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"Then are you going to ask me in?"
"Sorry." Lord, he felt like a b.u.mbling teenager. No, he decided as he slid the screen open for her, no teenager had ever been this b.u.mbling.
"I'm a little distracted."
Ana's brows lifted as she surveyed the chaos of pots and bowls. "So I see. Would you like some help?"
"I think I've got it under control." He took the bottle she offered, noting that the pale green bottle was etched with symbols and that it carried no label. "Homemade?"
"Yes, my father makes it. He has-" Her eyes lit with secrets and humor.
"-A magic touch."
"Brewed in the dungeons of Castle Donovan."
"As a matter of fact, yes." She left it at that, and wandered to the stove as he took out some gla.s.ses. "No Bugs Bunny this time?"
"I'm afraid Bugs met a fatal accident in the dishwasher." He poured the clear golden wine into the crystal gla.s.ses. "It wasn't pretty."
She laughed and lifted her gla.s.s in a toast. "To neighbors."
"To neighbors," he agreed, clinking crystal against crystal. "If they all looked like you, I'd be a dead man." He sipped, then lifted a brow. "Next time we'll have to drink to your father. This is incredible."
"One of his many hobbies, you might say."
"What's in it?"
"Apples, honeysuckle, starlight. You can give him your compliments, if you like. He and the rest of my family should be here for All Hallows'
Eve. Halloween."
"I know what it is. Jessie's torn between being a fairy princess or a rock star. Your parents travel all the way to the States for Halloween?"
"Usually. It's a kind of family tradition." Unable to resist, she took the lid off the pan and sniffed. "Well, well, I'm impressed."
"That was the idea." Equally unable to resist, he lifted a handful of her hair. "You know that story I told you the day Daisy knocked you down?
I find myself compelled to write it. So much so that I've put what I was working on aside."
"It was a lovely story."
"Normally I could have made it wait. But I need to know why the woman was bound inside the castle all those years. Was it a spell, one of her own making? What was the enchantment that made the man climb the wall to find her?"
"That's for you to decide."
"No, that's for me to find out."
"Boone-" She lifted a hand to his, then looked down quickly. "What have you done to yourself?"
"Just rapped my knuckles." He flexed his fingers and shrugged. "Fixing the was.h.i.+ng machine."
"You should have come over and let me tend to this." She ran her fingers over the sc.r.a.ped skin, wis.h.i.+ng she was in a position to heal it.
"It's painful."
He started to deny it, then realized his mistake. "I always kiss Jessie's hurts to make them better."
"A kiss works wonders," she agreed, and obliged him by touching her lips to the wound. Briefly, very briefly, she risked a link to be certain there was no real pain and no chance of infection. She found that, while the knuckles were merely sore, he did have real pain from a tension headache working behind his eyes. That, at least, she could help him with.
With a smile, she brushed the hair from his brow. "You've been working too hard, getting the house in order, writing your story, worrying if you made the right decision to move Jessie."
"I didn't realize I was that transparent."
"It isn't so difficult to see." She laid her fingers on either side of his temples, ma.s.saging in small circles. "Now you've gone to all this trouble to cook me dinner."
"I wanted-"
"I know." She held steady as she felt the pain flash behind her own eyes. To distract him, she touched her lips to his as she absorbed the ache and let it slowly fade. "Thank you."
"You're very welcome," he murmured, and deepened the kiss.
Her hands slid away from his temples, lay weakly on his shoulders. It was much more difficult to absorb this ache-this ache that spread so insidiously through her. Pulsing, throbbing. Tempting.
Much too tempting.
"Boone." Wary, she slipped out of his arms. "We're rus.h.i.+ng this."
"I told you I wouldn't. That's not going to stop me from kissing you whenever I get the chance." He picked up his wine, then hers, offering her gla.s.s to her again. "Nothing goes beyond that until you say so."
"I don't know whether to thank you for that or not. I know I should."
"No. There's no more need to thank me for that than there is to thank me for wanting you. It's just the way it is. Sometimes I think about Jessie growing up. It gives me some bad moments. And I know that if there was any man who pushed or pressured her into doing what she wasn't ready to do I'd just have to kill him." He sipped, and grinned. "And, of course, if she thinks she's going to be ready to do anything of the kind before she's, say, forty, I'll just lock her in her room until the feeling pa.s.ses."
It made her laugh, and she realized as he stood there, with his back to the cluttered, splattered stove, a dishcloth hanging from the waist of his slacks, that she was very, very close to falling in love with him.
Once she had, she would be ready. And nothing would make the feeling pa.s.s.
"Spoken like a true paranoid father."
"Paranoia and fatherhood are synonymous. Take my word for it. Wait until Nash has those twins. He'll start thinking about health insurance and dental hygiene. A sneeze in the middle of the night will send him into a panic."
"Morgana will keep nun level. A paranoid father only needs a sensible mother to-" Her words trailed off as she cursed herself. "I'm sorry."
"It's all right. It's easier when people don't feel they have to tiptoe around it. Alice has been gone for four years. Wounds heal, especially if you have good memories." There was a thud from the next room, and the sound of racing feet. "And a six-year-old who keeps you on your toes."
At that moment, Jessie ran in and threw herself at Ana.
"You came! I thought you'd never get here."
"Of course I came. I never turn down a dinner invitation from my favorite neighbors."
As Boone watched them, he realized his headache had vanished. Odd, he thought as he switched off the stove and prepared to serve dinner. He'd never gotten around to taking an aspirin.
It wasn't what he would call a quiet, romantic dinner. He had lit candles and clipped flowers in the garden he'd inherited when he'd bought the house. They had the meal in the dining alcove, with its wide, curved window, with music from the sea and birdsong. A perfect setting for romance.
But there were no murmured secrets or whispered promises. Instead, there was laughter and a child's bubbling voice. The talk was not about what the candlelight did to her skin, or how it deepened the pure gray of her eyes. It centered on first grade, on what Daisy had done that day and on the fairy tale still brewing in Boone's mind.