Defender. Diana Palmer
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Название: Defender

Автор: Diana Palmer

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Вестерны

Серия:

isbn: 9781474055062

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СКАЧАТЬ pointed to one at the corner of the house that had the security light, and to another camera just over their heads, pointing away from the house.

      “Do they have microphones?” she worried.

      “They do.” He pulled a little device out of his pocket. “But that one—” he indicated the one overhead “—has had a slight malfunction.” He showed her the device and grinned.

      She grinned back. “Devious.”

      “Very. I’m going to turn it back on. Watch what you say.”

      She nodded. He pointed the device at the camera and clicked it.

      “I wonder what Mandy’s got in mind for supper?” he asked conversationally. “I’m starved.”

      “Me, too. Thanks for showing me the new foal, Mr. Fiore,” she lied. She’d seen it much earlier, but it was for the sake of the recording, in case her father saw it.

      “My pleasure, Miss Grayling,” he replied, and went to hold the door open for her.

      * * *

      Later, Paul was reading Herodotus when Isabel came through the door and jumped onto the bed with him. She was wearing a gown this time, a pink silk one with a matching peignoir. She was nicely covered, but the silk slithered over her firm, pretty little breasts and it dipped down so that just the tops of them showed. It was a modest gown. The problem was that little sliver of pretty, pale, freckled flesh. Paul had to drag his eyes away from it, especially when he saw quite suddenly two little peaks on either side of the bodice. She liked his eyes on her, and it was visible in a way she didn’t even seem to know.

      The girls didn’t date. They had no knowledge of men, or even their own bodies. Isabel was very likely a virgin. It made him react unexpectedly, in a very masculine way. He leaned forward carefully so that his reaction was less noticeable in the folds of his black silk pajama bottoms.

      “You’re reading that man again,” she noted, looking at the book in front of him on the bed. “Wouldn’t it be easier to read him in English?”

      “You lose something in the translation,” he said easily, smiling.

      “How did you learn Greek?”

      He smiled. “From my grandmother. She was a firecracker. I never saw anything or anyone she was afraid of.” He shook his head. “She went after a mob boss once with a length of salami. Damn, she had spunk!”

      “A mob boss? A real one?” Isabel asked, fascinated.

      He nodded. “Most of our family worked for, shall we say, underworld elements. One of them was a mob boss with a real attitude problem. He came to a family gathering and insulted one of her grandsons. She took after him with a salami and damned near unmanned him with it. He actually apologized to her.” His eyes were far away and thoughtful. “After that, he sent her a present every Christmas. Shocked us all. He wasn’t the type, you see.”

      She smiled. “I never knew my grandparents, on either side,” she recalled sadly. “Mama’s people originally came from Georgia. Her parents were pretty old when I was born and they died when I was a baby. Mama was worth millions. Her people were a founding family in Jacobs County. My father never talked about his people much. His father was very wealthy—that’s where Daddy’s money came from. He inherited after he married my mother. His mother died when he was a baby. He didn’t have brothers or sisters.”

      “That’s sad, not to have family.”

      “Do you have any?” she asked softly.

      He averted his eyes. The question hurt, but she didn’t realize it. “No. Not anymore,” he said tautly. “Except for a cousin.”

      He didn’t like remembering it. His grandmother had died years ago. He’d had a brother, but when he was in his teens, his sibling had died in a particularly horrible way, and not one he felt comfortable telling an innocent girl about. The others, well, he had a lot of guilt about the way they went, and the memories tore at his heart like talons.

      “I’m sorry,” she said gently, touching his muscular arm.

      He looked up, surprised at her empathy.

      She shrugged. “You never talk about your past. I guess you have some memories that are pretty bad, huh?”

      He nodded. “Yeah. Pretty bad.”

      She drew her hand back. “I’ve never had the opportunity to make any real memories,” she said on a sigh. “I go to school and come home, do class work, eat, sleep, get up and do it all again, except in the summer.”

      “I get up, work, eat, sleep, go to bed.” He chuckled. “I suppose there’s some sort of comfort in the routine. No great shocks. No big surprises.”

      “It’s tedious, isn’t it?” she asked suddenly, surprising an odd look in his large brown eyes. “We don’t do much except go through the motions of living.”

      He cocked his head. “You’re pretty clued in, for a sheltered little chick.”

      “I listen,” she said simply. “I don’t have much experience of my own, but women talk. I overhear things I don’t really understand, but once in a while, a woman is nice enough to explain it to me without making it sound vulgar.”

      Both thick eyebrows went up. “Now I’m intrigued.”

      She cleared her throat. “It’s nothing I could talk about in mixed company,” she said, lowering her eyes.

      “I see. It’s that sort of conversation, is it?” he teased.

      She flushed. “Well, books and movies and television sort of hint at things, but you don’t really know, do you? It’s just secondhand.”

      “So is hearsay evidence,” he mused.

      “Now you sound like a policeman,” she accused.

      His eyes narrowed. “And you’d know that how?”

      “There’s this nice policeman who works for Chief Grier,” she said. “I have lunch in Barbara’s Cafe every Friday with Blake Kemp’s assistant. The policeman is usually having lunch there, too, with a couple of his friends. They sit next to us and we talk.” She laughed. “He’s really funny. I like him.”

      He felt an unreasonable surge of jealousy. He fought it down and even managed a convincing smile. “Your age?”

      “Oh, no, he’s closer to your age. At least, to what I think is your age,” she added, because Paul had never told her how old he was.

      “Is he new here?”

      She nodded. She leaned toward him. “There’s some gossip about him,” she said in a stealthy, mischievous tone.

      “Is there? What is it?” he asked.

      “You remember Kilraven, who was supposed to be working for the chief, but was really an undercover Fed?”

      “I remember. He married Winnie СКАЧАТЬ