Merry and Bright(14)
And so was their stuff.
They were done, they were gone, and Mr. Wrong hadn’t even come to say good-bye. That hurt. But it also meant that the cookies were hers, so she ate one more and called Janie. “I made Jacob a dozen cookies and ate all but two by myself. Not counting the dozen I ate last night.”
“This is why you’re single.”
“Thanks.” She hung up and took her loser self to the parking lot where she found her flat tire and remembered that she’d forgotten to call Triple A. With a sigh, she sank to the curb by her car and pulled out the Tupperware.
Yep, two cookies left.
A double loser.
Jacob had his final check in hand, including the bonus that they’d earned by the skin of their teeth. It’d been a helluva tough forty-eight hours but he was done.
Free.
Leaving Scott’s office, he went by Maggie’s to say good-bye before heading to the airport. He hadn’t had a moment to breathe all day, but he’d thought about her. Thought about her and how she’d looked sitting on her worktable with no panties . . .
Her office was dark. He’d missed her. Frustrated, exhausted, and now disappointed, he left the building. It was a typical L.A. winter evening, fifty-five degrees with a rare addition—clouds gathering, blocking out any moon or starlight—not that there was ever much of that visible in downtown Los Angeles anyway.
The streets were decorated with red garland and festive colored lights, along with a long string of red brake lights—business traffic trying to get to the freeway. He walked through the parking lot and came to a surprised stop in front of Maggie, sitting on the curb by her car, eating . . . a cookie? “Hey.”
“Hey, yourself.”
“What are you doing?”
“Eating a cookie.”
“Okay.” He waited for her to expand on that but she didn’t.
“You can just ignore me,” she said instead.
Uh-huh. As if he could. Nothing about her was ignorable, not from the tips of her toes poking out her high-heeled sandals all the way up those sweet, lush curves to the strands of her adorably messy hair. “Why are you sitting on the curb?”
“I was talking on my cell to my sister. Just doing my part of the statistic that says the average American spends two years on the phone.”
“I’m not anywhere close to average.”
“I know. You’re bigger.” She covered her face. “Sorry. Sugar rush. Too many cookies. Waaay too many.”
She had a dab of chocolate on the corner of her mouth, and he found himself fixated on that. “What, no facts on cookies?”
“Oh, I have cookie facts. I was just trying to hold back.”
“You don’t have to hold back with me, Maggie.”
“Okay. Did you know it was Ruth Graves Wakefield who first used candy-bar chocolate in a cookie recipe while at the Toll House Inn circa 1930?” She waved a cookie. “And voilà, chocolate chip cookies were born.”
“Good one. So why are you sitting out here eating cookies?”
“Actually, technically, they’re your cookies.”
She was wearing another skirt today, a pencil skirt, with her legs demurely tucked beneath her, but he could see her knees, and the Band-Aids there. Her jacket was open over a blouse the same light blue as her eyes. She looked extremely buttoned up and extremely put together—if one didn’t count her hair, which was once again defying gravity with what appeared to be a stir stick shoved into it.
And the chocolate at the corner of her mouth, let’s not forget that, because he couldn’t tear his eyes off of it, or understand the sudden insane urge to lean down and lick it off.
But he had his bag packed and in his truck, and a plane to catch.
Maggie took the last bite of the cookie and brushed her fingers off. “I should have baked three dozen.”
“You bake?”
“Yes, and I’m good, too.”
“I bet you are.” He sat at her side, so tired he had no idea if he could get back up again. She smelled like chocolate. He had a feeling she would taste even better. Reaching out with his finger, he ran it over the corner of her mouth.
She pulled back. “What are you doing?”
“You have a little chocolate—”
“Oh, God.” Her tongue darted out, collided with the pad of his finger. It was like an electric bolt straight to his groin.
“Did I get it?”
“No.” He smiled. “You smeared it a little. Here.” Again he glided his finger over her lips, then sucked that finger into his own mouth.
Her eyes were glued to him. “Oh,” she breathed softly.
Yeah, oh. Traffic rushed all around them, and they sat there in their own little world. He had to get to the airport, and yet he didn’t get back up. Instead, he leaned in so that their mouths were only a breath apart. “Let me get that last little bit—”
“Where—” Her tongue darted out, attempting to lick the chocolate off. “There?”
He smiled. “No.”
She licked it again. “Now?”
“No.”
“Dammit, Jacob.”
“That’s Mr. Wrong, to you.” And still holding her face, he dropped his gaze from hers to look at her mouth, absorbing her little murmur of anticipation before he closed the gap and kissed her.
Jill Shalvis's Books
- Playing for Keeps (Heartbreaker Bay #7)
- Hot Winter Nights (Heartbreaker Bay #6)
- The Good Luck Sister (Wildstone #1.5)
- Accidentally on Purpose (Heartbreaker Bay #3)
- One Snowy Night (Heartbreaker Bay #2.5)
- Jill Shalvis
- Instant Gratification (Wilder #2)
- Strong and Sexy (Sky High Air #2)
- Chance Encounter
- Luke