MAX ROLLED OVER IN BED, opening one eye to the morning light. A sharp pain in his shoulder caused him to curse and he rolled back again, working out the twinge. Though the surgery had been nearly four months ago, he still had pain. Either the swimming or the sex had been too much for him and considering how much time he spent at both last night, Max was sure it wasn’t the swimming.
When the ache had subsided, he sat up and found the other side of the bed empty. “Angela?” he called. His voice echoed through the silent apartment. Then he noticed the note on her pillow. Max snatched it up. “I have to work sometime. Date number two tonight. Better make it good.”
He chuckled, then flopped back down onto his pillow. Smiling seemed to be the only thing he could manage. His body was exhausted, his desire completely sated and he felt completely transformed. He reached for the phone beside the bed, ready to call her, merely to hear her voice. Then he realized he didn’t know her number by memory yet.
At that very moment, the phone rang and he reached out and grabbed it. “You better have a very good reason for leaving my bed this morning,” he said.
“Some of us have to work,” Angie replied. “And with all the noise I made, you didn’t even move. You were snoring.”
“I’m sure that was attractive,” he said. “What time did you leave?”
“About an hour ago. I caught a cab. I just got home.
I’m going to shower and then head into work.”
“Why don’t you shower and head back here?” he said. “You’re the boss, you can take the day off.”
“I took yesterday off,” she said. “And if the boss doesn’t work, the boss doesn’t make money.”
“I have plenty of money for both of us,” Max said.
“I’m not dating you for your money,” she said.
“Why are you dating me?” he asked.
“For your body. Call me later. Tonight, I get to choose what we do. Go back to sleep.”
“Bye, baby,” he said.
“Bye,” she cooed.
The line went dead. He switched off the phone and tossed it aside. But almost immediately, it rang again. “She can’t get enough of me,” Max murmured.
He pushed the button and held it to his ear. “I knew you’d change your mind. My bed is so lonely without you.”
“That is not what a mother wants to hear first thing in the morning, Max.”
He winced, biting back a curse. “Hi, Mom.”
“Hello, darling. I won’t bother asking you what you’ve been doing.”
“It’s not what you think,” he said.
“I prefer not to think about it,” she said. “Get out of bed and get dressed. I’m on my way to your place. We’re going to have coffee. I’ll pick you up out front in five minutes.”
Max ran his hand over his chest. He was still sticky from last night’s adventure with the éclairs. “Give me ten. I have to hop in the shower.”
“All right. I’ll see you in a few minutes.” Max drew a deep breath and rolled out of bed. Reaching behind his head, he stretched the kinks out of his shoulder, then rubbed at the scar as he walked to the bathroom.
Five minutes was all he needed for a shower and five minutes after that, he was downstairs, watching for his mother’s car. When the Saab pulled up, he hopped in the passenger side, then leaned over and gave his mom a kiss on the cheek.
“Where’s the nearest coffee shop?” she asked.
“Out the driveway, then take your first left. As long as we’re in the car, we’ll go to my favorite place.”
Max gave her directions as they drove west. The coffee shop, Beanie’s, was in a busy part of the Lincoln Park neighborhood. He kept his eye out for a parking place, but knew that at this time of the day, it would be a while before they found something close. To his surprise, his mother pulled into a spot a few moments later.
“Why is it I can search forever for a spot and you always find one the minute you start looking?”
“You’re buying me coffee,” Maggie Morgan said as she stepped out of the car.
“It’s free,” Max said. “I own this place.”
“Really?” She stared up the facade. “It’s very nice. So you feed them drinks at night and soothe their hangovers in the morning. Your father would call that smart business.” She walked past him. “Too bad you don’t conduct your personal life with such care.”
“Here we go,” Max muttered. All of this because he’d made a mistake answering the phone. He followed his mother inside, then ordered coffees and pastries for them both. They found a table near the window and he pulled out her chair for her. “Before you start in on me, I’ll just say that the woman I was with last night is someone pretty special.”
“Movie star or model?”
“Neither. Just a regular, normal girl. Well, not normal. Very pretty. And nice. You’d like her.”
“Maxwell Morgan, it is time you seriously reevaluated your social life. You can’t keep sleeping with these women and expect any good to come of it. You’re not going to find a nice girl that way.”
“Oh, I know what this is about,” Max said. He took a bite of his pastry and slowly chewed. “David told me you want to set me up on a date. That’s why you’re here. To convince me to come to your barbecue. I’m not interested. I’m busy that weekend.”
“Just consider this girl. She’s lovely and she’s from a good family. And she’s not the sort to go sleeping around.”
“You’ve met her?”
“No, but her mother has shown me photos. She owns her own business and has a master’s degree.
You went to high school with her. You might even remember her.”
“I went to high school with 3,000 kids,” Max said.
“I didn’t know all of them.”
“She went to Northwestern, too. Although she finished all four years.” His mother grabbed her bag. “I brought your yearbook along. We’ll look her up and see if you remember her.” She flipped through the pages. “Here she is.” She paused. “Oh, my. This isn’t a very flattering picture. She looks nothing like this anymore.” She slammed the book shut. “Just trust me. Besides, if you don’t hit it off, you haven’t lost anything.”
Max grabbed the yearbook. “Show me. I’d like to know what you consider a lovely girl.”
Reluctantly, she found the page again and then held it out to Max. “Top row, second to the last.”
“Where?” Max asked, scanning the photos.
“There,” his mother said. “She had braces and she’s wearing glasses. She looks so much better now.
She’s blond. You seem to prefer blondes.”
The photo looked strangely familiar, but he shook his head. “Oh, Mom, no. This girl I’m dating is re ally great. I was thinking about bringing her to the barbecue. Her name is Angela.”
“Yes, dear. Angela Weatherby. I know.”
Max blinked in surprise. “How did you know that?
Did Dave mention her?”
“It’s right there, next to the photo.”
“What?” Max shook his head. “What photo?”
His mother pointed to the list of names in the yearbook. “Angela Weatherby. That’s her name. Kathy Weatherby is my tennis partner.”
Max stared at the picture for a long moment, dumbfounded. If he squinted his eyes, he could al most believe this was the woman who’d shared his bed last night. He bit back a curse. What the hell did this mean?
When they’d met, Angela had acted as if they’d been strangers. How could she have gone through four years of high school without- No, everyone in school knew who he was. And that wasn’t just ego talking, it was the truth. He’d been class president his junior year and student body president his senior year.
His brain scrambled to make sense of it. What had seemed so simple last night was suddenly incredibly complicated. Max had to question Angela’s motives and rewind every comment she made. Was this part of some clever manipulation?
Some of his buddies in the league had some experience with stalkers. Was Angela one of those? He slowly worked through the events of their short time together. No, she’d given him a bogus phone number. Why would she do that? Unless she knew his interest would be piqued and he’d come looking.
And she had been evasive about her background. She’d never mentioned where she went to high school or college. “Can I keep this?” he asked.
“Of course. Now, you’ll be coming to the barbecue, right?”
“Yes,” he murmured, his gaze still fixed on the photo.
“Alone?”
“Yes,” Max replied. “I’m very anxious to meet this girl. There’s something very familiar about her. In fact, I feel as if I know her quite…intimately.” He stood up. “I have to go, Mom.”
“But we’ve barely started our coffee.”
Max bent over and gave his mother a kiss on the cheek. “I have a lot of things to do today. Don’t worry, I’ll walk home.”
“All right,” she said. “I’ll see you a week from Saturday. Come about one. And wear something nice. I hate seeing you in those silly basketball shorts all the time. Wear a shirt. In fact, buy a new shirt. Then send it to the cleaners to be pressed. And no jeans. Khakis.”
“Are you going to pick out my underwear for me, too?” Max asked.
“You don’t have to be snippy,” she warned.
“Sorry. I’m tired.”
“I just want you to be happy,” she said, her expression softening.
“And that’s all I want for you, Mom. I’ll be at your barbecue. I promise.” He walked out of the coffee shop and onto the busy sidewalk. For a long moment, Max wasn’t sure what he wanted to do. He wasn’t even sure how he felt. Angry? Confused? Shocked?
He pulled his sunglasses down and headed east, toward the lake. “Let’s review,” he murmured. “I didn’t know her, but she knew me…maybe. We went to high school and college together, but we never-” He cursed softly. “We might have met.” There was a reason he’d thought he knew her that first night. They had met. But when?
“Think.” He’d only been in college for two years. She probably hadn’t looked much different from her high school graduation picture, with the exception of the braces. And maybe the glasses. She’d told him she’d been the president of the Latin Club. Max stopped and paged through the yearbook until he found the photo. “There she is,” he murmured. “Angela Weatherby. President.”
This was all too strange. Like it had all been planned out ahead of time. He’d known women-baseball groupies-who’d gone to great lengths to meet him, but was Angela one of them? Had she walked into the bar that night hoping that she’d catch his eye? The groupies he’d encountered were much more obvious about their intentions. Unless she was so good at manipulating men that she knew how he’d react if he were forced to chase her.
Max needed some straight answers. Now. But he wasn’t even sure what questions he ought to be asking. It would be better to wait and let things between him and Angela play out. A few well-timed questions about high school and college might shake the truth out of her. And then he’d know if this was a complicated manipulation or just a simple misunderstanding.
Max hoped it was the latter. Right now, he didn’t want to consider anything that might mess up the good thing they had going.
“I LOVE THIS PLACE,” Angela said, staring into the penguin tank at the Shedd Aquarium. “Whenever I need to clear my mind, I come here and watch the penguins. Life seems so perfect for them. Swim and eat, swim and eat.”
She glanced over at Max, her gaze taking in his perfect profile. They’d been together for two days and she’d done her best to resist his charms. But his constant assault on her defenses had left her feeling exposed and vulnerable.
It was just sex, incredible as it was. But it was the simple moments like this one, when she’d look at him and saw the man behind all the hype and celebrity that threw her. He was just a regular guy who loved pizza and swimming and watching penguins. He was completely content to spend a quiet afternoon with her.
“They’re like us,” Max said. “But we threw a little sex in there for variety.”
“Penguins mate for life, you know.”
“I didn’t know that,” Max said.
“It’s true. They search for that one special penguin they’re meant to be with and when they find each other, they settle down, build a nest and have a little penguin family.”
It was only after she relayed the penguin information that she realized how he might interpret her words. Did he think that’s what she was after? Was she even sure what she wanted? Angela had been so careful not to think about the future. Whenever her thoughts spun out to the weeks and months ahead, she stopped herself.
Two days. Forty-eight hours. And already she was in serious trouble. It wasn’t going to last, Angela told herself. In a week or two, he’d give her some sort of lame explanation and he’d move on. Why not just enjoy what they shared for what it was?
“It must take them a while to find their mate,” Max said. “They all look alike.”
“They know. They can feel it.” He looked at her and Angela smiled. “They stick together through sickness and bad weather, protecting each other. From the time they meet until the time they hatch their first baby, they don’t even eat. And then, the couple shares all the responsibilities for the newborn.”
Max slipped his arm around her shoulders and they silently watched the birds leap into the water and jump back out again. If only life could be so simple for humans. She’d already made so many mistakes and now, Angela wasn’t sure she’d be able to go back and fix them.
How would she explain everything to Max-how she’d been in love with when they were teenagers?
How she’d once dreamed about a day when they’d be doing just this. How she’d decided to write about him in her book and how his personal life was splashed all over her Web site.
No matter how she fashioned her explanation, she could never make it sound better than common stalking. But it wasn’t like that. What had begun as a complicated mess was now perfectly simple-she wanted him, he wanted her, and they’d found each other.
If she really believed they had a future together, then she’d have to come clean. The barbecue would be difficult to navigate with all her secrets still intact, so she’d have to tell him before then. Either that, or break up with him.
“What do you think about that?” Max asked.
Startled out of her thoughts, she blinked, then turned to him. “Think about what?”
“About mating for life? Is it possible?”
“Of course. Zoologists have studied penguin colonies and-”
“I meant for humans. Is it the natural order of things to spend your life with just one person?”
“I don’t know,” she said. “Look at the divorce rate nowadays. All those couples went into marriage thinking it was forever. And then it wasn’t. Relationships are hard. I think two people have to be temperamentally suited for each other. And then they have to work at it, every day, forever.”
“Have you ever thought about getting married?”
“No one has ever asked me,” Angela admitted. “But I do believe in the penguins. I think there’s one person out there for each of us and we spend our life trying to find that person. Sometimes, we think we’ve found them, and then we realize we were wrong. But when we actually do, it’s…perfect.” She forced a smile. “And what do you think? Are you a believer in the penguin theory of love or do you side with my parents?”
“Your parents don’t believe in romance?” he asked.
“They think I need to choose someone to marry for practical purposes, not because of some overwhelming passion. I was the oddball in our family. My parents and sisters were the scientists, always looking at life with a purely objective, rational eye. I spent my whole childhood lost in silly romantic fantasies. I loved fairy tales. My mother thought they were horrible stories that sent young girls all the wrong messages. She banned certain books from my reading list and I’d just sneak them out of the library with my best friend’s library card. She wouldn’t allow me to read Wuthering Heights because Cathy commits suicide over her love for Heathcliff.”
“Do your parents have a happy marriage?”
“No,” Angela said. “Maybe. I don’t see any passion there. I know they respect each other, but I was never really sure if they loved each other. What about yours? Are they happy?”
Max nodded. “Yeah, I know they are. They have their disagreements, but they love spending time together. They golf and play tennis. And I’m pretty sure they still have sex, so that’s a good thing, right?”
“I think so,” she said. “I hope that when I’m older, my husband still wants me.”
“You want to get married, then?” Max asked.
She shrugged. “I don’t know. I suppose if the right man comes along.”
“And the perfect guy. He would be…”
Angela laughed. “You want a list? I don’t know. He’d be honest and kind. Funny. I think humor is important.”
“Rich?”
Angela shook her head. “No. I’d want him to be passionate about his work, but money isn’t a deal breaker. I guess that’s it. Honest, kind and funny. And maybe spontaneous and romantic, too.” She frowned. “It doesn’t seem like much. I really should have found a guy by now, don’t you think?”
“Maybe you’re like that penguin right there,”
Max said, pointing to the tank. “Maybe you’re still searching.”
She slipped her arm around his. And maybe she’d found him already and was just too stubborn to ac knowledge it, Angela mused. “Let’s go get some lunch. And then I have to get back to the office. I’ve been taking too much time off work and leaving everything to Ceci. It’s really not fair.”
“Do you ever take a vacation?” Max asked.
Angela shook her head. “Not really.”
“Then why don’t we go somewhere this weekend, just the two of us.”
“I don’t know,” she said. “Maybe next weekend?”
If they were both out of town next weekend, then neither one of them could attend the barbecue. “I’d have more time then.”
He shook his head. “That doesn’t work. I’ve got plans. My parents are throwing a barbecue.” He paused. “You wouldn’t want to come with me, would you?”
“No!” Angela quickly replied. “I mean if I’m in town, I should probably get some work done.”
“It’s probably for the better,” Max said. “There’s this woman they want me to meet. The daughter of one of my mother’s friends. I’ll just go and say hello.”
Angela’s breath caught in her throat. This was where her real life intersected with the life they’d created for themselves. She risked a sideways glance, trying to read his expression. Was it possible that his mother hadn’t mentioned the name of this woman? “So you have a blind date?” she asked. “What’s her name?”
This was it. The truth was about to come out, right here in front of the penguin tank. Angela was glad. She hated all of the secrets between them. She’d make her explanations and if he couldn’t except them, then it would be over.
He paused, then shrugged. “I don’t know. She went to high school with me, but I don’t remember her.”
Relief washed over her. He didn’t know it was her.
Though the urge to tell him was still there, Angela decided to take more time to consider her approach.
She loved the penguin tank and didn’t want one of her favorites spot ruined by a bad memory.
“She can’t possibly be as beautiful as you,” he said.
Angela felt guilt snake through her. Did he know?
Had Max already figured everything out? This was her fault for hiding things from him in the first place.
She should have walked into the bar and admitted her reasons for being there. If she had, she certainly wouldn’t be stuck in this mess now. No, considering his hatred of the press, he probably would have tossed her out on her ear.
“I wouldn’t be so sure about that,” Angela said. She’d tell him at lunch. She’d confess everything and then let the chips fall. If he was still in her life at the end of the day, then they might actually have a future together.
“DATE NUMBER THREE,” he said. “Let me see. Penguins at the aquarium, a long swim, take-out pasta for dinner, and early to bed. I think I deserve top scores, don’t you?”
Angela nuzzled her face into his shoulder, her naked body pressed against his. “You’re getting awfully confident. You expect top scores for take-out pasta?”
“It was from a great restaurant. Face it. You like me. You think I’m hot. I’m irresistible. I managed to talk you out of going back to work, didn’t I?”
“You’re not that irresistible,” she said.
She’d been awfully quiet since they’d left the aquarium. Max knew what was on her mind. She was trying to work up the courage to admit that she’d known him all along. His first impulse was to attach some ulterior motive to their meeting at the bar that night. But after he thought about it for a while, Max realized that there might be another reason she didn’t want to admit their common past. She’d been one of those girls that nobody noticed in high school, the girls who watched from the sidelines. The girls that a guy like Max wouldn’t have bothered to talk to.
Max ran his hand along her body, cupping her backside and pulling her up to lie on top of him. All that had changed. And not because she was beautiful, but because he had finally found a reason to see beyond mere physical beauty.
This stolen summer had changed him. He’d grown up, become an adult. And he was finally beginning to realize what life was all about. It wasn’t about money or fame. It was about this-the small, perfect moments that he shared with Angela. The quiet conversations and long silences. The simple kisses and the passion that followed.
“I am irresistible,” Max said, searching for her mouth. His lips brushed against hers and he moved above her, his shaft growing harder between them. “Admit it.”
“No,” she said. “I can resist. Just watch me.”
Her wicked smile was an outright challenge to him. And though they were only teasing, Max suddenly needed her to acknowledge what was happening between them, the power that their attraction generated. Did she want him as much as he wanted her? How deep did her feelings run?
Their conversation at the penguin exhibit had given him a few clues. She wanted a relationship, something that would last, even though she hadn’t come right out and said it. And wasn’t that what was going on here? A relationship?
With all the other women in his life, he saw their time together in finite terms, with a beginning and an end. But he wasn’t able to contemplate ending things with Angela. Though she hadn’t been completely honest with him, her actions certainly weren’t enough to drive him away. In truth, he felt even more attracted to her knowing how vulnerable she felt about her past.
Still, there were two sides to every relationship. What would drive her away? Would it be his celebrity? The long periods apart? Her past? There were plenty of things on his side of the board that she might find unbearable.
Max pulled her into a long, deep kiss, doing his best to seduce her with his lips and tongue. “Say it,” he whispered. “Tell me you need me.”
“I don’t,” she said, still teasing.
Max took her face between his hands and stared into her eyes. “Tell me,” he said.
She paused, clearly confused by the intensity of his request. Then she drew a ragged breath. “I need you,” she murmured.
“Only me,” he said.
“Only you,” she replied. Her smile widened. “Unless you have someone else under the covers. Another man? Oh my, a threesome. I suppose I could spread the need around.”
It was clear she wasn’t about to engage in a serious conversation. And maybe it wasn’t fair of him to press her. After all, they’d only known each other forty-eight hours. What did he expect?
“I have something for you,” Max said. “In the envelope on by the lamp.”
“What is it?”
“Open it,” he said.
Angela shook her head. “We shouldn’t be giving each other gifts. It’s too soon.”
“It’s not really a gift,” Max said. “Just open it.”
She grabbed the envelope and slowly withdrew the airline ticket. “It’s a ticket,” she said. “Are you going somewhere?”
“I have to fly to Florida tomorrow and I was hoping you’d come with me. We could spend the weekend there. I could show you the city, then we could relax and have some fun.”
At first Max thought she’d accept, but slowly her expression changed. “We talked about this earlier. I-I can’t.”
“Why not? It’s just a couple days. I want to show you where I live.”
“I just can’t,” she said. She rolled off him, grabbing his T-shirt from the end of the bed and tugging it over her head. “I-I’m going to go get some orange juice. Do you want some?”
Max pushed up on his elbow. “Angela, wait.”
“I’ll be right back,” she said, forcing a smile.
He watched her walk out of the bedroom, then flopped back on the pillow. What was this all about? He thought she’d enjoy a little vacation. Since he had to be in Florida for a few days, why not take her along? There was something else at work here.
When she returned, Angela sat down at the edge of the bed. “I’m sorry,” she said. “It’s a lovely…gift.”
“No, it’s not a gift. Jewelry is a gift. This is just me being selfish,” Max said. “I have to be away for a few days and I knew how much I’d miss you. I thought if you came along, I wouldn’t miss you so much.” He reached out and touched her arm. “Is that so bad?”
She shook her head. “Not really.” Angela took a sip of the orange juice. “But that’s your other life. Down there, you’re famous, you have girls and paparazzi trailing after you. I can’t compete with that life. It’s so…big. But here in Chicago, everything works.”
“Angela, I might have to go back to that life. It’s my job. What’s going to happen then?”
She shrugged. “I don’t know. We’ll deal with that when the time comes, I guess.”
“I want to know now,” he said.
“We’ve known each other for-how long?”
“Forty-eight hours,” he muttered.
She blinked in surprise. “Really. That’s all? I’ve had stomach viruses that have lasted longer than that. I’ve had headaches that have lasted-”
Max pressed a finger to her lips. “I get it. But you forget, we’ve spent nearly all that time together. If you were dating some other guy, you might have had dates that lasted for five hours max.”
“Yeah,” she said.
“Right. Well, we’ve had the equivalent of…” He tried to do the math in his head. Nine times five was forty-five so-
“Nine point six,” she said. “I’m good in math, too.”
“All right. We’ve been on the equivalent of 9.6 dates. Now, if you figure two dates a week, we’ve been dating for almost five weeks. Five weeks is not too early to take a trip together.”
“It’s too early for me,” she said.
Slowly, it became clear to Max what she was saying. “You don’t trust me,” he said. “Go ahead. Say it. You don’t trust me.”
“I don’t trust you,” she said. “And not because you’re not a great guy. I don’t trust you because I barely know you, Max. And I don’t trust myself. I don’t want to get hurt. I don’t want to see the wonderful life you lead in Florida. I don’t want to be reminded of the differences between us.”
Differences? Damn it, they’d grown up in the same hometown, attended the same schools. Their parents were friends. If she were going to use that as an excuse, then he’d have to call her on it. Or maybe that was the reason she’d kept a few secrets from him. After dating starlets and pop stars, what could he possibly find interesting about a hometown girl?
“Forty-eight hours,” she repeated. “That’s barely enough time to figure out how you like your coffee.”
“You know how I like my coffee,” he said.
“And it doesn’t help that we spend most of our time in bed. I know a lot about your body and about how you like to be touched. But I don’t know how you got that scar on your knee.”
“Bike accident when I was twelve,” he said.
“Or what you like to read,” she added.
“Mostly non-fiction.” He sighed. “All right. I get your point. So, let’s get to know each other right now.”
“I’m still not going to Florida with you,” she said.
“I know you’re stubborn,” Max said.
“Cautious,” she countered.
He bent close and kissed her. “And your lips are incredibly soft.”
“You’re getting off track again,” Angela warned.
Max cupped her breast in his hand. “And that your body seems to fit perfectly against mine. As if it were made for my touch.”
She sighed softly. “Why don’t we play a game? I’ll ask you a question-any question-and you have to answer. We each get ten questions and two passes.”
“Passes?”
“We can refuse to answer twice. I’ll start.”
“All right.” Max sat up and crossed his legs in front of him, then pulled a pillow over his lap. “Shoot.”
“How many women have you slept with?”
He laughed. “Really? You want to know? I’m not sure I ever counted, but it’s not as many as you’d think.”
“More than five hundred?”
“No,” Max said. God, his reputation must be a lot worse than he’d ever imagined. “Where did you hear I’d slept with five hundred women?”
“More than two hundred?”
“Absolutely not,” he said.
“More than one hundred?”
Max shook his head. “I don’t think so. I’ve had some long dry spells and I’ve had some short-term relationships. Maybe ninety.” He paused. “Jeez, even that sounds like a lot. But it’s really not. If you figure ten on average a year. And that’s since the beginning. A lot of what you hear in the press isn’t true. If it were, I’d be up in the thousands. How many questions was that for you-four?”
“No, just one.”
“Actually, it was four. One main question and three sub-questions.”
With an astonished laugh, she reached out and slapped him on the chest. “You don’t play fair.”
“My turn,” he said. “Same question.”
“None,” she replied.
“None?”
“That’s question two according to your rules. And my answer is none.”
“You’ve slept with me, so it has to be at least one.”
“Oh, but you’re a man. You said same question. So I answered the same question-how many women have I had sex with.”
He grabbed her and threw her down on the bed, stretching out on top of her. “Oh, so this is the way it’s going to be. You’re going to trick me. I might as well give up right now. You’re much too clever, Angela Weatherby.”
“All right, all right, no more tricks.”
For the next two hours, they talked, asking questions, laughing at answers, and learning more about each other than they needed to know. Max carefully avoided questions about her hometown and her high school and college education, waiting for her to volunteer that information herself. And though she had plenty of opportunity, she never once mentioned she’d known him in the past.
When it came time to ask his last question, Max paused. “I think I’m going to save it,” he said. “For what?”
“For later. For when I really want to know something.”
“I can always pass on it.”
“No, you can’t. You’ve had your two passes, remember?” Max pulled her into his arms and kissed her. “Now, can we please just stop talking and start getting down to business?”
She growled playfully, then grabbed his face and kissed him long and hard. “Max, if kissing is your business, then I think I’d like to invest.”