He's So Fine Read online



  time with Cole Donovan.

  Laughing softly at whatever he saw on her face, Cole came all the way into the shop, letting the door close behind him.

  “I’m closed,” she said.

  He helpfully flicked the lock, which resisted his efforts. He turned to eyeball it and then manhandled it the way she had to every single day.

  “I could fix that,” he said.

  “That’s okay,” she said, looking at his sling. No way would she risk hurting him again. “I don’t want you to spend your time. And besides, I have a handyman guy.” She totally didn’t have anything of the sort.

  “It’d take me less than two minutes,” he said. “And no charge.”

  “Cole—”

  “You have any tools?”

  She chewed on her lower lip.

  He smiled. “You have all this stuff, and you don’t have any tools?”

  “I collect only pretty stuff,” she said, and gave him a reluctant smile. “And I’ve never found a pretty tool, or I’d undoubtedly have some here for sale.”

  “It’s okay,” he said, unperturbed. “I’m packing.”

  This didn’t surprise her. He was known as the local MacGyver, able to fix things in the blink of an eye with whatever he had on him…“Not necessary,” she said, annoyingly breathless for no reason. It absolutely wasn’t just the sight of him in one of his pairs of sexy cargo pants and a long-sleeved T-shirt that fit his rugged physique so well. She stood and dusted herself off. “Like I said, I was just closing, so…”

  He flipped the OPEN sign to CLOSED.

  “Yes,” she said, “but you’re on the wrong side of the door.”

  He just smiled. “You’re good with kids, you know.”

  For some reason, that caught her completely off guard. Maybe it was because no one had said such a thing to her before, ever.

  “Personal experience?” he asked.

  “Are you feeling out if I have kids?”

  “Or a husband,” he said, unabashedly. “Kids I wouldn’t mind at all. A husband…that’s probably an obstacle I can’t get around.”

  She laughed. “I have neither, not that it matters.” She pointed to the sling. “Have you been to a doctor?”

  “Yes, ma’am. It’s just an old shoulder injury that I retweaked, that’s all.”

  “Hauling me out of the water the other day.”

  “Hauling myself out of the water,” he corrected.

  She didn’t buy that, not for a second, but looking into his stubborn expression, complete with squared jaw and that little bit of scruff she was determined not to find attractive in the slightest, she knew she’d get nowhere arguing the point. “Why are you here?”

  “I don’t tend to question the universe,” he said blandly.

  She had to laugh. “You know what I mean. Why are you here in my shop?”

  “Maybe I’m here to buy something.”

  “You need a Halloween costume?” she asked.

  “Maybe.”

  “I just got some new ones in,” she said.

  “Yeah?”

  “Yeah, Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz and Miley Cyrus.”

  Not scared off, he grinned. “I could rock either.”

  That tore yet another laugh out of her, and his gaze slid to her mouth. “That’s a really good look on you,” he murmured. “More of that.”

  “You’re pretty demanding for such a laid-back guy,” she said. “Anyone ever tell you that?”

  “I’ve had no complaints.”

  Of course not. Looking like he did, with that long, leanly muscled bod— Not going there…

  Not even a little.

  Too late! the devil on her shoulder cried gleefully, the slut. “I’ve really got to clean up,” Olivia said.

  “Need help?”

  “No, thank you.” She paused to wonder why it was that his voice, with its deep, low timbre, never failed to give her a shiver. The really good kind of shiver. “I’ve got it. I’m going out the back to lock up my car. Feel free to let yourself out.”

  For some reason this made him smile as he rocked back on his heels.

  “What?” she asked.

  “Nothing,” he said, looking even more amused.

  “You’re a strange man,” she said, and headed into the back. “You know the way out. Use it.”

  Assuming he’d do just that, she strode through her storage room to the back corner, which also served as her office. Her desk was as neat and organized as her storage room wasn’t. She kept it so because the business side of things didn’t come easily to her. She had to work hard at keeping herself on track with the bookkeeping.

  The answering machine was blinking, reminding her that she hadn’t answered the phone during Drama Day with the kids. Damn. She hit PLAY and sighed at the sound of her mother’s voice.

  “What’s it going to be on that happy reunion?” Tamilyn asked.

  Delete.

  The next message shouldn’t have been too much of a surprise. It was the producer from TV Land. He was smart enough to get to the point. “Call me.”

  Delete.

  Next to her desk was an antique armoire that had come from the movie set of a remake of A Christmas Carol. She’d played one of the orphans. It’d been one of her favorite jobs, and the piece meant a lot to her, which was why it was back here in use and not out in the shop for sale.

  She opened the armoire to pull out her coat.

  The footsteps behind her shouldn’t have been a surprise. Her back to Cole, she went utterly still for a beat because he smelled…delicious, like he’d recently showered. She inhaled deeply, then pretended she wasn’t trying to catch a bigger whiff of him as she turned, buttoning up her coat. “Thought you left,” she said.

  “You thought wrong. Family reunion?”

  “What?”

  “Your first phone message.”

  Of course he’d heard the word “reunion” and assumed it’d be a family reunion. This was because he was normal. He could have no possible idea that this particular reunion had nothing to do with reality.

  “I thought you didn’t have any family.”

  “This is…extended family.” As in very extended.

  “Do you ever miss Kentucky?”

  She nearly gave a choked laugh. Kentucky represented her first seven years of life, which had been spent in a single-wide on cement blocks that leaked in the rain, and it’d rained a lot. It had meant a lot of long, cold nights in the winter and longer hot, sticky nights in the summer. It had meant an unhappy, stressed-out mom, hungry bellies, and uncertainty.

  But that had been a long time ago, a lifetime ago, in fact.

  “No,” she said as simply as she dared. “I don’t miss Kentucky. Why are you here again?”

  He pulled something from his pocket. Black lace.

  Her panties.

  “Oh, my God,” she said.

  “Thought you might want them back.”

  She gaped at him. “What if they’d fallen out of your pocket? What if you’d gotten in a wreck and been taken to the hospital with women’s underwear on you? What if—”

  Laughing, he put a finger over her lips. “You always worry about the worst-case scenario?”

  Yes. Always.

  She pushed his hand away from her mouth, snatched the panties, and then turned from him. She needed a moment without his sharp gaze to recover from the oddly electric touch of his finger on her mouth.

  And what it had done to her.

  “I was hoping to take you out to dinner as a thank-you for saving my life.”

  She hadn’t been big on guys in a while. If she was being honest, she hadn’t really even tried since the summer after college. The guy she’d been dating had discovered the Not Again, Hailey! DVDs. He’d had a showing with a hundred of his closest friends and charged admission, thinking it was funny as hell to promise people her autograph.

  Instead, it’d been mortifying as hell.

  “Long silence,” Cole said. “Doesn