Brick closed his eyes in that annoyingly patient way of his when he was trying to get his temper under control. “It’s fine,” he said, eyes still closed. “I’m glad you weren’t hurt.”
He sounded like he was being strangled.
“How’s Spence?” she asked.
“Whiny.” He brushed past her and stepped inside.
“If you want, you can dump him here for the rest of the day so you don’t have to deal with him,” she offered.
“I think you two have spent enough time together,” he announced, taking off his cowboy hat and throwing it on the table.
The man insisted on wearing the full uniform every shift, no matter how cold it got. She, and the rest of the female population on the island, did not mind how his uniform pants looked hugging his butt.
Butt bongos. Ugh. What was it about this man that made her so desperately stupid?
She sighed. “Can I get you something?” she asked, feeling suspicious.
“Coffee,” he said. “Please.”
“Coming right up.” She ducked into the kitchen and fired up the coffee maker. Meanwhile, Brick prowled the sunny space like a big, pissed-off cat waiting to pounce on something and rip its head off. “So, how’s your shift so far? Before your brother and I ruined it,” she said, reaching into a cabinet and producing two mugs.
“Fine.”
A man of few words and much annoyance.
“You got something to say?” she asked. “Because a conversation that goes both ways is usually more productive.”
“You and Spence,” he began.
She picked up the carafe and poured. “Cream? Sugar?” she asked, knowing full well he took it black.
He shook his head and stared at the mug when she set it on the counter and pointed to it.
“You two need to start thinking about growing up,” he announced, looking just a little green around the gills.
Remi poured herself a cup of coffee and then offered him a flat smile. “Do we now?”
“I can’t have you running around the island pulling pranks and getting into trouble. I get that you’re bored—”
“I hear what you’re saying,” she said through clenched teeth. “And I appreciate your feedback.”
He stilled. “What the hell kind of bullshit is that?”
“It’s me not biting your head off for unsolicited advice. If you want to tell your little brother how to live, that’s one thing. But you don’t get a say in me and my decisions.”
“I do when I’m the one who has to clean up your mess.”
“I get that you’re upset about your vehicle.”
“It’s not the fucking snowmobile.”
“Then what is it?”
“Maybe it’s time you head back,” he said abruptly.
“Oh, for Pete’s sake. I am so sick of the one step forward thirty-six steps back dance with you!”
“Is this still you not biting my head off?”
“Brick, you either say thank you and drink that coffee, or I’m going to throw it in your stupid, stubborn face.”
He blew out a breath, obviously trying to rein in his temper. “Fine. I’m sorry,” he began stiffly.
“Don’t apologize to me. I’m the one who helped your brother sink your snowmobile.”
“You don’t want an apology, then what do you want?” he demanded.
“I don’t know. Maybe pick a lane! Last night you’re all, ‘here’s the studio space I made for you,’ and today you’re shoving me out the door for Chicago. You make a girl’s head spin and not in the good way. More like in the 360-degree way!”
“Okay. Fine. I’m not sorry. You are. Let’s leave it at that,” he said.
“Why did you come here?” she asked as he picked up the mug.
“To make sure you were all right.”
The man was infuriating. He was lucky she hadn’t swamped him in the lake instead of his snowmobile.
“Thank you for showing up for him.”
“I didn’t do it for him.” His tone was surly, gruff.
He looked like he wanted to say more. Like there were words he was fighting back. She was so damn tired of his silence, his mysteriousness.
“Oh, come on! What the hell’s that supposed to mean?” she demanded. When they got like this, it was like two firecrackers that just kept reigniting the other. Someone always got hurt, and dammit, she was sick of losing fingers.
He lifted blazing blue eyes to hers. His hands were fisted at his sides, and his nostrils flared. She could very definitely see the veins in his neck now. But she wasn’t about to back down.
“You wanna say something to me, then open your damn mouth and say the damn words,” Remi said.
There was a long beat during which neither one of them moved. They’d never held eye contact this long. She felt undressed, cornered.
And then he started to move toward her. Slowly. Prowling. “I don’t think that’s what you really want, Remi.”
The way his voice, all gravel and whiskey, caressed her name made her legs tremble. There was meaning there. But she didn’t know what. She didn’t have a Brick Callan Dictionary available for translation.
She took a step back, then another one. But he just kept prowling toward her. He set his mug down with a distinct snap. She stopped when her back met the cabinet. Any second now, he’d look away. He’d leave and walk away without giving her a second thought. Just like he’d always done.
But this time he didn’t. He stopped when his boots touched her toes.
“Are you scared, baby?” his voice was a rasp. There was fire in his eyes.
She shook her head from side to side as her pulse rabbited at the base of her throat.
He placed one big hand on the cabinets behind her head and leaned in even closer.
Yep. She was just going to have a heart attack or infarction or whatever the hell it was called when a heart just gave up trying to work.
His beard was magnificent up close. She wondered if anyone had ever told him that before, then decided now wasn’t the time.
“You should be,” he said.
Beard. Heart attack. Sexy hand and lean-in. Oh, right. He’d asked her if she was scared, she remembered, walking it back in her head.
“Why should I be afraid of you, Brick?” she scoffed. Sure, her knees were literally shaking. But it wasn’t from fear. It was so much worse.
“Because…” he said, leaning in closer and closer in slow motion.
She stopped breathing and realized she’d flattened herself against the kitchen wall like a cartoon character pancaked by an anvil. He was so damn tall. She had to tilt her head way back to look up at him. And what she saw in his eyes made her wish she would have looked south rather than north.
He stopped an inch from her. So close that she could feel the hum of awareness firing between their bodies. So close that if she took a deep enough breath her breasts would brush against his chest and her nipples would celebrate.
“Take a breath before you pass out, Remington.”
She took one. A ragged, wheezy one. “Why should I be afraid of you?” she repeated.
He held up a hand like he was going to caress her cheek, but his palm stopped just short of touching her, and he withdrew it. It was his turn to take a jagged breath. “Because if you knew all the things I wanted to do to you, you’d leave town tonight and never look back.”