Читаем NRoberts - G2 Black Rose полностью

 “She’s connected to you, Roz. She knows what’s inside you, at least enough to understand what you think and feel, things you might not say out loud.”

 “She gets inside my head,” she said softly. “Yes, I’ve felt that. I don’t like it. But what happens to your theory when you add Bryce? I married him. He lived here. And though she acted up a few times, there was nothing extreme, nothing violent.”

 “You didn’t love him.”

 “I married him.”

 “And divorced him. He wasn’t a threat to her. It seems she knew that before you did. At least before you consciously knew it. He was . . . superfluous, let’s say, to her. Maybe it was because he was weak, but for whatever reason, still, no threat to her. Not from her view.”

 “And you are.”

 “Clearly. We could suppose it has to do with my work, but that doesn’t jibe. She wants us to find out who she was, what she was. She just wants us to work for it.”

 “You seem to know her very well, on short acquaintance.”

 “Short, but intense acquaintance,” he pointed out. “And understanding the dead is part of my work. It’s actually the part—the personalizing—that makes it the most compelling for me. She’s angry that you’ve allowed me into your life, into your bed.”

 “Because you’re not weak.”

 “I’m not,” he agreed. “And also because I matter to you, or I will. I’m going to make sure of it. Because what we’re moving toward, you and I, is important.”

 “Mitch, we’re having an affair, and while I don’t take that lightly, I—”

 “Rosalind.” He laid his hand over hers, kept his eyes on hers. “You know very well I’m falling in love with you. Have been since the minute I opened my apartment door and saw you standing there. Scares the hell out of me, but that doesn’t change it.”

 “I didn’t know.” She drew back, and her hand pressed on her heart, ran up to her throat and back again. “I didn’t, and that makes me as oblivious as Hayley. I thought we had a great deal of attraction for each other, and mutual respect along with . . . what are you grinning at?”

 “You’re nervous. I’ve never seen you nervous. How about that?”

 “I’m not nervous.” She stabbed at the last bite of her chicken. “I’m surprised, that’s all.”

 “Scared’s what you are.”

 “I’m certainly not.” With some heat, she shoved back from the table. “I’m certainly not. All right, I am.” She pushed to her feet when he laughed. “Yes, that should please you. Men love putting women into a state.”

 “Oh, bullshit.”

 There was a ring of steel, even through the humor. Intrigued by both, she turned back. “You’re an awfully confident individual.”

 “You meant that as a compliment the first time you said it. This time you meanarrogant , and right back at you, honey.”

 With that, she laughed. Then pressed her fingers to her eyes. “Oh, God. God, Mitchell, I don’t know if I’ve got it in me for anotherimportant relationship. They’re so much damn work. Love can be, should be, so consuming, so demanding. I just don’t know that I’ve got the stamina, or the heart, or the generosity.”

 “I have no doubt you’ve got plenty of all three, but we’ll take it as it goes, and see.”

 He rose. “Can’t say I mind making you a little nervous,” he said as he walked to her. “Nothing much shakes you, at least not so it shows.”

 “You have no idea.”

 “Oh, I think I do.” He slipped his arms around her, led her smoothly into a dance, swaying to the throb of the music. “One of the sexiest things about you is your unshakable capability.”

 “I’m capable.” She tipped her head up. “I want my accountant to be capable, but I sure as hell don’t want to sleep with him.”

 “I find it devastatingly sexy.”

 “Is this the seduction part of the evening?”

 “Just getting started. Do you mind?”

 He thought her capable, she realized, and found that appealing. And he made her feel soft, and cherished. “You asked me that the first time you kissed me. I didn’t mind then, either.”

 “I love that you’re beautiful. Shallow of me, but there you go. A man’s entitled to some flaws.”

 Amused, she trailed a finger up the back of his neck. “Perfection’s boring—but, God, don’t tell Stella I said so.”

 “Then I’ll never bore you.”

 He touched his lips to hers lightly, once, twice, then slowly, slowly, sank into the kiss.

 It spilled through her, the warmth, and the life, the thrill and the power. She moved with him, that sensuous dance, that sensuous kiss, and let herself glide. Like a woman glides over a path strewn with fragrant petals. Through moonbeams. And into love.

 She heard a door shut quietly, and opened her eyes to see that he’d circled her into the bedroom.

 “You’re a clever dancer, Dr. Carnegie.” Then laughed when he spun her out, and back. “Very clever.”

 He kissed her again, spinning until her back was pressed to the door, until the kiss took on a bite. Then he ran his hands down her arms, stepped back.

 “Light the candles,” he said. “I’ll light the fire.”

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