The Wild Heir(46)
“Fancy a game of tennis?” Magnus asks me as we stand on the stone patio at the back of the house that overlooks the fields and the distant town of Asker. Both of us are cradling cups of coffee in our hands. I’m normally a tea drinker but this place has made me up my caffeine intake.
“Fancy a game of tennis?” I repeat with a smile, making fun of his proper phrasing.
As is usual with him, he’s not wearing much. Just thin heather grey sweatpants and an old Ministry band t-shirt that he must have gotten from a thrift store. The sun may be warm but it’s not that warm and more often than not he’s barely dressed.
I know he does it to bug me.
Who knows why a half-dressed man should bug me so much but he does and he knows it.
I guess what it comes down to is the fact that I want to stare at him. He’s like the bloody sun, and while only quick glances are allowed, you wish you could just stare unabashedly and really soak it all in. Every solar flare, every dancing flame, every burning storm.
But that’s what Magnus wants so I have to constantly avert my eyes and pretend that I always see men that are built like him.
The fact is, I don’t. I haven’t. That’s pretty obvious. The only man I’ve seen naked is Malcolm and while I was madly in love with him at the time, the teenager mind didn’t care that he was skinny as a rake and freakishly smooth.
My twenty-two-year-old mind and untested hormones are being tortured by the fact that Magnus and his ridiculously toned body is everywhere I turn and I have to keep on pretending that I don’t see him. I have to keep pretending that I don’t wish for a moment that I could take my time dragging my eyes over his tattoos and his sinewy muscles. I have to pretend that he’s of no interest to me.
Sometimes I think I’m trying to fool myself of that as well.
“Yeah, you afraid?” he asks, crossing his arms. The muscles in his forearms bulge. The man is fucking built like a tank, I swear.
Don’t you ever let him know that, I chide myself. Eyes up.
I look him in the eyes. Dark, intense, always hinting at something sexual. “Afraid?” I ask. “Of tennis?”
“Yeah.”
“Is this an official question?”
“No,” he says, biting back a smile. “You think I’d waste that on tennis?”
I shrug. “I have no idea what your priorities are.”
Ain’t that the truth. Part of the reason why I spend a lot of my time trying to figure him out is because sometimes I can’t. One minute he seems super focused on something, the next it’s like it never even existed. The other day he seemed absolutely obsessed in getting a vintage billiards table for the place, spending hours online scrolling through ads and stores to get just the right one. The next morning, though, when I asked him about it, he shrugged it off like it was nothing and I haven’t heard a peep about it since.
Which explains a lot when it comes to women. He’ll be interested in one for a time and then he’ll move on to another. At least that’s what I speculate. I guess I should be somewhat flattered that it’s been almost a week now and he’s still staring at me with those wicked eyes like the day we first met.
Maybe even more so.
All in your head, I remind myself. And that’s the last thing you should want.
Well, other than the fact that wanting this is kind of my agenda for these two weeks.
Honestly, this is quite the bloody mess when you think about it.
“Sure, I’ll play,” I tell him. I haven’t played tennis in years but I figure any sort of exercise will work off the excess energy and nerves I have. I can’t tell if it’s my isolation here or Magnus’s questions or what but every morning I wake up feeling like I might run down the street and never look back.
Magnus tells me he hasn’t played tennis here since he was a teenager and though he said the court—which is located on the other side of the servants’ house—was in good enough shape, he didn’t know where the rackets were or what condition they were in. So while he looks for them, I run upstairs to my room and change into running tights, a sports bra, and a loose t-shirt, practically crashing into Jane as I leave my room.
“Sorry!” I apologize, running past her.
“Where are you going?” she calls after me.
“To play tennis with Magnus.”
“Uh huuuh,” she says after a beat and I don’t have to turn around to see the expression on her face. She’s been ogling him, stalking him, harping on about him since we moved in. You’d think she was the one who might be getting married.
I head out of the house and into the courtyard and stop dead in my tracks when I see Magnus there in front of me.
Gone are the sweatpants, which should be a relief since I have to battle with my brain to keep my eyes from staring at the ever-present outline of his dick. But now he’s shirtless and the pants have been replaced with way too small green athletic shorts, the kind you’d see on tennis players in the eighties, and instead of a mere outline, it looks like he’s smuggling an anaconda in there.
“Oh my god,” I exclaim, stopping where I am and covering my eyes. “Where did you find those?”
“In storage with the tennis rackets,” he says. “I think these were my father’s when I was little. They’re very kingly shorts, can’t you see?”