“Huh. I thought you said that meant nothing.” He trails the washcloth over my arms now.
I close my eyes and sigh. I did say that. And at the time I meant it, or at least I wanted to. “I needed it to mean nothing so I could maintain some sense of professionalism.” It’s a painfully honest statement, and there’s a part of me that wishes I could take it back.
But for as much as Rhett and I rib each other, I don’t think he takes me lightly. Men who take a woman lightly don’t look at a woman the way Rhett looks at me.
That look could be all in my head.
Maybe I’m unraveling over a look that doesn’t even exist.
“Is taking Epsom salt baths with your clients something they teach you at law school?” His chest shakes under the strain of trying not to laugh at his own joke. Dork.
I groan and cover my face with my hands. “Rhett.”
He presses a kiss to the crown of my head. I’m pretty sure just to keep himself from laughing.
“It’s not funny. I don’t know what we’re doing here. And I’ve spent years in school and tens of thousands of dollars on it to do this job. This is...I don’t know what I’m doing.”
“I think you do. I think you’re doing what you want for the first time in your life and that’s scary for you.”
“Yeah. Maybe.”
“I think you don’t need to worry about if I’m a client or not. I think that has nothing to do with what’s between you and me.”
“It’s the perception—” I try to say, but he interrupts me.
“What perception? Have you done this before? You planning to do it more in the future? Or does what’s happened between us have nothing at all to do with what either of us do for work? Do you think if we’d met under different circumstances, it would be different?”
“You might have been less of a growly prick to me,” I say, trying to steer the conversation away from what feels like something bigger than what I’m ready to face.
“I’m serious, Summer. I’m not sure why you keep talking about our jobs like it matters. We’re not doing anything wrong. I think Doctor Douche has you scared that there’s something shameful about being with another person. That you need to hide something you don’t.”
Well, shit. Is he right? I flip through the mental Rolodex of my past relationships.
I’ve never taken guys out with me. Never introduced them to my family. Once Willa straight out asked me if I was gay before assuring me she’d be cool with that.
Maybe the early input of thinking I needed to hide a relationship with genuine feelings made me believe that was true.
“I... well...fuck.”
He squeezes me and nuzzles against the back of my head. “I’ve always done whatever I want. Never been big on what other people think I should be doing. I imagine a person somewhere in between the two of us would be ideal, because I’ve probably burned a few bridges along the way.”
I snort at that. “You’re probably not wrong. I—” I start to protest, but he cuts me off.
“What if you stopped worrying about everything that could go wrong and just let yourself enjoy how right this feels?”
He presses a wet kiss to my back and my body comes alive as his calloused palms slip over my soapy skin in the most sensual way. My head tips back and I sigh at the feel of him playing my body with such finesse.
It does feel right.
“I’ll burn more bridges to take a kick at the can with you, Summer. Give me a shot.”
My lashes open and close rapidly. My heart is flipping over something that my brain can’t quite process. My can feels thoroughly kicked by everything he’s just said. My tongue is also thoroughly tied.
Rhett just leaves it, though, carrying on. “You said once that you’d become a personal trainer?”
I go still. Did I mention that? “I don’t remember that.”
“I do. I read between the lines. I’ve seen you work out. I’ve seen how hard you work and how reliable you are. If you could do anything as a job, would it be what you’re doing right now? What Kip does?”