Naturally Naughty - Leslie Kelly [20]
“I followed you because of the way we looked at each other.” Like they were looking at each other now. “I kissed you because you landed in my arms.” As he wanted her to now. “What can I say? You were a beautifully wrapped present and I couldn’t resist. Who could resist a beautiful woman so obviously in need of a kiss?” Like now.
She took a tiny, step back. He let her go. Not crowding. Not encroaching.
“You let me leave. You didn’t try to stop me.”
He smiled. “I let you go because after you told me your name, I remembered your face and the article and knew I could find you again once I got home to Chicago.”
Her eyes widened. Tap went the index finger. Tick went the pulse. Down went the heat—through his gut, into his groin.
“So you read the article?”
He shook his head, being honest. “Not really. I just remember your face, your first name and something about a store. You sell women’s lotion and things?”
She chuckled, a warm and truly amused laugh that rose from her throat. “And things.” Before he could question the naughty twinkle in her eye, she’d turned and looked out into the dark auditorium. “When did the Rialto close?”
He shrugged. “I’m not sure, really. I don’t come back too often. But I think it was seven or eight years ago.”
“You have family here?” She lowered her voice, betraying her keen interest. “You’re from Pleasantville?”
Jack nodded, but didn’t offer more information. He certainly wasn’t about to reveal who his family was. If Kate had spent time in town, she’d know the Winfield name. The last thing he wanted was someone else bringing up his father’s death. And whatever scandal the town gossipmongers had been whispering about any time his back was turned in the past few days.
Besides, he liked the anonymity of this night. It seemed right, especially here, in the old abandoned theater, so rich with atmosphere and antique glamour.
“Yeah. But, like I said, I got out years ago, as soon as I could. And I avoid coming back as much as possible.”
Her rueful nod said she completely understood what he was saying. Then she smiled, a small, friendly smile that made him think for some reason she’d let down her guard. Because he’d admitted he didn’t like this town?
“I used to love this building. It was my favorite place in Pleasantville.” She walked across the stage, her footsteps echoing loudly on the wooden planks. “I used to come for the first showing of a new movie, then hide in the bathroom to stay and watch it again and again.”
“Ah, a daredevil,” he said with a laugh.
A reminiscent smile curled her lips. “The ticket taker, the old one with the poofy black wig, caught me once.”
“Miss Rose?”
She nodded. “Yes! That’s it. Miss Rose. She was so funny, the way she’d talk about the movie stars, as if they were really here, living behind the screen.”
“So what’d she do about you hiding?”
“From then on out I didn’t have to hide—she always let me stay, but told me not to let on to anybody else.” She looked down at her hands. “I’d forgotten about her.”
Interesting. She looked happy and sad at the same time, as if it pained her to find positive memories about her years in Pleasantville. He could relate. Since his father’s death, especially, Jack had tried to reconcile the kid Jack who’d left town with the man who’d come back.
Seeing a table right behind the partly open, red-velvet stage curtains, he pointed. “Anything interesting back there?”
Kate stepped between the curtains, and he followed her into the murky backstage area.
She picked up her purse, which was lying on the sturdy old wooden worktable beside the curtain. But, thankfully, she didn’t immediately turn and try to leave. “Flashdance,” she said out loud, looking at a stack of papers lying on the table. “And Dirty Dancing. I think I actually saw that one in this theater.”
“I could have guessed you liked dance movies.”
She grinned. “What can I say? I can’t hold a tune, but I can move to one.”
“Did you take lessons?”
“Yeah, I started when I was really little, back in Florida.”
“Florida? I thought you were from here.”
“We moved