Since I Saw You (Because You Are Mine #4)(20)
“Face it. I set you off balance,” he said, leaning down slightly, a small smile tilting his lips.
She blinked, unsteadied yet again. “Your cockiness is epic,” she said in mixed amazement and irritation, forgetting momentarily that he’d just admitted point-blank a weakness to her. He’d been as vulnerable as she had been after they’d had sex.
“Only if it works,” she thought she heard him mutter under his breath in a thick accent. “Will you have lunch with me?” he asked, his gaze sinking slowly to her mouth in a familiar way that she recognized from the other night. Heat rushed through her, testing her straining defenses.
“I told myself I was going to steer clear of you, Kam.”
“Why?” he asked, taking a step closer, so that the placket of his open shirt brushed against her coat. She found herself staring up into those magnetic eyes. She was nearly as close as she had been Monday night when they lay side by side, both of them turned inside out by thunderous climaxes. “I apologized, didn’t I?” he reminded her quietly. “I know when I make a mistake. Or are you one to hold a grudge?”
“No, it’s not that. I appreciate your apology,” she admitted. “It’s just . . . you’re trouble.”
“As a rule?” he murmured. “Or for you in particular?”
She hesitated. “Both, I think.”
“Best news I’ve had all day.”
Something hitched in her chest when she saw the smile in his eyes.
“At least have lunch with me. It’s boring in that hotel room all alone.”
“You said you wanted to be alone. You’ve lived in isolation for almost all of your adult life,” she reminded him.
“But always with something to do. I don’t like being bored.”
“There’s a fantastic workout facility at the Trump Tower hotel.”
“I already used it today.”
“You could take a tour of the city. Or I could plan a tour for you at a Noble Enterprises manufacturing plant.”
“Ian is going to take me out to a plant next week to show me around. We planned it today during the tour downtown. But if you know of any other technology or telecommunication sector companies I might visit while I’m here, I’d be interested,” Kam said, surprising her. He leaned in and said with mock confidentiality, “And you don’t even have to hold my hand during the tours if you don’t want to.”
“Kam, I’m not trying to patronize you. I’m trying to help.”
“I know that, and you will,” he said so earnestly he took her off guard. “But what I want to do right now is take you to lunch. Please?” he prodded, probably sensing her crumbling resistance.
She hesitated.
“I don’t want Ian to know. Or Francesca. Or anyone,” she stated finally.
“About today?”
“I haven’t done anything regrettable today with you, except for lose my temper in Ian’s office.” Not yet, you haven’t, a knowing voice in her head sneered. She suppressed it with effort. “I meant I don’t want you making Monday night public.”
“Because Ian is your boss?”
“Because I don’t want him to know,” she repeated.
He shrugged in that insouciant way of his. “Fine. It makes no difference to me. Ian isn’t my concern. Not at the moment, he isn’t.”
She hesitated but then noticed his small smile. A thrill prickled through her. That grin was piratical, yes, and daring, but there it was . . . that hint of shyness. She shouldn’t, but that smile told her she would.
“I have a feeling I’m going to regret this,” she said in a hushed tone.
“Sometimes the risk is the only thing that makes something worthwhile.”
Before she could respond, he’d taken her hand in his and was leading her to the curb to hail a cab.
• • •
“I read about it in a travel magazine while I was at school in London and always wanted to come,” Kam said by way of explanation when they pulled up to a restaurant and Lin stared out the window in amazement. She glanced around curiously when Kam held the cab door open for her and helped her alight onto the sidewalk. They were in the midst of an established North Side neighborhood. Kids played in the schoolyard across the way. Neat brick row houses lined the street for blocks.
“Lou’s Ribs and Pizza,” she read the sign in the window. The building looked like it’d gone through its share of years and renovations. It was a hodgepodge of materials from different eras.
“You’ve never been here?” Kam said as he walked ahead of her and opened the door.
“No,” Lin admitted. She followed him into a surprisingly crowded bar and eating area. A jukebox played a muted pop classic, and people chatted at booths and tables. Everyone’s conversation automatically went up in volume when someone turned on a blender behind the bar, as if the crowd was accustomed to the sound. “It’s doing a good business for weekday lunch. How in the world did you know about a neighborhood place like this?”
“I told you, I read about it when I was in college. It’s known for ribs and deep-dish pizza and incredible milk shakes. It’s been around forever. Frank Sinatra used to come here with his buddies. It’s crowded today because there’s a Cubs game at three. You grew up in Chicago and never heard of Lou’s?”