Название: Wicked Nights
Автор: Anne Marsh
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
isbn: 9781472047342
isbn:
Lenny bellowed for last-takers, and she tightened her fingers on the chains connecting her swing to the ride. The anticipation of waiting to start was almost as good as the ride itself. As the music swirled and blared, the swing dipped and swayed as someone else sat down beside her. Nope. No way. She always rode alone.
She turned her head—although how she was going to protest sharing a public ride with single seats for solo riders, she didn’t know—and Cal settled onto the seat beside her. She couldn’t remember the last time Cal had ridden the swings. Or the first time, for that matter.
“I could be saving that seat,” she pointed out through a mouthful of candy.
He raised a brow. She hated when he did that. The gesture always, always preceded his busting her. Sure enough...
“For whom?”
He reached out a thumb and rubbed at the sticky corner of her mouth. Oops. She was wearing her guilty pleasure on her face. At least he hadn’t licked his finger first. Ignoring the rasp of his callused skin against hers, she pulled away from his touch. He was also far too literal. “I didn’t say I was.”
“Just that you could be,” he agreed. “Which you’re not. So fair game.”
“Since when do you ride the swings?”
“Maybe I’m trying something different.” His eyes met hers in silent challenge, and she wondered if her comment about his predictability had stung the other night.
Lenny was making final rounds, collecting tickets and checking the safety harnesses. If tonight were her lucky night, Cal wouldn’t have one. Of course, since he was never impulsive, he undoubtedly did.
Lenny paused.
Cal handed over his ticket.
So not her night.
A minute later the ride started, the familiar music drowning out the chatter of the pier’s crowds. The lights flashed a riff of rainbow shades, and Discovery Island melted into a colorful blur as they rose up off the ground. She loved this. The sensation was almost as good as platform diving had been. She could—again, almost—pretend she was flying.
Cal ruined it by opening his mouth.
“Good job today,” he said. Instead of looking out at the island, he was staring at her again. Cal was always annoyingly fair.
“You, too,” she admitted grudgingly. Because it was true, darn it. He had done a good job and it worried her. She really, really needed the contract, and Cal might be the person who stopped her from getting it.
The ride whirled up, gravity and centrifugal force working their magic as the swings swung out in a wide arc. She’d sat on the inside because she really hadn’t expected company, and he outweighed her. He braced himself as the ride turned, but his thigh pressed against hers. The world spun out of focus, and she couldn’t hold back the laughter anymore. Cal’s weight changed the swing’s pitch but not in a bad way. On the next turn, which came faster and higher, he slid into her—the man had no choice—and she leaned forward.
“There’s Deep Dive.” She leaned forward and pointed to his shop.
* * *
PIPER LIVED ON the edge.
Literally.
Cal wrapped a hand around the back of her neck and gently tugged until she wasn’t quite so close to the edge of the seat. The ride had a safety harness, a set of thin chains, which struck Cal as more ornamental than functional. The ride’s designers had clearly bet on gravity keeping riders in their places. Equally obvious, they’d never planned on Piper. She’d once debated the feasibility of jumping from the ride, when it swung out over the ocean at its highest point, and hitting the water.
He’d never know for certain whether she’d have gone through with the plan or not, but he’d watched her like a hawk for the rest of the summer until she’d gone back to the mainland with her family. She’d accused him of being an old grandfather. He’d countered that she’d had a death wish.
Her legs extended in front of her as their swing whirled into the next turn, and she threw her arms over her head, shrieking happily. Her right knee didn’t quite straighten all the way, the ridge of scar tissue there a visible reminder that some things in life hadn’t worked out for Piper. On the other hand, while the accident had put an end to her diving career, she didn’t seem to be in mourning.
Instead, she’d moved on.
Or moved back. Cal wasn’t sure which. All he knew was that he was off balance in more ways than one, which was pretty much what always happened when he was around Piper.
They needed to let go of this ridiculous bet. It was a stupid idea and unprofessional. He had no idea why he’d agreed to it in the first place, except that when he was around Piper, things seemed to happen. That was part of the problem.
At least he had a captive audience. She couldn’t run away from him now. “About our bet—”
“You can’t renege,” she said. “Look, you can see my boat.”
“Piper—”
“That’s my name.” She slid a sideways glance at him he couldn’t read. Too bad Piper didn’t come with an instruction manual. Or an off switch.
“We can’t do the bet,” he said firmly. He knew what happened when he gave Piper so much as an inch.
“You agreed,” she countered, every bit as stubborn as he remembered. The years hadn’t softened her up any. Or taught her to be reasonable.
He braced as the ride spun higher and the swings arced out into the air. Squashing Piper hadn’t been part of his plan. “Cut me some slack.”
“Nope,” she said. “No way. You were my childhood nemesis. You never went easy on me once.”
Her body curved into the turn, and she threw her arms up again with another whoop, taking at least a year off his life as her butt lifted off the seat. He anchored her with an arm around her waist, feeling the warmth of her beneath the thin cotton top. She looked sweet and sexy, both of which were misleading. He had no idea what game Piper was playing with him, but she’d never shown the slightest awareness of him as a man. Or sweetness. Stubborn, fierce, competitive—Piper was all of those. Sweet, however, was not part of her vocabulary.
He didn’t even like sweet.
He tucked her bag of candy into his pocket before it flew away. See? Nothing but trouble.
“We’ll renegotiate,” he stated firmly.
“Cheater,” she said, a small smile curling her lips, and the delight in her voice matched the grin on her face. “You’re a cheater, Cal Brennan.”
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