the back of the van. Or when he’d cared for her after she’d fallen in her dressing room. Maybe it was because of his sexy smile and the intimate way he watched her when he thought no one was looking.
Maybe it was even because of the way she’d felt every single time she’d woken up in his arms.
Those predawn moments. Yeah. They’d probably done it.
Because each time it had happened—whether at his apartment, or hers, she’d had to lie there and watch him sleep. Study the line of his jaw and the curve of his cheek. Wonder how a man could have such a sensuous mouth and still be so damned tough. Note the small scars on his body, and his tattoo, and grieve for the things he must have gone through as a soldier.
Yes. In those moments, her heart had opened up. And she’d let him in just as surely as she’d let him in her body.
There were moments when she allowed herself not to care. To even consider whether they could make this crazy relationship of theirs work. Maybe a masked wedding...the Crimson Rose and the sexy night watchman.
That was so lame.
But it was no more crazy to think about than the idea of an official union between Izzie Natale and Nick Santori of Taylor Street.
“Would that really be so bad?” she whispered. She’d been telling herself it would, but at moments like this, she had a hard time remembering why.
“I need sugar,” she mumbled as she headed for her kitchen, dying for something sweet. She’d been so good at the bakery and tried to resist temptation, so she never brought any of that stuff home. At moments like these, though, she regretted it.
Nick had called a while ago, saying he’d be leaving the pizzeria in an hour and would come by. She glanced at her watch, wondering if she had time to run to the corner market. She was so desperate she’d go for a packet of Ho Hos at this point.
Before she could grab her shoes and dash for something to binge on, her cell phone rang. Glancing at the caller ID and recognizing the New York City number, she immediately began to smile, now knowing another sure-fire way to escape—at least mentally—from her troubles.
“V!” she exclaimed as she answered.
“Girl-friend!” was the reply. “It has been for-evah, where have you been?”
Plopping down on the sofa, Izzie kicked her feet up and leaned back, so happy to hear a voice from her old life, she wondered if fate had sent Vanessa’s call as some kind of mental gift. Vanessa was a good friend from her Rockette days. The striking, long-legged African-American woman had been Izzie’s roommate on the road and the two of them had hit it off from their very first hotel stay, when they’d both decided to call for room-service French fries at two in the morning, despite the matron’s orders to go to sleep by eleven o’clock.
“I’m still in Chicago.”
“Still doing that bakery thing?” Vanessa asked, sounding completely shocked. “I can’t believe you’ve lasted this long.”
“Join the club. I sometimes forget I haven’t spent the past seven years with my arms in cookie dough up to my elbows.”
“How’s your father?
“Getting better every day, already pestering my mother to let him go back to work.”
“That’s great. And as soon as he does you can quit.”
Yes, she could. Why that idea would send a shot of sadness through her, Izzie didn’t know. It wasn’t as if she liked working at the bakery. Even if she had made friends with all the staff, gotten on a first-name basis with their restaurant clients and the regulars who stopped in every day for breakfast.
Well, maybe she did like it. A little. But certainly not enough to want to stay there permanently.
Vanessa laughed softly. “And then you can come home. You still thinking of choreographing, or teaching?”
She had been, though, not as much lately. But she didn’t tell Vanessa that.
Fortunately, her friend quickly moved on. “You’ve got to come back soon. You are so missing out.” Launching into an explanation of all the things that had been going on—with the Rockettes, and in her personal life, Vanessa soon had Izzie laughing so hard she had to wipe tears from her eyes. The other woman was a wild one, and the ballsiest female she’d ever known.
The stories were entertaining, particularly when told with Vanessa’s flair. But even as she laughed, Izzie couldn’t help wondering whether her friend was truly happy. She