licked his face. On two short, deep barks she bunched her muscles and would have given Nell the same treatment if Zack hadnât blocked her.
âThis is Lucy. Sheâs friendly, but mannerless. Down, Lucy.â
Lucy got down, her entire body wagging now. Then, obviously unable to control her joy and affection, she leaped on Zack again.
âSheâs two,â he explained, firmly pushing her down and shoving her butt to the ground with his hand. âBlack Lab. Iâm told they mellow out some when theyâre older.â
âSheâs beautiful.â Nell stroked Lucyâs head, and at the first touch the dog collapsed on the ground and rolled over, belly up.
âNo pride, either,â Zack began, then looked surprised when Nell just hunkered down and sent Lucy into ecstasy by rubbing her belly with both hands.
âYou donât need pride when youâre beautiful, do you, Lucy? Oh, thereâs nothing like a big, beautiful dog, is there? I alwaysâoh!â
In a delirium of pleasure, Lucy rolled, scrambled, and knocked Nell flat on her back. Zack was fast, but not quite fast enough to keep her from being leaped on and licked.
âJesus, Lucy. No! Hey, Iâm sorry.â Zack shoved at the dog and lifted Nell to her feet one-handed. âYou okay? Did she hurt you?â
âNo. Iâm fine.â Sheâd had the wind knocked out of her, but that was only part of the reason for breathlessness. He was brushing at her while the dog sat, head down, tail cautiously thumping. He was, Nell noted, frustrated and concerned. But not angry.
âYou didnât hit your head, did you? Damn dog weighs almost as much as you do. Banged your elbow a little,â he added, then realized she was actually giggling. âWhatâs so funny?â
âNothing, really. Itâs just sweet the way sheâs pretending to look ashamed. Sheâs obviously terrified of you.â
âYeah, I take a bat to her twice a week whether she needs it or not.â He ran his hands lightly up and down Nellâs arms. âSure youâre okay?â
âYes.â It struck her then that they were now standing very close, almost embracing. And that his hands were on her, and her skin was much too warm from them. âYes,â she said again and took a deliberate step in retreat. âNo harm done.â
âYouâre sturdier than you look.â There were long, lean muscles in those arms, he noted. Heâd already admired the ones in her legs. âCome on inside,â he said. âNot you,â he added, pointing at the dog. âYouâre banished.â
He scooped Nellâs shoes up from the ground and walked toward a wide porch. Curious, and unable to think of an excuse not to follow, Nell went through the screened door he opened and into a big, bright, messy kitchen.
âItâs the maidâs decade off.â Comfortable in his own clutter, he set her shoes on the floor and went tothe refrigerator. âCanât offer you homemade lemonade, but weâve got some iced tea.â
âThatâs fine, thanks. Itâs a wonderful kitchen.â
âWe use it mostly for heating up takeout.â
âThatâs a shame.â There were acres of granite-toned counters, and wonderful rough-hewn cabinets with leaded-glass fronts. A generous double sink with a window over it offered a view of the inlet and the sea.
Plenty of storage and work space, she mused. With a little organization and a bit of imagination, it would be a marvelous . . .
We? Heâd said âwe,â she realized. Was he married? Sheâd never thought of that, never considered the possibility. Not that it mattered, of course, but . . .
Heâd flirted with her. She may have been out of practice and short on experience, but she knew when a man was flirting.
âYouâve got a lot of thoughts going on inside that head at one
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