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Breach

Page 4

   


I spent the following weeks trying to work out the enigma that was Nathan Thorne, to no avail. After his mood altering comments, he had escaped, returning some time later as the man I’d known up to that point. With careful glances, I watched the way he interacted with others, but there was no hint of the pain I’d seen in his beautiful features.
Whatever plagued him was hidden well under his charismatic personality and good looks. The one glimpse I’d been privy to, kept me up at night. What an odd thing for a man like him to say.
I should’ve been more concerned with the fact that I was losing sleep over a man I couldn’t get along with – something I couldn’t afford as I already didn’t sleep much – and he’d become the star in all of my fantasies.
“Morning,” I said with a yawn as I trudged in on Friday, the end of Nathan’s third week with Holloway and Holloway.
Not that I was counting.
“Coffee?” he asked, holding a cup toward me.
I eyed the cup before glaring at him. “Is it poisonous?”
He chuckled, the sound making wetness pool between my thighs. Stupid body, reacting to a man I couldn’t stand.
“No, Delilah. Fresh brewed.”
“Are you buttering me up for something?” I inquired before taking the cup from him.
“No. I saw you walking in when I was heading to get a cup of my own. With as much as you drink, I figured you’d need one.”
“Oh.” I was stunned he would do something nice for me. “Sorry… Thank you.”
I smiled at him, half-genuine and half-rehearsed. His face lit up for a fraction of a second before turning to a grimace.
“Don’t mention it.” His gaze returned to his desk and the papers that adorned it.
There it was: that faint glimpse. He stopped himself from what could’ve been a real smile, for reasons only known to him. What was it that had me so curious about him, that with each new insight revealed, I was left breathless wanting to know more?
I called it quits about six that evening, ready for the weekend. It’d been a long frustrating week, and I was in desperate need of a drink to unwind. There was a bar within walking distance of my condo, one I’d been frequenting every weekend over the last few months.
“Hey, Lila!” John, the bartender, greeted as I entered.
“Hey, John!”
“Usual to start?”
I nodded, and he got to work on my shot and Long Island Ice Tea.
Not only did I need it to unwind, but it would also help me get some sleep.
“Tough week?” He handed me the shot before making my other drink. “Insomnia still got you?”
I tipped back the rum, cringing against the strength. “Yup. I feel like my brain should’ve melted at this point.”
“Holloway got you any help yet?”
“Yeah, he started a few weeks back, but he’s kind of a jackass.”
He gave a sympathetic frown. “That sucks. He at least good-looking?”
I eyed John for a moment, wondering if I was in some sort of set up. “Yes, he is. Fuck hot and has every woman in the office chasing him around, hoping he’ll break and, I don’t know, just drop trou right there and plow into them.”
He snickered, handing me the Long Island. “Every woman but you?”
“What’s the point?” I shrugged. “First, he’s an ass. Second, he wouldn’t have any interest in me anyway, so why bother making an idiot of myself?”
“Honey, you are beautiful and sexy. I wish you could see that for yourself. You get my regulars all riled up when you come in here.”
“Yeah, well…” I trailed off. There was no response to give.
John left to tend to some other customers, leaving me sipping on my drink and contemplating a game on the TV screen in front of me. The sound of the door opening wasn’t uncommon, but the shiver that ran down my spine was not normal.
“Can I get a Dos Equis?” The newcomer asked.
I didn’t need to turn to know who it was, nor to know he was looking at me. I was too tired and too tipsy to care.
“Palmer?” I knew he was smirking, just by the tone he used. Jesus, I couldn’t deal with him tonight.
Could I not think about him for five minutes? He had to be a drunken illusion, even though I’d had little to drink. There was no reason why he would be at my local dive bar.
I tilted my head toward him, his reliable smirk the first thing to greet me. Okay, not an illusion. “Thorne.”
He brushed off my attitude. “What brings you here?”
“I’m here every Friday. Why are you here?”
“I needed a drink. I just spent the last hour trying to lose Kelly. I think she was trying to find out where I live.”
“And of course you had to land in my bar.” I huffed.
“Does it have your name on it?”
“Here you go,” John interrupted, setting a bottle down in front of Nathan. “Wanna keep a tab?”
“Sounds good.”
John smiled at me. “Lila, you good?”
Crap. He was going to give me shit about Nathan the next time I was in.
“One more.”
John nodded and went to make my second Long Island, leaving me once again with the ass**le.
“Lila?” Nathan leaned his arm against the bar.
“Short for Delilah.” My tone was clipped.
“I’ve never heard anyone call you that nickname.”
“Only Caroline at the office does. Delilah is more professional, so only my friends call me Lila.” I hoped that would be enough to sate his curiosity.
It seemed to, because that was where the conversation stopped. I was not in the mood to talk. All I wanted to do was drink, then crash. I was exhausted, and tired to the point of tears.
Sleep called to me; the need to shut out the world and turn off my brain. He made no move to speak as we sat next to one another. The feeling that we were in the same boat came over me as we stared at the screen in front of us. There seemed to be a weird tingling, an almost buzzing sensation, crossing between us. I wondered if he felt it too, or if my tipsy brain was imagining it.
An hour later – after I downed my second Long Island – I was ready to go home. I paid my tab, said goodnight to John, and told Nathan I’d see him on Monday, before I stepped out into the cold early-March air.
After I had walked a couple of blocks, I noticed the sound of footsteps following me. I turned to find Nathan about thirty feet behind me.