Автор: Anne Oliver
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
isbn: 9781472082985
isbn:
“Don’t,” she said sharply.
Christo, just straightening up to take Derek into the conference room, looked around at her. “Did you say something?”
“No—” her cheeks were burning “—I just—no. Never mind. Made a mistake.” She waved in the general direction of the letter she was supposed to be typing. “Just…muttering.”
He gave her an odd look, then shrugged. “What are you doing tonight?”
Her gaze jerked up. Her heart kicked over. “What?”
“I’ve got the shelves ready. Can I come up and put them in?”
“Oh.” Deflated and annoyed at feeling deflated, she shrugged. “Sure. Of course.”
He knocked. And knocked again.
She didn’t answer the door.
It was just past seven. He didn’t know what time she’d left the office because he’d been on a conference call between five and six. When he’d finished, though, and come out of his office, she was already gone.
Her car was in the garage. So she should be home. Though, he supposed, she could have walked up to the shops on Manhattan Avenue.
Or she might be on a date.
He knocked again. Louder. “Natalie!”
No answer. He hadn’t seen anyone come and pick her up. But then, he hadn’t spent the last hour watching her door, had he? He had better things to do. Besides, she’d told him he could come tonight.
But she hadn’t said she’d be here, he reminded himself.
Well, fine. She knew he had a key. He’d let himself in. He went back home and got it, then when one last knock got no reply, he opened the door and went in.
The apartment might be Laura’s, but it had Natalie’s mark on it now. That was her laundry folded in neat piles on the kitchen table. Her colorful T-shirts and scoop-necked tops, her shorts and capris, her skimpy equally colorful underwear.
He didn’t need to be thinking about Natalie’s underwear. He still remembered the pink camisole top she’d worn the night he’d found her in his bed. Still—
He shoved the memory away and began hauling in the shelves. Herbie, ever curious, followed him, wove between his feet, tripping him and meowing at the same time.
“Didn’t she feed you?” Christo asked him.
But he could see that Herbie still had a bit of food in his bowl. She’d obviously been home. And then he saw her open day planner by the coffeemaker. In Natalie’s handwriting, it said, Scott 6:30.
So—his jaw tightened—a date, after all.
No matter. He could work faster without her interference. He had plenty of interference with Herbie before the cat got bored and decided Christo wasn’t going to provide any food. Then Herbie curled up beside Natalie’s CDs on the cabinet under the window, and Christo began putting the bookcases together.
He liked working with his hands, liked the feel of the wood beneath his fingers, liked fitting things together and making something useful. Doing that was a good counterpoint to the thinking he had to do for his legal work. Often as he worked, his mind did the same, exploring possibilities, considering options, framing and reframing arguments, asking himself questions.
Like, who the hell was Scott?
He put on the wood glue and fitted the back to the side.
And why hadn’t she ever mentioned him?
He was meticulous with his work, drilling and gluing and countersinking the screws. It was the sort of work that usually settled his mind. All he could think right now was he could have used another pair of hands.
It was past nine when Natalie finally appeared. “Oh,” she said when she pushed open the door and found him kneeling in the living room as he put the blind screws into the back of the first bookcase. “You’re still here.”
“Imagine that.”
“What’s wrong?”
“Nothing’s wrong,” he said sharply. “Give me a hand here. Unless you’re worried about getting your clothes dirty.”
She wasn’t wearing the gray skirt and blazer with the black blouse she’d worn to the office. Not dressing for success tonight, then. She had on a casual flowered skirt in a sort of batik print with a rust-colored top that brought out the red in her hair. Probably the way Scott preferred it.
She hesitated. “I will. But let me change,” she said. “I only have so many work clothes.”
Christo’s eyes widened. “Work?”
“I went to dinner with a new client tonight.”
Scott at six-thirty was a client? “Dressed like that?”
She blinked in surprise, then realized what he expected to see in the way of work clothes. “I’m not a lawyer,” she reminded him.
His teeth set. He studied her clothing. “And that’s what wives wear?”
She shrugged. “More or less. Less tailored than lawyers. More casual and approachable, but still businesslike.”
“Just,” he muttered.
“What?”
“Nothing. Get changed and come give me a hand here.”
It should have been easier with the two of them working. It wasn’t.
The second pair of hands was helpful. But the way they bumped into each other was not.
Nor was the faceful of her hair he seemed to get every time he moved close. Damn it, Natalie! But he didn’t say it. Just breathed it in. Breathed the scent of her—and felt that plaguing desire grow.
It made him want to do more than brush an arm against her. It made him want to reach out and pull her into his arms.
She shifted to get a better grip on the bookcase as they were moving it and her breasts brushed against his arm.
His breath hissed between his teeth. “Damn it. I said move.” He grunted.
“I am.”
“Not that way!” She turned and he got her hair in his face again. “Are you trying to drive me nuts?”
Her shoulders stiffened. She looked at him, confused. “Drive you nuts?”
His jaw worked. “All that shifting, twisting, turning—”
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