Читать книгу The Wedding Promise - Grace Green, Grace Green - Страница 9
ОглавлениеCHAPTER THREE
JUST before noon, Sara heard heavy footsteps outside the bathroom window and recognised Logan Hunter’s purposeful tread.
What did he want this time?
And his timing couldn’t have been worse, she decided as she glanced ruefully down at her skimpily clad figure!
She jumped when she heard his loud rat-tat-tat on the front door.
Wrapping a huge terry towel around herself, over her undies, she padded barefoot out of the bathroom, and was halfway along the passage when he knocked again.
She stopped at the closed door and spoke through it. ‘What do you want?’ Her tone was frosty.
‘I want to talk to you.’
‘This is not a good time.’
She listened. There was no sound of retreating feet. Heaving out a frustrated sigh, she leaned back against the door and looked down the narrow hallway to the living room. A dingy little room. And bare as a baby’s bottom. Minimum amount of furniture...sofa, two armchairs, one coffee table, one ancient TV. ‘I said,’ she threw into the hallway, ‘this is not a good time.’
‘Then I’ll wait here till it is. What I want to say has to be said.’
‘Through the door, then.’
‘To your face.’
‘Sorry, but—’
He shoved the door open and sent her flying down the passage. She only just managed to keep her balance, but as she scrambled to stay upright the towel became dislodged, caught under her feet and she tripped. Flailing in the air, she fell against the wall with a sideways thud that jarred her shoulder and knocked the breath out of her.
Logan Hunter loomed over her, his arms outstretched in an offer of help that wasn’t only too late, but also unwelcome.
‘You,’ she gasped, ‘are a menace!’ She snatched up her towel and breathlessly wrapped it around herself... but not before he’d treated himself to a good eyeful of every creamy curve! Resentment swept through her with the steaming heat of tropical rain.
‘Hey,’ he protested, ‘how was I expected to know you were leaning against the—?’
‘What right do you think you have to push your way in here as if you owned the place...?’ She halted, jolted by the sudden stunned expression in his eyes. ‘What’s the...?’
‘You’re green,’ he choked out. ‘What in the world happened to you? Are you sick?’
He staggered back against the opposite wall as if the very sight of her had knocked the knees from under him.
‘All right,’ she snapped, ‘say what you have to say then get out.’
‘It’s a face mask.’ He ran a hand over his mouth, and she was sure he was hiding a smile. ‘Ruined now, of course. Cracked all to hell.’ The smile couldn’t be contained. It became a chuckle. And then a full-bodied belly laugh. ‘Hey, I’m sorry ... but if you could only see yourself—’
‘Say what you have to say,’ she gritted, ‘and get out of here!’ Out of my life!
‘First of all, then—’ his voice had a strangled sound ‘—I came in here as if I owned the place because I do own the place.’
‘When it’s rented out, you have absolutely no right whatsoever to come in here without an invitation.’
‘Which you were not about to offer, as I recall—’
‘Nor ever will! OK, that’s the “First of all” taken care of. Now, what was the real point of your visit?’
‘I came to apologise.’
‘For...?’
‘For... assuming the worst this morning. For accusing you without asking for your side of the story. I assure you it won’t ever happen again.’
For a second, she melted. He looked so sincerely repentant, she was almost on the point of forgiving him. And then she heard a muffled moan come from deep in his throat, and she knew he was laughing at her. Again.
‘Get out!’ Temper aflare, she jerked the towel even more tightly around her breasts to make doubly sure it wouldn’t fall again as she marched back along the hall to the door, which still lay open.
She stalked to one side, bracing herself, waiting for him to pass by.
‘I think,’ he said softly, ‘it would be a good idea if, from now on, you and I could keep out of each other’s way.’
‘Oh, you’ll get no argument from me on that point, Mr Hunter. I couldn’t agree more.’
‘Well, hell, finally we’ve agreed on something. Who says miracles don’t happen?’
He grinned, and the sight infuriated her. She wanted to slap him, but she stood still as a marble statue, refusing to give him the satisfaction of seeing how close to being out of control she really was.
He left then. And as he brushed past her his arm touched hers. She hadn’t been expecting that, nor could she possibly have anticipated the shock of electricity that passed between them. It jolted her whole body and she inhaled sharply. With the inhalation came the musky scent of him.
It was heady, and intoxicating, and erotic.
She stared after him, her legs sagging, her mind reeling, as he strode away along the path.
She couldn’t have moved had her life depended on it.
She was still standing there, rooted to the floor, long after he’d disappeared around the corner.
She’d never felt such a thing before. Oh, she’d read about it, but she’d never experienced it—that sexual electricity that could arc between a man and a woman.
It was disturbing...it was exhilarating.
And it was the very last thing in the world she wanted.
Over the next week, Logan saw next to nothing of his near-neighbour...but that didn’t mean he didn’t think about her.
He didn’t want to think about her, but from time to time, when he least expected it, images of her would sneak into his mind.
Two images, to be exact.
The first invariably set his pulses pounding: the fiery Mrs Wynter wearing nothing but a white cotton bra and bikini panties, her skin so smooth it just begged to be caressed.
The second...well, even now he couldn’t think of it without chuckling. She’d looked like an alien from Mars with that green face mask...but with those turquoise eyes spitting at him and those pink lips snapping at him and that glorious blonde hair scraped back in a perky ponytail she’d been something else again...
Only what that something else was he couldn’t pin down. And he didn’t even begin to try to.
The woman spelled trouble, with every letter in bold black caps!
His decision to stay away from her was one of the most sensible he’d ever made in his life.
And on this sunny afternoon, as he walked into his study, he idly congratulated himself on that very thing. Life on the island had always been simple, and he wanted to keep it that way. No complications, no entanglements.
‘Andy—’ he hitched a hip on the edge of the computer desk, where his daughter was sitting at the keyboard ‘—I thought I’d take a hike to the old swimming hole and cool off. Want to come?’
‘No, thanks, Dad.’ Andrea’s eyes were fixed on the monitor. ‘I’ve got tons of e-mail to answer. You go, though. I’ll catch you later.’
‘Fan club stuff?’
‘Mmm...’
‘OK.’ He glanced around. ‘Can’t believe we’ve been here a week, but we’ve gotten a pile of work done...though this room looks so darned bare now without all our books. The whole house looks bare, with all the knick-knacks packed away—’
‘Dad, do you mind? I’m leaving with Chrissie tomorrow morning...I’ve really got to get these letters written this afternoon.’
He pushed himself to his feet. ‘Right, I’ll be off. What are we having for dinner?’
‘Oh, it’s my turn, isn’t it?’ Finally, she looked up at him, but in an absent way, with a distracted frown tucking her brows together. ‘How about...um...a stir-fry?’
Her mother’s eyes. Large, the colour of rich dark chocolate, fringed with thick sable lashes. Just looking into them sent his thoughts spinning backwards. The ache of his loss...would it never go away? He’d always known he was a one-woman man; what he hadn’t known was the price he’d have to pay for being that way...
‘Stir-fry it is.’ He set a light hand on his daughter’s shoulder. ‘Did I ever tell you you’re a great kid? ’
‘Did I ever tell you you’re a great dad?’
Under his palm, he felt her shoulder muscles tighten. Her eyes lost their vague expression and became focused, serious. Determined.
‘We’re a team, right?’ she said.
He tried to lighten the moment. ‘Oh, sure...till some Prince Charming comes along and whisks you away on the back of his white charger—’
‘No way!’ She surged up from her chair and gave him a fierce hug. ‘I’ll never leave you, Dad. That’s one thing you’ll never have to worry about. I don’t want a Prince Charming. I don’t need anybody else but you. We don’t need anybody else but each other. For ever.’
When Logan left the house a few minutes later, his mood was troubled. And it remained that way as he followed the track through the woods to the swimming hole. How come he’d never noticed before just how dependent on him Andy had become? Sure, they spent a lot of time together, he’d made a point of doing that; he’d tried to fill the space her mother had left in her life. But he hadn’t realised the intensity of her dependence on him. He hadn’t realised that there was a possessive aspect to her feelings for him.
If ignored, it could eventually become unhealthy. He had to put a stop to it. Without delay.
He was still thinking about the problem half an hour later, when he heard the sound of rushing water ahead. Veering off the track, he cut through the undergrowth, and made his way to the six-foot-high rock east of the fall.
Shedding his shirt and trainers, he ambled round the rock, and dived into the crystal clear waters of the pool.
Sara started as she heard the sound of splashing. Not the steady rush of the waterfall, but a more erratic sound.
She pushed herself up on her elbows and squinted against the sun. She’d come upon the swimming hole by accident days ago, and had spent her afternoons there ever since. Afternoons that had been peaceful and un interrupted. But now... She frowned as she saw that the surface of the swimming hole was rippled.
Someone surged to the surface, and her heart lurched. It was a man. With dark hair.
She sprang to her feet, and slipped behind the huge granite rock at her side. Peeking round warily, pulses racing, she waited.
The swimmer shot to the surface again. And started swimming lethargically around the large pool. He was wearing brief trunks... the same colour as his hide.
Logan Hunter.
Frustration burned like bile in her throat. Was there no getting away from the man? She’d come all this way to avoid him...and here he was, like the proverbial bad penny!
She drew back behind the rock again, and that was when she noticed his shirt and sneakers. He’d tossed them down there, quite unaware that anyone else was around.
Her eyes narrowed. A wicked smile twitched the corners of her mouth. He’d called her a thief, hadn’t he? Well, give a dog a bad name, might as well hang it!
It took her just a moment to gather up her own things and put them in her backpack; then she scooped up his shirt and sneakers.
It’s going to be a long walk home, Mr Hunter!
Laughter bubbled up inside her as she snuck away.
‘Gotcha!’
Sara gasped, and Logan’s shirt and shoes tumbled from her hands.
Logan took enormous delight in having startled the devious Mrs Wynter as he grasped her shoulders. He whirled her round and he couldn’t keep the smugness from his expression as he looked down into her shocked face.
Her cheeks were bright pink. ‘I thought—’
‘You thought I wouldn’t see you.’ What kind of perfume was she wearing? Something tangy, provocative... ‘But I did. And now you’re going to have to pay.’
‘Pay?’ she asked faintly.
‘You didn’t think you could plot to make me hike two miles in my bare feet... and get away with it?’ he mocked.
‘It was a joke.’
‘Ah. A joke.’
‘Well—’ she tilted her nose up at him defiantly ‘—not so much a joke as...retribution.’
‘For...?’
‘For calling me a thief.’
‘I apologised for that.’
‘It still stings.’
She tried to wrench free, but he only held her arms tighter. ‘Not as much as my feet would have stung if I’d had to walk home with no shoes.’ She looked breathless; her chest was rising and falling rapidly, and her glorious turquoise eyes were dilated. On her brow, almost hidden by the sweep of her blonde hair, was a tiny indentation. The kind of mark left by chicken pox. He wanted to kiss it...
‘Well, you won’t have to suffer now,’ she said. ‘So would you mind letting me go? I want—’
She broke off, and he saw her swallow. ‘Yes?’ His voice had become husky. ‘What do you want?’
The pink tingeing her cheeks had darkened to a vibrant scarlet. ‘I want you to stop...looking at me like that.’
He raised his brows. ‘Like what?’
‘As if you’re...wondering how it would feel to...kiss me.’
‘Mind-reader, huh?’
‘No, just...a woman.’ She flicked a quick look at his bare chest, which gleamed wet from the pool. Nervously, she ran the tip of her tongue over her upper lip.
She’d been right; he’d wanted to kiss her. But now, as he watched that moist pink tongue move where he’d wanted his own lips to move, he wanted a whole lot more.
But a kiss would be a good place to start.
He drove his cool, damp hands into her hair and swept it right back from her face. Then he clasped her head with his long fingers, holding her fast.
For a long moment they stared into each other’s eyes, and sexual excitement shimmered between them like the gossamer flutter of a butterfly’s wings.
‘You’re wondering too,’ he said softly, and, sliding a hand from her hair, traced a fingertip over her lip, where her tongue had been. He felt the faint tremble of the moist flesh, and found it incredibly arousing.
Her lashes fluttered closed, as if she. couldn’t bear to look at him, couldn’t bear the electricity crackling back and forth between them.
‘Tell me,’ he whispered, now tracing his fingertip over the fine curve of her jaw. ‘Tell me you’re wondering too.’
A small moan was her only answer. He lowered his head, and water from his hair dropped onto the thin cotton of her shirt, making it cling in places to her breasts. His throat almost closed as lust catapulted him from tenderness to urgency. Male hormones amok. Testosterone on the rampage.
With a ragged groan, he dragged her against his wet body. And kissed her. Desperately.
The taste of her lips was even more lusciously sweet than he’d anticipated, the silky texture something close to heaven. He deepened the kiss, and heard her whimper. He stepped her backwards towards the tree behind her. She sagged weakly against it, and he slid his mouth along her jaw to the sensitive spot below her ear.
‘Still with me?’ he whispered against her scented skin.
She slid her arms around his neck, clung there as if her legs had become too weak to support her. ‘That—’ her voice was blurred, like velvet rubbed the wrong way ‘—is a loaded question—’
‘Daddy!’
The appalled voice came from behind him.
He froze...and felt Sara stiffen. Then she snatched her arms from around his neck and pushed him from her.
Oh, God, he thought despairingly—Andy! Where had she come from, and what was she doing here?
Heartbeats jamming, he turned.
His daughter was ten feet away. She was wearing jeans over a red and white spotted swimsuit, and she had a red towel slung over her shoulder. Her hair stood up in jagged little curls, and her face was whiter than the snowy foam at the foot of the waterfall.
‘Sweetie—’ Logan heard the choking sound in his own voice ‘—what are you doing here? I thought you were going to be busy with your letters—’
‘How could you, Daddy?’ The huge brown eyes were filled to the brim with tears. She didn’t once let her gaze flit to Sara; kept it fixed, agonisedly, on him. ‘Oh, how could you?’
‘Honey—’
‘I followed you. I thought you were lonely. I felt sorry for you, after you’d gone, so I came after you. But all the time you knew I was busy and you were planning to meet—’
‘No, no, Andy.’ He stepped towards her. ‘It’s not what you think—’
‘Oh, spare me!’ She stumbled back, her gaze now more anguished than ever. ‘You’re a hypocrite, Dad. You told me to keep away from her—“that woman”, you called her! You told me you’re judged by the company you keep, and you said—you said...a person’s reputation...is...’
The words ended in a wail, and her face crumpled. Blindly, roughly, she brushed at her over-spilling tears. ‘Oh, I hate you,’ she sobbed. ‘I just hate you.’
She spun around and took off along the trail, back the way she’d come. Her sneakers kicked up spurts of dry dirt with each step, leaving faint dusty clouds in the air.
Logan stood, as if too stunned to move.
‘Go after her.’ Shakily, Sara folded her arms around herself. ‘Hurry.’
He jolted to life. Shoving his feet into his trainers, he fastened the laces, and grabbed his shirt. About to leave, he glanced at her, his eyes dark. Unhappy. ‘You’ll be OK?’
She nodded.
‘Sure?’
‘Go.’
After a brief hesitation, he did as she bade. He took off, fast, his steps thudding hard on the sun-baked trail.
Sara stood where she was till he was out of sight, and the sound of his steps had faded away.
Only then did she hitch her backpack more firmly over her shoulders, and start the long trek home.
‘Sweetie—’ Logan tapped on his daughter’s bedroom door ‘—you can’t stay locked in there for ever. And hey—’ he tried for a touch of humour ‘—I’m starving... it’s almost seven o’clock. What about that stir-fry you promised?’
No answer.
He muttered frustratedly under his breath. He’d soon caught up with Andy that afternoon, on the trail from the swimming hole, but she’d refused to listen to him. And when they’d reached the house she’d raced furiously upstairs and slammed the bedroom door in his face.
She hadn’t come out since, despite his repeated efforts to coax her to unlock the door.
He sighed, and was about to turn away, when he heard her call, sulkily, ‘The door’s not locked.’
It had been, earlier. His spirits rose a notch.
He opened the door and walked into the room.
She was sitting cross-legged on the bed, with a book spread out on her lap.
She didn’t look up.
‘Let’s clear the air,’ he said quietly, and crossed to the cushioned wicker chair by the bed. He sat down, and grasped the curved arms of the chair. ‘Andy...?’
‘What?’ She still didn’t look up, but now he could see that her eyes were red-rimmed, the lids swollen. He resisted the urge to reach out to her. She wasn’t ready for that yet; her body was rigid with hostility, every taut line of her young face screamed defiance.
‘Have I ever lied to you?’
Her lower lip jutted out, and she shrugged.
‘Please answer me.’
She picked at a scab on her knee. ‘I guess not,’ she said sulkily.
‘Yes or no?’
‘No,’ she muttered.
‘OK.’ He relaxed—a little. ‘So here’s what happened. I went to the swimming hole, alone, expecting to be there alone. I didn’t see Mrs Wynter; she must have been sunning herself on the grass at the far side of the rock. At any rate, when I was in the water, she stole my shoes and shirt...but I spotted her. I chased after her, and grabbed her...’
Andy was looking at him now, her eyes gleaming. ‘She was going to make you walk home in your bare feet?’
‘Yeah.’
He could see she was trying not to smile. ‘Go on.’
‘Well,’ he said, ‘what happened next...’ He cleared his throat.
‘The kiss.’
He met her gaze squarely. ‘That’s the hard part to explain. I was darned annoyed at her for disturbing my swim. I guess I wanted to...well, show her!’
‘Dad—’ Andy cupped her hands around her knees and fixed him with an oddly adult gaze ‘—I sometimes think you’re living in the Dark Ages. If you kissed Mrs Wynter against her will, you’ll be lucky if she doesn’t sue you for sexual harassment. That would teach you a lesson.’
She scrambled off the bed, and, tucking her arm through his, looked seriously up into his face. ‘But I don’t think she will. She probably wouldn’t want Zach Grant to know she’d been kissing anybody else. But the best thing would be for you to keep right away from her. Keep your distance, Dad. Play it safe.’
‘That’s very good advice,’ Logan muttered. ‘And I intend to follow it to the letter.’
Next morning, Sara woke around eight. She was in the kitchen, enjoying a mug of freshly brewed coffee at the kitchen table, when she heard the throb of an engine.
When she looked out of the window, she saw a luxurious silver craft coming alongside the jetty. Three people were on deck: a couple, and a fair-haired girl about Andy’s age.
A movement closer at hand drew her attention, and, turning her head, she saw Logan and his daughter walking down the beach. The teenager was wearing a backpack.
As Sara watched, the fair-haired girl leaped onto the dock and with a scream of excitement ran to greet Andy, squealing with surprise over Andy’s cropped hair. Logan, after pausing to exchange a few words with the girl, ambled on and stopped alongside the craft.
The adults chatted for a minute, and then the two girls boarded the vessel, but not before Andy had hugged Logan.
The morning was quiet, the kitchen window open, and she heard him call, ‘See y’all in a couple of days. Bye, Andy.’
‘Bye, Dad...’
It would. seem, Sara mused with a wry smile, that Andy had forgiven her father his trespasses of the previous day!