Chapter 92
Almost all of my life I’d been a shrinking violet, too scared of pushing boundaries to get what I wanted, but another look into Julian’s gorgeous green eyes that morning had me desperate. For once I needed to pluck up the courage to be daring. To be risque. To be… sexy.
I’d heard about it a thousand times over, from book heroines. I’d seen it in Mum, in person. The way she’d smile and flutter her eyes. The way she’d positioned herself for Scottie was a promise of what lay ahead in the bedroom. So, I tried to emulate it. Kind of. I bit my lip, trying not to look awkward as hell as I twisted my body to the side. I hoped my tight, white worktop would show off my tits. What little I had of them. Shame he couldn’t see the lace of my bra underneath…
Julian noticed the difference in those few tiny seconds, straightening up and putting his mug back on the counter.
“What would you like to eat?” he asked me, as a clear distraction. “I know your work shift starts soon, so I’ll get my chef hat on.”
It didn’t start for another ninety minutes, but his tone said a lot. I’d have taken his response as an ultimate no and rebuttal if I hadn’t seen him suck in a breath behind his fake innocent smile.
He opened the fridge.
“I have eggs. Smoked bacon, too. And the best Cumberland sausages. Would you enjoy a full English breakfast on a Sunday afternoon?”Content © copyrighted by NôvelDrama.Org.
“I’d love one, thank you.”
“Excellent,” he said, then gestured me through to the living room. “Make yourself at home at the dining table. I know it’s a poor excuse for one, but it will accommodate the two of us, I’m sure.”
I’d barely noticed the table before, it had been wedged in a corner under a stack of newspapers, but it was positioned differently when I headed back in with my mug of tea. I took a seat as he’d suggested, still running through options in my mind.
Did I carry on with the seduction route? Giggles and eye flutters? Maybe some more lip-biting? I couldn’t imagine it would look authentic, but maybe it would state the obvious. Did I try to find the courage to talk about it directly? Bring up a conversation about his words that night at the door?
It’s not your mother I’m going to be wanting, Rosie. It’s you.
It felt like I was there a lifetime, mulling things over, listening to the pans sizzling as Julian made our food. Part of me wanted to go back in there and keep chatting, but I didn’t know what to say. I didn’t want to turn the conversation too… ordinary.
When he arrived and presented the two plates they were like a dream. Everything from mushrooms to hash browns, to black pudding.
“Wow,” I said, and he smiled wide.
“I’m glad you’re impressed. I used to be quite the chef, once upon a time. I do enjoy cooking.”
I could see that.
I tucked in, still holding back my words as my eyes kept flitting over to him. It was obvious after a minute or two that he was avoiding meeting my gaze.
“This is delicious,” I said, and he smiled again.
“Thank you.”
“No, thank you.”
“You are more than welcome.”
Still, Julian wouldn’t meet my gaze. He ate his food, and drank his mug of tea, smiling but not speaking. Holding back. And I got a twist in my stomach, a fear and a knowing, that if I didn’t address this if I didn’t at least try, then we’d fall into a pattern. He took care of me, closing me off as nothing more than a girl downstairs who needed looking after.
That wasn’t what I wanted. I needed to try.
We ate in silence, but it wasn’t uncomfortable, just a little tense. I felt something brewing in me. It needed to. I tried to make my voice sound confident when I spoke.
“I love being eighteen, you know. It gives me loads more freedom. For so long I was just a kid and felt like one, but now things are different. I’m different.”
I was sure what I’d just said sounded dumb. I felt my cheeks warming and I wondered if he could see right through me.
“Rosie, eighteen is far too young to understand what situation you may be stepping into. The age gap between us is just too big to explore.”
Yes, of course, he could see right through me. Our eyes met, his burning with what I’m certain was lust. I burned up some more, must have looked like a frightened rabbit.
My words came on instinct.
“No, it’s not too big. It doesn’t matter. If you want it, that is. Because… I do. I want it.”
He looked away, picking up his mug.
“Believe me. I do have… inclinations, as I told you before. But they wouldn’t be ethical. I can assure you of that. You’ll thank me for my restraint when you look back on it.”
The shrinking violet in me could have taken over, reverting to chatter about food, and my work shift looming, but I couldn’t let this go. I wanted to say so much more.
“You don’t know that,” I said.
He put his mug down and looked me in the eyes.
“Have you had sex, Rosie? Tell me. What experience do you have to judge this by?”
He had me at that. I had none, and it was obvious.
“Have you ever kissed anyone?”
“Yes,” I said because I had. Once. A quick kiss with sloppy tongues with an older boy at the park when I was fourteen. I hadn’t seen him again. He’d only been visiting his uncle.
“Really? Tell me about it.”
I couldn’t tell him the truth, it would be laughable, so I finished up the rest of my toast.
Julian picked up my plate as soon as I was done, stacking it on top of his. He was out of his seat and on his way back through to the kitchen before I could speak.
“Get ready for your shift. You’ll have to leave soon.”
He was right, but I didn’t want to. I couldn’t stop my heart pounding. I couldn’t stop the need to tell him he was wrong about me. That I was ready.