Wedding Party Collection: Once A Bridesmaid...: Here Comes the Bridesmaid / Falling for the Bridesmaid. GINA WILKINS
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СКАЧАТЬ V-neck, knee-length, three-quarter sleeves, no fussy trim.

      His eyes kept going, down her legs to her shoes. Five-inch-high nude pumps.

      ‘Problem?’ she asked, when his eyes started travelling back up, and she must have sounded exasperated because that stopped him.

      At last he looked in her eyes. ‘You look good—as usual.’

      Oh. ‘Thank you,’ she said, and actually felt like preening.

      ‘But I don’t want you to break your neck wriggling around in that dress and tottering on those heels. The building is finished but there’s still some debris around that you could trip over.’

      And we’re back!

      This was going to be a long day. A long, fun day. He was just so irresistibly grumpy!

      She stepped towards the windows. ‘This is just brilliant!’ Turned to shoot him a broad smile. ‘Are you going to give me a tour, Leo?’

      He nodded—and looked so uninviting that Sunshine almost laughed. Well, there was no time like the present to commence his therapy and start touch, touch, touching!

      Brace yourself, Leo darling.

      ‘Yes, but be careful,’ Leo was saying, oblivious. ‘And leave your bag—it looks heavy.’

      Sunshine dropped the bag on the spot. ‘Tell you what,’ she said, walking back to him, ‘I’m just going to hold on to you so you don’t have to worry about the state of my fragile limbs.’ She took his arm before he could back away. His arm felt hard and unyielding, like a piece of marble. Or petrified wood. Petrified! Perfect. She beamed up at him. ‘Lead on, Leo.’

      His jaw was shut so tightly she thought he might crack a tooth.

      Oh, dear...oh, deary me! This was going to be good.

      * * *

      This was bad, Leo realised.

      Actually, he’d realised it the moment he saw her standing on the viewing platform outside, looking glamorous and yet earthy. And wistful. And...sad.

      So she was sad—so what? She recovered like lightning, didn’t she? Like the other times. There was no reason for him to want to... Well, no reason for anything.

      And her hair was annoying! Out on the platform the wind had been blowing it every which way and she hadn’t given a thought to the tangle it was creating, and then she’d shoved the mess of it into a band as though it didn’t matter. She should care about her damned hair the way every other woman he’d ever dated cared.

      Not that he was dating her.

      It was destabilising, that was all, to have his perceptions mucked around with.

      As was the way she’d cast that expensive-looking orange leather carry-all thing onto the floor—as though it were no more valuable than a paper shopping bag.

      And the fact that she never wore nail polish.

      The way she could make her eyes twinkle at will.

      And that fresh flower smell of hers.

      The jolt when she took his arm and looked up at him with mischief printed all over her face like a tattoo.

      He didn’t want to feel gauche when he pulled away from her touch and nearly caused her to face-plant—and then embarrassed because she laughed it off and blamed herself when he knew that she knew the fault was his. Because Sunshine, he was coming to realise, was no dummy.

      And he certainly didn’t want to feel disapproving, like a damned priest, just because she was dating two men simultaneously and didn’t love either of them. Because she was right about one thing: who was he to lecture her?

      Leo flexed his arm under her hand, which felt disturbingly light and warm and...whatever. It was nothing. Meant nothing. It was just her keeping her balance. The same as holding on to a railing.

      He took a slow, silent breath. ‘Let’s start with the kitchen,’ he said, and led her though swinging doors into a large room of gleaming white tiles and spotless stainless steel surfaces. ‘Everything in here is state of the art, from the appliances to the ventilation system.’

      Sunshine let go of his arm—relief!—and turned a slow circle. ‘It’s kind of daunting. Although I think that about every kitchen.’

      ‘You don’t like to cook?’

      ‘I just do not cook. I can’t. I did once boil an egg, although it ended up hard like the inside of a golf ball.’ That stopped her for a moment. Distracted her. ‘Have you ever peeled off the outer layer of a golf ball?’ she asked. ‘It’s amazing inside—like an endless rubber band wrapped round and round.’

      Not exactly a riveting fact, but she did seem to have an interest in the oddest subjects. ‘You boiled it too long,’ he said. Yeah, I kind of think she figured that out herself, genius.

      ‘I ate it, but I haven’t boiled an egg since. And, really, why boil an egg when you can pop out to a café and have one perfectly poached with some sourdough toast?’

      ‘And that’s the only thing you’ve cooked? The egg?’

      ‘I’ve made two-minute noodles—as recently as yesterday.’

      ‘Didn’t you help out at home when you were a kid?’

      ‘That was the problem.’ She ran a finger along the pristine edge of one of the cooker tops. ‘My hippie parents are vegetarian. It was all bean sprouts, brown rice and tofu—which I actively detest—when I was growing up.’ She gave one of those exaggerated shudders that she seemed to luxuriate in. ‘Tofu casserole! Who wants to cook that?’

      She opened an oven, peeked inside.

      ‘You’re clearly a lapsed vegetarian.’

      She turned to face him. ‘Capital L, lapsed! From the moment I bit into a piece of sirloin at the age of fifteen—on a Wednesday, at seven-thirty-eight p.m.—I was a goner. I embraced my inner carnivore with a vengeance. Meat and livestock shares skyrocketed! And two days later I tried coconut ice and life was never the same again. Hello, processed sugar! I don’t have a sweet tooth—I have a shark’s mouth full of them!’

      ‘Shark’s mouth?’

      ‘Specifically, a white pointer. Did you know they have something like three hundred and fifty teeth? Fifty teeth in the front row and seven rows of teeth behind, ready to step up to the plate if one drops out.’

      This was more interesting than the make-up of a golf ball, but not quite as intriguing as the calorific benefit of a passionate kiss.

      And he wished he hadn’t remembered that kiss thing—because it came with a vision of her kissing the Viking embalmer.

      Sharks. Think about sharks. ‘The only thing I know about sharks’ teeth is that they can kill you,’ he said.

      ‘Hmm, yes, although the chance is remote. Like one in two hundred СКАЧАТЬ