“Sorry,” he said. “Let’s just say I’ve been feeling old lately.”
Mollie pivoted on her seat and glared at him. “Jackson Burke, do not pull that shit with me. You’re thirty-five years old. I’m willing to bet that every man in this bar wants to be you, and every woman wants to—”
He lifted his eyebrows, and Mollie hesitated only slightly before she forced herself to finish the sentence. “Mate.”
Jackson burst out laughing. “You still do that?”
“Do what?”
“Talk about animal mating rituals when you get nervous.”
“I’m not nervous! Why would I be nervous?”
He was studying her. “You tell me.”
“Don’t be weird,” she muttered. “I’m just saying, you’ve hardly got one foot in the grave.”
“I don’t particularly care for cabbage either. And I don’t have any pets.”
She gave him a puzzled look. “What does that have to do with anything?”
He held her gaze for several moments. “Move in with me.”
Mollie choked on her champagne. “Sorry?”
He gave a rueful smile as he watched her dab at the champagne on her chin. “I figured I wasn’t the best company, but it’s that bad, huh?”
“Jackson, you can’t just go around asking strange women to move in with you.”
“Why not? You need a place to live. I have three extra bedrooms. And you’re hardly strange.”
“That’s true. We’re practically family,” she muttered.
“Practically. But not.”
Something in his tone had Mollie’s head snapping up. Something low and a little bit sexy.
They weren’t family. They weren’t related.
Jackson leaned forward, his gaze strangely intent. “Come on, Mollie. What do you have to lose?”
As she stared at the man she’d once harbored an unhealthy crush on—a crush she was no longer at all sure had dissipated—she realized that the answer to his question was everything.
She had everything to lose.
Chapter 4
She’d said no.
Jackson hooked a finger into the knot of his tie, tugging at it until the damn thing loosened, before flicking open the top button of his shirt.
Mollie had said no to living with him.
Jackson wandered to the bar in his living room and poured a finger of Scotch before going to stare out at the New York skyline.
Of course she’d said no. He’d been insane to ask. What did he think, that a woman he’d been avoiding for months—a woman who was related to his ex—was going to jump at the chance to be roommates?
He leaned his forehead against the cool glass. It was better this way anyway. If he ended up getting the coaching gig, he’d be gone in a couple of months. Plus he didn’t want company. Didn’t want to share his space.
But damn, he was lonely.
Jackson took a sip of his Scotch and was relishing the burn in his throat when his cell phone buzzed on the kitchen counter. Caller ID showed it was the doorman of his building.
“Hello?”
“Good evening, Mr. Burke. I have a Ms. Mollie Carrington here to see you.”
Jackson frowned. Mollie? As in the same Mollie he’d just parted ways with fifteen minutes ago? The same Mollie who’d looked ready to puke when he’d casually asked her to be his roommate, practically shouted no, and then spent the rest of dinner rambling about infectious diseases? How did she even know where he lived?
“Sure, send her up,” he said.
“Very good, sir.”
Jackson rolled his eyes as he hung up, wondering just what sort of Christmas bonus would be required to get the guys downstairs to stop addressing him as sir.
There was a sharp knock at the door. The second he opened the door to his apartment, Mollie brushed past him and spun around with a glare. “You’re unbelievable.”
His eyebrows lifted in surprise. Whoa. This was a version of Mollie Carrington that he’d never seen before. He’d seen goofy Mollie, brainy Mollie, chatty Mollie, and thinking Mollie. And tonight he’d seen sexy Mollie. But this…this was angry Mollie, her blue eyes flashing heat. It was as sexy as it was confusing.
“Hold on. You’re the one barging in on me, and I’m unbelievable? Did you follow me here?”
She ignored his question as she crossed her arms. “You do not get to spend the past few months avoiding me, ignoring my calls and my emails, and then ask me to move in.”
He groaned and went back for his whisky. “We’re back to that? Look, it was a spontaneous gesture. I thought I was being nice. But you said no, and that’s that.” He held up the whisky to her, but she shook her head.
“I had to say no,” she said. “Obviously.”
He shrugged. “I get it. You don’t want to move in with a thirty-five-year-old bachelor. You said no. I said fine. We moved on. We’re cool.”
Mollie snorted. “Why do I find that hard to believe? Oh yeah, maybe because you quit responding to my emails once your perfect life got a little bit messy.”
His features registered pain followed by a quick flash of guilt before he resumed his glower. “Forgive me if I didn’t feel like spilling my guts to the woman whose sister was divorcing me.”