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A few minutes later, she found him on her sofa, his legs stretched out, his eyes half-closed. "Why aren't you home in bed?"
"I had some stuff to do." With one hand, he reached for the tray she'd set on the table. With the other, he reached for her. Cont ent with her beside him, he piled soft cheese on a cracker. "It's not half-bad," he said with his mouth full. "I missed dinner."
"I suppose I could send out for something."
"This is fine. I figured you'd want an update."
"I do, but I thought I'd hear from you several hours ago." He mumbled something over a new cracker. "What?"
"Court," he said, and swallowed. "I had to be in court most of the afternoon."
"I see."
"Got your messages, though." The refueling helped, and he grinned. "Did you miss me?"
"The update," she said dryly. "It's the least you can do while you're cleaning out my pantry."
He helped himself to a handful of glossy green grapes. "I've ordered surveillance for your plant on Winesap."
Her ringers tightened on the stern of her gla.s.s. "Do you think it's a target?"
"Fits the pattern. Have you noticed a man around any of your properties? White guy, about five-four, a hundred and thirty.
Thinning sandy hair. Forty-something, but with this round, moony face that makes him look like a kid." He broke off to wash crackers down with wine. "Pale, mousy-looking eyes, lots of teeth."
"No, I can't think of anyone like that. Why?"
"He's a torch. Nasty little guy, about half-crazy." The wine wasn't half-bad, either, Ry was discovering, and sipped again. "All-the- way crazy would be easier. He likes to make things burn, and he doesn't mind getting paid for it."
"You think he's the one," Natalie said quietly. "And you know him, personally, don't you?"
"We've met, Clarence and me. Last time I saw him was, oh, about ten years ago. He'd hung around too long on one of his jobs. He was on fire when I got to him. We were both smoking by the time I got him out."
Natalie struggled for calm. "Why do you think it's him?" Briefly Ry gave her a rundown on his work that evening. "So, it's his kind of job," he added. "Plus, the phone call. He likes the phone, too.
And the voice you described-that's pure Clarence."
"You could have told me that this morning."
"Could've." He shrugged. "Didn't see the point."
"The point," she said between her teeth, "is that we're talking about my building, my property."
He studied her a moment. It wasn't such a bad idea, he supposed to use anger to cover fear. He couldn't blame her for it. "Tell me, Ms. Fletcher, in your position as CEO, or whatever it is you are, do you make reports before, during, or after you've checked your data?"
It irritated, as he'd meant it to. And it deflated. As he'd meant it to.
"All right." She expelled a rush of air. "Tell me the rest ."
Ry set his gla.s.s aside. "He moves around, city to city. I'm betting he's back in Urbana. And I'll find him. Is there an ashtray around here?"
In silence, Natalie rose and took a small mosaic dish from another table. She was being unfair, she realized, and it wasn't like her.
Obviously he was dead tired because he'd put in dozens of extra hours-for her.
"You've been working on this all night."
He struck a match. "That's the job."
"Is it?" she asked quietly.
"Yeah." His eyes met hers. "And it's you."
Her pulse began to drum. She couldn't stop it. "You're making it very hard for me, Ry."
"That's the idea," Lazily he skimmed a finger along the lapel of her robe, barely brus.h.i.+ng the skin. Her scent rose up from it, subtly, tantalizingly. "You want me to ask you how your day went?"
"No." With a tired laugh, she shook her head. "No."
"I guess you don't want to talk about the weather, politics, sports?"
Natalie paused before she spoke again. She didn't want her voice to sound breathy. "Not particularly."
He grunted, leaned over to crush out his cigarette. "I should go, let you get some sleep."
Her emotions tangled, she rose as he did. "That's probably best.
Sensible." It wasn't what she wanted, just what was best. And it wasn't, she'd begun to realize, what she needed. Just what was sensible.
"But I'm not going to." His eyes locked on hers. "Unless you tell me."
Her heartbeat thickened. She could feel the shudder start all the way down in the soles of her feet and work its way up. "Tell you what?"
He smiled, moved closer, stopping just before their bodies brushed. The first answer, whether she wanted him to go or stay, was already easily read in her eyes.
"Where's the bedroom, Natalie?"
A little dazed, she looked over his shoulder, gesturing vaguely.
"There. Back there."
With that quick, surprising grace of his, he scooped her up. "I think I can make it that far."
"This is a mistake." She was already raining kisses over his face, his throat. "I know it's a mistake."
"Everybody makes one now and again."
"I'm smart." While her breath hitched, her fingers hurried to unb.u.t.ton his s.h.i.+rt. "And I'm level-headed. I have to be, because..."
She let out a groan as her fingers found flesh. "G.o.d, I love your body."
"Yeah?" He nearly staggered as she tugged his s.h.i.+rt out of his jeans. "Consider it all yours. I should have known."
"Mmm..." She was busy biting at his shoulder. "What?"
"That you'd have a first-cla.s.s bed." He tumbled with her onto the satin covers.