“Sorry, but you just don’t look much like a gardener,” she said, obviously realizing he was prevaricating.
He cast her a sideways glance and let a faint smile lift the corner of his mouth. “You don’t look much like a fashion designer, either.”
Instead of taking offense, she barked a laugh and lifted a hand to her sopping ponytail. “Touché. I know I’m a mess. Aside from the horrible bed, a cricket kept chirping somewhere inside the house. And the water in the shower ranged from cold to frigid.”
“Devastating,” he murmured.
She continued, “There’s not a hair dryer in sight, because, of course, Grandpa doesn’t need one. I almost stuck my head over the stove but figured that might be pushing it.”
“Knowing how dangerous things tend to happen when you’re in a kitchen, that was probably a good call. And we don’t want to tax rescue services with a call about a fire. They were already out here once this week.”
“Did I mention that the airline misplaced my big suitcase? I only had my carry-on, which is why I’m wearing the old clothes that my sister left here when she came to visit a year ago.”
Judging by the clothes, the sister was a different type of dresser altogether.
“We can run by a store later if you need to shop,” he said.
“If the airline doesn’t show up with my things within a couple of days, I might have to take you up on that. I had the basic necessities in my carry-on, but I’ll be out of stuff pretty soon.”
“Are you really going to stick around for a while?” he asked, wondering if she truly intended to stay for weeks. Man, he hoped not. He was supposed to be enjoying a retreat from the real world. But this talkative, beautiful woman had brought it crashing in on him like the winds of a hurricane.
“Maybe. I’m between projects and was supposed to be going out of town for a couple of weeks anyway,” she said, crossing her arms and leaning against her window to look out at the passing scenery. “This isn’t exactly France, though.”
“You were going to France?”
She nodded but didn’t look over.
“Why would it have been better if you’d met me there?”
She jerked and swung around to stare at him. “What?”
“You said that last night.”
She bit that succulent bottom lip.
He prodded her. “Your exact words were, I believe, ‘Why, oh, God, why, didn’t I meet you in Paris?’”
She huffed. “Jeez, what are you, a transcriptionist?”
“I have a very good memory.”
“Obviously.”
“So?”
“So what?”
She was obviously trying to deflect, and he considered letting her get away with it. But something about that sad face and those slumped shoulders made him want to rile her up a little. He’d been raised with sisters, so he knew that nothing worked better to get them out of a sad slump than giving them something to be mad about.
“So, why would it have been better if you’d met me in Paris?”
“I was hysterical. I didn’t know what I was saying.”
“Not that hysterical. As I recall, you were pretty damned calm at that point. Sedate even.”
Her eyes narrowed. “Shall we talk about how you were at that point?”
Hell, if she thought he was going to apologize for getting a hard-on when he’d had a gorgeous woman in his arms, she had another think coming. “I have a Y chromosome. And you’re beautiful.”
Her bluff having been called, she looked away.
“Paris,” he reminded her.
Crossing her arms over her chest and harrumphing, she said, “I just meant if I was going to end up in some hot guy’s arms this week, it should have been in the city of light, not in my grandfather’s kitchen.”
He made a mental note of the hot, wondering if she even realized she’d just revealed a little more about her thoughts of last night.
Casting him an arch look, she added, “By the way, it could have been any guy’s arms.”
“Hot.”
“What?”
“You said any hot guy’s arms.”
“It’s like I’m riding with a digital voice recorder.”
“Like I said. Good memory.”
“The point is, I was just speaking in general terms about how a run-down old kitchen can’t compare to the most romantic city in the world. That’s all.”
He wasn’t buying it. “Didn’t sound that way.”
“Would you stop interrogating me?”
There was fire in her eyes now, and color in her cheeks. Indignation wafted from her, and he congratulated himself on getting her mind off her troubles. Let her be annoyed at him, and engage in a little verbal sparring. At least it would be a few minutes less she spent worrying about her obviously deeply loved grandfather.
“Why were you going to France?”
“Did you miss the part about not interrogating me?”
“It’s just a simple question.”
“One that’s really none of your business.”
“So, not for work, then.”
She just huffed.
He speculated aloud. “If there was a possibility you’d end up in some random guy’s arms, you obviously weren’t meeting up with a boyfriend.”
“Did you also miss the part where I said it was about kitchen vs. Paris and not about a stupid man?”
“Your boyfriend’s stupid?”
“Argh!”
Defense attorneys hadn’t called him the Honey Badger of Hollywood for no reason. Oliver had been born with a persistent gene. “Was that an answer?”
“I don’t have a stupid boyfriend.”
“Well he can’t be very smart if he lets you come alone up to Sonoma to be stalked by a potential ax-murdering maniac in your grandfather’s kitchen.”
“There’s no boyfriend, okay? Stupid or otherwise!”
He’d known that’s what she was saying but was glad for the confirmation, anyway. He couldn’t say why that certainty sent a hint of relief gushing through his veins, but it did. “Well, that’s good. I’m afraid I’d lose a little respect for you if you liked stupid guys.”
“Right now, they’re sounding very appealing,” she mumbled.
“Low standards, huh?”
“No, I just wouldn’t have to be couching every word I say so it couldn’t be used against me in a court of law.”
That was striking a little close to home. “Because a stupid guy would understand you better?”
“No, because I wouldn’t give a damn if he didn’t!”
“You calling me smart, and saying you give a damn?” He wondered if she could