She peeked at him. He stared straight ahead, looking all hot and broody. He wore a pair of shorts that fell below the knee, and a formfitting shirt that hugged all his hard planes. She couldn’t wait to rip it off of him. “So, what’s in the bag?”
“Water, flashlights, a knife, sleeping bag, some—”
She snorted. “Let me guess. You were an Eagle Scout.”
“Why guess?” His hands tightened on the shoulder straps. “I’m sure Kady told you all about it.”
“Maybe,” she admitted. “I just didn’t believe her until now.”
“I was the leader, too.” He watched her out of the corner of his eye. “Go ahead and laugh. You know you want to.”
Actually, she found it endearing, damn it. “No, I don’t,” she said. “I think it’s…cute.”
He looked at her, surprise clear in his eyes, and shook his head. “I didn’t realize you had a thing for nerds. I wore glasses, too. Oh, and I had braces for three years. Does that gain me points with you? I seem to be sorely lacking in that area lately.”
She tsked. “Nope. It’s not like you’re that boy anymore.”
“I grew up.” He lifted a shoulder. “People do that.”
She studied him for way too long before she bent over and studied the forest floor. She could feel his eyes on her ass. If she were lucky, soon it would be his hands. “Oh, look. Here’s a green leaf.”
“In a forest,” he said wryly. “Imagine that.”
She chuckled and straightened. “Hey, she couldn’t make it too hard. I think she knew half of us would be hungover.”
He skimmed his gaze over her length, setting her on fire without even trying. God, she wanted…no, needed him. “You’re not.”
“No.” She looked at him, her cheeks heating up way too much. “I’m not.”
“Red…” They locked gazes. Images of exactly what they’d been doing last night came to mind with vivid clarity. The images hadn’t left her alone at all, actually. “You might be looking at this differently than me, but after last night I’m—”
She held her hand up, needing to shut him up before he said something to ruin her plan. She didn’t want him being sweet or anything even remotely likable. This was all about the list, having fun, and moving on. Plain and simple. No feelings or attachments or mushy-gushy stuff.
Just like in Seducing the Hot Enemy. Only she wouldn’t fall in love with him, like the heroine had the hero. There was no happily ever after written in the pages for them.
“Don’t. Last night was mean of me, and Mexico was mean of you. I didn’t do it on purpose, but I know it was low of me to get you all…all…” She gestured toward his groin. “…ready, and leave like that. Sorry.”
He studied her. “I believe you. But that doesn’t mean I’m done with you, just because I let you run away last night. We’re even now.”
“Oh really?” She walked forward, not looking at him. He fell into step beside her. “I’m not sure you want to go down that road, Doc. Maybe we should go back to ignoring each other. We’re good at it.”
He shook his head. “I don’t want to.”
“Well, I might. I’m still deciding.” No, she wasn’t. She knew what she wanted: him. But she couldn’t admit that yet. He needed the thrill of the chase, just like in all the books. As soon as he caught her, he’d be bored. So she shoved the leaf at him. “Put this in your bag.”
When he took the leaf from her, her fingers brushed against his palm and her stomach locked down tight. He captured her hand for a second, not letting go even when she tugged. “This isn’t over,” he repeated.
The instant attraction and need that hit her were about as subtle as a bitch slap to the face. He released his hold on her hand, if not her mind, and put the leaf away. He was too intense. His hold on her too strong. She moved even deeper into the trees. He followed her but glanced over his shoulder.
For a while they walked in companionable silence. She didn’t know how far they walked, but the next time she stopped to dig around in the dirt, the sky looked a heck of a lot less bright. As far as she could tell, no one else was near them. Had they walked far enough away from the resort to cross off another item on her list?
Have sex in public.
“Uh, Red?” He stopped walking, shooting her a weird look. “Maybe we should head back toward the resort. No one else is this far up. If we keep going like this, we’ll be camping tonight. I’m fine with that, but something tells me you aren’t, if you’re scared of bears and spiders.”
“You’re right about that. I don’t camp. But you’re worrying for nothing. We’re almost done.” She bent over and picked up a feather, her knees feeling all weak and shaky. “See? I already found another one.” She looked up at him from her bent over position. “And a pinecone, too.”
His brows slammed down. “All these rare, one-of-a-kind things in the forest, of all places? It’s unheard of.”
She stood up, juggling both items, and laughed. She dropped the objects into their bag, and he crossed them off the list. The irony of him scratching stuff off a list, too, wasn’t lost on her. Hers was more exciting, though.
He looked up at her, his stare steady and sure. “Do you have any idea how far we’ve traveled?”
“A few miles.”
“We need to head back,” he said, his tone hard.
She shrugged, deciding they’d gone far enough away. It was about time. While she’d been planning her attack with such careful precision, she should have been watching where she was going. She tripped over a jagged rock, landing on the dirt on all fours.
“Well, crap,” she muttered. This wasn’t exactly how she’d planned on being on her knees, thank you very much. “That rock came out of nowhere. It should really watch where it’s going.”
“Yeah. It was obviously speeding,” Tyler said, his tone way too sarcastic for her liking. He bent down and hauled her up to her feet as if she were weightless. “Christine.”
All that yummy strength in those arms…
He frowned at her, his gaze skimming over her bloodied knees with the precision of a doctor. Of course, he was one, so that made sense. This was so not the seduction she’d had in mind when they’d started out this way. She brushed her hands over her butt. “Yeah?”