I was ready to head home and looked around for Aida. I wanted to leave her here so I wouldn’t have to deal with her wanting to come back to my place tonight to visit. I had plans for Reese and that skirt . . . and those boots.
“Dance with me,” Aida said, and her hand clasped my arm. She had snuck up behind me.
“I’m ready to go,” I replied.
She pouted. “You haven’t danced with me all night. We always dance at these parties.”
I had started to say no again when Reese stepped slightly away from me. “Go, dance. I’ll wait right here.”
“See? She doesn’t care. Let’s dance.” Aida was in a much better mood than the one I’d left her in. She was a little too happy. Her mood swings the past two days were giving me whiplash. I wasn’t used to having her around for this long; she usually only came for a few days a couple of times a year, though she did stay for a while with us last summer.
I didn’t want to dance with her. I hadn’t even danced with Reese, mostly because I was afraid she would panic at the idea of dancing with all these people here. It was obvious she didn’t feel comfortable among strangers. Dancing with Aida seemed wrong.
“Please, please, please,” Aida begged, drawing attention to herself as she pulled on my hand, trying to tug me forward. “We can leave after one dance.”
We would leave as soon as I was ready.
“Go,” Reese said, pushing me gently.
Dammit. I didn’t want to do this. Aida and I had been taught to dance by my mother when we were kids, and it had entertained Aida when she was younger. She hadn’t liked doing things I enjoyed, like fishing, hiking, and camping. Harlow had loved doing all those things with me. But Aida was always different. She enjoyed attention.
She kept pleading and pulling my arm. I wasn’t getting out of this.
“Fine. One dance,” I replied, and she beamed brightly.
I glanced back at Reese as she pulled me forward. “I’ll be right back.”
Reese nodded and smiled at me.
This was a bad idea.
Reese
“Does he always dance with his cousin like that?” a deep voice asked. Although I had only met the guy once—or twice, technically—I knew who it was without looking.
“Yes,” I replied, even though I had no idea.
They really were something. I had no idea Mase could dance like that. People had stopped talking and were watching them now. One dance had turned into two.
“He’s not real smart,” River Kipling said with a drawl.
There he went again, making me mad. I turned to glare up at him. In the light, he was much more attractive than I had realized. There was a carefree look about him, and he seemed unaffected by the party around us. “He’s brilliant,” I replied.
River grinned and shook his head. “You’re something else, Reese Ellis.”
I wasn’t sure what he meant by that, but I didn’t care. He said mean things about Mase. I didn’t like him. At all. “They like to dance,” I said, feeling the need to defend Mase even more.
“Then he should have danced with you. Shame to have you on his arm and miss the chance to spin you around the dance floor.”
Mase hadn’t asked me to dance. I thought maybe he didn’t like to, but he was putting on a show with Aida. I watched as he picked her up and did some flippy thing. The crowd clapped and cheered. “She’s better at dancing than I am,” I admitted. “I couldn’t do that kind of stuff.”
I thought that would shut up River Kipling, but I was wrong. “That looks like work, not fun. Holding a woman close and feeling your body brush against hers, the tease of knowing you can’t touch anything the way you want to.” He paused. “That’s why you dance.”
I wanted him to shut up. I didn’t need him in my ear. I was trying to find a way to fit into Mase’s world. This guy wasn’t helping by putting doubts in my head. The song ended, and Mase shook his head when Aida obviously begged him to dance one more time.
When he turned toward me, I saw him tense up as his gaze shifted to River beside me.
“Bet he stops dancing now. You’re welcome,” River said in an amused tone.
I glanced back at him as he walked off. He did fill out a pair of jeans well, and he had a swagger when he walked. But he was infuriating otherwise.
“Was he bothering you?” Mase asked, as his hands slipped around me.
I forgot the aggravating man and looked up at Mase. “No, he was just talking about how good y’all danced.”
Mase frowned at that. “Yeah, sorry she made me do two. She’s coming now, so we can go.”
I nodded.
Aida’s laughter trailed behind us as we walked toward the truck. “I love dancing!” she squealed loudly into the darkness. “We need to do that more.”
Mase didn’t respond. He walked me toward the driver’s-side door and opened it, then lifted me up and set me on the seat, as if I couldn’t do it myself.
“I can do that without help, you know,” I teased.
He leaned in. “But if you do it, your skirt will ride up, and I’ll see my freckle. Aida’s with us, so I wouldn’t be able to take a lick.”
My face grew warm, and I shivered, thinking of how good it felt when he did that. “Oh,” I managed to reply breathlessly.
“Yeah, oh,” he repeated. “When we walk through that door tonight, I’m bending you over so I can visit my spot.”
Anticipation made my breath hitch. “M’kay,” I said, not knowing how else to respond to that.
“We need to go out dancing next weekend,” Aida said as she opened the passenger door and climbed in.
Mase moved me over and climbed in beside me.
“Reese can come and watch. We can dance all night,” Aida said.
I wasn’t going to watch Mase and Aida dance all night, but I didn’t say anything.
“Glad you enjoyed it, Aida,” Mase said simply.
“I loved it! No one else dances as good as you,” Aida said. Then I felt her gaze on me. I turned toward her and saw a smirk on her face. “I guess Reese doesn’t know how to dance, since you didn’t dance with her all night.”
That stung. A little.
Mase’s hand slid over my thigh. “She can dance.”
“Oh . . . well, then, you must not enjoy dancing with her. It’s OK, Reese. He’s had me to dance with for most of our lives, and we move together like a well-oiled machine.”
I didn’t like the way she said that. There was something off about her tone.
“I love dancing with Reese. Let this go, Aida.” That still didn’t answer my doubt. I was beginning to think maybe Aida was right. He didn’t want to dance with me because he was used to showing off, and I couldn’t show off with him.
Mase let Aida out at his mother’s house with a “good night,” and I knew that was his way of letting her know she wasn’t welcome up at the house with us. I started thinking about what he’d said about bending me over, and I squirmed a little in my seat.
“I didn’t ask you to dance tonight because I was afraid you wouldn’t want to in front of all those people. You seemed nervous, and I didn’t want to add to that. But there is nothing in the world I’d rather do than hold you against me.”
He had waited until Aida was gone to explain, and I appreciated it. I didn’t want her to know I had felt intimidated by them dancing. Leaning over, I kissed his arm. “You’re right. I would have been nervous.”
“Feeling your body move against mine is the ultimate turn-on. If I’d danced with you, I wouldn’t have been able to stay. We might not have made it to the truck before I had my hand up the back of your skirt to cup your luscious ass.”