"I didn't expect to see you up before noon."
From his slouched position at the cherry oak kitchen table in Jean's leased house, Aidan squinted open one eye and scowled at his friend.
He felt like hell. His head was pounding and he had the worst case of cottonmouth in recent memory.
Taking in Aidan's disheveled state, Jean laughed good-naturedly. "Too much champagne, I take it?"
Aidan snorted. "Who the hell gets a hangover from champagne?" He ran a hand over his face and groaned deeply as he felt the night's growth of stubble on his chin. "I may or may not have taken a few shots of vodka from the liquor cabinet in the library last night."
Jean watched him with an amused crook of the mouth as he sipped a glass of orange juice near the refrigerator. "Ah, so that's why you ended up passed out in the guest room. Any particular reason for this rather uncharacteristic show of...overzealous alcohol consumption?"
"Jean, for the love of God, why are you talking like a college professor?" Aidan groaned. "Small words. Short sentences." Lowering his head to the cool surface of the table, he mumbled out a muffled, "That's all I can handle at the moment."
"Fine," Jean put his glass down and opened the fridge, removing a package wrapped in white butcher's paper and a carton of large, brown eggs. "Short sentences then," he said, as he began preparing breakfast. "Why did you get drunk last night? My guests couldn't have been that dull."
Aidan snorted derisively, as he recalled the inane conversation he'd had with bottle-blonde Collette Fitzroy. Sure, she was attractive, but the more she'd tried to entice him with her mascara-caked eyelashes and blood red lips, the more he'd been turned off—repulsed even.
He didn't generally have a type when it came to women since beauty came in every imaginable form, but the entire time the socialite was going on and on about the fashion in Milan and her stock holdings in some of the nation's Fortune 500 companies, he'd been thinking about Rainey and how she'd caught his attention that first night at the club just by talking about a part-time summer job.
The more Collette had talked, Aidan realized, the more she bored him in comparison to Rainey's depth. He enjoyed Rainey's mystery and shy personality—it was like a breath of fresh air compared to Collette's...wide-open display.
Judging by the size of the slit in her dress and the low-cut of its neckline, she had no problem advertising the goods. The only problem was that Aidan hadn't been interested.
"Aidan? Hello?" Across the kitchen, Jean was standing in on the other side of the counter, waving a spatula at Aidan to get his attention.
Aidan had to blink several times to clear his thoughts. "Huh?"
"I asked why you felt the need to get drunk last night. Anything interesting happen?"
It was Jean's sly tone that finally caught Aidan's attention. How much did he know about what had happened between him and Rainey the night before?
"Why do you ask?" Aidan's voice, still gravelly in the midst of his hangover, was cautious.
"Hmm," was all Jean said as he tore open the papered package he'd retrieved earlier and began dicing up thick slices of bacon. "Do you want an omelet? I have tomato, rosemary, green onion...les champignons. Oh, wait; you don't like mushrooms. Well, you have your other choices."
"I don't want an omelet."
"Orange juice?" Jean asked, not looking up as he minced garlic with practiced ease. "Or would you like to indulge your English ancestry with some tea?"
"I don't want juice or tea," Aidan replied shortly. He knew he sounded like a testy six-year-old, but he didn't care.
"Fine," Jean threw back just as concisely, "then do you want to tell me what happened between you and Rainey last night?"
Sitting up straight for the first time all morning, Aidan shot his friend a wary look. "Mind your own business, Jean."
Meticulously slicing tomatoes into thin wedges, Jean kept his attention on his task but his voice was steady and clear. "Hey, no need to get angry. Besides, it is my business: you're my friend, it was my party, this is my house—at least until the lease is up."
Jean finished the tomatoes and started chopping mushrooms. "Come, Aidan, you remember last night. Rainey came inside. You followed. About twenty minutes later, she came back out looking...disheveled, found her friend Karen, and they left. Rainey wouldn't even let me have my driver take her home. Said she'd already called a cab." He paused to rinse his cutting board. "So, I have to assume that, in the interim, something happened between the two of you."
Aidan cast Jean a nasty look. There was the pulse beating at his temple again. Vaguely, Aidan worried that he was developing some kind of a condition from all the strain he'd been under during the past two weeks.
And now that Jean knew something was up, he really didn't have a choice but to give him some sort of an explanation.
He sighed. "I kissed her. Are you happy now?"
Jean's left brow shot up, but he didn't say anything. He was clearly waiting for more detail.
Closing his eyes, Aidan began to rub his temples, hoping the throbbing would ease. "She spilled champagne on her skirt and I was trying to help her. We were in...the bathroom and, well, one thing led to another and I ended up kissing her..." He let his arms fall away and he rested his head against the back of the chair. "God, this is definitely going to complicate our whole arrangement. I mean, I really don't think this is what Lynn had in mind."
He waited for Jean to respond, but long seconds passed with no sound from his friend.
Turning his head, Aidan found the Frenchman watching him speculatively. "Don't look at me like that," he said on an exasperated sigh. "It was just a kiss."
Well, that was mostly true, Aidan mused; he didn't want to hear what Jean might have to say if he told him that kissing Rainey was only the beginning of what had happened last night.
"Aidan," Jean began slowly. "In America, the French are viewed as...lovers, am I right?" Aidan nodded, and Jean continued. "Well, I think the Italians are the true lovers, but why argue with such an enchanting belief, n'est-ce pas?" he smiled mischievously.
"Is this going somewhere, Jean?"
"Oh. Right," the Frenchman sobered a bit as he made his point. "What I mean to say is that, although we French are not artisans of love, I know that a simple kiss doesn't put the look on someone's face that I saw on Rainey's last night. It was confusion and anxiety, yes, but she was—forgive the cliché—glowing." Jean held up his hand before Aidan could interrupt. "And you, well, I've hardly ever heard of an innocent kiss leading to a man drinking himself into a near stupor. So, again, I have to ask, qu'est-ce que tu as fait?"
The wrought-iron legs of Aidan's chair scraped across the floor as he shoved away from the table. " I told you, already; I didn't do anything!" He stalked over to brood in front of a large bay window, his hands shoved deeply into the pockets of the dress slacks he'd worn to the party and slept in last night.
"Forgive me if I prefer to assume otherwise, mon ami," Jean said calmly. The sound of eggs sizzling in a frying pan was the only noise in the room.