And now that she had given voice to her fear, it didnât seem so monstrous. It was like taking a midnight trip to check the closet for the boogie manâthe walk was scary, but after the door was open, the return wasnât so bad. So sheâd just start her return. As V would say, she needed to get out there more. Make herself available. Stop thinking of men only as business acquaintances. Well, she couldnât do that by corking the bottle and scuttling back to her room.
âI hope it does not pain you too badly.â
Pamela looked up from her finger . . . and up and up . . . into eyes so blue that they couldnât possibly be real. And just how tall was he? Her brother was six two, and this guy had to be at least a couple of inches taller than that. Then her gaze widened to include his face, and all thoughts of blue eyes and her brother disappeared. What a scrumptious man! The lines of his face were firm, his chin square and strong. His hair was the gold of summer sun, thick and curly.
He was, quite simply, perfect. He looked like he had stepped from the pages of a magazine adâand not one of those oh-so-chic, androgynous ads that made women look like men and men look like little boys. This man was old Hollywood handsome, like Cary Grant or Clark Gable. Only he was blond and . . . her thoughts fragmented as she realized what else she was seeing, and she was mortified to hear a small giggle escape from her lips. He was blond and gorgeous and wearing something that looked like an ancient gladiator costume and left very little of his amazing body to the imagination! Pamela felt her face warm again, this time out of shock and secondhand embarrassment.
âWhat?â she asked, staring stupidly, having completely forgotten what he had said.
âYour finger,â he pointed at the tissue-wrapped appendage. âI saw you cut it. I said I hope it doesnât cause you too much pain.â
His smile made her stomach tighten with a ridiculous little nervous quiver. Dimples! The guy had dimples, which lent his masculine beauty an unexpectedly sweet boyishness. Boyish and breathtaking and very, very tallâa totally lethal combination.
âOh, uh, yes . . .â She shook her head as if to clear the cobwebs from it. Oh, bloody buggering hell, sheâd definitely had too much wine. âNo . . . I mean, no, itâs nothing. Just a silly mistake.â
âDo you know that in the Ancient World people did not believe in mistakes? They thought every action carried with it a purpose, an omen, a meaning, and that the future could be foretold through things as simple as leaves of tea or smoke rising from a ceremonial fire.â
Pamela could hardly believe what she was hearing. Her mind flitted from thought to thought like bubbles in a windstorm. Could a man who looked like that actually carry on an interesting conversation? Just exactly why did he look like thatânot as in incredibly handsome, but as in bizarrely costumed? And that accent! It made his deep voice seductive . . . intriguing . . . It wrapped around her and slid down her spine like hot oil.
Pull yourself together! The rational part of her brain berated. Sober up, girl! Weird outfit or not, this man is prime flirting material. She needed to stop staring like a slack-jawed tourist and speak intelligibly.
âNo, I didnât know that,â she said in her best letâs-pretend-Iâm-sober voice. âItâs been too long since my last college humanities class, and Iâm ashamed to admit that the only part of history I really paid attention to was my art history class that focused on the elements of ancient architectural design.â The words ancient architectural design slurred together alarmingly. Oh, God! She was babbling. She sounded like an inebriated egghead.
âAncient architecture interests you?â
He seemed surprised, and even through her wine fog Pamela had to stifle her instant