Undone by Moonlight. Wendy Etherington
One, sex between him and Calla was still imaginary. A realization that was both good and bad.
Two, his head didn’t hurt just because he’d overindulged in whiskey. He’d been whacked on the back of the head. Reaching behind him, he found a bandage and smooth skin around the edges. Hell. Somebody’d shaved a section of his head. He wasn’t vain about stuff like that but still … a bald spot?
Not only did he not have game, his game was on strike.
For the shaving and bandage, he recalled a hospital nurse. For the assault he drew a blank.
He shook his head, which did nothing but increase the incessant pounding.
Bracing his forehead against the tiled shower stall, he fought to push through the clouds clogging his memory, but the deluge of water only made him wonder if he was supposed to get his bandage wet, and, if he did, would he die of an antibiotic-resistant bacterial infection or simply start leaking brain fluid that would swirl down the drain?
And, if so, would that please happen now?
Until one of those glorious moments occurred, he might as well make the woman who promised to feed him happy. He reached for the mini hotel shampoo she’d obviously set out for him, but was distracted by the large bottles belonging to her. Leaning close, he inhaled vanilla and sugar and his head immediately stopped pounding.
Contentment washed over him, even as hunger to be near her ran rampant. She’d tempted him for months, even though he knew they couldn’t be together. She was too bright and pure, and he wasn’t about to drag her into his crappy life and past.
He resisted the urge to cover himself in her scent and washed quickly with the hotel-size green tea products. Once he’d dressed and headed toward the kitchen a second time, he acknowleged she’d been right. The shower had steadied him.
Course a lot of his memory was muddled, and that was going to be a problem. From past experience, he knew she was relentless when she was after something. He sure didn’t think she’d let him get away with a free breakfast and hot shower.
As he walked from the bedroom toward the kitchen, she was dishing scrambled eggs onto a plate already groaning with bacon. His stomach grumbled in response.
“How do you take your coffee?” she asked in a cheerful, if low volume, voice.
His pounding head appreciated the care. Why was she so good to him when he didn’t deserve to be in the same room with her? “Black, thanks.”
He sat on one of the two stools pushed up against the bar bracketing the kitchen on two sides. She handed him a heavy-looking mug, though he imagined her cupboards were full of dainty teacups. A quick scan of the counter proved his guess—a cream scallop-edged cup with a bouquet of pink roses decorating the side sat beside the stove.
As he took the first sip of coffee, their gazes locked. Weak as he was, he quickly looked away. He didn’t need to complicate his already tangled life with his confusing feelings for her.
The silence lingered until she set a filled plate on the bar before him. Maybe he could slink away, after all.
But he’d barely taken his first bite when she slid onto the stool next to him and asked, “So, wanna tell me about last night?”
“No.”
“Sure?”
“Very.”
She pushed a small glass filled with orange juice toward him. “This will help.”
Shrugging, he drank the juice in a quick swallow.
As soon as he set the empty glass on the bar, she pushed another one in his line of vision. This one held tomato juice, complete with celery stalk artistically leaning against the side.
He curled his lip. “I don’t like—”
“Drink it.”
As he often found in her presence, he did as she ordered, though he would swear he hadn’t made a conscious decision to do so.
Surprisingly, the juice wasn’t bland, watery tomatoes. The drink had a spicy kick, as if she’d made a Bloody Mary without the shot of vodka. Though he had a feeling, based on the determined look on her face, that he could use the added buzz.
“The vitamins in oranges, tomatoes and celery are good for you,” she said.
He also had the feeling she’d told him that before. Not surprising. This wasn’t his first ride around the block with hangovers. “Goody. You know how I like to take care of myself.”
“Eat the celery.” When he started to argue, she added, “Think of the celery as a carrot for the bacon reward.”
He chomped the stalk in two bites, then grabbed two slices of bacon from the plate before she could come up with some other healthy barrier to his fat-laden breakfast.
His obedience bought him silence, as she said nothing while he inhaled the food.
“You’re not eating?” he asked when he paused long enough to notice she wasn’t.
“I had a spinach omelet earlier.”
In his opinion, the only place for something green in eggs was in children’s stories that rhyme. But also knowing she’d go back to the subject of last night, he commented, “You’ve got a nice place.”
“Thanks. Because of all my pageant winnings, I went to college on a full scholarship, so my parents gave me the money they’d been saving for school.”
“Pageant? Like bikini contest?” He could certainly imagine her figure earning piles of cash.
“No, like Miss America. You know, evening gowns, crowns and sashes, questions about world peace.”
She was a beauty queen; he was a master marksman. If ever two people were less compatible, he couldn’t imagine who, when or where. “You have a lot of roses in here.”
“When your name is a flower, you have to go with it.”
“So why not lilies?”
“Too obvious. You’re not going to divert my attention from asking about last night, by the way.”
“I figured it was worth a shot.”
“How about if we start with an easy question? Who hit you over the head?”
He shook his head. “No idea.”
“Okay, not a good start.”
“Everything’s pretty fuzzy.”
“I’ll bet. How ‘bout we start from the beginning? What’s the last thing you remember clearly?”
He struggled to think back. “I picked up my suit from the dry cleaners.” His only suit, come to think of it.
“You were coming to the wedding,” Calla said, gazing at him with wonder.
“I was invited.”
“So you were. After dry cleaning?”
“Hung around my apartment awhile, fixed my neighbor’s ceiling fan, then went to the bar down the street to watch football.”
When he stopped, she asked, “Did you get into an argument with somebody at the bar?”
“No, I—” What? He recalled watching the Syracuse-Rutgers game of all things, but had no idea what happened afterward.
“Try to picture yourself.”
When he did, he was rewarded with a sharp jab of pain to the back of his skull. Wincing, he shook his head.
She slid off her stool. “Why don’t you take one of your pain pills? You’ve eaten now, so you can—”
“What pain pills?”
“The