Sunsets & Seduction. Tawny Weber

Sunsets & Seduction - Tawny Weber


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be away from me soon enough,” she couldn’t stop herself from adding, hurt and disappointed that he was so obviously displeased by her presence.

      She knew he believed the worst of her, but she didn’t deserve it. She also knew from a lifetime of being a politician’s daughter that once people’s minds were made up about you, they rarely changed their views. When she had been bandaging Jonas’s foot, it seemed as if he could barely stand her touch.

      “Listen,” he said, running a hand through his already wild hair. “I’m … grateful you came.”

      She didn’t say anything, and the silence stretched between them.

      “You’re welcome,” she said eventually, and was relieved to hear the honk of a cab outside. She didn’t say anything else, either. What was there to say? She thought that she cared for Jonas; they definitely had chemistry, or so she thought. But she wasn’t going to beg him to be with her. Still, it hurt.

      “What about Irish?”

      “He’ll be okay. He doesn’t do well being transported, and his food, water and bed are here.”

      “Okay. If you’re sure he’s okay.”

      “He has a cat door in the back if he needs to get out, but he usually just hunkers down at night.”

      “Let’s go, then,” she said, and he pulled back when she took his hand.

      “Cripes, Jonas, relax. I’m just helping you out to the cab, not trying to come on to you,” she said, gritting her teeth.

      He blew out a breath, seeming as tense as she was. “It’s not you, Tessa. I hate this, my situation and being led around like a poodle all the time,” he admitted.

      Her own aggravation softened. He was a protector, a man who wasn’t used to being vulnerable. He stood in front of others who were. She put her own feelings aside, realizing how difficult this was for him. He let her lead him out through the maelstrom to the shelter of the cab.

      “Hardly a poodle. More like a rottweiler with a nasty temper,” she muttered under her breath as they climbed inside the cab, and thought she might have seen him smile, just a little.

      TESSA ALMOST BOLTED from the cab by the time they reached her store. The silent tension between her and Jonas was intolerable.

      “No more fares,” the cabbie said, looking back at them as she started to get out, but Jonas didn’t.

      “My friend needs you to take him home,” she said to the driver, who shook his head vehemently.

      “No more fares,” he repeated, shifting his light to Out of Service, and staring at Jonas, not that Jonas could notice.

      “He says you have to get out here,” she spoke to Jonas.

      “Yeah, I got that.” His tone was clipped and short. He was obviously not happy about that option, and she couldn’t help feeling insulted.

      It infuriated her, but she held her temper. “You can come into the store and wait for another taxi,” she offered.

      She’d call one herself, and make sure she told them to hurry, she thought testily, helping him from the taxi. He insisted on paying the fare, and she let him.

      “Careful stepping up,” she cautioned as they ascended

      to the shop, and he pulled his hand out of her grasp, taking the railing.

      “I’m fine. I have this whole property memorized. It was part of my job,” he said.

      She made some faint response, noting that he did seem to move easily up her stairs and inside the door, as if he could see.

      Why did it make her heart constrict in an uncomfortable way to think he knew her space so well? That he had committed something about her to memory? It didn’t mean anything, she reminded herself. He’d said as much.

      It was just a side effect of his job.

      “I’ll call another taxi,” she said.

      “Thanks.”

      Tessa was on her phone for several minutes, watching Jonas stalk around her shop like a caged tiger. She called one company, and then another, but no one could send a ride for at least an hour, if then.

      The city was paralyzed by the storm. The taxis were starting to return to the garage for the night.

      As she redialed, she watched Jonas lift one scented bar to his nose and turned his attention to her.

      “This is new,” he said, and she blinked in amazement.

      He paid that much attention to her products? Most of the time he had acted as if he couldn’t care less.

      “Yes,” she answered, while seeking another taxi service.

      She didn’t tell him what he had picked up was one of the soaps in her new Erotic Enhancements collection. That particular scent could intensify orgasm. Standing and watching him lift the soap to his nose, inhaling, made her skin warm. Her heart fluttered. From her brief experience in Jonas’s arms, he wouldn’t need any help giving intense orgasms.

      “Tessa?” he interrupted her train of thought.

      “Oh, what? Sorry,” she responded, shaking her attention away from Jonas and sex. Even when he was being unpleasant, she couldn’t stop picturing him naked.

      “Any luck?”

      “No, I’m sorry. We can keep trying, but the city is—”

      She stopped as everything went dark around her. The store was suddenly pitch-black, no light outside or in.

      “Oh no.”

      “What?” he asked sharply.

      “Blackout. Everything just went dark. Really dark.”

      “Are you okay?” he asked.

      “Um, yeah, but it looks like you might be stuck here for a while.”

      He was quiet, and she bit her lip. He certainly couldn’t think she’d orchestrated this.

      She stepped down from the register where the phone was, and started to make her way across the store, but couldn’t find anything to focus on, and gasped in pain as she knocked into the corner of a display.

      “Where are you? Are you okay?”

      “Yeah, just having a lot harder time than you making my way around in the dark,” she said grumpily. It seemed the tables had turned.

      “You stay put, but keep talking. I’ll find my way to you,” he said, and she thought she heard a slight smile in his tone.

      “This isn’t funny.”

      “I know.”

      “I don’t know what to talk about,” she groused.

      “Then sing something,” he offered, sounding closer.

      “I don’t sing outside the shower,” she said, and then, a second later, felt his hand on her arm.

      “There you are,” he said.

      His strong fingers closing around her forearm reminded her of that morning, and memories swamped her.

      She had been so frightened by his call, and then so relieved to find him with only a minor injury, that it had been easy to set desire aside. Well, mostly.

      Not so now. Here, in the familiar setting of her store, where they had spent so much time together, it was harder to ignore her attraction to him, stupid as it might be. He obviously didn’t feel the same way about her.

      His breath warm and close to her cheek in the dark. She had a feeling it wouldn’t take much to turn her face to his and lean in for a kiss.

      “I guess we could go upstairs and wait it out. This can’t last


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