AFTER A LONG, BRUTALLY HOT DAY THAT INCLUDED A go-round with an inspector he’d considered strangling with a bungee cord, a key crew member who had to be rushed to the ER for twelve stitches, and a screwup on a materials delivery, Ryder wondered why he didn’t end the day having a beer and take-out Warrior’s Pizza in his underwear.
But a deal was a deal, so he grabbed a quick shower, and took the time to shave.
He remembered to make the bed, a chore he rarely bothered with. Then, rolling his eyes, muttering curses in a way that had D.A. bellying into his own bed, Ryder unmade the bed by stripping off the sheets.
The least a man could do was provide fresh sheets if he planned on tossing a woman into them.
He knew the rules. And they included clean sheets, fresh bathroom towels, and a scrubbed-out sink. Women were fussy, and a woman like Hope—as he’d spent considerable time at her place and seen for himself—was fussier than most.
Fair enough.
Satisfied the bedroom would pass, he went downstairs, picked up a few things on the way through. He wasn’t a slob, he told himself. And he had Betts, his cleaning lady, in every other week. But between work and his time with Hope, things had gotten a little messy.
He wound through to the kitchen and tossed what he’d picked up into the utility room to be dealt with later. No problem with the kitchen, he mused. He kept that squared away because if his mother dropped by—and she did—she wouldn’t say a word. Oh no. She didn’t have to when she had that look if he had piles of dirty dishes or trash and recyclables around.
He got out the bottle of Cab he’d picked up, dug up a wineglass. Then muttering again, got out another. He didn’t mind wine, and drinking it with her was more sociable.
He knew the damn rules.
He had a clean house, pretty much. He had wine and decent glasses for it. He had a couple of steaks. He didn’t cook. He grilled and he nuked. So he’d grill the steak, nuke the potatoes, and dump the salad mix he’d picked up into a bowl.
If she didn’t like it, she should go to some other guy’s house for dinner.
Why was he acting nervous? He wasn’t nervous. That was ridiculous. He’d had women in his place before. Usually it was after they’d gone out somewhere, but he’d done the grill-and-nuke for women before.
They were fine with it. She’d be fine with it.
He dumped the bag of salad in a bowl and considered it a job well done. He scrubbed a couple of potatoes, opened the wine. He caught himself fiddling—turning on music, letting the dog out, letting the dog in.
Relief flooded when he heard the knock on the front door. He was better at doing than thinking about doing.
She looked amazing. Every time he saw her was another kick in the gut. “You cut your hair.”
“Yeah.” She lifted her hand to the short cap with long, spiky bangs. “I had some time, and it was driving me crazy. What do you think?”
“It looks good on you.” Everything did. It set off those smoky eyes that matched the smoky voice. She wore a dress, the kind that made him wish summer would never end. It bared her shoulders, and a lot of leg, and when she stepped in, he noted it bared a lot of back.
“Here you go.”
He hadn’t even noticed the flowers in her hand, and now just frowned down at them.
“Hasn’t anyone ever brought you flowers?”
“Can’t say they have.”
“Let me be the first. And I picked this up at the bakery. Have you had their brookies?”
“No. What are they?”
“Orgasmic.”
“I figured we’d be taking care of that ourselves.”
“Why stop there? Believe me, you’re in for a treat. I’ll put the flowers in water for you. Do you have a vase?”
“Ah … I don’t think so.”
“I’ll find something. And I didn’t forget you,” she said to D.A. while he rubbed against her legs. She opened her purse, produced a massive rawhide bone.
“What, did you take down a mastodon?”
Laughing, she pointed until D.A. managed to sit on his wagging tail. “It was a bitter battle, but I won.”
D.A. clamped it in his teeth, pranced over into the living room to collapse and gnaw.
Hope smiled up at Ryder. “So?”
“I’ve got some wine in the kitchen.”
“Just what I need after defeating a mastodon.”
She glanced around—discreetly—as she went back to the kitchen with him. She’d been in his home once, but hadn’t seen much more than the bedroom.
She liked his space, his use of color and comfort, and the detailing of the wood. She knew he and his brothers had built it, as they’d built Owen’s and Beckett’s.
If she ever found herself in the market for a house, she’d make sure it was a Montgomery Family Contractors project.
She loved his kitchen, the easy efficiency, the clean lines—dark woods, open shelving, glass-fronted cabinets.
“Is it all right if I look for something to put the flowers in?”
“Sure. I’ve probably got a jug or something.”
He poured the wine while she hunted. “I heard there was a glitch with the inspector at MacT’s.”
“Picking nits is all. We’ll deal with it.”
“I saw it the other day. God, it’s going to be fabulous.”
She found a clear pitcher, filled it with water.
“First round’s on Red Hots.”
“You can count on it,” Hope said as she arranged the flowers. “I love your house. It’s very you—and your brothers. Your mother, too, I’m betting with the landscaping. All the Montgomery family touches.”
“Nothing gets done that everybody doesn’t have a hand in.”
“It’s nice. We’re not very handy, my family. With the practical things, I mean. My mother’s creative and artistic, and my father can discuss any book or movie ever written or made, but neither of them can handle anything more complex than a screwdriver.”
“It’s people like that who keep us in business.”
“They have their repair people on speed dial. Personally, I like being able to do minor repairs myself.” She caught the smirk, narrowed her eyes. “I can and do make minor repairs. Do you think I call you or your brothers over every time something needs a hammer or screwdriver? I have my own tools.”
“Are they those pretty ones with flower handles?”
Now she drilled a hand into his stomach. “They are not.” She picked up her wine, touched to see it was her usual brand. “What can I do?”
“About what?”
“Dinner. How can I help?”
“Nothing much to do. We can go outside, and I’ll start the grill.”
He led the way through a dining room he currently used as an office. Here Hope’s innate organizational soul shivered. Papers unfiled, supplies jumbled, a desk all but trembling under the weight of undone tasks.
“Don’t start,” he said, seeing her look.
“Some of us handle tools, others handle office space. I can say, proudly, I’m reasonably adept with the first and a genius with the second. I could help you with this.”
“I—”
“Know where everything is,” she finished. “That’s what they all say.”
She stepped out onto a wide deck, breathed deep. His mother, she had no doubt, had spearheaded the charming country-cheer garden, the planters spilling with color. It all flowed into the green spread of woods and the rise of hill.
“This is wonderful. I’d want my coffee out here every morning.”
“There’s never much time for that in the morning.” He opened an enormous, shiny silver grill that struck her as intimidating. “I wouldn’t think the house in the woods would be your style.”
“I don’t know, maybe I’ve never had a chance to find out. From the ’burbs to the city, from the city to small town. I’ve liked all of it. I think I’d like the house in the woods, too. Which way is Clare? And which way is Avery?”
After he’d switched on the grill, he walked to her, stepped behind her. Lifting her arm with his, he pointed in one direction. “Avery.” Then angled her arm again. “Clare. And.” He turned her, pointed again. “My mother.”
“It’s nice to be close. But not too close.”
“I can see their house lights when the leaves fall. It’s close enough.”
She looked over her shoulder to smile, and found herself turned into him, pressed again him. His mouth took hers, hot and urgent. A surprise, as he’d seemed so casual. A wonderful surprise, she thought, as his need stirred her own.
He took her wine, set it aside. “We’ll eat after.” And grabbing her hand pulled her back into the house.
She scrambled to keep up. “All right.”
He made it to the stairs before he pushed her against the wall, tortured himself with her lips, her body. “Just let me …”
He found the short zipper that started halfway down her back, yanked it down. She barely had time to gasp before she was naked but for a thong, her heels, and a pair of dangling earrings.
“Christ. Damn it.” He’d sworn he’d keep his hands off her until after dinner—until after the movie, or at least until during. But the way she looked, smelled, sounded … It was too much. Just too much.
He filled his hands with her breasts, ravaged her mouth.
And she gave back—as eager, as desperate as he. She tugged his shirt up and off, tossed it away, scraped her nails up his bare back, and tied his guts into knots.
When he lifted her off her feet, she melted against him, hot, fragrant wax.
She felt weightless. He carried her up the stairs as if she were. She’d never been carried up the stairs before, and certainly not with her dress in a heap behind her.
Glorious.
She fed herself on his neck, his face, feasted on his mouth as he moved through the bedroom door.
“I can’t keep my hands off you.”
“Don’t.” She wrapped tight as they fell on the bed. “Don’t keep your hands off me.”
He wanted that warm, smooth flesh, the long, slim lines and curves. And the taste of her filling him as he worked his way down her body. She arched up, crying out.
He knew he was rough, tried to slow, tried to gentle, even a little. Tried to remember her delicacy and the hardness of his own hands. He brought his mouth back to hers, softer now, deep and lingering. The revving engine of her body went to purr.
Something turned inside her, a slow, liquid spin, and another, another, that left her dizzy, left her weak.
She breathed out his name as his lips slid over her, featherlight now. A drug seeping into her blood.
She reached for him again, her own hands stroking lightly, dreaming as sensations fell over her like tissue paper.
Now to savor rather than devour, to seduce rather than ravish, they moved together in the quieting light.
When she cupped his face in her hands, when their eyes met, she felt joy merged with desire.
He saw her lips curve before he lowered his to brush them. Felt her fingers thread through his hair. And now when she arched to him, when she opened, welcomed, he slid into her, into velvet heat.
Her breath caught, released, caught again. And those eyes held his as they rose and fell together. Deep, dazzled eyes that went dark and blind as he urged her up and up, and over.
Her body held, taut as a bow, and held quivering until it went slack with release.
He pressed his face into the curve of her throat, and took his own.
Dreaming still, she turned her head, brushed her lips over his hair as her hand trailed up and down his back, while they lay quiet. When he shifted, she curled against his side. His arm came around to wrap. Drifting, he didn’t make the connection that affection had tangled with heat, on both sides.
“I guess I should put those steaks on.”
“I could eat. But I think I’ll need my dress.”
“You look good without it, but it’s a nice dress. I’ll get it.”
“And my purse?”
“What for?”
“I need to make a few repairs.”
He frowned at her. “What for?” he repeated. “You look good.”
“It’ll take me five minutes to look better.”
She could already wring every beat out of a man’s heart, but he shrugged and went downstairs. The dress smelled like her, he thought, sniffing at it as he hunted down her bag in the kitchen.
D.A., the rawhide—worse for wear—still clamped in his teeth, gave him a look that said: I know what you’ve been doing.
“You’re just jealous.” He carted the dress and purse upstairs where she sat on the bed, knees drawn in. When she smiled, he wanted to jump her again.
“Thanks. I’ll be right down, give you a hand.”
“Okay, but it’s no big deal.”
He left her alone before he broke and climbed on her again.
True to her word, she was done in five. “I don’t see any difference except for the dress.”
“Good. You’re not supposed to.”
“How do you like your steak?”
“Rare.”
“That makes it simple.” He tossed a couple of enormous potatoes in the microwave, punched buttons, then pulled the salad out of the fridge.
“Would you like me to dress that?”
“I got a bottle of Italian and a bottle of blue cheese.”
Considering, she poked her head in the fridge, took stock. “I can do better, if you’ve got olive oil.”
“Yeah. Up there.” He pointed to a cabinet.
She opened the cabinet, found a couple other things that met with her approval and took them out. “Little bowl, a whisk?”
“I got the bowl.”
“That and a fork then.”
She went to work, smooth and quick, and looked nothing like a woman who’d fogged his brain only minutes before. He left her to throw the steaks on. When he stepped back in, she was tossing the salad. “I couldn’t find your salad set.”
“I don’t have one. I use forks.”
“Well then.” She angled the forks she’d used in the bowl.
“I thought we’d eat out on the deck.”
“Perfect.” She carried out the salad, went back for plates, flatware. By the time he pulled the steaks off the grill, she’d set the table—with the flowers—topped off their wine. She’d managed to find his butter, sour cream, salt, pepper. And plated the potatoes.
He had to admit, the table looked just a little classier than it would have left to him. “What was your talent in that beauty pageant? Magic tricks?”
She only smiled as he slid her steak on her plate. “This looks great.”
She served his salad, then served herself before lifting her glass, tapping it to his. “To long summer nights. My favorite.”
“I’m a fan. What was your talent?” he repeated. “That’s part of the deal, right? I bet you tossed flaming batons.”
“You’d be wrong.”
She sipped her wine, picked up her fork.
“Give it up, princess. I’ll just get Owen to find out. He’s better at searching the Internet than I am.”
“I sang.”
“You can sing?”
She lifted her shoulders as she ate. “I didn’t win the talent portion.”
“You can’t sing.”
“I can sing,” she countered with some force. “I can also play the piano, and tap. But I wanted to focus on one element.” She smiled as she ate her salad. “And the girl who tapped while tossing flaming batons won the talent.”
“You’re making that up.”
“You could search the Internet for it.”
“How’d you win if you lost the talent?”
“By sweeping the rest. I killed the interview.”
“I bet you killed the swimsuit deal.”
She smiled again, that slow, sultry look. “You could say so. Anyway, long time ago.”
“I bet you still have the crown.”
“My mother has it. More important, I got the scholarship. That was the goal. I didn’t like the idea of putting myself and my parents into debt. They already had two children going to college, and moving to grad school. Winning made a big difference, and I earned it. Those pageants are brutal. Still, I earned and I learned.”
“Sing something.”
“No.” Flustered and amused, she shook her head. “I’m eating. The steak’s perfect, by the way. Hey!” she made a grab, but he was fast, and pulled her plate up and out of reach.
“Sing for your supper.”
“You’re being ridiculous.”
“I want to hear you, judge for myself.”
“Fine, fine.” She thought a moment, then gave him a couple bars of Adele’s “Rolling in the Deep,” since it had played in her car on the drive over.
Throaty, sexy, rich. He wondered why he was surprised. “You can sing. Keep going.”
“I’m hungry.”
“I don’t have a piano.” He set her plate in front of her again. “But you’re definitely going to tap-dance after dinner.”
Her eyes narrowed when he tossed a bite of steak to the dog. “Your mother taught you better than that.”
“She’s not here. What else can you do?”
Hope shook her head again. “No. Your turn. What can you do besides what I already know?”
“I can kick.”
“I saw you kick for your mother’s dog.”
“That’s nothing. I kicked the game-winning field goal my senior year—championship win.” Long time ago, too, he thought, but still. “Sixty-three yards.”
“I’m guessing that’s impressive. The yardage.”
“Sugar, as far as I know, the longest ever kicked in high school ball’s seventy yards.”
“I’m impressed then. Did you keep it up in college?”
“The scholarship helped. There were three of us, too. College wasn’t my thing, but I gave it a shot.”
“Did you ever consider going pro?”
“No.” No passion for it, he thought now. No gut-deep drive. “It was a game. I liked it. But I wanted what I’ve got.”
“It’s nice when that works out. When you get what you want. We’re both lucky there.”
“So far.”
The light softened toward dusk as they finished the meal, lingered over wine. She rose to clear as the first fireflies winked in the green shadows.
“I’ll get them in the morning,” he told her.
“I’ll get them now. I can’t relax if things like dishes aren’t done.”
“Maybe you need therapy.”
“When things are in their place, the world’s in balance. When they’re done, you can take me to the movies. What are we watching?”
“We’ll find something.” For now he liked just watching her. “You want popcorn?”
“There’s that balance again,” she said as she loaded the dishwasher. “Movies. Popcorn. One without the other is just wrong.”
“Butter and salt?”
She started to refuse, then gave in. “What the hell. It’s my night off. And I’m going to have a fitness center in my backyard before too much longer.”
“Do you have any of those little outfits?”
She slanted him a look from under her long, spiky bangs. “I do. But the opening will give me an excuse to buy new. Right now nobody sees them but me when I find time to put on a workout DVD.”
He put the bag of popcorn in the microwave, glanced at her. “You’re going to want the corn in a bowl, aren’t you?”
“Yes, I am. And a plate for the brookies.”
“Just more dishes to deal with.”
“It’s a process, Ryder. Maybe I should check in with Carolee before we settle into movies and popcorn.”
“Does she know where you are?”
“Yes, of course.”
“She’s got the number if she needs anything. Put it away.”
“I’ve been doing that very well. I just had a tiny relapse.”
He smiled at her. “You’re good for the inn.”
“Thanks. You didn’t think I would be.”
“I didn’t know you.”
Her eyebrows arched under the bangs. “You thought, city girl in a fancy suit with fancy city ideas.”
His mouth opened, shut again.
“You did!” She poked at him. “Snob.”
“I figured you for the snob.”
“You figured wrong.”
“It happens.” He ran a hand over her hair, surprising both of them. “I like the hair,” he said and barely resisted stuffing the hand in his pocket. “Shorter than mine.”
“You need a haircut.”
“I haven’t had time.”
“I could cut it for you.”
He laughed. “No, you fucking won’t.”
“I’m good at it.”
He pulled the popcorn out, dumped it in a bowl. “Let’s go watch a movie.”
“I even have the right tools.”
“No. Do you want more wine? I’ve got another bottle.”
“I’ve got to drive, so no. I’ll switch to water.”
“Grab those chocolate things. Big-ass TV’s downstairs.”
She followed him down, gaped, grinned.
“This is wonderful!”
“I like it.”
She supposed he thought of it as a man cave, but there was nothing cavelike here. Glass doors opened to the outside, giving it a sense of more space. He’d used color again, sharply, nothing soft, nothing pale, mated it with dark glossy wood, a lot of leather.
Delighted, she wandered, studied the alcove where he kept weights, an old-fashioned water bubbler, the punching bag boxers used—what was it? Speed bag, she remembered.
She peeked around and into the small, Deco-inspired black and white bath.
He had games—the Montgomery brothers seemed to love them. Pinball machine, an Xbox, even one of those touch-screen games Avery had at Vesta.
But the best was the bar—carved and compact, and the retro refrigerator, the glass shelves with old bottles.
“Is this a reproduction or the real thing?” she asked.
“It’s the real thing. I like old things.” He opened the old Frigidaire, gave her a bottle of water.
“It’s like the fifties meet the now. It’s great.” She admired the antique poker table, the old-style pinball machine.
“You must have great parties.”
“That’s Owen’s deal more than mine.”
“I should say you could have great parties.” Her party-planning brain already organized themes, menus, decorations. “And that is, without question, the biggest TV I’ve ever seen.”
“Might as well have big. That cabinet’s for the DVDs. You can pick what you want to see.”
“I get to pick? That’s very considerate.”
“There’s nothing in there I won’t watch, so you can pick.”
She laughed and, before she did, walked over, wrapped her arms around his waist. “See, you didn’t have to say that. I’d’ve believed you were considerate.”
“It is what it is.”
“I like what it is.”
“So do I. Ah, what’s that thing called before the movie?”
“Previews?”
“No, the old-fashioned thing. Before they played the movie.”
“The overture?”
“Yeah, that’s it.” He scooped her off her feet. “It’s time for the overture.”
She laughed as he rolled them both onto his black leather couch.