No, he wanted a large shot of pitorro rum, but Mikel didn’t stock Puerto Rican moonshine. He nodded, watching as she rose again. She curled her slim shoulders inward and lowered her chin as she walked, as though she didn’t want to disturb the air she passed through. No, as though she didn’t want to be noticed.
When she brought the crystal pitcher to the table from the credenza, she poured the water into his goblet without spilling a drop, despite the ice cubes bobbing and clinking against the sides.
He turned his head and caught her gaze.
“I waited tables when I was in college,” she said, somehow reading the question in his mind.
Her laptop emitted a quiet ping. She set the pitcher back on the credenza and hustled back to her computer, pulling the drive from its port. He held out his hand, the faint scar on his wrist catching his eye. Had Kodra tightened the zip tie that would mark Gabriel’s skin there for the rest of his life?
She leaned over the table with the flash drive held between her fingertips. Her hands matched the rest of her: small and delicate, the nails cut short with no burst of colored polish to draw attention. He moved his hand closer to her, and she dropped the silver drive into his palm without touching him.
He closed his fingers around the electronic dossier on one fragment of his nightmares, the metal slightly warm from her grasp.
“I’ll ask Mikel to call you as soon as he returns to the office,” Quinn said. “Do you have any questions for me?”
Must I suffer through this again?
But he couldn’t voice that question, because she had worked hard to find this man. “You’ve been very clear. I’ll read the rest on the flash drive.” He pushed himself to his feet, the strange fatigue sapping his energy.
She leaped up to hold the door open. “Thank you, Don Gabriel.”
He gestured to the exquisite tapas board that he had just noticed on the credenza. Someone had gone to the trouble and expense to have it there for him. “I’m sorry I didn’t have time to sample some of the delicacies. They look delicious.”
“More leftovers for Emilia and me,” she said with a cheeky grin.
The chuckle that rose from his throat felt good…real. “Perhaps I should ask for takeout.”
“Sorry. You have to consume all tapas on premises.”
He passed close to her as he approached the door. A waft of vanilla and lime with a touch of sugar rose from her gleaming hair. When he looked down, all he could see was the zigzag of her part. He wanted to cup her chin to tilt it upward so he could study her face in more detail.
He got his wish when she jerked up her head, her eyes wide with worry. “Would you really like to take the tapas with you? We can do that.”
He held her gaze, finding golden lines lighting her brown irises, short thick lashes, fine-pored skin without a touch of sun, and a full bottom lip that tempted his thumb to stroke it. She stared back at him, her gaze roving over his face in return. It was a fair exchange, but he wondered what she saw. Would she check his ear to see if there were visible scars?
He broke the moment with a shake of his head. “You and Emilia may enjoy all the tapas. I have lunch plans.” A lie, and his stomach clenched in a way that rejected the idea of food.
She gave him a tentative smile and took a step backward, a clear hint that she wanted him to exit the conference room first.
He could sense her behind him as he walked down the hall toward the reception area, partly from the whisper of her footsteps on the carpet and partly from what seemed like a crackle of electricity in the air. He recognized that as the charge of physical attraction, but he dismissed it as misplaced, some spillover of adrenaline from the storm her revelation had conjured up inside him.
Emilia hovered by the door, a look of concern shadowing her face when she saw him. “Mikel called to apologize for not being here. His daughter’s fever is just beginning to abate.”
“Please! Family is always the first priority. He has no apologies to make.” Gabriel dredged up his most reassuring smile, the one that said all was well. The one he’d perfected to keep everyone from hovering over him.
Emilia’s anxious expression eased. “He wished to be here to discuss the discovery with you.”
“Quinn did an excellent job,” he said.
Of exhuming memories he’d worked hard to bury. But it wasn’t fair to blame her for that.
“I’m glad.” But Emilia cast a critical glance toward Quinn, which he understood. Emilia was an old-school Calevan with great respect for the hierarchy and history of the country. Quinn’s American reluctance to curtsy would not sit well with her.
Suddenly, the tension eddying around the office frayed his nerves. “Thank you. I will be in touch,” he muttered before he strode to the door.
As he bolted out into the sunlight, the edges of the flash drive dug into his palm.
Chapter 3