He was so gorgeous. More breathtaking than the sunset. More beautiful. More what she wanted, but shouldn’t.
She dropped her heels next to his shoes. “Met a nice girl and settled down.”
“Don’t start, Faith.” He grabbed her hand and headed toward the surf.
“What?” She stumbled, trying to keep up with his pace as he dragged her behind him, sand flying up at her ankles.
“Matchmaking,” he spat the word out. “I don’t need you fixing me up with friends any more than I need my family doing so.”
As if she’d fix Vale up with one of her friends. Besides, thanks to the long hours she worked, few of her friends would even claim her these days.
“I can assure you I’d never do that to any of my friends. I like them too much to introduce them to you.”
“Good, because if I ever marry, I’ll find the woman all by myself.”
Which meant he hadn’t already found her.
Not that Faith thought he had. Just that part of her had hoped someday he’d realize how good it might be between
them. Then again, she imagined Vale was the kind of man who it was always good between.
Between the sheets, between the car seats, between the sand and the waves.
Where had that thought come from? She wasn’t prone to lust. Was used to dealing with how he made her feel and usually did a great job of suppressing her baser instincts. So why hadn’t she then?
She gulped, tearing her gaze from him to stare out at the ocean. Coming here with him had been a horrible mistake. One she’d likely live to regret.
“What about you?”
“Me?” She knew his gaze was on her, but she didn’t dare look at him. He’d see too much in her eyes, would instantly realize that she’d met the man she wanted for all time during a job interview eighteen months ago.
No! She hadn’t met the man she wanted for all time. Vale was not that man. There was no
that man.
All she felt for Vale was physical attraction and professional admiration. That was it. Nothing more.
“Why haven’t you married?” he clarified, his words nipping at her soul as surely as the tide tugged at her feet.
“I imagine someday I’ll meet someone who’ll sweep me off my feet.” Someone who’d make her forget how Vale’s lips had felt against hers, how even now thoughts of him pushing her back onto the sand and kissing her danced through her mind. Not that she thought things would last with that man either. She didn’t.
Men left. It was what they did best.
“And give you babies to take to soccer practice?”
She tried not to let images of blue-eyed imps dribbling the ball toward the goal take over her mind. She did not want to have Vale’s babies. She didn’t want babies period.
Sure, the making them might be fun, but then she’d be like her mother, alone, raising a child.
Only her mother hadn’t been able to stand being alone and had flitted from one loveless marriage to another, from one man who’d eventually leave her to another.
“I’m in no hurry at this point in my life to meet someone or even think about marriage and babies. My career is what’s most important.”
“Until you achieve your career goals?” he teased, but his eyes held a steely quality.
“It’s not as if I’m going to reach a certain point, mark my career off my life to-do list, then move on to marriage and children, Vale.” She glanced out at the horizon, spotting the silhouette of a ferry off in the distance. “Just that at some point down the line I’d like to believe I can have all the things I want.”
She wouldn’t remind him that what she wanted was a real house with a real yard for her dog to play in. No man required.
“You’re a special woman, Faith. If anyone can ever have it all, I’m sure it’s you.”
She glanced at him, saw the sincerity on his face, and smiled. “Thank you, Vale. That quite simply might be the nicest thing you’ve ever said to me.”
“You jest.” His forehead wrinkled. “I’ve complimented you before.”
“About my work, yes. Me? No.”
He stopped walking, turned to face her. His hand squeezed hers reassuringly. “Just tonight I told you what a beautiful woman you are.”
“Tthat’s d-different,” she stammered, wondering at the light in his eyes. Was it the reflection of the last golden rays dancing across the sky? Or was Vale looking at her as if she really was beautiful?
His brow lifted. “Because you don’t believe me when I say that you are beautiful?”
“I’ve seen the women you date. I’m not even in the same league.” Models, actresses, heiresses, he went through them all.
“True,” he agreed, twisting the knife in her gut. He could at least have been polite and not said anything.
She’d never have him, knew she never would, and was foolish to have these momentary lapses where she dreamed she might.
“None of the women I’ve known hold a candle to you, Faith. Not a single one.”
She wanted to look away, wanted to shield her eyes from his, but she couldn’t. Not when he looked at her as if he believed what he said, as if he really did believe she was more beautiful than the women he escorted to New York’s finest venues. What else had they put in her hair color other than truth serum? A dose of
hear what you want to hear?
“Thank you,” she said for lack of knowing what else to say but knowing the situation called for something. She was imagining the softening of his gaze, the pressure of his hand holding hers. “That’s a kind thing to say.”
“You don’t make me feel kind, Faith.”
She stared up at him. “No?”
“No.” Had his mouth moved closer to hers?
She licked her lips, nervously, yet even as she did so, she’d instinctively known his gaze would follow her movements. She wasn’t a fool, wasn’t imagining this chemistry between them. Truth serum, gullibility, whatever, the sparks arcing between them would light up lower Manhattan. “What do I make you feel, Vale?”
Great question and one Vale wasn’t sure of the answer to.
He wanted her. Which surprised him. Usually he was either instantly attracted to a woman or he wasn’t attracted at all.
With all women, he got what he wanted with little effort. Faith was different. He’d spent more time with her than with any other woman, knew her better, had let her know him better, yet what did he really know? Not even the name of her mysterious boyfriend.
Vale immediately lowered his mouth to cover hers, telling himself the surge of emotion in his chest was not jealousy of a man he’d never met. Whatever, Faith’s lips were sweet beneath his and pleasure soon replaced the unwanted emotional surge.
Soft, full, yielding, yet demanding, she returned his kiss. If there was another man in her life, their relationship couldn’t be too serious. Otherwise Faith wouldn’t kiss him back. Yet she didn’t do so whole-heartedly, which gave him pause. He could read her every thought, feel the conflicting sensations swirling inside that brilliant mind of hers. She wanted him, yet she didn’t.
He understood perfectly because he felt exactly the same.
“I want to make love to you, Faith, but I’m not willing to ruin our professional relationship.”
Her eyes widened at his admission, greener than the most precious emerald.
“You’re more important to me than a quick rumble between the sheets.” His words said one thing, but he asked her a question with his eyes. A question he knew the answer to, but asked all the same in the hope he was wrong about Faith.
“Professional relationship at stake or not, I’m not willing
to be just a rumble between any man’s sheets, Vale. I’m not you. I don’t do casual sex.”
He’d known, but still disappointment filled him at her response.
“Understood.” He ran his fingers along her cheek, thinking her more beautiful than the sunset, more tempting than any siren of the sea, more precious than any gem in a treasure trove, loving how his name sounded on her lips. “But another kiss wouldn’t hurt anything.”
“No.” Her lips hovered centimeters from his mouth, her breath warm, inviting, making him want more than she was willing to give. “One more kiss wouldn’t hurt, Vale. But just one more because I won’t be one of your girls. We aren’t having a weekend fling or rumble between your sheets or whatever you want to call it.”
“Okay,” he agreed, breathing in her warm, vanilla scent, so clean and refreshing, like her. “Just one more kiss because you aren’t one of my girls and don’t want to be a rumble between my sheets this weekend.”
He continued to tell himself once more while he kissed Faith reverently, his hands cupping her face, his fingers partially threaded into her pulled-up hair, his gaze locked with hers.
The kiss was gentle, searching, desperate and yet lingering as if they had all the time in the world to explore each other’s lips. It was a kiss unlike any Vale had ever experienced.
A kiss that made him wonder what else with Faith would be like nothing he’d ever experienced.
That wonder both thrilled him and scared the living hell out of him.
Feeling like a plucked chicken in a room full of swans, Faith sat in the upstairs media room with the women staying at
the Wakefields’ Cape May mansion. Sharon, Angela, two of Sharon’s college friends, Vale’s other cousin Monica, and Steve’s younger sister, Francis Woodard. Vale’s mother and Sharon’s parents had retired to bed around ten, claiming they were too tired to sit up with the younger women and reminding Sharon to be sure to get her beauty sleep so she wouldn’t have bags under her eyes.
The men had gone out for drinks and Steve’s bachelor party, Vale included. Each second that ticked by brought his return closer. And when he returned they’d be expected to share a bedroom. Did Vale sleep in pajamas? Or would he slide between the sheets in nothing more than he’d brought into the world?
“Tell us,” Francis cried after downing a shot of something bright red and grabbing Faith’s hand, pulling her from her meanderings. “What’s it like, dating Very Scrumptious Vale?”
She didn’t want to lie, but what could she say? “Mostly, we just work together.”
“Honey, we all saw that kiss down on the beach.” Francis fanned her face with exaggeration. “If you were on the clock, sign me up for medical school.”
Faith’s face burned. Okay, so the groom’s little sister had a point. But how did she explain what she didn’t understand herself?
“It’s complicated.”
“Love always is,” Sharon sighed.
“We’re not in love,” Faith quickly denied, unwilling to perpetuate the misconception.
“I saw the way Vale looks at you.” At Faith’s raised eyebrow, Sharon went on. “He looked at you as if you’re the only woman in the world, as if he would have liked to push you down in the sand and made love to you right there, the world be damned.” She smiled, taking on a dreamy
look. “I know love. It’s exactly the same way Steve looks at me.”
“You’re mistaken.” Vale had looked at her with lust because she was convenient, because they were at a wedding and people did stupid things at weddings. Like get married and believe in happily ever after.
“I know Vale,” Sharon boasted. “He wants you.”
Yes, he’d told her that. And, truth was, just having Vale desire her was so much more than she’d ever dreamed possible. So why had she said no?
He hadn’t said the words out loud, but essentially he’d been asking her to have an affair with him. A fling that would last the weekend and be done when they left the magic of the beach.
But she couldn’t say yes, not when she’d be expected to work side by side with him as if nothing had happened.
Lord, how was she going to work with him night after late night now that she knew his kisses tasted of ambrosia?
“Oh,” Sharon cooed, “you’re in love with him, aren’t you?”
Faith opened her mouth, ready to deny his cousin’s claim, but nothing came out. Nothing at all, because she didn’t know how she felt about Vale. Not any more. From before they’d met, she’d admired him professionally, had known she wanted to work with him, had used every resource within her repertoire to arrange an interview. When they’d met, she’d been thunderstruck by emotion so potent the magnitude had almost blinded her.
She admired Vale, professionally and personally, although she’d hesitate to admit the latter to anyone other than herself. Physically she wanted him, but what heterosexual woman wouldn’t?
This weekend she had the opportunity to be with him
and was too scared to accept the risk that chance would change everything between them. Bok. Bok.
Only sometimes change was inevitable, and inevitably her relationship with Vale had undergone a change she couldn’t undo even if she wanted to.
Taking that chance would strip her soul bare, would let him see into her heart, and therein lay the problem.
She didn’t want to give Vale that power over her future. Didn’t want to become her mother, settling for whoever came along because she’d tasted love and couldn’t hold on to it, forever searching to feed a hunger that couldn’t be satisfied.
No, she didn’t love Vale and would never, ever allow herself to be that foolish.
F
AITH
tossed and turned in the enormous bed in the giant bedroom their suitcases had been placed in. How could she sleep when eventually Vale would return? Would be sleeping in the same room? Possibly crawl between the sheets beside her if she didn’t stay awake and order him to the sofa?
Although his family had been nothing but kind to her, she’d had a difficult time relaxing. How could she fit in when their conversation ran from spending the month in Europe at their favorite French resort to having their thighs liposuctioned in Beverly Hills?
Which should only serve as yet another reminder of why she shouldn’t become involved with Vale this weekend. Despite how dedicated he was to his career, to finding a treatment or, better yet, a cure for Parkinson’s, the reality was he moved in a different world from that she did.
A jiggle of the doorhandle had her breath catching.
Vale.
Peeking through barely open eyes, she took in the outline of his sleek body in the doorframe. So beautiful. So tempting.
Softly, he closed the door, walked over to the sofa and sank down onto the leather. She could feel his gaze on her, could feel his presence so overwhelmingly that she
swore the room pulsed with him. His scent. His aura. His heartbeat.