“I can’t believe this. Several million sex-starved men in Virginia and I find the only one with scruples. Unbelievable.” She frowned. “And I’m not delirious, darn it. Surely you’ve been propositioned before.”
His lips quirked. “You don’t strike me as the kind of woman who goes in for casual sex. Is this about almost dying?”
She ground her teeth. “No, dammit. I said I hadn’t been in love, not that I haven’t had sex. I’ve had sex . . . lots of sex . . . great sex.”
He grinned and remained silent.
She threw up her hands. “How hard is this to understand? You’re here. I’m here. We can’t leave. Why not enjoy it?” She paused, clearly struck by an unpleasant notion. “You’re not a priest, are you?”
He chuckled, shoving his hands in his pockets. “I’m not a priest.”
“Believe me, Grant, I feel fine—well, maybe a little tired, but that’s to be expected.”
He shook his head, unsure if he was trying to convince her or himself. “You’re off balance from coming so close to . . . well, you know.” He couldn’t say it out loud again. The thought of Maddy lying dead in a snowdrift made him feel sick.
Her expression cleared. “If you think this is about that whole dying-without-love thing, you can rest easy. I’m not asking you to be my soulmate. This is about sex. . . two adults enjoying carnal pleasure.”
She said that last part with a defiant toss of her head. He grinned, pretty damn sure this intriguing woman was not really so cavalier about sex. Despite her question that tested his self-control to the limit, he couldn’t help but believe this was not her usual style.
He doggedly changed the subject. “I want to hear about Maddy the novelist.”
Her smile told him he wasn’t off the hook, not by a long shot. “What do you want to know?”
“The usual. How did you get started? When did you know you wanted to be a writer?”
She perched on the arm of the sofa. “I always knew I wanted to write. My great uncle was a fairly well-known mystery writer in the sixties. By the time I was a preteen he wasn’t publishing much anymore, but he would let me read all of his books. Pretty inappropriate for a twelve-year-old, let me tell you. But I devoured them. I majored in journalism in college, but after a stint as a reporter during my senior year, I realized I wasn’t cut out for just the facts, ma’am. I was lucky. I won a couple of fiction competitions. And one of my professors had a relative who was an editor. He got my first manuscript read, and the rest is history.” She cocked her head. “Now can we discuss sex?”
He glanced at his watch, refusing to be drawn in again. “It’s late, Maddy. You need sleep. We’ll talk about this tomorrow. I’ll bunk down in here and you can have my bed.”
“No way.” Her response was adamant.
He raised his eyebrows. Was she really going to offer to share his bed? His noble intentions would carry him only so far.
She waved a hand. “You’re huge. I’ll be fine on the sofa. No arguments.” Her outthrust jaw defied him.
He shrugged. “Fine. I’ll get some bedding.”
A half hour later she was tucked in a nest of blankets with the lights turned out. He added more wood to the fire and replaced the screen. “I’ll tend to it during the night,” he said. “We can’t afford to let it go out in case we lose power.”
He couldn’t read her face. The firelight cast heavy shadows, and she had pulled the covers up to her chin. He stood, irresolute, reluctant to walk away from her. “Are you comfortable?” he asked, his voice husky with the effort not to say all those other, less-appropriate things that were buzzing in his brain.
Her nod was barely visible. “Yes.”
He approached the couch, his feet at odds with his brain. He sat on the edge of the coffee table. “How do you feel?”
“Fine.” Her voice was sulky.
He leaned forward and stroked her cheek. Her skin was soft and smooth. He wanted her with a driving urgency that had nothing to do with her artless invitation and everything to do with the warmth she had brought into his home. And he hadn’t even realized he was cold. Such sudden emotion was suspect. He wasn’t in the habit of jumping into relationships, sexual or otherwise.
But Maddy touched him deeply, made him yearn for things he had given up on a long time ago. He slipped to his knees and knelt over her. “Can I kiss you good night?” he whispered.
Her eyes were dark and mysterious. “I think that was pretty much included in my earlier blanket offer.” Humor laced her unsteady response.
He felt his pulse jump and gallop. Part of him—most of him—was still ready to take what was offered and consequences be damned. He brushed her lips. “I’m glad I found you.”
Her tongue peeked out to meet his. “Technically, I found you,” she muttered. She moaned as he moved down to nibble the underside of her jaw.
He didn’t stop her when she shoved the heavy blankets aside. “I’m hot,” she complained.
“Hell, me, too,” he groaned as his hands slipped under her shirt and skated north. His palms closed over warm, plump feminine curves. He started to shake.
She arched her back, murmuring incoherent pleas and demands. He pushed her top out of the way and sucked one of her nipples deep into his mouth. Her response was electric. She jerked and cried out as an orgasm ripped through her body.
He laid his head on her shoulder and stroked her hair as she quieted.
Her voice when she spoke was a tiny thread of sound. “Well, that was embarrassing. I guess we know now who’s the sex-starved one.”
“Not embarrassing, Maddy. Amazing. Do you have any idea how much I want you?”
She turned on her side and raised up on her elbow. “Then why?” she asked, her cat’s eyes gleaming with confusion.
He toyed with a curl that had escaped the rubber band and lay tumbled against her creamy breast. “We have several days. Let’s get to know each other. Then, if you’re still of the same mind . . . well . . .”
“You’ll jump my bones?” she asked hopefully.
He shook his head. “You really are a brat, aren’t you? Go to sleep, honey. We’ll see what tomorrow brings.”
* * *
Maddy lay awake for a long time, watching the dancing flames. It should have felt strange to be here in unfamiliar surroundings. But instead it felt safe, warm. Here in Grant’s cozy cabin she could ignore the shambles her personal life had become. With her parents acting like children and her last boyfriend a distant memory, facing the holidays had been more than she could bear.
Now fate and Mother Nature had given her a reprieve, and she intended to make the most of it. Grant Monroe was kind and gentle and so sexy he made her ache. He was also apparently unattached. Her brazen invitation had shocked her as much as it had Grant. But she didn’t regret it. Who could blame her for stealing this little slice of heaven? She closed her eyes and sighed. Van Gogh lay on top of her feet, the dog’s weight and warmth a comforting presence. For the moment, one simple, wonderful moment, life was perfect.
* * *
Grant slept fitfully, waking every hour or so to tend the fire and to check on his charge. She slept deeply, the lines of exhaustion still etched on her face. He sent up a prayer of gratitude for her safety. She said he had saved her life, but she really had saved her own. Only her dogged courage had given her the strength to make it as far as she had. She could so easily have died.
He touched her occasionally, just to reassure himself that she was real. He came to the cabin seeking answers. And Maddy dropped into his lap. What did it mean? He wasn’t much of a believer in fate, but life was funny sometimes. He’d known Maddy less than a day, but already she had a hold on his heart. Maybe because of the dramatic way they met. Maybe because she was the kind of woman he had been looking for, deep in some unacknowledged part of his psyche.
He snorted. Holy hell. He’d need a shrink if this kept up. He brushed a butterfly kiss across her lips, careful not to wake her. Whatever the reason,
Maddy was his . . . at least for the next few days. What was that old saying? If you saved a life it belonged to you? He would gladly take credit for rescuing her if it meant she was tied to him in some way. He might not have all the answers yet, but he would soon.
And in the meantime, he would do his best not to take advantage of her vulnerability. She was hurting from her parents’ divorce, feeling lost and alone, and on top of that, she had survived a dangerous ordeal that could have ended her life. She was off balance, emotionally overwrought. Only the lowest kind of worm would agree to her artless invitation. Heck, by morning she would probably have changed her mind. He wondered why that thought didn’t give him the least bit of satisfaction.
* * *
Sometime before dawn the storm finally blew itself out, leaving twenty-two inches of pristine, powdery white snow. He took Van Gogh out early, using the back door, so Maddy could sleep on.
By nine-thirty he was getting a little worried. He shook her shoulder. “Maddy, honey . . . You about ready to wake up? I’ve got bacon and eggs and pancakes almost done.”
Her face scrunched up and she pulled the blankets completely over her head. “Go away.”
He grinned. Clearly his houseguest wasn’t a morning person. “That’s not what you said last night.” He chuckled, sliding his hand beneath the mound of covers to tickle her belly.
She yelped and uttered a word that was not at all ladylike. “I’m liking you less and less, Monroe.”
He waved a steaming cup of coffee near the bump that was her head. “Hot coffee, no waiting.”
She struggled to a sitting position, her hair a riot of auburn corkscrews. “Give it to me.”
He surrendered the mug without protest and watched amazed as she drained the contents in short order. “What? You have an asbestos-lined mouth?”
She flopped against the back of the sofa, nodding. “I don’t do mornings very well. Caffeine’s my salvation.”
“I’ll make a note of that.”
Suddenly she remembered to be shy with him. Her face went beet red and she flapped her hands at him. “Get lost. Scram. I look a fright.”
He threw the bedding to one side and scooped her into his lap, nuzzling the top of her head. “You’re rumpled,” he corrected. “It’s a good look on you.”
He tipped her backward over his arm and found her mouth. She tasted like coffee and cream and sweet, warm woman. He explored her mouth with his tongue, sliding one hand beneath her to trace her spine. His cock stiffened immediately, and he knew the exact moment she realized it.
She froze, panting slightly, her eyes cloudy. “You’re hard,” she muttered.
He nodded ruefully. “You seem to have that effect on me.” She wiggled her bottom and he groaned. “Easy, baby.”
She nipped his bottom lip. “Can I touch you?” she asked, her voice and face entirely serious.
“What about breakfast?” he asked weakly, struggling to survive.
She was already wriggling around to gain access to his now-constricting jeans. “It’s overrated.”
She lowered his zipper and every ounce of blood in his body rushed to his groin. Her small, talented hands slid past his boxers with startling ease. When her fingers closed around his aching cock, he shivered. She stroked him gently, murmuring words he was too far gone to understand.
When he managed once to open his eyes, he saw her staring raptly at his genitals, her eyes big and her lips wet where she had licked them. Such unabashed admiration did wonders for a man’s ego.
He groaned, barely remembering his resolve. “Enough, little witch. It’s time to eat.”
She scraped a fingernail down his shaft. “I’m ready if you are.”
He jerked her hand out of his pants. “I’m going to the kitchen,” he said through clenched teeth. “I expect you to join me there in three minutes or less.”
* * *
Maddy sighed as she made a trip down the hall to the bathroom. Just her luck. She finally decided to spice up her sex life, and she picked a man bent on protecting her from herself. It was just too depressing. But as she glanced in the mirror, she couldn’t help smiling at her reflection.
Look at her. Out of control hair, no makeup, pale skin, negligible curves . . . and Grant Monroe wanted her. True, he hadn’t done anything about it yet, but a man’s body didn’t lie. That impressive erection was because of her.
She washed up rapidly, pausing long enough to use a little of her lip gloss. Some war paint never hurt. When she entered the kitchen, Grant was at the stove, his posture unnaturally rigid.
Guilt pinched her. She really needed to back off. She didn’t mind making the first move with a guy, but she had invaded Grant’s home, and they were both trapped for the duration. He might even have a significant other tucked away somewhere. That thought made her stomach churn.
She had to know. “Do you have a girlfriend?” She blurted it out with an appalling lack of finesse.
He turned around, holding a plate of pancakes and eggs. His brows were drawn together in a frown. “No, of course not. Did you really think I’d be fooling around with you if I were otherwise committed?”
She shrugged. “Men do.”
“Well, not this man.” He set down the plate with a thunk and returned for the bacon. “If that’s the kind of men you’ve been going out with, it’s no wonder you’re a little cynical about love.”
“You said yourself that you’ve never been in love.”
His face got a funny look. “That doesn’t mean I haven’t been with women I respected and admired.”
“Oh.” She fell silent, suddenly envisioning a stream of beautiful, sexy women entertaining Grant Monroe. They probably all had big boobs . . . like the one in the picture. Her confidence slipped a notch.
He joined her at the table and they ate mostly in silence. At one point she leaned down to give Van Gogh a chunk of pancake, and she groaned as her muscles protested from the abuse she’d given them the day before.
Grant’s eyes sharpened. “What’s wrong?”
“I’m sore, that’s all.”
“There’s ibuprofen in the cabinet to the left of the stove.”
She wrinkled her nose. “I thought you might offer to give me a massage. Strictly medicinal, of course.”
He carried their dishes to the sink. “I’m not falling for that. My mother warned me about women like you.”
She grinned, enjoying his dry humor. “Your loss.”
He glanced out the window. The sun was out and the snow was so bright it hurt to look at it. “I need to chop some wood. Can you entertain yourself for awhile?”
“I think I can manage. I might alphabetize your spices.”
“Won’t take long. I think it’s pretty much salt, cinnamon and pepper.”
“Spoken like a typical bachelor.”
* * *
When Grant started chopping wood, he realized he was smiling. Maddy’s sass and wit made him laugh. She had bounced back incredibly quickly from a bad experience. Her sexuality was an innate part of her personality, and he admitted to himself that he wouldn’t be able to resist her for long, nor did he want to. Any man of his acquaintance would jump at the chance to have a few days of uncomplicated sex with a fascinating woman.
But he found himself wanting to prove to her that love did exist. Which was really pretty damn funny since he had no personal knowledge of such emotion. Maddy was the kind of woman who deserved to be loved. She was smart and strong and full of life. If she hadn’t found love, it wasn’t her fault. The men in her orbit must be idiots, or at the very least blind.
The back door opened and his heartbeat jumped, but it was only Van Gogh lumbering out to see him. Maddy must have taken pity on the dog’s whining. Van Gogh loved to be outside. But the deep snow was giving her problems.
Grant used his arm to clear the drifts off the top of the picnic table and gently lifted the dog so she could bask in the sun. The temperature was in the midtwenties, but there was no wind, and th
e sun felt remarkably warm.
He returned to splitting logs, relishing the strain on his muscles and the sheer physical labor. In forty-five minutes he had more than enough wood, but he kept working. He was sweating now, so he shrugged out of his heavy coat. His plan was to make himself tired enough to forget how horny he was.
He and Maddy might end up in bed, but he wanted to make sure she was recovered, both physically and emotionally, from her frightening experience . . . And in all fairness, he needed time to explain his own situation. He had a few secrets of his own to confess.
* * *
When he returned to the house, everything was quiet. He found Maddy in the living room, but she never even looked up when he entered. She was sitting cross-legged in one of the big armchairs, working on her laptop. He made a fair amount of noise, carrying in wood and adding logs to the fire, but her eyes remained glued to the small computer screen.
She had a pencil tucked behind her ear, and a couple of notebooks lay scattered on the coffee table. He sat down across from her and glanced at his watch. It was exactly thirty-two minutes before she stopped typing and realized he was there.
He grinned as she visibly shook off whatever world she had been in and returned to the here and now. He cocked his head. “I take it things are going well?”
She nodded, her eyes gleaming with excitement. “I worked out the whole murder scenario while I was walking yesterday. I found a steep part of the trail over a deep ravine where I could conceivably shove a body off and have it disappear. I had already researched how and where to give a fatal knife wound between the ribs. So it’s all coming together.”
“How many books have you published?”
“Three so far. This will be my fourth.”
His eyes widened. “Wow. You’re pretty young to have done so well.”
Her lips quirked. “How old do you think I am?”
He shrugged uneasily. Discussing a woman’s age was never a smart thing to do. “I don’t know . . . twenty-four. . . twenty-five?”
By Firelight Page 3