Love in the Vineyard (Tavonesi #7)(12)



His idea took hold. And then it took off.

They could go on a series of anonymous dates. They could share their dreams and preferences, get to know each other but without the trappings of circumstance.

But he needed a way to make her comfortable enough in the next couple of hours that she might give him her phone number and agree to a first date.

One of the couples left the table and headed to the dance floor. Women loved to dance; he had that on good authority from his sisters. Amber had once told him that if men realized what seductive power dancing held for women, they would be flooding dance instructors with requests for lessons.

When Tasha finished her meal, he stood and held out his hand.

“A dance, my lady?”

She didn’t take his hand, just stared at it as though she had to weigh the pros and cons of dancing with him. Not a promising start.

“As I said, if I step on your toes, you can flee the dance floor.”

“One misstep and I’m gone,” she said. From her tone he surmised that perhaps she meant more than him stepping on her toes.

But then she smiled and allowed him to close his fingers around hers. He guided her into the colorful throng of already dancing couples. The DJ played a medium tempo swing song, and he tilted his head at Tasha. “Swing?”

“I don’t know this music. Or how to dance to it.”

“Then tonight is your lucky night.”

He put a hand to her waist and with his other hand, he lifted her hand to rest on his shoulder. “Let the world melt away and let me lead.”





He couldn’t know how much she would like to do exactly that.

Yet Natasha’s fears of giving over to the sensations jolting through her at his touch were stronger than her impulse to let go and enjoy the evening, the moment and the man. Her lucky night, he’d said. She didn’t want to think about luck. She’d had the dream again the previous night—always the same sequence of events, always the same words. It wasn’t right. Surely her mother wouldn’t mock her from the grave.

But the man’s firm leading caught her up, and soon she was twirling and dipping and dancing and laughing.

Until the music ended.

And Natasha snapped back into the room.

She stepped away from his hold. A rush of coolness swept between them as if someone had opened a door or a window, but there was neither in sight. He dipped his head toward hers and she panicked, thinking he was going to kiss her.

“One more?” he asked, smiling. “And then we should get something to drink.”

Relieved that all he wanted was a dance, she nodded.

But then the DJ cued a slow song, a song she’d never heard before. As his hand slipped to her back and down to her waist and he drew her close, her heart rumbled a beat far faster than the slow tempo of the lovely ballad.

He ran his other hand along her arm until his fingertips met hers. He twined his fingers in hers, then lifted their joined hands and rested them against his chest. Through the edge of her palm, she felt his heart beating, keeping time with hers, keeping a tempo that had nothing to do with the DJ or the party or the place. She tilted her head back and caught him smiling down at her as he swayed and drew her into the first slow steps of the dance. The music played not only around her but through her, melding with the beat of his heart against her palm and the feel of his other hand at her back, guiding her, meeting her, caressing her.

And she let go. Surrendered to the pulse of energy flowing in her. And danced with the mysterious man with the beguiling smile.

When the music stopped, she felt like a woman waking from a delicious dream. But within seconds her thoughts rushed in, calling her defenses back into place like sentinels that had waited at the ready, unhappy to have been dismissed for even the briefest of moments.

“Let’s get some air,” he said. “There’s a terrace just outside the back of this tent.”

Air. Yes, air would help her return to her senses.

He took two glasses of champagne from a passing waiter and handed one to her.

The night had turned cool, the perfect drop in temperature that would lead to this season’s best grapes. The fog hadn’t yet come in, but there was a distinct chill in the evening air.

He whisked off the black doublet he wore and wrapped it around her shoulders.

“Thank you,” she said, finding her voice.

Several couples were seated near heaters at small tables lit by candlelight. Their mingled voices and laughter rippled into Natasha. Had she ever really had fun? She couldn’t remember.

“The stars are especially bright tonight. No moon,” he said.

She looked up, but he wasn’t looking at the stars. He was looking at her.

“Tell me something about you,” he said softly.

“We’re not supposed to exchange information,” she answered.

“Only identifying information is off limits. Tell me about something you love.”

Under normal circumstances she would’ve said Tyler. She sorted through possible responses and found she wanted to answer. Wanted to share some part of her with this mysterious man. But not without a reciprocal exchange.

“If I do, then after, you tell me something. One thing that you love.”

“With pleasure.”

His accent perhaps explained his rather formal English. She liked the way he spoke, the way his words wound together in unusual patterns and his accent made the words stand out, familiar yet not familiar. For so many years she’d honed her ability to listen, to see, to use her senses to make up for her struggles with written words. She was reaping the reward for honing those senses tonight. With this man in this magical setting.

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