Chapter Six #3
Erin hesitated only another moment, then laid the box on the bed to draw off the top. Under a cushion of tissue paper was dark green silk. “Oh. What a color.”
“It’s expected today. Well, take it out,” she demanded. “I’m dying to see if it’s right on you.”
Cautiously Erin touched the silk with her fingertips, then lifted the dress from the box. The material draped softly in the front and simply fell away altogether in the back to a slim skirt. Dee rose to hold the dress in front of her cousin.
“I knew it!” she said, and her face lit up. “I was sure it was right. Oh, Erin, you’ll be dazzling.”
“It’s the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen.” Almost reverently she brushed her fingers over the skirt. “It feels like sin.”
“Aye.” Then, with a laugh, Dee stepped back for a better viewpoint. “It’ll look like it, too. There won’t be a man able to keep his eyes in his head.”
“You’re kinder to me than I deserve.”
“Probably.” Gathering up the box, she handed it to Erin. “Go put it on, fuss with yourself awhile.”
Erin kissed her cheek. Then, letting her feelings spread, she gave her cousin a hard, laughing hug. “Thank you. I’ll be ready in ten minutes.”
“Take your time.”
Erin paused at the door. “No, the sooner I have it on, the longer I can wear it.”
The party was already underway when Burke drove up.
He’d nearly bypassed it altogether. Restless and edgy, he’d thought about driving up to Atlantic City, placing a few bets, spinning a few wheels.
That was his milieu, he told himself, casinos with bright lights, back rooms with dim ones.
A party with the racing class, with their old money and closed circles, wasn’t his style.
He told himself he was here because of the Grants.
The fact that Erin would be there hadn’t swayed him.
So he told himself. Since their last encounter he’d nearly talked himself out of believing there was something between them.
Oh, a spark, certainly, a frisson, a lick or two of flame, but that was all.
That overwhelming and undesirable feeling that there was something deeper, something truer, had only been his imagination.
He hadn’t come tonight to prove that, either. So he told himself.
It was Travis who let him in. Burke could hear voices raised in the living and dining rooms along with the piping Irish music that set the tone.
“Dee was worried about you.” Travis closed the door on the nippy mid-March air outside.
“I had a few things to see to.”
“No problems?”
“No problems,” Burke assured him. But if that was true, he wondered why his shoulders were tensed, why he felt ready to jump in any direction.
“You’ll know just about everyone here,” Travis was saying as he led him into the living room.
“You’ve got quite a crowd,” Burke murmured, and was already searching through it, though he didn’t move beyond the doorway.
“I think you’ll see that Dee’s outdone herself in more ways than one.” With the slightest gesture, Travis had Burke’s gaze traveling to the far end of the room and Erin.
He hadn’t known she could look like that, coolly sexy, polished.
She was sipping champagne and laughing over the rim of her glass at Lloyd Pentel, heir to one of the oldest and most prestigious farms in Virginia.
Flanking her were two more men he recognized.
Third- and fourth-generation racing barons, with Ivy League educations and practiced moves.
Burke felt his blood heat as one of them leaned close to murmur something in her ear.
Both amused and sympathetic, Travis laid a hand on Burke’s shoulder. “Beer?”
“Whiskey.”
He downed the first one easily, appreciating its bite. But it did nothing to relax his muscles. He took a second and sipped it more slowly.
Erin was perfectly aware that he was there.
She doubted he’d been in the room ten seconds before she’d felt his presence.
She smiled and flirted with Lloyd and the others who wandered her way, and told herself she was having a wonderful time.
But she never stopped watching Burke and the women who gravitated to him.
Adelia had been right—the talk was horses. Purses, the size of which made the head reel, were discussed and the politics of racing dissected. Erin took it in, determined to hold her own, but as she nursed her single glass of champagne her gaze kept roaming.
The man didn’t even have the courtesy to say “how do you do,” she decided. But then he seemed more interested in the leggy blonde than in manners. Erin accepted a dance with Lloyd, and if he held her a bit too close she ignored it. And watched Burke.
It didn’t appear to bother her to have the young Pentel stud pawing her, Burke noted as he swirled his whiskey.
And where in the hell had she gotten that dress?
Setting down his whiskey, he lit a cigar.
She was nothing to get worked up over, he reminded himself.
If she wanted to wear a dress that was cut past discretion and bat her baby blues at Pentel, that was her business.
The hell it was. Burke crushed out his cigar and, leaving the blonde who had snuggled up beside him staring, walked over to Erin.
“Pentel.”
Annoyed, but as well-bred as his father’s prize colt, Lloyd nodded. “Logan.”
“I have to borrow Erin a minute. Business.”
Before either of them could object, Burke had maneuvered his way between them and had Erin in his arms.
“You’re a rude, shameless man, Burke Logan.” She was delighted.
“I wouldn’t talk about shameless while you’re wearing that dress.”
“Do you like it?”
“I’d be interested to hear what your father would say about it.”
“You’re not my father.” Though she smiled, there was more challenge than humor in the curve of lips. “Doesn’t a man like you worry about luck, Burke? No wearing of the green on St. Patrick’s Day?”
“Who says I’m not?” His eyes tossed the challenge right back.
“Money doesn’t count.”
“I was talking about something more personal than money. If you want to go somewhere private, I’ll be happy to show you where I’m wearing my green.”
“I’m sure you would,” she murmured, and tried not to be amused. “Now, what business do we have?” He wasn’t holding her as close, not nearly as close as Lloyd had been, but she felt the pull of him.
“You’ve come a long way from dancing in moonlit fields, Irish.”
“Aye.” Some of the pleasure went out of her as she studied him. “What does that mean?”
“You’re an ambitious woman, one who wants things, big things.” God, it was driving him mad to be this close, to smell her as he had once before in a dim garden shed with rain pelting the roof.
“And what of it?”
“Lloyd Pentel’s not a bad choice to give it to you. He’s young, rich, not nearly as shrewd as his old man. The kind of man a smart woman could twist easily around her finger.”
“It’s kind of you to point that out,” she said in a voice that was very low and very cold. She didn’t know what possessed her to go on, but whatever it was, she swore she wouldn’t regret it. “But why should I settle for the colt when I can have the stallion? The old man’s a widower.”
Burke’s mouth thinned as he smiled. “You work fast.”
“And you. The skinny blonde’s still pouting after you. It must be rewarding to walk into a room and have six females trip over themselves to get to you.”
“It has its compensations.”
“Well, why don’t you get back to them?” She started to pull away, but his hand pressed into her back so that their bodies bumped. The flame that was never quite controlled flared at the contact. “Damn you,” she said from the heart as he tightened his fingers on hers.
“I’m tired of playing games.” He had her across the room and into the hall before she found the breath to speak.
“What are you doing?”
“We’re leaving. Where’s your coat?”
“I’m not going anywhere, and I—”
He merely stripped off his jacket and tossed it over her shoulders before he yanked her outside. “Get in the car.”
“Go to hell.”
He grabbed her then, hard and fast. “There’ll be little doubt of that after tonight.” When his mouth came down on hers, her first reaction was to fight free, for this was a man to fear. But that reaction was so quickly buried under desire that she moved to him.
“Get in the car, Erin.”
She stood at the base of the steps a moment, knowing no matter how strong, how determined he was, the choice would be hers. She opened the door herself and got in without looking back.