Sultry Groove (Reckless Beat #4) (19 page)

BOOK: Sultry Groove (Reckless Beat #4)
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She smiled and leaned into his warmth. “Thank you.”

“Nice rack.” Mason’s voice made her wince as she turned to face him.

“Mason!” Sidney back handed his chest. “You’re such an ass sometimes.”

“Sometimes?” Ryan pivoted on the sofa, leaning over the backrest to face them. “Nice to see you again…?”

Melody stepped forward, outstretched her hand and prepared to give her name. “Mel—”

“I’m sure the big guy can do the re-introductions.” Ryan focused over her shoulder toward Sean. “Can’t you, buddy?” His face contorted in a vicious smile.

Sean cleared his throat and placed a hand at the small of her back. “You should all remember Red from the engagement party.”

“Red?” Ryan hid a smirk under an unconvincing frown he aimed her way. “That’s not your given name, is it?”

“Stop being a jerk, Ry.”

Melody lowered her outstretched arm, unsure what the underlying conversation was about and not liking it in the least.

Ryan chuckled. “Sorry,
Melody
.” His smile was genuine this time, as if he’d blinked away the asshole persona. “Don’t worry, I remembered your name. I’m polite like that.”

“Fuck off, Ryan.” Sean’s tone was lethal, and entirely too defensive.

She turned to him, ignoring the attention from Mason and Sidney. “What’s going on?”

“Nothing.” He thrust a hand toward the kitchen. “You remember Mason and Sidney?”

She stood motionless, trying to read the stubborn set of Sean’s jaw. Could she have this all wrong? She’d been thinking all his nicknames were sweet endearments, when the reality could be the exact opposite.

“I remember.” The honeyed feminine voice drew closer. “I also remember you spilling your drink all over her.”

Sean cringed, still not meeting her gaze. He didn’t meet Sidney’s either.
Awkward.
Apart from the engagement party, this was the first time she’d been with Sean around his friends. He could be one of
those
guys. The Danny Zukos of the world, who treated women like gems when they were one on one, and pushed them to the curb when under the scrutiny of friends.

“Well, as much as I’m enjoying whatever horrific crash and burn you’re sailing into—” Mason muttered, “—I’m gonna go put the meat on the grill.”

“I’ll join you.” Ryan jumped the back of the sofa and followed after Mason.

“Hold up,” Sean grated. “I’ll help you light it.”

Melody watched in shock and disappointment as Sean strode away from her, following his friends and Sidney toward the balcony door.

“Are you coming, Red?”

He didn’t even glance over his shoulder to address her. Something wasn’t right. He’d been distant in the hall, yet she’d still felt the invigorating heat of his attention. In this room, the emotional space between them was greater. Their connection had shifted in the last few minutes, or maybe it had happened in their days apart. He was agitated, distracted, and entirely different from the man she spent dance rehearsals with. The only problem was, she wasn’t sure if she was overreacting because of her lack of confidence, or if the discomfort in her gut was intuition pushing her to leave.

“No.” She shook her head. “I actually think I should go.”

Sean closed the
balcony door, enclosing himself into the heavy silence with Red. “I’m sorry.” He turned to face her. “This isn’t going as planned.”

She lowered her gaze to the floor and gave a heavy swallow as guilt rose further up his throat. He was nervous about seeing her again. Anxious about the image of her scar in his mind. Annoyed as fuck that Mason and Sidney had crashed his casual date. And worst of all, he’d been blindsided by Ryan trying to stir trouble about his previous inability to remember Red’s name.

“Are you sorry about the unexpected guests,” her voice was pained, “or sorry Ryan pointed out you don’t even know my name?” She raised her focus to his and punched him in the sternum with her somber brown eyes.

He prowled forward, trudging out his annoyance at Ryan, Mason, and Sidney with every step. He’d anticipated tonight for days, hoping he could quickly get the anxiety about her scars out of his system and focus on the fantasies that were now back within reach. Instead, they were falling to shit at his feet. Red crossed her arms as he approached, not in defense, but what looked like comfort. It didn’t stop his advance. He continued until they were toe to toe, his thighs almost brushing hers. He took his time, gazing into her eyes, trying to determine if she was angry or hurt.

Hurt. Definitely hurt.

“You want the truth?” he murmured, itching to kiss the saddened curve from her mouth.

She raised a brow in answer and began gnawing on her bottom lip.

“The first night we were together, I couldn’t remember your name. Ryan gave me shit about it.”

Her features relaxed. “The first night at the engagement party?”

Fuck.
He winced. “No. The first night we slept together.”

“Right.” She stepped away with a scoff. “I can’t believe I was so far off my game that I didn’t realize I was being played.” Her fingers raked through her gorgeous strawberry-blonde locks and she laughed bitterly. “Boy, I’ve really lost my touch.”

“I’ve never played you. I drove to your studio that day because I couldn’t get you out of my head.” He bridged the foot of distance between them. “It wasn’t about sex, even though it turned out that way. I wanted to spend time with you. And that’s all I’ve wanted ever since.”

He grabbed her hand, holding tight when she tried to tug away. “The sex is sensational, but it wasn’t my intent.”
Fucking hell.
“OK, that’s kind of a lie.” He entwined their fingers and brought her knuckles to his lips. “I wanted in your pants the moment I laid eyes on you.”

“And you didn’t spare the decency of learning my name before you reached your goal.”

He kissed her knuckles harder. “I remembered when I went in search of your studio. I just forgot afterward. Come on, Red. Cut me a break. It was a simple mistake.”

“You’ve forgotten my name
again
?”

“I haven’t forgotten your fucking name,” he growled, cupping a fierce hand to the back of her head. “
Melody.
” The word was a whispered breath between them before he brushed his lips briefly over hers. “It wasn’t a satisfying feeling to realize I couldn’t remember your name after you left that night, if that’s what you think.”

“I don’t know what to think.” Her fingers finally gripped his, squeezing the heat back into his chest. “I don’t like being this person. I don’t like acting this way.”

“What way?” He could feel the insecurity settling between them. His confident, see-through-top wearing woman had disappeared again. “You’re upset because I forgot your name. It’s understandable. In fact, I’m sure half the female population wouldn’t disagree if you tried to neuter me.”

She released a breath of a chuckle. “A year ago, I wouldn’t have cared.” This time her laugh was mocking. “You wouldn’t have stood a chance against who I used to be. You would’ve known my name and what I stood for. And I’m sure you never would’ve forgotten.”

He’d lost her. The fire-breathing pixie he knew had vanished under the weight of his asshole behavior. He didn’t like being the cause of her doubt. Their time together always started with self-assurance and passion, then he’d say or do something to fuck it up. To fuck her over and do whatever it was that sent her spiraling into uncertainty.

“I know who you are and what you stand for, Melody.” He said her name for reassurance and because he actually liked the sound of it on his lips.

“I’m not sure how you can, when I don’t know myself.”

What could he say to that? She was on the brink of leaving, and he wouldn’t risk opening his mouth to blurt out dumb shit he hadn’t thought through. He wasn’t smooth like Mitch or Blake. Well, Mitch wasn’t entirely smooth, more adorably idiotic, but he still got his point across.

“Do you think I should leave and save myself the embarrassment of facing your friends again?”


Hell, no.
” He ran his hand through her hair, enjoying a little too much how the smoothness of the strands flowed effortlessly through his fingers. “What I want is Ryan, Mason, and Sidney to fuck off so I can spend time alone with you. But until that happens,
please
stay.”

She remained silent. Thunderous heartbeats echoed in his ears as he waited for her reply, brushing his lips over hers once, twice, hoping to entice her into hanging around.

“I like when you say my name,” she whispered, cutting off his oxygen with her fragility. “I’ve always had nicknames. Too many to list. But very few people call me Melody. I like the way you say it.”

And here he was thinking his endearments would make him stand out from the sea of past lovers. “So you’re telling me you don’t like when I call you pixie? Or fairy?”

Her lips curved against his. “What I’m saying is, if you continue to say my name in that smooth, deep tone of yours, you might get more than you bargained for once we’re alone.”

“Melody, oh, sweet Melod—”

She cut him off with a kiss. Her delicate hand rested on his chest, right over his heart, as their tongues entwined and assets south of the equator began to stir. When she pulled back, her brown eyes beamed with lust-filled determination. Her confidence, although fleeting, was a fucking brilliant sight. He felt her self-assurance consume him, giving him the patience to hold his temper when all he wanted to do was smack Ryan and Mason in the back of the head.

Nobody realized how much he needed this.
Her
. His friends had it all, the limelight, the popularity, and the women. All Sean wanted was the opportunity to obtain the same. And Melody wasn’t merely about filling a gap in his life. The few days apart had cemented his interest. He needed more of her. He needed
all
of her.

The balcony door slid open, and he fought the need to groan.

“Sorry to interrupt.”
Sidney
. Of course, it had to be her. “Mason was asking for the tongs.”

Sean straightened and released a huff of frustration. “I’ll bring them out in a minute.”

He waited until the door opened and closed again before he relaxed. “Can I get you a glass of wine?”

“I have to drive.”

“You can spend the night.” He grinned, not only because the offer was too tempting to deny, but because Sidney hadn’t even lasted a moment in his mind. He was done. Over her. And the more he thought on it, the more the heavy weight of guilt eased off his shoulders.

“I could, but I won’t. Not tonight.”

“Work?” He pecked her lips and dropped his hold on her hand.

“Yeah. I have another early start in the morning.”

He inclined his head. “I’m beginning to hate your job.”

She snickered and flashed him a brilliant smile. “You didn’t hate it so much when your hands were all over me in the studio.”

“The world doesn’t exist when I’m touching you, let alone your job.” He strode to the kitchen, sensing the heat of her stare on the back of his neck. He removed the garden and potato salads from the fridge, enjoying the contemplation of her silence. She wasn’t the type to fill a void with unnecessary chatter. He liked it.

“Is there a problem between you and Sidney?”

Fuck.
Maybe her quiet contemplation wasn’t entirely fan-fucking-tastic. He shouldn’t have stiffened. It was instinctual. Unavoidable. And probably the biggest red flag to wave in front of Red’s face.

“Why do you say that?” Great diversion tactic. Answer a question with a question. There’s no way she’ll notice you sweating now, asshole.

“I guess you don’t seem comfortable around her. You stiffen whenever she speaks to you, and I noticed you don’t make eye contact.”

“Hmm.” He frowned, feigning ignorance so poorly he was sure she was going to latch onto the guilt permeating the air and call him out. “I don’t mean to.” He focused on the path toward the tongs and tried to find an exit strategy. “We’ve been friends for years.” There, that was a hint at their past. A hint was better than nothing. And if Melody did happen to ask for details, he’d spill. He wasn’t sure how, all he knew was that he wasn’t going to lie.

“I guess I haven’t really seen you around your friends before.”

“Yeah.” He pulled open the second drawer beside the dishwasher and grabbed the utensils he needed. “Apart from the time I was passed out at the engagement party. You can’t forget that.” He met her gaze, hoping for a smile she thankfully flashed his way.

“No. I don’t think I’ll ever forget that.”

He smirked, two parts proud for the diversion and a whole heap satisfied at her grin. “I love your smile.”

Her lips curved higher. “And I love that you love my smile.” Her cheeks darkened and she glanced away, hiding her embarrassment.

He couldn’t hold back, he strode for her, the utensils tight in his grip. She was the woman for him, the one he wanted to pop his relationship cherry with. All he had to do was get her to open up and let him in.

***

Melody’s high was
short lived. She followed Sean onto the balcony, sipping her soda as they chatted amongst themselves, and filled her in on back story whenever necessary. It would’ve been fun—living it up with world-famous musicians, laughing, joking, shooting the breeze. Only she couldn’t get rid of the flutters in her belly.

It couldn’t be intuition
. Apart from the engagement party and her work in the studio, this was the first time she’d mingled with anyone other than dance students since the accident. It had to be her confidence playing havoc and pushing her to have an unhealthy focus on a woman she didn’t even know. Still, she couldn’t stop herself from zoning in on the way Sean frowned whenever Sidney addressed him. Or how the other woman spoke with affection in her tone, then barely hid the crumpling of her features when Sean gave a gruff reply.

Damn it. No self-confidence, now jealousy. What was she turning into? She didn’t like the new Melody. The old one had never bothered with the green-eyed monster. She’d never needed to. Guys fawned over her. If they cheated or broke up with her, it was a case of onward and upward. Relationships had never been something she looked at in a long-term kind of way. Being on tour and constantly working didn’t allow for love-filled attachments, only extended hookups. Things were different now. Sean was different. And this whole envy thing was entirely unwanted.

“The past is in the past.” Sidney smiled as she spoke. “I’m no longer going back there. The future is our only focus now.” She nestled into Mason’s arms, resting her head against his neck.

Melody had missed something. “Why is that? Did something happen in the past?”

It was more than Sidney’s personal history she wanted to learn. If at all possible, she was dying to know if other people could simply let go of devastating parts of their life and move on.

The conversation died. Silence hung heavy. Only the sizzle of meat on the grill entered her ears. “Sorry,” she murmured, not entirely sure what she was apologizing for. “Forget I asked.”

“No, it’s fine.” Sidney straightened in Mason’s arms.

Sean cleared his throat, in threat or discomfort, she wasn’t sure, but Sidney’s gaze turned to his for a brief, uncomfortable moment.

“It’s a long story. One that I’m sure you would’ve briefly skimmed over in the papers. My previous assistant had some mental issues I wasn’t aware of, and threatened us with a gun.”

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