a nice, blank spot on the wall, and took a breath. “Relaying an employee’s increasingly excellent job performance is not the same as talking about her for weeks. And stop being flippant about the situation, Montrose. It’s horrific.”
“Why? You like the girl. I think she likes you back. Ask her out.”
“No,” Jacob snapped, because he was sensible and logical and would not be led astray by Mont’s shockingly casual attitude toward human connection. Mont didn’t understand these things. Mont was charming and classically handsome and inherently flexible, and Mont didn’t get tied up in knots over the slightest thing, and Mont had almost certainly never had a woman tell him that he was great in bed but a little too intense out of it.
Jacob had heard that several thousand times and did not want to hear it from Eve. In fact, if he ever did hear it from Eve—accompanied by one of those pitying wince-smiles as she disappeared into the mist—he was oddly certain he might burn Castell Cottage to the ground.
“Christ, mate, stop being so bloody awkward and just tell her how you—hang on.” Mont broke off midsentence, his voice fading as he spoke to someone else in the background. “Give me a sec, Tess.”
“Are you talking to Jacob?” Tessa Montrose’s voice floated down the line.
“Yes.”
“Is he having a meltdown?”
“Yes.”
“Has that woman hit him with her car again?”
Mont laughed. “Oh, something like that. Now piss off.”
“But do you know where my—?”
“No, I don’t know where your glue gun is, piss off. Sorry, Jake. What was I saying?”
“I don’t remember,” he lied. “Put Tess on the phone, would you? I want to talk to her.” Something about hearing her voice had given him an idea. An idea about how to make Eve smile, which was a goal he found himself more and more eager to achieve, these days. She made everyone smile so often, so easily—he could do the same for her, couldn’t he?
He certainly fucking hoped so. She deserved it.
“You want to talk to Tess? Charming,” Mont said. “Why? You need something fixed?”
“Just put your sister on the phone and stop asking questions.”
“Why would I do that when I could keep asking questions and get on your nerves?”
Jacob muttered an insult and drifted toward the window behind his desk. Eve was in the garden, clearing up the empty wrought-iron tables, looking like one of the meadow flowers with her lavender braids and rose-pink T-shirt. She’d started serving afternoon tea outside when the weather was nice. Her idea. And, God, why did it make him oddly hot and . . . fluffy, inside, when she behaved as if this job, as if this B&B, was her passion, too?
She walked out from under the shade of an oak and it was like watching the sun rise.
Her mouth was moving, but Jacob couldn’t hear her—so he balanced the phone between his ear and his shoulder and opened the window. Eve’s voice flooded the room like a glass of ice water on a sweltering day. She was singing “Special Affair,” and the sound of it thrust him back in time to last Sunday. To sweet, silvery darkness and her body beneath him.
“Tess,” Mont was saying, “I think Jake wants to talk to you. God only knows why.”
The words barely registered; Jacob was too busy controlling his cock and his thoughts. Reminding himself that there was no way the world would let him keep a woman like Eve. She’d leave in the end. Everyone and everything left, in the end, didn’t they?
The thought wasn’t entirely accurate, he knew that, but it felt accurate. It felt inescapable.
“Never mind,” he said out loud. “Never mind. I’ll call Tessa later. Mont, I have to go.”
“What? Don’t. You’re freaking out about something, aren’t you?”
“No. Good-bye,” Jacob said, and then he hung up. Down in the garden, Eve looked up as if she’d heard his voice. Her eyes met his as if drawn by some magnetic force. She smiled, and waved, and Jacob—
Jacob was hit with such soul-deep affection, he actually lost his breath.
Somehow, he managed to wave awkwardly back. Then he turned away and slumped into the hidden safety of his desk chair. He sat there for God only knew how long, frozen and confused, his chest heaving and his thoughts flying. The sun sank low, and still, he sat. The breeze through the open window turned cool, almost cold, and still, he sat.
But no matter how long he waited, the feeling didn’t go away.
Bloody shitting hell. He