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Doodah humming aside, there was no doubt in her mind that being with Ivan was right. She'd known Steve for years and hadn't known him at all, and she'd known Ivan for a very short time and felt as if she knew all that was important about him.
There had been an overwhelming chemistry between them from the very beginning, but that wouldn't have been enough. It was enough for kisses and a few fantasies, but it wasn't enough to make her want to spend the night next to him. She realized now that she had to love a man to think of doing that. Ivan was very close and very real, and she loved him.
She tugged his s.h.i.+rttails from the waistband of his jeans and slid her palms along the flat plane of his stomach and the hard wall of his chest. "I'm glad I waited all these years," she said. "I'm glad my first time is with you."
"Hmmm, so do you love me?" he asked, flicking the overhead light off, unb.u.t.toning his s.h.i.+rt. "How much?"
Stephanie smiled at him. "Enough."
"Enough for what?"
"Enough for anything you have in mind."
Ivan's grin flashed white in the subdued light of the bedroom. He kicked his shoes off and nestled her close to him. He kissed her temple and the sensitive spot just below her ear.
He wanted to go slow, to make it beautiful for her, but she was making control difficult, and he felt a rush of heat slam into him as her hands explored the small of his back and slid below his waistband.
He groaned and moved against her, kissing her hard. The kiss deepened, demanded more, promised everything. He laid her on the bed, inching her nightgown over her head, moving the material slowly, kissing each new inch of exposed flesh-the inside of her knee, her thigh, dark slick shadows, and all the soft feminine places pirates like him loved to ravish. He watched her arch under his kisses, her breathing shallow, her eyes following his every move.
"Steph, are you sure? We could stop here..." Not easily, he thought, but he could manage it.
"I'm sure."
Lord, how he loved her. The strength of it almost took his breath away. He was taking something very special from her, and he wanted to make sure he was replacing it with something equally wonderful. In his heart he offered her everything he valued-fidelity, trust, respect, affection, pa.s.sion.
"I love you," he whispered, his hand sliding across her belly, dipping lower, stroking, inflaming.
She whispered the words back. "I love you." And she really did love him, she thought. And she loved what he was doing to her.
"Do you like this?" he asked, his finger circling the center of her universe.
"Yes," she said on a sigh.
And then it happened... her universe exploded.
It was dark when she awoke. The wind had slowed and rain pelted the windowpane. It was a good thing Ivan had gone back to her room to tack plastic over the broken window. After he'd secured the plastic they'd showered together and made love again-for a very long time. They'd talked in hushed voices, enjoying the easy intimacy their loving had brought. They'd teased and explored and found preferences, finally losing themselves to the desire they'd created, and they'd fallen asleep with legs and arms entwined. It had been the nicest possible night, she thought. If it had followed an elaborate white-gowned ceremony, it couldn't have been any more perfect.
She snuggled closer and swept her hand the length of him, almost as a rea.s.surance that he was real. He stirred in his sleep and wrapped his arms around her, his touch renewing the now familiar pulse of desire.
Ivan wasn't sure if he was dreaming or if he was awake-and didn't care. He rolled over, and in one smooth, swift movement made her gasp at the speed of his reaction, leaving no doubt in her mind that he was the direct descendant of a pirate.
Stephanie mustered her reserves and gingerly eased herself onto a chair at the breakfast table.
Ivan looked up from his plate of pancakes and couldn't resist teasing. "Have a rough night?"
She glanced over her shoulder to make sure the dining room was empty. "Why am I the only one walking funny?"
"Because you're the one who got greedy and woke me up in the middle of the night," he said, covering her hand with his and smiling at her with such unabashed affection that she was sure anyone watching would instantly know they'd shared a bed.
"Don't men get sore?"
"I try to keep in shape," he bragged, polis.h.i.+ng off a tumbler of fresh-squeezed orange juice. "Practice, practice, practice."
Mr. and Mrs. Platz came in and took seats at the table. "It's raining," Mrs. Platz said morosely. "First no leaves, and now rain. And this is a lovely inn, but I hardly slept last night. The wind was howling, something terrible. And there were thumping noises and cras.h.i.+ng noises. Lord, for a while there it sounded as if something was banging on my window."
Melody served them pancakes and sausage and gla.s.ses of juice. "Must have been Tess. I warned you about putting Mr. and Mrs. Platz in that room."
Eileen Platz put her hand to her throat. "Who's Tess?"
"Tess is our ghost," Melody told her cheerfully. "She's really a nice old lady, but she only likes to have Ivan sleep in her bedroom."
"Well," Mrs. Platz said, sizing up Ivan, "I don't suppose I blame her."
Ivan tipped back in his chair. "Tess was the wife of Red Rasmussen, the pirate. She predates this house by about 150 years, but the current Haben was built directly over the foundation of the original Haben, and some believe she's taken up residence here. Legend has it that Red died at sea, and Tess died waiting for him."
"How romantic," Mrs. Platz said. "How sad."
"It wasn't Tess that was at the window last night," Stephanie said. "It was-" She paused and poured herself a cup of coffee. "It was the wind. It blew one of the branches from the oak tree into my window and smashed the gla.s.s. We're going to have to trim that tree back," she added lamely, looking at Ivan.
Mr. Platz dug into the sausages. "These are terrific. Are they homemade?"
"I get them from the butcher down the street," Stephanie said. "He makes fresh sausage every Thursday."
Melody brought herself a plate of pancakes and took her place at the table. She eyed the sausage critically.
"Does he add nitrates? Is the meat cured?" She opened her dark eyes extra wide. "I read about nitrates. They're chemicals that they put in the meat to make it change color and stuff, and they give you cancer. They make your pancreas rot away, and you die writhing in pain. And if you drink beer while you eat the nitrates, you get huge cancerous tumors that grow all over your body. And do you know what they make sausage out of? Ground-up pigs. Have you ever seen a sausage pig? They're big. We're talking really big-"
"Excuse me," Stephanie said, "I think we've already had the discussion about pigs."
Melody blinked black mascara-caked lashes at her. "Oh, yeah. Sorry."
Mrs. Platz leaned forward. "About this ghost, has anyone ever seen her?"
"I talk to her all the time," Melody said. She lowered her voice for emphasis. "We be mates."
Mrs. Platz's eyes glittered, and she sucked air through her narrow mouth. "Do you think she'd talk to me? I've always felt very strong cosmic vibrations, but I've never actually talked to a ghost."
Melody shrugged. "She hangs out on the widow's walk."
"Does she materialize? Does she drip ectoplasm?"
Melody's face was expressionless as she ate her pancakes. "Mostly she just hangs out."
"Well, how do you contact her? Do you have to go into a trance? Do you need a white candle?"
"She likes cookies," Melody said. "She has a real sweet tooth."
Mrs. Platz looked confused. "How can a ghost eat cookies?"
"I eat them," Melody said matter-of-factly. "Then I tell her about them, and she gets turned on by that."
"Lord, I would love to see a ghost. My neighbor, Sophia Schroth, would die if she knew I'd talked to a ghost." She looked at her husband. "I knew I should have gone to the window last night."
"Ms. Lowe said it was the wind, and that's what it was... the wind," Mr. Platz told her.
"It was the wind at Ms. Lowe's window, but it might have been Tess at ours. We were sleeping in her bedroom."
Mr. Platz rolled his eyes. "You need to get help, Eileen. You're beginning to sound like your aunt Rose." Mr. Platz leaned toward Ivan and spoke in a confidential voice. "Her aunt Rose talks to Walter Cronkite all day."
Mrs. Platz pinched her lips together. "I believe in ghosts. I always have, and I always will. And I can feel that there's a ghost in this house."
"Hah! Some ghost," Mr. Platz said. "Has to knock on windows to get into her own bedroom. If she's such a hot ghost, why doesn't she just waltz through the wall? Any self-respecting ghost can waltz through walls."
Mrs. Platz dismissed him with a wave of her hand. "Don't pay any attention to him," she said to Melody. "He doesn't understand about these things. He has no psychic energy."
Melody poured more maple syrup on her pancakes and nodded in understanding.
"Do you think if I went up to the widow's walk, I would get to see her?" Mrs. Platz asked Melody. "Do you suppose you could introduce me?"
"Sure. Hey, anybody who uses Clairol Ebony's okay in my book."
Mr. Platz grunted. "You think she'll be out in the rain? Won't her ectoplasm get wet?"
"I don't know," Melody said. "But she grooves on fog."
Stephanie kept her eyes averted and concentrated on her mashed potatoes. She felt hideously sorry for Eileen Platz, and at the same time was on the verge of bursting out laughing. The poor woman had maintained a marathon vigil with nothing to show for it other than a red nose and frozen feet. At one point a small crowd had even gathered to watch the two crazy women standing in the rain on the top of Haben. The local cable station had sent a minicam, and a kid from the high school paper had stopped by to get details. The astonis.h.i.+ng part was that everyone seemed to know about Tess, and no one disputed her existence. What the people of Camden, Maine, couldn't understand was why Eileen Platz thought it necessary to talk to old Red's widow. Stephanie chewed a piece of fried chicken and wondered about the sanity of New Englanders.
Melody looked as if she'd fared considerably better than Mrs. Platz. Her hair was freshly washed and starched and more brilliantly orange than ever. "It's a shame you didn't get to see Tess," she said to Mrs. Platz. "She probably went to the mall."
Eileen Platz sat a little stiffer in her chair, and Stephanie thought she was most likely trying to decide if she'd been made a fool of. She couldn't begin to guess why Mrs. Platz had believed Melody in the first place. Because you believe what you want to believe, she told herself. Eileen Platz wanted to believe there was a ghost on the widow's walk. Just like all those kids in the rehab programs had wanted to believe drugs would help them cope, make them smarter, make them cool, make them s.e.xier, give them energy. She almost wished Mrs. Platz had seen Tess. After standing in the rain for seven hours, Mrs. Platz deserved to see something.
"Cheer up," Mr. Platz said to his wife. "We're staying here one more night. Maybe the ghost will come back and knock on your window some more."
Chapter 8.
Stephanie pulled down the shade on her brand-new window and turned to look at the man sprawled on her bed, taking in his gray wool socks, lean muscular legs encased in soft faded jeans, awesome bulge behind his zipper, unb.u.t.toned s.h.i.+rt displaying a swath of hard, smooth chest and stomach. His hair needs cutting, and his beard should be bronzed, Stephanie thought. She'd never thought of a beard as being an instrument of torture, but Ivan knew how to exact a price with his. "Do you think Mrs. Platz will make contact with Tess tonight?"
Ivan grinned. "It's possible. Tess should be back from the mall by now."
"You know, this is crazy, but I'm beginning to feel as if I actually live with Tess. I think I know how Jimmy Stewart felt about Harvey."
He put a pillow behind his head and motioned for her to come to him. He liked being friends with Stephanie. He'd like to lie there and talk, he thought, but already the pressure was building in him, and he knew talk would be put aside for a while. It was early, barely ten o'clock, but he didn't know how he'd lasted this long. His worst fears for the bed-and-breakfast business were coming true. It was almost impossible to get Stephanie alone.
When they were married-and there was no doubt in his mind that they'd be married-she could run the inn during the summer months, if she wanted. In the winter, he'd like the house to be theirs. He didn't want to share Stephanie year-round with a constant flow of guests.
She smiled slyly and crawled onto the bed, reminding him of a predatory feline, and straddled him at the hips. It hasn't taken her long to a.s.sert her s.e.xuality, he thought, pleased. She wasn't afraid to say what she liked, and she wasn't afraid to be aggressive. Those were traits that followed her in and out of the bedroom. Strength. She had strength of character. He slid his hands under her gray Rutgers University sweats.h.i.+rt and confirmed what he'd suspected. No bra.
She'd seemed surprised when he'd strolled into her bedroom five minutes before and kicked his shoes off. She'd thought about it for a moment and lowered the shade. She hadn't questioned his moving in, and he hadn't asked permission. He was probably being presumptuous as h.e.l.l, he thought, but it felt natural. Besides, there was the dead guy in the gray suit. Ivan didn't care how many years of karate she'd had, he didn't care if she had a marks-man rating, and he didn't care how many times she'd survived being thrown into the Hudson River. He had no intention of letting her sleep alone until he found out what was going on in Haben.
She leaned back slightly, popped the snap to his jeans, and slowly slid the zipper all the way down. His hands grasped her at the waist. "Pretty brazen," he said, with a smile.
"I was afraid you were going to strangle."
The room was lit by a small ginger jar table lamp that sat on her nightstand. It was a small room, one of the few in the house that Stephanie had filled with her own furniture. She stood at the side of the bra.s.s bed and peeled her s.h.i.+rt over her head, enjoying the way he watched her with affection and desire and a touch of amus.e.m.e.nt. Because there was the hint of a smile playing at the corners of his mouth, she smiled, too. "You like being entertained, don't you?"
Ivan reached out for her, but she stepped away. She unzipped her jeans and worked them down her legs in a sensuous slow motion that caused her b.r.e.a.s.t.s to sway seductively. She came a little closer and stuck her thumb in the elastic waist of her bikini panties.
"I didn't think virgins were allowed to wear panties like that," Ivan said.
"I'm not a virgin anymore. I bought these panties five years ago, and I've been saving them for this special occasion."
He removed his s.h.i.+rt and shucked his own jeans. "They're very pretty, but if you value them, you'd better get them off. I've got about thirty seconds of self-control left, and then I'm going to rip those panties to shreds."
Stephanie was half-asleep when she heard Eileen Platz shouting. She sprang out of bed and had her hand on the doork.n.o.b when she realized she was naked. She grabbed a terry-cloth robe, belted it quickly, and ran into the hall. She was almost knocked over by Mrs. Platz, rus.h.i.+ng from the master bedroom.
"It was there!" Mrs. Platz screamed. "It was at my window. The ghost!"
Lucy and Melody joined them. "What's going on?"
Mr. Platz staggered from the bedroom. He pointed to the window, opened his mouth, and crashed to the floor.
Stephanie bent over him. "He's fainted. Lucy, get me a wet cloth."
Mr. Platz opened his eyes. "Did I faint? It was awful. It was horrible. I'm going home to Maryland right now, and I'm never coming back." He struggled to his feet. "That Tess is the ugliest woman I've ever seen."
Mrs. Platz rolled her eyes in disgust. "That wasn't Tess, you dimwit. It was an old man!"
Stephanie and Ivan exchanged grimaces.
"Just exactly what happened?" Ivan asked.