A Tempestuous Temptation

A Tempestuous Temptation by Cathy Williams

Book: A Tempestuous Temptation by Cathy Williams Read Free Book Online
Authors: Cathy Williams
Ads: Link
whatever clothes you want and you’re going to let me buy whatever clothes you want. The whole damned shop if it takes your fancy!’
    Aggie smiled and then giggled and slanted an upwards look at him. ‘You’re crazy.’
    In return, Luiz smiled lazily back at her. She didn’t smile enough. At least, not with him. When she did, her face became radiantly appealing. ‘Compliment or not?’ he murmured softly, and Aggie felt the ground sway under her feet.
    ‘I’m not prepared to commit on that,’ she told him sternly, but the corners of her mouth were still twitching.
    ‘Come on.’
    It was just the sort of boutique where the assistants were trained to be scary. They catered for rich locals and passing tourists. Aggie was sure that, had she strolled in, clad in her worn clothes and tired boots, they would have followed her around the shop, rearranging anything shehappened to take from the shelves and keeping a close eye just in case she was tempted to make off with something.
    With Luiz, however, shopping in an over-priced boutique was something of a different experience. The young girl who had greeted them at the door, as bug-eyed in Luiz’s presence as the waitress had been on Saturday in the café, was sidelined and they were personally taken care of by an older woman who confided that she was the owner of the shop. Aggie was made to sit on the
chaise longe
, with Luiz sprawled next to her, as relaxed as if he owned the place. Items of clothing were brought out and most were immediately dismissed by him with a casual wave of the hand.
    ‘I thought
I
was supposed to be choosing my own outfits,’ Aggie whispered at one point, guiltily thrilled to death by this take on the shopping experience.
    ‘I know what would look good on you.’
    ‘I should get some jeans …’ She worried her lower lip and inwardly fretted at the price of the designer jeans which had been draped over a chair, awaiting inspection. Belatedly, she added, ‘And you don’t know what would look good on me.’
    ‘I know there’s room for improvement, judging from the dismal blacks and greys I’ve seen you wear in the past.’
    Aggie turned to him, hot under the collar and ready to be self-righteous. And she just didn’t know what happened. Rather, she knew
exactly
what happened. Their eyes clashed. His, dark and amused … Hers, blue and sparking. Sitting so close to each other on the sofa, she could breathe him in and she gave a little half-gasp.
    She knew he was going to kiss her even before she felt his cool lips touch hers, and it was as if she had been waiting for this for much longer than a couple of days. It wasas if she had been waiting ever since the very first time they had met.
    It was brief, over before it had begun, although when he drew back she found that she was still leaning into him, her mouth parted and her eyes half-closed.
    ‘Bad manners to launch into an argument in a shop,’ he murmured, which snapped her out of her trance, though her heart was beating so hard that she could scarcely breathe.
    ‘You kissed me to shut me up?’
    ‘It’s one way of stopping an argument in the making.’
    Aggie tried and failed to be enraged. Her lips were still tingling and her whole body felt as though it was on fire. That five-second kiss had been as potent as a red-hot branding iron. While she tried hard to conceal how affected she had been by it, he now looked away, the moment already forgotten, his attention back to the shop owner who had emerged with more handfuls of clothing, special items from the stock room at the back.
    ‘Jeans—those three pairs. Those jumpers and that dress … not that one, the one hanging at the back.’ He turned to Aggie, whose lips were tightly compressed. ‘You look as though you’ve swallowed a lemon whole.’
    ‘I would appreciate it if you would keep your hands to yourself!’ she muttered, flinty-eyed, and Luiz grinned, unperturbed by this show of anger.
    ‘I hadn’t realised that my

Similar Books

Sweet Charity

M McInerney

The Curve Ball

J. S. Scott

Cataract City

Craig Davidson

Out of the Blue

Sarah Ellis

Ghostwalker

Erik Scott de Bie