Final Score. Nancy Warren
I’m sure she’s dying to get away from snow and ice.”
“Be great to meet her.” Cassie had found Max’s combination of brains, wealth and Latin charm to be slightly intimidating. She couldn’t imagine him with a bush pilot.
“I only met her once, but I think you’ll like her.” Serena chuckled softly. “She’s quite a character.”
“I could definitely use a night out.”
“Excellent. We’re on, then.”
“What if Claire says no?”
“Then we kidnap her.”
“No wonder you’re a business leader. You always have such sound plans.”
Serena pulled out her phone and punched in something. Probably she was already updating her calendar for Monday. Or texting Claire.
“Well, I’d better get back and start on the bedroom. Drop by sometime and check out the progress.”
“Love to. Oh, wait, I almost forgot. I have something else for you.” And Serena ran to her car, her long legs looking good in tight jeans. Cassie reminded herself that she really needed to fit in more time at the gym.
Serena returned a minute later with a mischievous look on her face and a brown paper bag holding an object about the shape and size of a—Oh, my gosh, she didn’t. Yes, she did—calendar.
The firefighters’ charity calendar. Hunter’s finest firefighters, buff and ready to rock your world one month at a time.
She laughed as she opened it slowly, beginning with Mr. January, who was a fine-looking African-American guy with the most amazing pecs she’d ever seen and—
“Oh, don’t even think about poring over every month,” Serena said. “Flip to June.”
Cassie didn’t need to be told a second time; her fingers itched to fly past the first five months of the year. Flip, flip, and there he was.
Dylan.
Dylan, shirtless, his firefighting pants slung low on his hips, posing with an ax over his shoulders and a look in his eyes that made her feel as though she were in danger of being scorched. Oh, my. Those eyes, those abs, the shoulders.
“I see he has a tattoo,” she said finally, feeling a little weak. It was a linked-chain-type thing in dark ink that circled his right bicep. She wondered what it would feel like to put her hand around that tattoo. How far around his muscular arm would her hand even reach? Her palm grew warm thinking about wrapping around that hot skin.
“Let’s just say that in my apartment? It’s always June.”
They snorted with laughter. “Does Adam know?”
“He says when we get married, I have to leave the calendar behind.” She glanced at Cassie over the glossy photograph of a grinning Dylan. “He says, ‘It’s Dylan or me. Make your choice.’”
The color photograph flashed in the sunshine, making Dylan gleam like a bronzed god. “That’s got to be a tough choice.”
“I tell you, Adam’s a great-looking guy. Don’t get me wrong. And I will love him to the end of time.” She leaned closer. “But a girl can still look.”
“Uh-huh.” And Cassie wondered how long she could keep looking and remembering to breathe at the same time.
Serena’s phone signaled an incoming text. She glanced at it. Frowned. “Speak of the devil.”
“Dylan texted you?”
“No. Adam.” She put the phone away with a crease between her brows.
Cassie wanted to ask if everything was okay, but before she could say a word, Serena was backing away and waving. “Let me know how it looks when it’s up. The chandelier, I mean.” And then she was gone.
As she drove home Cassie had to face that her outing, while successful on many fronts, hadn’t exactly been the mental cold shower she’d hoped.
Thanks to Mr. June, she felt hotter than when she’d left.
When she pulled into her driveway beside the dusty truck, she immediately grabbed the calendar and stuffed it back in the brown paper bag. She hid it in the chandelier box so her handyman hottie wouldn’t see her toting pictures of his hot, half-naked self. Then, leaving the back of her car open, she walked into the house.
“Hi, Dylan, I’m back.”
“Okay, I’ll come help unload.”
“Thanks.”
He walked out of the bathroom in one of his threadbare old T-shirts and plaster-dusted jeans. The T-shirt wasn’t even tight, but as he moved she felt as if she was seeing him, gorgeous and shirtless once more. Now she knew he had a tat on his upper right bicep, she felt a strange urge to see it in the flesh.
“You okay with that box?” He paused in front of her and she realized she was standing there like a fool. Staring at him.
“Yes. I was only thinking you probably need some water since you’ve been working in all that dust.”
“I was wearing a mask. But yeah, I’ll get some. Good idea.”
He glanced at the box in her arms. “I’m guessing that’s not floor tiles.”
She shook her head. “It’s a chandelier. For the bedroom. Serena bought it for me as a housewarming gift.”
“Awesome. That will look great upstairs.” Then he narrowed his gaze. “And why do I have a feeling that my housewarming gift will involve putting it up for you?”
She chuckled. “Because you are so very smart and intuitive.”
He shook his head at her as he walked by and she turned to watch his all-too-amazing back view as he disappeared through the door.
She took the box upstairs, and then pulled out the bag containing the calendar. She felt so foolish having the firefighter calendar at all, and now it was in her bedroom. There wasn’t anywhere to hide it. Everything was still in boxes except her chest of drawers. She opened her T-shirt drawer and shoved the calendar in there. Then ran back downstairs.
He was bringing in tile boxes three in a stack, which caused his arm muscles to delineate so she had to drag her gaze away.
She managed two boxes in a stack, but she wasn’t striding along as if they were a couple of feathers.
She followed his lead, stacking the boxes in the front hall beside the stairs. There was the kitchen tile, tile for both bathrooms, wall tile, shower tile, tile for the shower floors. She’d had no idea there was so much involved in remodeling a small house. She didn’t have the kitchen backsplash yet because she wanted to get her counters first. But she had some ideas, and new magazines seemed to get published every week with new layouts and even newer products.
It was getting so bad that she was beginning to dream of tile and appliances. And maybe a certain guy who was good with an ax.
* * *
“OKAY, HERE’S THE DEAL,” Dylan said, standing with his hands on his hips and looking around Cassie’s bedroom with a practiced eye. “If you want the chandelier put up, then I’m going to paint that ceiling first. And if we’re painting the ceiling, we might as well get the walls done at the same time.”
She looked early-summer ripe in snug denim cutoffs and a sleeveless blue shirt, her curly hair dancing when she nodded. “Makes sense.”
“I’ll tackle the ceiling while you do the walls.”
She nodded but didn’t look exceptionally confident. She’d finished scraping the walls and he could see the places where she’d filled holes. Her pretty hazel eyes seemed as big as the kitten’s when she gazed at him. There was a sprinkle of freckles across her nose that he hadn’t noticed before.