More Than Words: Stories of Strength: Close Call / Built to Last / Find the Way. Karen Harper. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Karen Harper
Издательство: HarperCollins
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Жанр произведения: Зарубежные любовные романы
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781408954096
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have been the kind of kid who brought home injured animals, and that was what he was at the moment.

      Except he didn’t see it that way.

      He walked over to the door and stood a few inches from the threshold, wondering if he’d be able to figure out what she was doing in there. Sleeping? Plotting what she’d do once he got there? But he didn’t hear a sound from inside—no radio, no running water, no happy humming.

      No gulping.

      No window creaking open as she tied sheets together to make good her escape.

      She must have heard him talking in the hall with their hostess.

      The door jerked open suddenly, and Jess was there in shorts and a top, barefoot, her hair still damp and her skin still pink from a recent bath or shower.

      “O’Malley,” she said. “What a coincidence.”

      “Like minds and all that?”

      “Mmm.”

      “Sweetheart, there’s nothing ‘like’ about our minds.”

      But she was unflappable—she’d had longer to prepare for this moment. “I saw all those Nova Scotia brochures on your dining-room table and couldn’t resist. Funny we picked the same B and B.”

      “You’re not even trying hard to sound convincing.”

      She ignored him. “It’s adorable, isn’t it? I love the cottage touches and the raspberry theme.”

      He had no idea what she meant by “cottage touches.” He placed one hand on the doorjamb and leaned in toward her, smelling the fragrance of her shampoo. “How’s your room?”

      “Perfect.”

      He tried to peer past her. “I think it’s bigger than mine.”

      She opened the door a bit wider. “See for yourself.”

      In her own way, Jessica Stewart liked to play with fire. O’Malley stepped into her room and saw that it was shaped differently from his, but about the same size. “I didn’t see your car,” he said.

      “Really?”

      All innocence. “Did you hide it?”

      “I engaged in strategic parking. If you’d arrived with a woman friend, I’d have been out of here in a flash.”

      He smiled. “Don’t want any competition?”

      “I wouldn’t have wanted to embarrass you. You deserve a break, you know, after the shooting. It’s just that you also need to be around friends.” She scrutinized his head as he walked past her. “How’s the wound?”

      “I’ve cut myself worse shaving.” He peered into her bathroom. “Do you have pink towels?”

      “They’re a shade of raspberry. Don’t think of it as a feminine color.”

      “It’s a cheerful place. I’ll say that.” He stopped in front of Jess’s bed and turned to her, noticing the color in her cheeks. It was more than the aftereffects of her shower. “Now that you see me, do you feel like a dope for following me?”

      “It’d take a lot for you to make me feel like a dope, O’Malley. Everyone’s worried about you. What did you think would happen when you snuck off like that?”

      He shrugged. “I thought I’d get to spend a few quiet days on my own in Nova Scotia.”

      “No, you didn’t. You thought I’d follow you. That’s why you circled the name of the B and B—”

      “You didn’t have a key to my place.”

      “You knew I’d ask your brother. I’ll bet he okayed it with you to give me the key. Am I right?”

      “Hey, hey. I’m not on the witness stand, prosecutor.”

      She sighed, shoving her hands into her shorts’ pockets. “O’Malley—” She broke off with a small groan. “You’re impossible. I don’t know why I ever slept with you. My first day at the academy ten years ago, I was warned about you.”

      He feigned indignation. “Warned in what way?”

      “Every way.”

      “What, that they don’t come any smarter, sexier, more hell-bent on catching bad guys—”

      “More full of himself, more hell on women, more cynical—”

      He shook his head. “I wasn’t cynical in those days.”

      “You are now.”

      “Only a little.”

      He approached her, slipping his arms around her as she pulled her hands out of her pockets. She didn’t stiffen. She didn’t tell him to back off or go soak his head. Instead she met his eye and smiled. “You’re more than a little cynical, O’Malley.”

      “It’s to protect a soft heart.”

      “Ha.”

      But she had to know he had a soft heart—he’d exposed it to her when they’d made love. He’d never done anything like that before and wasn’t sure he wanted to again. He didn’t like feeling vulnerable—emotionally or physically.

      She was still smiling when his mouth found hers, and he could taste the salt air on her lips, her tongue. She draped her arms around his neck and responded with an urgency that told him she’d at least thought about this happening on her trip up here. He lifted her off her feet. Why hadn’t he asked her to come with him? Maybe she was right and it was some kind of test, some kind of sexy game between them.

      “O’Malley.” She drew away from him and caught her breath. “Brendan. Oh, my. I didn’t mean—” She didn’t finish. “Maybe we should take a walk.”

      “A walk?”

      “It’s a gorgeous day.”

      “Right.”

      He set her down and backed up a step, raking one hand through his close-cropped hair. She licked her lips and adjusted her shirt, which had come awry during their kiss.

      “I’m on a rescue mission,” she said. “I shouldn’t be taking advantage of your situation.”

      “Why the hell not?”

      But the moment had passed. She had something else on her mind besides falling into bed with him—not that it was easy for her, he decided. She just had a lot of self-discipline.

      “I’ll meet you downstairs,” she said. “We can take a walk, then do afternoon tea.”

      That was it.

      Jess made her way to the door and held it open for him as he strode past her back out into the hall. “Think Marianne Wells would have a ham sandwich or something at tea time?”

      “I doubt it.”

      “Little scones, probably, huh?”

      Jess smiled, looking more at ease, less as if she was afraid he’d go off the deep end at any moment. “I’d count on something with raspberries.”

      The afternoon stayed warm and sunny, and Marianne served tea on the back porch, laying out an assortment of miniature lemon scones with raspberry jam, tiny triangles of homemade bread, fresh local butter and watercress, and warm oatmeal-raisin-chocolate-chip cookies that one of her friends had dropped by that morning.

      Jess couldn’t have been happier, but O’Malley looked a little out of place sitting on a white wicker rocker with a watermelon-colored cushion as he negotiated a Beatrix Potter teacup and plate of goodies.

      He’d gotten rid of the bandage on his forehead. His bullet graze looked more like a nasty cat scratch. Probably no one would guess what it really was, or even bother to ask. He’d had no trouble negotiating