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Nerd Gone Wild

Nerd Gone Wild (Nerds, #3)(29)
Author: Vicki Lewis Thompson

“Checking my…” Her eyes began to sparkle a couple of seconds before she burst out laughing. “You thought you could stop them from squeaking? Oh, Mitchell, you’re hilarious. We don’t have to worry about it, because we’re not hav**g s*x, but that’s so you. Checking my springs. Too funny.” She stood. “Let’s play cards.”

He thought about the pricey little gizmo she still clutched in one hand. “Um, what do you think we ought to do with the bug?”

“I want to show it to Betsy tomorrow. She’d love to have that as another story to tell about the Loose Moose.” She glanced at him. “You want it, don’t you? I can tell by the way you’re looking at it. After watching all those spy movies, you’d think this was cool to have, wouldn’t you?”

He shrugged as if he could take it or leave it. “I wouldn’t mind.”

“Here.” She gave it back to him. “Just promise me you’ll show it to Betsy tomorrow. She’ll want to keep it, but if you tell her about being hooked on spy movies she’ll probably let you have it, instead.”

He hoped so. Yes, he could buy a replacement, but he hated wasting something that was perfectly good. Maybe he’d conveniently forget to show it to Betsy. This story of his was pretty lightweight, and the more times he had to tell it, the less likely it would hold up.

“Did you bring your cards?”

“Um, I’ll go get them.”

She shook her head, still smiling. “You were so obsessed with the squeaking bedsprings that you forgot to bring the cards?”

“I guess so.”

Her smile faded. “Maybe the card game is a bad idea. I don’t want to cause a situation for you.”

He almost laughed at that. She had no clue what a situation she’d caused for him, in many ways. “You won’t,” he lied.

“I hope not, because if we don’t play cards, I’ll go stir-crazy. With Tanya spreading her bad vibes all over the Top Hat, Uncle Kurt sacked out for the night, and the outdoors cold enough to freeze your nose hairs, as Betsy would say, there’s nowhere to go but here.”

So he’d won her by default. Not exactly a compliment, but in his nerd disguise he wasn’t allowed to pull out all the stops, wasn’t supposed to be able to sweep her off her feet and make her yearn to spend every minute with him.

She looked instantly contrite. “I didn’t mean that the way it sounded. I really want to be here with you, Mitchell. You’re a lot more fun than I—” She clapped her hand to her mouth.

“Than you thought I’d be?”

“I’ll just shut up before I make things worse.”

“It’s okay, Ally. Geeks are used to being underestimated.” Then he winked at her before leaving to get the cards. He probably shouldn’t have allowed himself the wink, but maybe she hadn’t noticed it because of his glasses.

* * *

He’d winked at her. And the effects were still evident—squiggles of sexual awareness dancing through her system, making her want what she shouldn’t have. She’d have to force herself to concentrate on this card game and forget about that wink. And his mouth. And the cleft in his chin. And his big brown eyes. And the way his pants had molded around his package while he’d been lying there under her bed.

“Got the cards.” The owner of that sizable package walked back in. “I think you still have the matches.”

She vowed not to look at his package again tonight. “Let’s sit on the rag.” She’d already nixed the bed as too dangerous.

“That works.” He sat Indian-style across from her and started shuffling the cards.

She hadn’t realized how his sitting that way would emphasize the part of Mitchell she’d just promised herself to ignore. Suddenly that part seemed like all she could look at. Needing a distraction, she picked up a beer bottle and decided to open it herself by using the hem of her sweater to help her grip the cap.

It wasn’t the best solution in the world. She had to keep changing the angle and tipping the bottle this way and that to get enough leverage.

“Want some help?” Mitchell set the shuffled cards down between them.

“I’ll get it.” And she did. The cap came off suddenly and beer foamed out onto her sweater, her wool pants, and her socks. “Ack!” She quickly drank several swallows to get the beer back under control, but she still had beer all over her. Fortunately she hadn’t spilled any on the rug.

“Anything I can do?”

She put down the beer and stood. “Give me a couple of minutes to change clothes, okay?”

“Okay, or we could kill two birds with one stone and play strip poker.” He gazed up at her with a half-smile.

Her pulse rate jumped. “Very funny.”

“It wasn’t a joke.” His smile widened. “I’m a good poker player.”

Lust fizzed through her veins, making her lightheaded. “Sorry. Not doing that.” But she thought about it as she walked over to the dresser and pulled a yellow sweatshirt and sweatpants out of the bottom drawer. Strip poker. No guy had ever proposed that to her before. What fuel for the imagination!

In the bathroom, she closed the door and took off her socks, sweater, and slacks, leaving them in a pile in the comer. She’d wash them out tomorrow. Then she glanced down at the simple cotton underwear she had on, the practical stuff she’d bought for Alaska. Anybody playing strip poker would want to have something fancier than that to lose.

Well, she wasn’t playing it anyway, so it didn’t matter. She pulled on her sweatpants and tagged the cozy sweatshirt over her head. She’d forgotten socks, but she could get them later. Then she glanced in the mirror to see if her hair was sticking out in all directions.

It wasn’t, but the woman looking back at her sure did have flushed cheeks. That woman was thinking about strip poker, and where such a game would inevitably lead. But she wouldn’t play. No, definitely not.

She opened the bathroom door and walked back into the bedroom.

Mitchell glanced up and his gaze traveled over her. “Better?”

“Better.” But that very male once-over of his had gotten to her, making her n**ples tighten and her panties grow slightly damp. The flush spreading through her made those socks she’d forgotten totally unnecessary, so she sat down. “What kind of poker are we playing?”

“Stud.”

She should have known. She resisted the urge to fan herself. “Five-card or seven-card?”

“Seven. I gave us each a pile of a hundred matches. We can say they’re worth a dollar apiece. The ante’s a dollar.” He tossed a match into the space between them.

She tossed one in, too.

“Remember how to play?” His fingers flexed as he picked up the cards and dealt them each two cards down and one card up.

“Pretty much. I might need some coaching.” She’d never paid much attention to his hands before, except for the time she’d caught him tapping in rhythm with Clyde’s performance on the bar. Now she noticed the sprinkle of dark hair and his obvious dexterity. Very sexy. He had capable hands. Capable of doing all sorts of things. To her. Ally, stop it.

“Your bet.”

She looked at her cards. Not bad. She looked at his card that was face up. In the process she found herself glancing at his crotch again. Then she dropped three matches in the center.

“Stop doing that.”

“Doing what?” She consulted her cards, as if she had no idea what he was talking about.

“Checking out the merchandise.”

“In your dreams.” She still didn’t dare look at him.

“Yeah, that, too. I’ll call.” He dropped three matches in the pile and dealt the next two cards. “Your bet.”

She raised again. With an ace-ten in the hole and an ace-ten on the board, she was sitting pretty. All Mitchell had showing was a two and a six, unsuited.

“I’ll call.” He matched her bet.

The next cards didn’t do much for her, and she couldn’t see how they’d do much for him, either, although he had a pair of sixes. She checked. He raised. She couldn’t let him get away with bluffing her, so she called his bet. But each time she glanced at his cards on the floor in front of him, her gaze just naturally traveled slightly higher.

“No fair, Ally.”

“What?” She managed an innocent expression as she looked up.

He met her gaze. “I think you’re deliberately trying to distract me.”

“Hey, we’re playing on the floor. Your cards are there, and your… your other stuff is right in my line of sight.”

“Not good enough. You’re not just passing through. You’re lingering there.”

“Am not.”

His lips twitched. “Are so.” He held the remaining cards in his hand. “Think you’re going to win this one?”

“I might.”

He dealt the last card down, glanced at it and dropped ten matches into the pile,

“I think you’re bluffing.” She added ten of her matches. Her last card had given her a full house.

“Maybe, maybe not.”

“Ah, you’re bluffing, all right.”

“Care to make it interesting?” His gaze challenged hers.

A zing of sensation shot straight down between her legs. “Like how?”

“Loser takes something off.”

“I said I wouldn’t play strip poker.”

“Don’t you think matches are kind of boring?” he asked softly.

She had to admit it was way too easy to bet matches. Win or lose, it didn’t make much difference. “I suppose.”

“Besides, you’re so sure you’re going to win. I’d be the one who had to take something off, not you.”

She debated. It would be sort of fun to make him do that. He’d probably go with a sock. No big deal. “Okay.”

“Let’s see what you’ve got.”

This was more exciting than matches, she’d have to grant him that. Adrenaline rushed through her as she flipped over her full house.

He whistled. “Impressive.”

“Go ahead. Take something off.” She liked being the winner. This was power.

“Not so fast.” And he turned over four twos.

That was the moment she remembered that she’d never put on those socks. She had four items of clothing on her body. Taking off any one of them would change the whole game.

* * *

Mitch knew he’d lured her into this trap, but dammit, she kept checking him out even though she’d declared they wouldn’t do anything. A guy could take only so much of that before he was spurred into action. His last two had been pure luck, but he’d always had luck with cards. He’d been banking on that.

“Time to settle up,” he said.

“I had you until that last card!”

“Yep.” He could see the wheels going around as she tried to decide how to handle this. He would have felt sorry for her except that he knew what she really wanted to do. She thought he couldn’t take the fallout if she followed her impulses. The only way to convince her was to trick her into giving in and then she’d eventually see he was tough enough.

It wasn’t like he’d never had sex with a woman and then walked away, or had her walk away. A guy didn’t get to be thirty-two without that happening a few times. But Ally saw him as a delicate nerd who would get his little heart broken. She needed to be disabused of that notion.

“I’m waiting,” he said.

“I should have put on clean socks,” she mumbled.

He’d noticed she hadn’t bothered with another pair of socks. That had clinched his decision to talk her into this, especially after she’d looked so confident about her cards. He’d pretty much known what she had from the expression on her face. She was no card shark.

“All right, here goes.” She pulled her arms out of the sleeves of her sweatshirt.

He’d seen this maneuver once in an old movie—Flashdance. He’d thought it was sexy then, and it drove him wild now, when the woman in question was Ally and she was sitting three feet away.

“I suppose you think this is funny.”

“No, I wouldn’t say that.” How about arousing beyond belief? “But it does look like a couple of midgets are wrestling under there.”

“Almost got it. There!” She stock her arms back through the sweatshirt sleeves, pulled her bra out from under the bottom hem and threw it at him. “Debt paid!”

He caught the soft cotton bra, which came over to him on a wave of delicate flowery scent that made his blood pound. “Thanks. Ready to play again?”

She gazed at him, obviously thinking it over. Her color was high, and she looked as if the game had really stirred her up.

“Or do you want to quit while I’m ahead?” He was banking on the fact that she wasn’t a quitter and wouldn’t like losing.

“We need some extra rules,” she said.

He kept himself from smiling in triumph. She was in. “Like what?” He loved knowing she was nak*d under that sweatshirt.

“Like if either of us folds, that hand doesn’t count. Otherwise there’s no judgment involved, no reason to keep the cards facedown.”

“Okay, if one of us folds, that’s just a matchstick hand.” And he would never fold. Because losing meant winning. For what he had in mind, they both had to be nak*d.

“And either one of us can stop the game if we get uncomfortable.”

“You mean like too cold? Because we can turn up those baseboard heaters.” He didn’t need any more heat so long as he had her to look at. One glance and he was hot, hot, hot.

“I mean like too embarrassed.”

“Are you embarrassed now?” She sure didn’t look embarrassed. She looked turned on. Her n**ples were making nice little outsies in her yellow sweatshirt.

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