Whatever ploy Isaac had been prepping for, it hadn’t been that. A matchmaker?
Standing on one foot, she took off her shoe and planted her injured heel on the ground.
“Be careful,” he warned. “There could be glass -”
“I don’t need help.” Stacy turned on him fiercely, pausing in her hobbled progress into her vehicle. “Doesn’t he get that? I need to figure out who to trust on my own and if I make a mistake along the way, that’s how I learn. Can I help it if I figure things out the hard way?”
She started hopping again, her breasts threatening to break free of the neckline a little more each time. But given how upset she seemed, he didn’t take the same pleasure in the show.
“Can I –” He reached to help her again.
“No.” Collapsing into the driver’s seat, she tucked the skirt around her thighs. “I put myself on the line for the first time ever to ask a guy out tonight, and you thought it was so ludicrous an idea you didn’t even take me seriously. Another hint that I suck at dating, I guess. But I’m not giving up.”
Huh?
She started the van and hauled her door shut, leaving him to scratch his head. Whatever had just happened here, Stacy Goodwell didn’t behave like any corporate spy he’d ever met.
Rolling down her window, she seemed to be gearing up to rant at him more but he beat her to the punch.
“You asked me out?” Funny, because he’d been specifically listening for a pitch like that, figuring it would confirm that she was after the plans for his new 3D graphics chip.
But apparently, he’d missed it.
“I said we’d make the perfect couple,” she retorted. “Remember? You don’t listen enough and I talk too much. I thought it sounded perfect. As an added bonus, you don’t stare down my dress and you haven’t paid me a bunch of ridiculous compliments meant to get me into bed. And for some reason - maybe because you don’t seem like you’re trying to impress me – I don’t feel intimidated to say what I think with you.”
She tried to turn the car over, but since the engine was already running, it made a scraping, squealing sound.
“Stacy.” He had zero experience with upset women since he’d never incited this much emotion from a woman outside of bed. He wasn’t quite sure what to do next.
Could he have read the situation wrong? What if she wasn’t a spy and she really was just a very unusual beauty with an overprotective father and a matchmaker trying to call the shots?
“Sorry again about trying to break into your van.” Putting the transmission into drive, she kept her foot on the brake and met his gaze under the buzzing fluorescent glow of a street lamp. Her eye makeup had smudged under one eye. “Goodbye, Isaac Reynolds.”
Tearing out of the lot, she left him shaking his head and wondering what had just happened. As spy missions went, she’d obviously failed. But on the off chance that she hadn’t been sent to learn his company’s secrets, it was him who’d messed up royally. No man with red blood in his veins and a few functioning brain cells would let a woman like that get away.
A woman who might have been attracted to him.
The possibility blew his mind.
The only thing left to do was run a check on her and see what he found. Because if she wasn’t working for the competition, Isaac had a new goal in life, the first that didn’t have anything to do with his business model. If she hadn’t been playing him, he would gladly chase this sexy, futuristic spaceship captain all the way back to her home planet if he had to.
He’d do whatever it took to see her again.
Chapter Six
Blades flying over the ice, Kyle Murphy juked two defensemen, protecting the puck like it was his firstborn. Beating the competition, he came face to face with the goalie, a rare one-on-one opportunity. An opportunity he excelled at creating. Lifting his stick, he faked a slapshot, turned the puck over to his backhand and… missed the goal all together.
For a moment, his teammates seemed too surprised to react. That shot was his bread and butter. The money shot.
Didn’t matter that this was a practice. He practiced like he played, and he always made that frigging shot.
Curses streamed from his mouth, rare for him even though the practice arena was frequently filled with creative and functional swearing alike.
Behind him, the coach’s whistle blew to end practice and Leandre Gagnier had the audacity to clap him on the back.
“Tough shot, Murphy.” He almost kept a straight face when he said it.
Bastard