Romance: Dance with Me (California Belly Dance Romance Book 2) (2 page)

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Authors: DeAnna Cameron

Tags: #Contemporary Romance

BOOK: Romance: Dance with Me (California Belly Dance Romance Book 2)
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“But you need someone to take care of you. You need someone who understands you and your talent and can look out for you. Someone like Tamara, who—”

“Stop,” he blurted. He wasn’t going to think about her. Not now. Not ever. He’d walled off that part of his life a long time ago. It was better that way.

Gina perked. “Oh?”

In that one syllable, he heard the conversation pivot.

“Is there someone new?” she coaxed. “Someone special?”

There wasn’t anyone remotely close, but he heard opportunity in her tone. If he told her the truth, she’d go right back to haranguing him. But if he didn’t…

“Yeah,” he lied. “I’ve met someone new.”

“Why didn’t you say so? Do I know her? Is it serious? How serious?”

Even with three thousand miles between them, her giddiness radiated loud and clear.

“Well, you know…” He cracked a grin, relieved to be off the defensive.

“It is serious. I can hear it. I want to meet her. You know what?”

He heard the flutter of papers at the other end of the connection. “Todd’s going to a work conference next week, so I’m coming to California. No reason to stay in this penthouse all alone for a week, not when I can spend quality time with my little brother and his new girlfriend.”

Sudden panic set in. “You can’t,” he said.

“Why not? I’ll stay in my old room. It’ll be just like old times.” She paused. “Unless she’s living with you. Is she living with you? She is! You devil! You should have said so.”

He made a face. Was this getting better or worse? “I didn’t want to say anything until—”

“Until you knew it was going to work out. I get it. Well, I’m sure it’ll be fine. It’ll be better than fine. It’ll give me a chance to get to know… what’s her name, anyway?”

He froze. Then he said the only thing he could think to say. “What?” he bellowed. “You’re breaking up. I’m losing the signal. Are you still there?”

She repeated herself, but he wasn’t listening. He tapped the phone’s screen and ended the call. Then he tore away the Bluetooth ear piece and threw it against the windshield.

What the hell had he just done?

 

 

 

 

 

 

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3

 

Melanie put down the scarf she was folding and stared out the window again at the yellow Porsche. “Is he just going to sit there?”

“What do you care?” Abby asked, her head buried in a box of circle skirts. “I thought you couldn’t stand him.”

“I don’t care. It’s just weird. Sitting out there when it’s got to be ninety degrees. Whatever happened to June Gloom? This heatwave sucks.”

“Maybe he’s on the phone. Maybe he’s talking to Garrett about the tour.” She stood up and gave Melanie a long, loaded look. “Or maybe they’re talking about the auditions. You know, you might want to be nicer to him this time. He might be one of the judges.”

The car door swung open and Melanie saw his shoulder-length mane of tawny-brown hair emerge first. Then the rest of his lean, six-foot-and-change frame appeared. A leg clad in distressed jeans, slung low and snug on his narrow hips. A tanned and rippled chest flashing through a white, open shirt. A chest that was nearly as famous as his talents with a drum.

Melanie dropped her glance to the new batch of scarves and tried to ignore the jingle of the bell when he opened the door.

“Taz, it’s great to see you,” Abby said, sliding aside the mountain of empty boxes blocking him from the boutique. “What brings you by?”

Melanie nearly gagged. Abby was laying it on thick. Just because he strutted around like some kind of celebrity didn’t actually make him one. She stared harder into the mound of chiffon.

“You said you’d like to stock the Belly Dance Diva CDs in your shop, so I brought you a box.”

You’d think he was doing them a favor, not the other way around. What a jerk. It was always the same with hot guys. They look good, but their attitudes suck.

Abby didn’t seem to notice or care. “Absolutely,” she said cheerfully, relieving him of the box he had tucked under his arm. “I’m so glad you remembered. We’re hoping to open in a couple weeks, and I know these will go fast. Some of the students are already asking about them.”

“I also snuck in a stack of Pandemonium Ball flyers. It’s almost sold out, but there might be a few tickets still around, if anyone’s interested.”

“Are you going?” Abby asked.

He nodded. “The Divas are cosponsoring this year, so I’ll be playing. You going?”

“I wish,” Abby said. “All my money’s going into this place, but I’m hoping to attend next year.”

“Yeah,” he said. “You should. It’s a good time.” He scanned the room, taking in the stacks of boxes, and the shelves slowly filling with merchandise. “Your place is looking really good. Are you planning something for the grand opening? I heard the showcase last month was a big hit. I’m sorry I missed it. Did it…”

What he was trying to ask without actually asking was obvious. Why did that kind of cowardly hesitation always annoy the hell out of her?

“The bank won’t be swooping in to close her down any time soon,” she blurted, “if that’s what you mean.”

Abby shot her a horrified look. Taz looked at her like she’d materialized out of thin air.

“What she means is,” Abby continued, “the studio’s business is great, and it will get even better as soon as I can find a day manager to oversee the boutique and our online shop.”

Down the hall, the dance room door opened, followed by a stampede of bare feet and dance shoes. Melanie checked the wall clock. It was break time for the class. She braced herself for what was coming.

Then, right on cue, a squeal: “Taz!” A girl with a curly mop of red hair rushed up to him. “Oh my God, Taz Roman, what are you doing here?”

Curly was quickly joined by a dozen of the girls and women who made up the Saturday morning belly dance class.

Sheesh. You’d think he was Brad Pitt for belly dancers.

When he explained he was dropping off CDs, it set off another round of squeals. “If we buy one, will you sign it?”

“Of course,” he said, with that toothy celebrity smile of his. “I’d love to.”

That was an understatement. You could see it in the way he basked in the adoration. Puh-leez.

“Ladies, let’s give him some room. Okay, who wants one?” Abby counted the hands—which was all of them—and pulled out fourteen CDs. “He’ll sign them and then you can pay after class. You don’t want to waste your class time.” She exchanged a look with Janaya, who was an accomplished performer but was obviously still learning how to keep a class full of pheromone-surging females under control.

To his credit, Taz worked fast, and he charmed every one of those giggling students as he did it.

When they were finished and back in the dance room, Abby gathered up the CDs and set them beside the cash register.

“That was very generous of you,” she said to Taz. “You made their day. Didn’t he, Melanie?” She bumped Melanie with her hip when she didn’t get a response.

“Hey! Ow. I mean, yeah, that was pretty cool of you.” She made a face at Abby.

Taz didn’t seem to notice. He was standing at the window, staring at the parking lot.

“Actually, they made mine,” he said. “It’s been an epically bad day so far.”

“Girl trouble?” Melanie asked with a smirk. It was supposed to be a joke because—c’mon, this was Taz the Romancer. Everyone knew the only trouble he had with girls was fitting them all into his limited schedule.

So it took her by surprise when he said, “Yeah, you could say that.”

“Seriously?”

Abby slanted her a hard look that screamed, “Shut up.”

“I’m sorry to hear that,” Abby said, using her sweetest, most sympathetic voice. “I didn’t know you were seeing someone.”

He ran his fingers through his hair, brushing it back over his shoulder. “I’m not. It’s my sister.”

Melanie choked. Not a small, polite hiccup, but something loud and nearly obscene. Abby just stared.

“That came out wrong,” Taz said, almost laughing. “I’m not seeing anyone, but my sister thinks I am. Now she’s coming out to meet her.”

“To meet the girlfriend who doesn’t exist?” Melanie asked.

He nodded. “I know it sounds ridiculous, but she’s been on my case about everything lately, including settling down. She misunderstood something I said. It just seemed easier to let her believe I had met someone. Until she said she was coming out to meet the mystery girl. Now I don’t know what I’m going to do.”

“You could try telling her the truth,” Abby offered.

“I know. I should,” he said. “And I will. I’m just not in a big hurry. She’s difficult under the best of circumstances. This is going to—”

“I don’t see the big deal,” Melanie interrupted.

Two pairs of eyes shot her direction.

“What? Like you couldn’t find someone in a heartbeat who was willing—eager even—to pretend she was your girlfriend?”

His expression twisted. “Yeah, maybe too eager. I wouldn’t want to give someone the wrong idea, even if she was doing me a favor. Besides, she’d have to be convincing. My sister’s pretty sharp. She’s got the brains in the family.”

That wasn’t a surprise.

“But,” Abby said, “what if this mystery girl were getting something in return?” She turned to Melanie.

Instinctively, Melanie shook her head. She didn’t know what was brewing beneath that black ponytail, but she knew that devious look. She knew that tone.

Abby continued. “If she were getting something in return, she’d be motivated to make it convincing.”

Taz looked curious or confused—it was hard to say which. “Something like what?”

Crap. Melanie’s heart raced, and her palms burned. She would have made a run for it if there wasn’t an obstacle course of boxes between her and the door.

“I was just thinking that Melanie here…”

“Oh no,” Melanie groaned aloud. “You are not going to do this. Not now.” She stared at her friend, hard and with what she hoped was threatening malice.

Abby ignored the protest. “Melanie,” she repeated emphatically, “is planning to audition for the Divas in a couple weeks. And I’m sure it would be a big help to have someone who knows the ropes offer a little coaching beforehand. Would you consider that a fair trade?”

Melanie glanced around at the cash register, the scarves, the jewelry display, looking for something to hurl at her friend to end this embarrassment. Instead, she hurled her words. “Honestly, you can’t expect him… or me… or—”

“Hold on.” Taz cocked his head to the side and stared at Melanie. “If you’re serious, you’d be kind of perfect. My sister would hate you.”

“Hey,” Melanie cried, “you don’t have to be mean.”

He threw his hands up in defense. “I’m not. I mean it in the best possible way. It’s just your tattoos. She can’t stand them, especially on women. If I know her, she’ll back off the minute she sees you. I think it might work.”

“What about the coaching?” Abby piped up.

“I can’t promise you a spot or anything,” he said, “but I’ve seen what Garrett and his choreographers tend to like and not like.”

Abby’s face could hardly contain her grin. “What do you think, Melanie? You’ll do it, right?”

Was she serious? They both seemed to think this stupid scheme could work.

Taz turned to her with a big, goofy grin. “C’mon, Melanie,” he cooed. “Wanna be my pretend girlfriend?”

Why was her heart jumping inside her chest? Why did she feel like she was going to throw up? This was stupid. She shouldn’t even care.

Abby sidled up to her like a car salesman on the make. “You’re single now and you’re going to be spending your time preparing for the audition anyway, right? Just say you’ll do it. What do you have to lose?”

My integrity? My sanity?

She was not going to be Taz Roman’s pretend anything. Every ounce of her screamed against this ridiculous, terrible, awful idea. “No way,” she blurted. “Absolutely not.” She glanced at the wall clock and slammed down the scarf she was holding in a death grip. “I’ve got to go.”

She snatched up her purse and stormed out of the boutique, kicking aside the empty boxes in her way.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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4

 

Once Melanie was cruising up Harbor Boulevard in her ’68 Squareback with the window down, her elbow propped on the ledge, and rockabilly music blaring through the speakers, she felt better. Not great, but better.

She could breathe. She could think. Even with this hot wind pressing on her, smashing the barrel curl of her bangs against her forehead. She hardly noticed the swelter of the heat wave or the temperatures rising with every passing mile, taking her farther from the cooler ocean breeze and closer to the hot cauldron that was the center of Orange County.

It was still an improvement from the studio and Abby’s ambush. She focused on that as she pulled into the Bella Garden Mobile Home Park, a raggedy corner of a place wedged between the 22 and 55 freeways. She rolled through the gravel lane till she saw her mother’s 1970s powder-blue single-wide with the bent window screen and the sun-bleached awning hanging limp and crooked over the porch.

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