The Player (The Game Maker #3) - Kresley Cole Page 0,42
save up and be a full-time mom. Al and Gram had been planning to go on a world cruise to fleece obnoxious tourists and teach them never to travel again. Mom and Dad dreamed of owning a real art collection to replace the scam props littering the house. Benji, with his artistic soul, wanted to pick up a camera and document wildlife, instead of degenerates. And Pete . . .
Actually, Pete was delighted with his plum new position at the Caly.
I told Dmitri, “We all have dreams, huh?”
He canted his head. “I am starting to believe that.”
The server came back to refill our wine. Had I downed a glass? I struggled to resist Dmitri in the best of circumstances. If I had a couple of drinks, he could make me plead for it. Again.
The idea of begging turned me on so swiftly, my face grew heated once more.
“Tell me about your hobbies,” he said. “Do you ride horses?”
Eyes on the prize, Vice. “Um, not in a while.” Not since we’d worked a real estate con near a ranch in neighboring California. My family had hated being away from Vegas; not me. “Do you ride?”
“I once did, avidly. I’m thinking about picking it up again.” Must be nice. “Do you like the seaside?”
“Dunno. I’ve never been to one.”
“How can that be? Would you like to travel more?”
“Sure. We have so many replicas of other places here. I’d love to see the Giza pyramids or a real castle or the Eiffel Tower. Just getting a first stamp in my passport would be huge for me.” Hell, I’d be happy to drive back to Cali. I always said if I won the lottery I’d get a vacation place there. “But I could never stay away long. My family’s here. Sunday dinner is mandatory. You only get to miss a few a year.”
“You must be very close to them.”
“They’re everything to me.”
“You are loyal to those you love,” he said quietly.
“I will be till I die.” I had a catalog of faults, but I possessed loyalty in spades. Once I identified someone as part of my pack, I always would. “‘To the grave’ is our family motto.” That also described how long we Valentines kept secrets.
Dmitri’s lips almost curved again, the closest that man came to smiling, and he raised his glass to me. “A toast to loyalty.”
I clinked glasses with him.
The intensity of his stare made me feel awkward, so I cast about for something to say. “I couldn’t find much about you online.”
“I work to keep it that way.”
As I suspected. So what was he hiding? More than his eccentricity? “Are you a ‘have more than thou showest, say less than thou knowest’ kind of guy?” Grifters lived by those words.
“Ah, Shakespeare’s King Lear.”
I grinned. I shouldn’t be surprised Dmitri recognized the quote. My mark was scarily brilliant. “So what do you do now? Since you’ve already finished a lifetime of work?”
“Now I’m a steward for my own holdings.”
“I think that’s a non-braggy way to say you oversee a financial empire ’cause you’re so rich.”
He inclined his head. “I’ve got it down to a science, actually. I can work an hour a day from anywhere. I’ve decided it’s time to enjoy myself more.”
“Doing what? What are you looking for out of life?”
“The same as most men. A wife and a couple of children.”
I couldn’t believe he’d admitted to wanting a wife. And he’d also revealed yet another way we didn’t fit: kids. “A family of your own, huh?”
“Wealth is meaningless without loved ones to spend it on.”
“I’ll have to take your word about the wealth. Though I am surprised you haven’t settled down then.”
“I hadn’t met the right woman.”
Hadn’t met? As in, he had now.
He’d told me he wanted to get something solidified, but that was a far cry from settled down and having kids. Lucía, Natalie, and Jess had gone on about Sevastyans falling at first sight. Could Dmitri truly think I was the one for him?
No, no. Russian was his first language; he’d probably mistaken the tense of the verb. Or I’d misheard him.
So why was he looking at me so keenly. . . ?
CHAPTER 16
________________________________________
___________________________________
As Dmitri and I talked over more wine and shared a decadent tiramisu, I discovered we did have a few things in common.
We liked some of the same art and books and even some of the same music. He didn’t laugh or smile, but he did have a sense of humor. “Perhaps you’ll be the