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The Closer. Rhonda NelsonЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Closer - Rhonda Nelson


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given the success of your own insects, as well as the fact that you’re the heir apparent, I thought it was a good choice.”

      Something in his tone must have caught her attention because she stilled and looked up at him. “You make it sound like you’re getting ready to retire.”

      He shrugged innocently. “Who knows? I might.”

      She rolled her eyes and gave an indelicate huff. “Yeah, right. I’ll believe that when I see it.”

      Rather than respond, her father tucked the creation more firmly into the black foam that held it secure, then carefully closed the lid, snapped the latches and locked them with a key he produced from his pocket. He handed it to Griff, along with the case. “Jess has a spare key, in the event you need it.”

      Griff couldn’t imagine why he would, but nodded all the same.

      Jessalyn Rossi leaned over and gave her dad a hug. “I’ll keep you posted,” she told him.

      “I have no doubt,” he replied, a smile in his voice.

      She withdrew and looked up at Griff. “I just need to get my things out of the car.”

      Griff nodded and, case in hand, followed her back out of the store. She quickly unlocked the car, then leaned in—giving him another unobstructed view of her lovely rear end—and grabbed a single suitcase and a purse. She straightened, then glanced over her shoulder and shot him a hopeful look. “I don’t suppose you’d want me to drive?”

      Griff smiled. “No, thanks. It’s against protocol.” He didn’t know whether that was true or not, but it sounded better than when “hell freezes over.” He was already feeling too left of center. Off balance. Allowing her to drive would no doubt compound the issue. As a matter of fact, he could safely say that he imagined everything about Jessalyn Rossi was going to compound the issue.

      Because, God help him, she was the issue.

      3

      ER...SO MUCH FOR Paul Blart: Mall Cop, Jess thought as every hair on her body tingled with hypersensitive awareness. Honestly, when she’d turned around and saw him standing in the shop, a sonic boom of white-hot sexual attraction had blasted her so thoroughly it was a miracle she hadn’t been blown backward, spread eagle, like something out of a superhero-comics movie. Her skin still felt singed from the heat, her middle a simmering muddled mess.

      It was unnerving, to say the least.

      A healthy twenty-year-old woman, Jess was accustomed to looking at the occasional handsome man and experiencing a passing whiff of feminine interest. The recognition would flit through her mind as quickly and unremarkably as a half-formed thought, one that was soon dismissed and replaced with something else. Her gaze shifted to her left and a shivery breath slowly leaked out of her lungs.

      Griffin Wicklow was another matter altogether.

      One whiff of him, so to speak, and she’d turned into the proverbial bloodhound. And if the hammering of her pulse and the tightening of her nipples were any indication, a female one, at that.

      In heat, naturally, she thought with a droll quirk of her lips.

      She couldn’t have been any more stunned if she’d sprouted horns and grown a tail. This didn’t happen to her. It had never happened to her, as a matter of fact. On the rare occasions she’d dated anyone long enough to segue into an intimate relationship—rare being the operative word, because oddly enough, most men didn’t appreciate a woman who knew more about the engine under the hood than they did—desire had been something that had required...coaxing. Cultivating. A bit of persuasion.

      It had never inexplicably slugged her across the middle with all the subtlety of a two-by-four.

      It had never made her feel like icy fire had suddenly erupted beneath her skin.

      More disturbingly, it had never made her nervous.

      Being different had always demanded courage, so at this point in her life Jess could safely say that very little rattled her. And if it did, she’d eat glass and smile through the blood in her mouth before she’d admit it. She inwardly grinned.

      It was part of her charm.

      But the anxious energy presently twitching through her veins was something foreign and therefore more...concerning. She could literally feel him there, beside her, though they weren’t actually touching. Every confident turn of the wheel beneath his wide, blunt-tipped beautiful fingers, each breath that moved in and out of his lungs, the slightest shift of his mouthwatering shoulder as he negotiated traffic.

      It was madness. Sheer, utter, God help her, thrilling madness.

      Perhaps he’d be willing to drop her off at the nearest hospital, Jess thought with a futile smothered whimper, where she could take advantage of some serious psychological help.

      Clearly a lobotomy wouldn’t be in order—she’d obviously already lost her friggin’ mind.

      But how could she not when he looked like that? If he’d been merely handsome or even just striking, she’d like to think that she would have momentarily swooned, but then recovered. After all, it wasn’t as if good-looking men were that uncommon.

      But fifteen minutes post meeting and she was still reeling, still toe-curlingly aware.

      It was the hair, she ultimately decided. Curls did it to her every time. No doubt they were the bane of his existence and had garnered him endless teasing as a boy, but mercy, they were beautiful. Big and loose and messy, but easily styled as evidenced by a vague part that looked more as if a hand had done the work rather than a comb. And dark auburn, to boot, damn him. Her favorite color. Not quite brown, not quite red, but thousands of shades in between that caught the light.

      The same color slashed boldly over eyes that were deeply lidded and equally riveting. Pinwheels of blue and green burst from his irises in wide, vibrant striations, as though Mother Nature couldn’t decide which hue best suited him, so she gave him both in equal measure.

      In direct contrast with the unforgiving masculinity of his face—the bold nose, mile-high, stark cheekbones, angular jaw—curly bronze-tipped lashes framed those remarkable eyes, a feature she was sure he resented. She was suddenly hit with the insane urge to touch them, those lashes, to feel the springy curve of them against the pad of her thumb.

      Madness, she thought again, balling her hands in her lap.

      One would think the Almighty would have been a little more considerate of the fairer sex when doling out Griff’s finer features. For instance, because he’d been so liberal with his face, one would assume that, in fairness, Griff wouldn’t have been blessed with so spectacular a body. Jess slid a covert peek over his long, muscled profile, her belly clenching when it reached his thigh.

      Wrong.

      It, too, was equally stunning, equally divinely made. At five-eight, Jess was a tall woman and therefore was accustomed to barely lifting her chin to speak to someone with additional height. This man easily topped six and a half feet and every inch of his physique was perfectly honed, devoid of any softness or, God forbid, fat, she thought enviously. It was a body that commanded attention from both genders, one that was fit and naturally conditioned. He moved easily in his skin, walked with an economy of movement that was as graceful as it was purposeful. He wore a cream-colored sweater, the sleeves pushed up to reveal fine copper hair dusting his forearms, and jeans that were worn and sat low on his lean hips. A little too low, she noted dimly, as though he’d recently lost a little weight.

      Jess imagined most every woman longed for one forbidden encounter, to be bowled over by the shock of unadulterated sexual desire, the kind that resulted in torn clothing, whisker burn and hot, broken epithets in conjunction with even hotter, mindless sex. Many women imagined this sort of sex, casting an A-list Hollywood actor as their star performer, herself included, on occasion.

      But move over, Channing Tatum, because Griffin Wicklow had just taken top billing on her imaginary marquee.


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