He cocked his head at her. ‘I’m the heartless one? I know I have a heart, because you broke it this morning, Penny. That was the last news I expected to hear.’
‘I’m sorry, Ryan, but it was far worse for me, believe me.’
‘Are you going to give me the name of the hospital?’
‘So you can try and obtain my medical records? No, Ryan, I’m not. If you choose not to believe my simple word, then nothing else really matters, does it?’
‘I suppose not,’ he said in a strange voice.
‘I think you’d better go now.’ She was tying her hair back into a pony-tail, turning her face away from him so he wouldn’t see the tears pouring down her cheeks.
‘I’d rather stay,’ he said, touching her naked shoulder.
Penny shook her head. ‘You got what you wanted. Go now.’
‘I want all of you,’ he said, caressing her shoulder. ‘I’ll never be happy until I have all of you.’
‘Why not be content with what you’ve had?’ She wiped her tears away clumsily. ‘You’ve proved I’m still a fool. You can go back to London now and forget me forever.’
He was silent for a while before answering. ‘You were never this cold, this hard,’ he said at last.
‘As you said, I’ve changed. I used to be soft as putty. But not any more. I’ve learned to fight for myself at last.’
His arms slid around her, strong and male. ‘I’ll be back.’ She felt him kiss the nape of her neck. ‘Sweet dreams, Penny.’
Her eyes were so full of tears that the firelight was no more than a dancing orange blur that dazzled and hurt her brain. But she kept staring at it while she listened to him dress…and long after she heard the door close and his sports car drive away.
CHAPTER FOUR
SHE had given Miles Clampett the key to the workshop, and he was putting the finishing touches to the door when she arrived the next morning. Despite the bitter weather—it had snowed overnight, and the world had gone white and silent—he was whistling cheerfully.
‘You look bright-eyed and bushy-tailed,’ he grinned. ‘You must have had some lavender under your pillow.’
‘What?’ she asked suspiciously. Miles was a notorious snoop, and she wondered what he was talking about.
‘Us country folk,’ he said, putting on a Farmer Giles accent, ‘we puts lavender under our pillows to get a good night’s sleep.’
‘I’ll remember that,’ she said, stepping over a pile of shavings to get inside.
‘You don’t need to. I’m sure your gentleman friend knows how to ease your tensions.’ He winked. ‘Saw his car outside your cottage last night. And smoke coming from the chimney. Cosy.’
She didn’t need Miles to remind her of last night’s folly. The memory was burned into her brain as though with a red-hot branding iron. In any case, it was too early in the morning to exchange repartee with Miles.
She went inside, ignoring him.
The wisdom of last night was, at best, dubious. But however tangled her emotions were, her body evidently felt no regrets. The lingering melancholy in her system seemed to have been burned away. Her heart was beating a little faster and the blood in her veins was defying the snowy weather to make her skin flushed and glowing.
She glanced at herself in the mirror that hung in their tiny bathroom. Those roses in her cheeks had been what had caused Miles to snigger when he’d seen her. There had been a definite transformation.
She forced her thoughts away from Ryan. There was no time for introspection. She already knew that it was going to be another busy day.
The day after tomorrow was Saturday, and she had not one, but two weddings. Both were big weddings, too, meaning not just bouquets and buttonholes for the wedding parties, but churches to do as well. They would have to co-opt Tara. Luckily Tara, who was saving up to go to Australia, needed the money and never minded doing extra work.
Their business was really prospering. Hard work had never frightened Penny, and she was prepared to fight for her success.
She had no sooner started work when the phone rang. She picked it up with a hello, and was greeted by a husky, all-too-familiar voice.
‘I’m sorry last night ended on a bad note. That was not the way I had planned it.’
She felt her nipples tighten in response to his voice. ‘I didn’t realise you’d planned it, Ryan,’ she retorted, ‘but I suppose I should have guessed.’
‘I put that badly. I should have said, that wasn’t the way I’d dreamed of it.’
‘Well, I’m sorry I disappointed you.’
Ryan chuckled softly. ‘Stop trying to pick holes in everything I say. Last night was wonderful. I’ve ached for you for so long. It was heaven to hold you, to kiss you…I only meant to apologise for offending you at the end. You took my words the wrong way.’
‘Did I?’
‘Penny, you still don’t understand me. Sometimes I wonder if you ever will.’
‘You’re right,’ she replied. ‘I don’t understand you, Ryan. I don’t understand why you’ve come looking for me. The fact that you’ve taken the trouble to track me down shows that you don’t understand me, either. Or that you simply don’t care.’
His voice softened. ‘Wasn’t last night wonderful for you? I know it was. And I know that this morning your blood is tingling, just like mine. You feel alive for the first time since you left me. Isn’t that true?’
She felt an awkward resentment at his accuracy. ‘Sex is a completely different thing from love. Sex can be wonderful between total strangers.’
‘Oh?’ There was a different note in his voice now. ‘You know this from experience?’
‘That doesn’t concern you,’ she replied smartly. ‘I’m very busy, Ryan. Was there anything else?’
‘I want to see you tomorrow night.’
‘No!’
‘I’m back in London,’ he went on, ignoring her protest. ‘I have business here until tomorrow. I want you to have dinner with me at Northcote tomorrow night. You can advise me on how to furnish the place—it’s still empty.’
‘I keep telling you, but you won’t listen—we have nothing to say to each other!’
‘And I have some things of yours,’ he concluded smoothly. ‘When you ran out on me in London, you left half your stuff behind. Photographs of your parents, letters, the jewellery I gave you.’
‘I don’t want the jewellery,’ she assured him. ‘Please take it back.’
‘Well, there’s a beautiful Adam fireplace at Northcote,’ he said. ‘I’ll make a nice big blaze, and throw everything on it, shall I?’
‘No! I want the photographs!’
‘Then come and get them,’ he said succinctly. ‘Tomorrow night at seven.’
‘Ryan—’
The line had clicked dead in her ear.
She slammed the phone down with a growl of frustration.
‘So who is he?’ Miles Clampett asked through a mouthful of nails. He had sauntered in, and was leaning against the door jamb with his usual smirk. ‘An old flame, obviously.’
‘Have