Bingo. Devlin turned away so she couldn’t see his face and led the way through the door.
They took a cab to the law school, which was Angela’s custom. Devlin was always amazed that New Yorkers rarely drove; in the Midwest kids were driving tractors at thirteen and had licenses before they had cars. Angela mentioned casually that her uncle had a limo garaged nearby if Devlin ever wanted to use it. Devlin stared out the window and observed to himself that crime did pay.
Angela’s first class was Trusts and Estates, which met at nine. They got a quick bite in the cafeteria and then Devlin followed her down the same hall he’d traveled the day he’d seen her crying in the library. She took a seat in the back so that Devlin could be as inconspicuous as possible, but Angela didn’t miss the once-over he received from her female classmates when he entered the room behind her. She had no friends in this group. It was a second year class that she’d missed taking because of a scheduling problem, but she knew that she would have to explain him when she encountered some of her closer acquaintances later in the day.
As soon as the professor started in, Devlin pulled a paperback from his pocket and began to read. Angela tried to ignore him and concentrate on what the student giving the brief was saying, but this proved to be a difficult task. It was fortunate she listened well enough to keep her head above water, because her name came up in the lottery to give the class the facts of the second case.
Angela looked down at her notebook and groaned. The case was a nightmare, horribly complicated and impossible to explain, concerning a botched will that wound up giving the testator’s money to all the wrong people. To make matters worse, when Devlin heard her name called, he set aside his book and looked at her with interest, waiting for her to speak.
Angela did the best she could, ignoring the knowing grins of her classmates. Professor Walensky was in one of his “cannibals roasting the missionary” moods, and she knew she had just jumped into the pot. Everyone else in the room wore a better-you-than-me look, and a dead silence fell as she drew to a conclusion.
“So, Miss Patria,” Professor Walensky said, “what, in your opinion, was the main problem with this will?”
“The lawyer who drew it up violated the rule against perpetuities, and so the man’s wife inherited everything, even though he had tried to leave his estate to his son and his niece.”
Walensky nodded slowly, and then went on to tear apart everything she’d said, line by line, questioning each conclusion she’d drawn from the facts. Angela waited; this was typical. She knew that she was right, but Walensky had a way of making everything you’d said sound so outrageous that he convinced you the most reasonably thought out premise was a bunch of garbage by the time he finished.
“And so,” Walensky concluded, “don’t you think, Miss Patria, that the client in this case should have made a different will?”
“No.”
Walensky’s eyebrows shot up into his white hair. “No?”
“I think he should have hired a different lawyer. The attorney screwed it up; there was nothing wrong with the testator’s idea.”
“And how do you propose to avoid making such a mistake yourself when you are in practice?” Walensky baited her.
Angela’s patience snapped. This old curmudgeon had had her on the rack for ten minutes now, Devlin was listening to every word, and her classmates were breathing prayers of thanksgiving that this godawful case had not fallen to them.
“By doing nothing but divorces,” Angela fired back, and waited for the bomb to fall.
Walensky’s face went blank with surprise, and the group held its collective breath. Then he started to laugh, and, relieved, the class joined in with him.
“Touché, Miss Patria, touché,” Walensky said. “I suppose I have tormented you long enough today. If you will give your attention to the blackboard, ladies and gentlemen, I will demonstrate how to avoid the pitfalls of the rule in a case such as this.”
Angela waited until Walensky was writing and then risked a glance at Devlin.
He was smiling. Slowly, carefully, he formed a circle with his thumb and forefinger, and then went back to his book.
* * * *
Angela and Devlin returned to the brownstone in late afternoon to find Josie making dinner in the kitchen. Angela felt that the day had not been a triumph; she had introduced Devlin to her friends as a visiting “cousin,” a ploy that had met with a conspicuous lack of success. He looked like nobody’s cousin, and nobody believed it. Angela told the truth to only one person, her friend Holly, who knew all about the threats on Angela’s life and the plan to hire a bodyguard. Holly had eyed Devlin warily, her gaze traveling to the strap of the shoulder holster just visible beneath his jacket and then back to Angela’s face.
“Aren’t you afraid of him?” Holly had whispered when Devlin was out of earshot, walking a few paces behind them.
“Why? Do you think I should be?”
“I don’t know. He looks . . . mean.”
Angela sighed. “Holly, I don’t care if he looks like Vlad the Impaler as long as he keeps me from getting killed.”
Holly, who was very happily married, glanced over her shoulder. “He’s kind of attractive though, isn’t he, if you like the type.”
“What type?”
“Rough and ready, you know what I’m getting at. Great body, too.”
Angela had to laugh. “I thought you just said I should be afraid of him.”
“Exactly,” Holly replied with satisfaction, shooting her a triumphant glance.
Angela let it pass, understanding perfectly.
The conversation had done nothing to improve her spirits, and now she was tired from a long day as well.
Josie greeted Angela with a hug, and then surveyed her companion.
“Josie, this is Mr. Devlin, the private detective Harold hired to . . . take care of me. Devlin, my housekeeper and friend, Josie Clinton.”
Devlin stepped forward to shake hands, and then excused himself, going off toward the guest room. Angela waited for Josie’s reaction, but none came. The older woman continued to baste the roast she was browning and then shut the oven door.
“Well?” Angela prompted.
Josie looked at her.
“What do you think of him?”
Josie removed the potholder she was wearing and dropped it on the counter.
“I think he’s not exactly what your uncle Frank had in mind.”
Josie was a woman of few words. “Yes, I know,” Angela said unhappily.
“But he looks perfectly capable of taking care of you, himself, and the entire population of Cleveland, Ohio,” Josie added. “I have to give him that.”
“I wonder how Harold Simmons came up with him,” Angela mused, almost to herself.
Josie snorted. No love was lost between the housekeeper and Patria’s attorney.
“I can’t imagine,” Josie said sourly. “The workings of that shyster’s mind are a mystery to me.”
“How’s Maria?” Angela asked.
Maria was Josie’s daughter. “She has the flu, but she’ll live,” Josie replied shortly. She glanced at her watch. “Dinner’s in ten minutes.” She jerked her head in the direction of the corridor. “Is he eating with you?”
“I guess so, if he wants to,” Angela answered. “Harold said room and board would be part of the arrangement.”
“I’ll have to go shopping tomorrow then,” Josie said. “We’ll be needing more food. With that size, he must have an appetite on him.”
Angela looked at the floor dejectedly.
Josie saw her expression and put a hand comfortingly on Angela’s shoulder.
“Don’t look like that, baby,” she said. “They’ll get whoever is causing this trouble, and it will all be over soon.”
Angela nodded and went up to her room to change.
* * * *
Devlin waited a week before he started to search the house. Every day he accompanied Angela during her activities, an
d every night he planned the most efficient method of casing her home. He’d made careful note of the floor plan when she’d shown him around, and saw that the door to her uncle’s study was locked and bolted. He’d expected nothing less, and had come prepared with a supply of burglary tools to break into the room.
But he wanted to check out the library on the second floor first. It was down the hall from Angela’s room, and had several desks and cubbyholes where documents might be stored.
It was two in the morning on a Thursday night when he crept up the carpeted staircase and paused outside Angela’s door. He turned the knob soundlessly, and pushed inward. A shaft of moonlight from the window revealed Angela sleeping in the bed, her hair spread upon the pillow, her hands clutching at the bedspread as if it were her security blanket. The filmy nightgown she wore revealed her creamy shoulders and the shadow of her breasts beneath the cloth. Devlin looked for long moments, drinking in the sight. Then he shut the door, leaning against the wall in the corridor, closing his eyes.
The wave of desire passed and he swallowed, taking a breath. He would have to avoid such glimpses in the time ahead of him; they did not help to strengthen his resolve.
He moved on to the library and entered the book- lined room, turning on the desk lamp and shutting the door. Quietly, methodically, he examined the shelves along the walls with his practiced eye. Time passed and became meaningless; he was deep into his task and unaware of the minutes slipping by.
He was standing with a book in his hands, flipping through the pages, when the door opened behind him. The overhead light switched on, suddenly blinding him.
“What are you doing in here?” Angela’s voice said.
Chapter 2
Devlin started violently, and his arm slammed into a delicate glass figurine standing on the desk at his elbow. It landed on the hardwood floor with a splintering crash, smashing into pieces.
Angela gave a cry of dismay and rushed to pick up the shards lying at the edge of the rug. “I said, what are you doing in here?” she asked again, curiously.
“I couldn’t sleep and came up here to get something to read,” Devlin answered, indicating the book he held. He moved to assist her and Angela drew back, slicing her hand on the fragment clasped in her fingers. Blood seeped from the wound.
Devlin dropped the book and grabbed her hand, lifting it to his lips. He sucked gently, his mouth warm and soothing on the abraded flesh.
Angela swayed toward him, mesmerized by the sensuous feel of his lips on her skin. Then she suddenly snatched her hand away, holding it behind her back.
“Stop that!” she cried. “What are you doing?”
“I was trying to get out any fragments embedded in the cut,” he answered. “You don’t want an infection.” He reached out again, waiting, and Angela slowly replaced her injured hand in his.
Devlin ran his index finger gently over the wound, and then once more pressed her hand to his mouth. His gaze met hers over her imprisoned fingers.
“Don’t,” she whispered, her eyes closing.
His lips traveled to the sensitive skin of her wrist, leaving an impression of wet heat.
“Please,” she managed, pulling back from him, forcing herself to look at him.
His eyes questioned her silently.
“You’re playing with me and I can’t bear it,” she responded.
Devlin’s fists clenched at his sides. “Is that what you think?”
“What am I supposed to think?” Angela asked wretchedly.
Devlin’s eyes turned cold. “I see,” he said evenly. He gestured to the broken ornament. “Please find out how much that cost so I can pay for it.”
“That’s not necessary,” Angela replied stiffly.
“Just give me the bill,” he insisted tightly.
“All right,” she said distractedly. “I’ll look it up on the inventory in my uncle’s safe.”
“Fine.”
Angela turned to go. “Maybe you’d better just leave that pile of broken glass for Josie,” she said. “I don’t want you to get cut the same way I did. It happens easily.” She paused on the threshold. “And Mr. Devlin, I would advise you not to misunderstand my behavior tonight. I have no intention of providing a pleasant alternative to reading in order to make your evenings more enjoyable. I realize that this assignment must be dull for you, but I will not be your in-house entertainment.” Angela fled, running down the hall to her room and flinging herself on her bed. It was several minutes before her heartbeat returned to normal, and then she sat up, pressing her fingertips to her temples. It was an effort to refrain from crying.
Why had she been so mean to him? He hadn’t done anything to deserve her deliberately nasty remarks. Almost nothing made Angela feel worse than the awareness of her own cruelty. And in this case, she knew that the real reason for her outburst did not bear close examination.
She’d turned on him because in those moments when his mouth caressed her hand she’d wanted him so badly that it terrified her. All week long the feeling had been building, and she’d tried to ignore it, but the sudden, unexpected closeness in the library had unnerved her. Scared, overwhelmed, she’d attacked him in order to drive him away. Who was he, after all? A stranger of short acquaintance, a man she hardly knew. And yet she was drawn to him as she had never been to another.
Angela folded her arms across her stomach and bent forward, seeing again the look on his face when she’d told him that she would not be his on the job distraction. That arrow had struck home; he had tried to keep his features impassive, but she had detected the slightest flinching, as if from a precisely aimed blow. She squeezed her eyes shut, shaking her head. It was ridiculous to make a big deal about his actions; all he’d really done was kiss her hand. But her response had exceeded the stimulus to such an extent that she’d been forced to pretend an indignation she didn’t feel. It had been a way to place Devlin in the wrong, an excuse to hurt him, and she had seized upon it like a beggar snatching up a found coin.
Angela raised her hand before her eyes and examined the cut, which she’d bandaged hastily with a wad of tissue from the hall stand. It was still bleeding slightly but didn’t look too bad. She sat dispiritedly on the edge of the bed and wondered if she should go downstairs and apologize to him.
No. That would be a mistake. It would be better to avoid him whenever she could.
Angela got up and slipped a cassette into her stereo player. She lay back down on the bed, listening to the pounding drums and letting the music carry her away.
Tomorrow Philip was returning from Tokyo. Maybe he would be able to distract her from her preoccupation with Devlin.
Angela turned her face into the crook of her arm.
She wasn’t too hopeful about it.
* * * *
Devlin threw himself onto the bed in his room and punched his pillow savagely. He had really blown that one. He hadn’t heard her until she was standing in the room with him. His reaction to Angela was messing up his head, making him careless. Thank God she’d found him in the library and not in her uncle’s study.
What was she doing roaming around the house at that hour anyway? She’d been fast asleep when he checked on her. Devlin groaned aloud at his monumental stupidity. One more incident like this one and he’d be turning in his union card and taking up bird watching.
He rolled over and stared at the ceiling. Damn but she had him rattled. Instead of planning strategy, he wound up spending much of his time fantasizing about her. And her boyfriend was due back in the morning, which Devlin hardly considered good news. The guy had called twice long distance, and a package had arrived from him on Tuesday. It had contained a jade and enamel earring box that was doubtless as priceless as the trinket Devlin had just trashed upstairs.
That thought led him to consider Angela’s parting speech. What the hell had that been about? All right, he’d lost control of himself and gone a little far, but he knew that something more than simple annoyance with his boldness had ca
used her pique. She could have just dismissed him coldly, but she had been really upset, her reaction out of proportion to the provocation. She’d acted as if he were expecting her to entertain him, and he knew full well that he’d worked very hard to avoid giving her that impression. He’d been struggling every damn minute since he came into her house to overcome his desires, and one lapse didn’t justify that lecture, which was oddly out of character. What, in short, was going on in her mind?
Music began on the floor above him, soft and low, but with an underlying sensual vibration that thrummed in the walls and rattled the glassware on his dresser.
Devlin smiled to himself.
For such a demure young lady, she listened to some pretty sexy tunes.
* * * *
In the morning they ran together as usual and returned to eat Josie’s breakfast without exchanging ten words. Devlin had a piece of toast and a cup of coffee, and then left the kitchen with a quiet, “Thanks, Mrs. Clinton.” Angela looked after him, playing with her blueberry muffin, breaking it into sections and distributing the crumbs on her plate. Finally she pushed the dish away and slid out of her chair, going to the coffee pot to freshen her cup.
“All right,” Josie said behind her, rinsing out a glass, “what’s wrong with Brett?”
Angela turned to look at Josie curiously. She had noticed a subtle change in the housekeeper’s attitude toward Devlin during the time he’d been with them. She’d been wary and distant at first, but his understated courtesy and deference to her wishes had gone far to win Josie. He wasn’t overtly charming as much as direct and straightforward, which suited Josie just fine. Angela had a sneaking suspicion that the older woman liked him.
“We had a fight last night,” Angela answered.
“About what?”
“About nothing. I blew something out of proportion, and I guess he’s miffed about it.” She got up and lifted a stack of folded laundry from the counter. The sweatshirt Devlin had loaned to her was on top of the pile. She carried the clothes into the hall, where he was, as usual, reading the newspaper.
“Josie laundered this for you,” Angela said, handing it to him.
Men of Intrgue A Trilogy Page 51