Название: Single Dads Collection
Автор: Lynne Marshall
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Короткие любовные романы
Серия: Mills & Boon e-Book Collections
isbn: 9780008900625
isbn:
She really didn’t need this.
She was sitting in the shade with the children, Freddie napping on her lap, the baby asleep in the carrier beside her, Beth sitting cross-legged playing a game with stones and talking happily to herself, and in front of her Harry was stripped to the waist and digging.
Rippling muscle, smoothly tanned skin glistening with sweat, streaks of dirt across his forehead where he kept lifting his arm and wiping away the trickles that threatened to run down into his eyes. And the way he threw the spade down into the hole, over and over, slicing through the roots and then grasping the stem and heaving it over, trying again, cutting another root, another tug, another cut, and all the time those muscles bunching and gleaming and driving her crazy.
Finally, victorious, he heaved the rootball of a huge old vibernum out of the ground and straightened, grinning at her. ‘At last,’ he said, his breath sawing in and out, and he strolled over, dropped down beside them and reached for a glass of fresh lemonade.
‘Oh, bliss,’ he said, rolling it over his chest and then lifting it to his lips, his throat working as he swallowed it in one.
‘I hope you never go to wine-tastings,’ she said drily, and he chuckled.
‘Oh, I can swill and spit with the best of them, but ice-cold real lemonade on a hot day with a raging thirst? No way. It would be a sin to spit it out.’
‘Want another?’
He grinned. ‘I thought you’d never ask.’
He held out the glass while she filled it from the Thermos flask, then took a long, reflective swallow and smiled. ‘Gorgeous. Nice and sharp. I hate it too sweet.’
‘It’s got honey in it,’ she told him.
‘It’s lovely. Thank you.’
She dragged her eyes away from him, from those twinkling, smiling eyes, the stubbled jaw—she hadn’t given him time to shave she’d been in such a hurry to keep moving—the beads of sweat caught in that fascinating, arrowing hair just above his battered old jeans…
No!
‘Want to have a look at the plan? It’s only a doodle so far—nothing formal yet—but I’d like your feedback.’
‘Sure.’
And he lifted the tray out of the way, set it down on the other side of him and shuffled closer.
Too close. She could smell him, the tang of fresh sweat, the warmth of his skin, the lemons on his breath—intoxicating. She hauled her pad over and picked up a pencil.
‘I thought this might work,’ she said, and forced herself to concentrate.
It took two days.
Two days in which Harry thought his muscles were going to die, but it was only because he’d been too busy with the baby to work out. Normally, in his crazy nomadic lifestyle, he stayed in hotels that had gyms—unless they were filming in the back of beyond, in which case very often they’d had a hike to get there—and when he was at home in London he went to the gym round the corner from his flat.
But in the two—or was it nearly three?—weeks since Kizzy had come into his life, he hadn’t lifted anything heavier than a basket of wet washing, and he needed this.
Therapy, he told himself, and at least he’d slept last night.
And now, at the end of the second day, the shrubs with the yellow squirt on them had been evicted, a rotten tree was felled and the root hacked down to below ground level, and a huge pile of shredded material was heaped up at the bottom of the garden ready to be composted and put back into the soil. He tipped out the last bag onto the heap with a sigh of relief and surveyed the devastated garden thoughtfully.
‘It looks vast,’ he told her. ‘I’d forgotten the garden was so big.’
‘They always look like this when they’re cleared. Even cutting the grass can double the apparent size of a garden. And using fine lawn grass does the same thing, because we have a mental scale rule and a blade of grass is x big, therefore the garden must be y long—and so on.’
‘Tricks of the trade? Clever. So what’s next?’
‘Marking out the hard landscaping, deciding on the shape of the lawn, and then getting down to the nitty-gritty of the planting. But to do that, we need a big rope to lay on the ground to give us a line. There’s one in the summerhouse. Can you give me a hand? It’s quite heavy.’
The summerhouse?
‘Sure,’ he said, his mouth suddenly dry. He hadn’t been in the summerhouse since the night of his grandmother’s funeral. He’d been actively avoiding it, because so much of their past was in the place, but it seemed his avoidance tactics were to come to nothing.
Right now.
He followed her, Freddie and Beth running ahead to show him the way, Kizzy sleeping in the carrier in the shade by the back door where they could keep an eye on her from either garden.
And there it was, screened by shrubs, tucked away at the end in a lovely, private little dell, the sort of place that as children had been a magical retreat, and as adolescents in the grip of their hormones had been an ideal trysting place.
‘Right, it’s in here somewhere,’ she said, pulling the door open and picking her way in. ‘We don’t use it any more, so it’s a bit of a dumping ground now. Ah, here it is.’
It smelled the same. Slightly musty, the odd cobweb hanging across the windows, and it had gone downhill a little, but it was basically the same, and the memories slammed through him.
The hedgehog with its fleas. Secret societies with Dan, and Emily and Georgie, on occasions, if the girls insisted. And then later, on her sixteenth birthday, their first kiss.
Tender, tentative, staggering in its impact on the seventeen-year-old boy with a massive chip on his shoulder and a feeling that he’d never really been wanted.
Until then.
But Emily had wanted him, and, God help him, he’d wanted her. So much.
That innocent, simple kiss had awoken a whole world of sensation that had somehow been much more than straightforward lust. It had been the tenderness that had shaken him. Her tenderness, and his. Particularly his. Until the night of his grandmother’s funeral. That hadn’t been tender. That had been desperate, and frightening, and wild with a passion that had left them both shaken. They’d stopped, pulled back from the brink, shocked by the force of their emotion—
‘Harry?’
He lifted his head and met her eyes, and the memories must have been written all over his face. ‘Sorry. Miles away,’ he said, and he watched the soft colour sweep her cheeks and she looked away.
‘Um—the rope,’ she said, but she was between him and it, and the only way to get it was to squeeze past her. She turned away from him, but as she struggled not to fall headlong into the piles of clutter, he took her shoulders in his hands to steady her and her bottom settled briefly but firmly against СКАЧАТЬ