Nights In Black Lace. Noelle Mack
had on a fitted black jacket with a big lapel pin of a pelican that made him smile. Underneath that was a camisole—was that what those tight tops were called? Maybe it was a corset. Anyway, it was low-cut and made of black lace that stretched over beautiful full breasts.
Get a grip, he told himself, wishing in another second that that particular verb hadn’t come to mind. Of course, he did want to get his hands on that sweet flesh. No, you jerk. Keep your eyes moving.
Bryan drew in a breath. No matter where he looked, she made him hot. He glanced down at a short skirt in hot pink showing off strong, slender legs that got that way because she undoubtedly walked a lot and bicycled and danced. And jumped for joy.
Something about her said that uninhibited joy was part of the deal.
Yeah.
What would it feel like to have legs like that clasped around his lower back while he—you don’t even know her name.
She was talking to him. “I heard you won a ticket to a front row seat.”
“Huh?” He lifted his gaze from her shoes, which were strapped at the ankle, high-heeled but cut low, with toe cleavage. She had been tapping one foot idly, which had gotten his attention. He was pretty sure her stockings were seamed. He’d love to bend her over and find out if garters were involved. “Oh—right. Quite a view. I’ve never been to anything like this.”
“I can tell.” There was a mischievous gleam in her eyes.
Now he was close enough to see their color—green with dashes of gold. But it was the expression in them that mesmerized him. Soulful. Intelligent. Woman-of-the-world.
Whereas he, Bryan Bachman, was still knocking around said world, waiting to hear from graduate schools while he tried to figure out what he wanted to do with his life. She looked like she had. She looked successful, despite her thrift store outfit, which was cute as hell.
“Hey, would you like to get out of here and get something to eat?” he said all of a sudden. “How about a BLT? My treat.”
Big spender. But he could probably afford that. She actually seemed pleased. He would have sworn that she blushed for a second, and was amazed when she did.
“Ah, what is a BLT?” she asked politely.
“That’s a bacon, lettuce, and tomato sandwich,” he explained. “I’ve been craving one. It’s really simple and really good, when you get the ingredients right. The tomato has to be ripe and the mayonnaise is key—”
“It sounds very American,” she said thoughtfully. “But then we French invented mayonnaise.”
“Yeah.” Bryan stuck his hands in the pockets of his jeans, wondering if he’d made a mistake. He should have asked her out to a good bistro, not that he knew one from another. Of course, he could have asked her to recommend one. And risk sounding like a mooch? No way.
He didn’t even know where to get a decent BLT in Paris, let alone whether she’d like his favorite sandwich.
“So you want American food,” she was saying. “We can go to Le Diner, then.”
“You know a place?”
She nodded. “The chef is as French as I am, but the cuisine is definitely not.”
“Is that a good thing or a bad thing?” Bryan asked sheepishly.
Odette had to laugh. “I have heard only good things about it, but I have never been there. I do know that tourists haven’t discovered it yet—it just opened.”
“Okay, that’s a good thing. I won’t run into anyone I know from back home.”
Odette gave him a look of mock offense. “Why? Are you ashamed to be seen with me?”
“Hell, no,” he said, flashing a startled smile. “You must be the hottest woman in Paris. If you don’t mind my saying so.”
“Not at all.” She gave him a smile that melted him.
“Anyway, I’d much rather look at you than a bunch of fanny-packers.”
“Ah. I see. Merci, m’sieu.”
He looked around at the filled-to-capacity hall as if he had no idea where he was and gave one last absent-minded glance at the catwalk. The music was louder and the models were dancing now, working the crowd.
The model hound in the row he’d left reached up and tried to grab an ankle. Bryan noticed the beefiest bouncer heading that way.
“Cochon,” Odette said indignantly. “There is one at every show.”
“He is a pig. Do you want me to—”
She shook her head. “The situation is under control.”
The tycoon was being lifted off his feet and hauled away faster than he could call a lawyer.
“All right. Well…shall we go?” He’d gotten lucky, she’d said yes, and he wanted to leave before anything else distracted her.
“Yes.”
Bryan looked around, somewhat disoriented by the place and the ever-louder music. They must be getting around to the grand finale.
“Lead the way,” he said to her.
She shook her head. “That’s not how I like to do things.” She stepped forward and slid her arm around his. “You are the man, no?”
“Uh…yeah. I like the way you say that.”
It took several minutes to get near the exit. He seemed even taller that close. His body so near hers, his thighs brushing hers, made her think of what she wanted: sex. Uncomplicated by emotion. But as passionate as two people who didn’t really know each other could make it.
Not just yet. She needed to find out more about him, look him up online, confirm Lucie’s offhand remarks. Odette whispered a few words to one of the bouncers on her way out so Marc would not worry.
Looking into the mirror of the bathroom in Le Diner, Odette asked herself a few interesting questions as she reapplied her eye pencil.
The first was What do you think you are doing? And the second, which was trickier, was When are you going to tell him who you are? He didn’t seem to realize that she was Odette Gaillard of Oh! Oh! Odette Lingerie, hadn’t asked her name. Just talked to her, half in schoolboy French that made her giggle, half in English, in between bites of his BLT. Even better, he’d listened when she talked.
But she’d been a little evasive, taking advantage of his not-so-fluent French to avoid questions. She’d ordered a BLT too. He was right. The sandwich was very good and very much the sort of thing one could crave.
So was he. Bryan Bachman was exactly what she wanted right now, and she needed a fling.
On a mad impulse, she’d deliberately skipped the grand finale of her own show. Missed her bow. Done without the loud acclaim of the crowd in attendance and the kissyface insincerity of the well-wishers afterward.
Odette had realized in the moment when Bryan had asked her out that she needed a holiday from the hoopla.
After five shows, she knew only too well that buyers would buy. Sex always sold.
Her designs were flirty and fun, of no real consequence. Her collection escaped the criticism reserved for true haute couture: the deconstructionists of fashion who turned garments inside out, and the architects of fabric whose pleats and poufs made women’s bodies invisible.
Marc had probably seized the opportunity to take her bow for her, and accept the bouquets of roses like the beauty pageant winner he longed to be in his retro fantasies of glamour.
Bless Marc’s gender-bending heart. Her assistant would be the first to understand a mad impulse to have a bizarre but tasty sandwich with a stranger. And whatever happened next.
Odette