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"I'm counting on it." She touched a hand to his arm. "A lot of it's your doing, Donald. We never would have gotten off the ground like this without you, especially after the warehouse."
"Damage control." He brushed off her thanks with a shrug. "In six months we'll barely remember we had damage to control. And the profits will bring a smile even to Deirdre's face." He was counting on it.
"That would be a real coup."
"Just drop me off at the next corner," he told the driver. "The restaurant's only a couple of doors down."
"I appreciate you making time to go with me."
"No problem. Seeing the flags.h.i.+p back in shape made my day. It wasn't pleasant visualizing the office torn up like that. That wonderful antique desk ruined. The replacement's stunning, by the way."
"I had it s.h.i.+pped out from Colorado," Natalie said absently, as something niggled at her brain. "I had it in storage."
"Well, it's perfect." He patted her hand as the car swung to the curb.
She waved him off, then settled back, dissatisfied, when the car merged back into traffic. Then, with a shrug, she gauged the traffic, the distance to her lunch meeting, and decided she had time for one quick phone call.
Ry answered himself on the third ring. "Arson. Piasecki."
"Hi." The pleasure of hearing his voice wiped out everything else.
"Your secretary's out?"
"Lunch."
"And you're having yours at your desk."
He glanced down at the sandwich he had yet to touch. "Yeah.
More or less." He s.h.i.+fted, making his chair squeak. "Where are you?"
"Looks like Twelfth and Hyatt, heading east, toward the Menagerie."
"Ah." The Menagerie, he thought. High-cla.s.s. No tuna on wheat for lunch there. He could see her, ordering designer water and a salad with every leaf called a different name. "Look, Legs, about tonight-"
"I was thinking about that. Maybe you could meet me at the Goose Neck." She rolled her shoulders. "I have a feeling I'm going to want to unwind."
He rubbed a hand over his chin. "I, ah... Come by my place instead. Okay?"
"Your place?" This was new. She'd stopped wondering why he'd never taken her there.
"Yeah. About seven, seven-thirty."
"All right. Do you want me to pick up something for dinner?"
"No, I'll take care of it. See you." He hung up and sat back in his chair. He was going to have to take care of a lot of things.
He picked up Chinese. It was nearly seven when Ry carried the little white cartons up the two flights to his apartment. He took a good look around while he did.
It wasn't a dump. Unless, of course, you compared it with Natalie's glossy building. There was no graffiti on the walls, but the walls were thin. As he climbed the steps, Ry could hear the muted sounds of televisions playing, children squabbling. The steps themselves were worn down in the centers from the pa.s.sage of countless feet.
As he turned onto the second floor, he heard a door slam beneath him.
"All right, all right. I'll go get the d.a.m.n beer myself."
Lip curled, Ry unlocked his door. Yeah, he thought. It was a real cla.s.s joint. There was a definite scent of garlic in the hall. Courtesy of his neighbor, he a.s.sumed. The woman was always cooking up pots of pasta.
He let himself in, flicked on the lights and studied the room.
It was clean. A little dusty, maybe. He barely spent enough time in it to mess it up. It had been nearly three weeks since he'd spent a night there. The sofa that folded out into a bed needed recovering.
It wasn't something he'd noticed before, or would have bothered with. But now the faded blue upholstery annoyed him.
He walked past it, taking about half a dozen steps into the alcove that served as his kitchen. He got out a beer and popped the top.
The walls needed painting, too, he decided, chugging the beer as he looked around. And the bare floors could have used a carpet.
But it served him well enough, didn't it? he thought grimly. He didn't need fancy digs. Just a couple of rooms a short hop from the office. He'd been content here for nearly a decade. That was enough for anyone.
But it wasn't enough, couldn't be enough, for Natalie.
She didn't belong here. He knew it. And he'd asked her to come to prove it to both of them.
The night before had been a revelation to him. That she could make him feel the way she'd made him feel. That she could make him forget, as he'd forgotten, that there was anything or anyone on the planet except the two of them.
It wasn't fair to either of them to go on this way. The longer he let it drift, the more he needed her. And the more he needed, the more difficult it would be to let her walk away.
His divorce hadn't hurt him. Oh, a couple of twinges, he thought now. Plenty of regrets. But no real pain. Not the deep-rooted, searing kind of pain he was already feeling at the thought of living without Natalie.
He could keep her. There was a good chance he could keep her.
The physical thing between them was outrageously intense. Even if it faded by half, it would still be stronger than anything he'd ever experienced before.
And he was well aware of his effect on her.
He could hold her with s.e.x alone. It might be enough for her. But he'd understood when he awakened beside her this morning that it wasn't enough for him.
No, it wasn't enough, not when he'd started to imagine white picket fences, kids in the yard-the kind of things that went with marriage, permanence, a lifetime.
That hadn't been the deal, he reminded himself. And he had no right to change the rules, to expect her to settle. He'd already proven he wasn't any good at marriage, and that had been with someone from his own neighborhood, his own life-style. No way was he going to fit in with Natalie, and the fact that he wanted to, needed to, scared the h.e.l.l out of him.
Worse than that, even worse, was the idea that she would turn him down cold if he asked her to try.
He wanted all of her. Or nothing. So it made sense, didn't it, to push her out before he got in any deeper? And he would do it here, right here, where the differences between them would slap her between the eyes.
At the knock of his door, he carried his beer over to answer it.
It was just as he'd thought. She stood in the hallway, slim, golden, an exotic fish completely out of water. She smiled at him, leaning up to kiss him.
"Hi."
"Hi. Come on in. No trouble finding the place?"
"No." She skimmed her sweep of hair back, looking around. "I took a cab."
"Good thinking. If you left that fancy car on the street around here, there'd be nothing left but the door handles when you went back out. Want a beer?"
"No." Interested, she wandered over to the window.