rock.
But before she could so much as turn in his arms, heâd stepped away from her to study the recipe sheâd put on the counter.
âIt says you have to chill the dough overnight before you cut it.â
âSo weâll pop it in the freezer before we bake it, too.â
âSusan, Iâm telling you, if you start this now, youâll still be at it tomorrow afternoon.â
âNot with you helping me I wonât.â She grinned at him to hide her hurt. âYou want to mix or dump in the ingredients?â
âDump.â Michael didnât sound any more excited about that than he had about the baby. She hoped he was a little quicker at the dumping or they wouldnât get the house made.
Â
HEâD BEEN RIGHT, of course. There was no way they were going to finish her damn gingerbread house that day. Theyâd been working on it for a couple of hours already and he was still at the designing stage.
But he had to admit the idea had been a good one. He couldnât remember the last time he and Susan had laughed together like this.
âYou have flour on your nose,â he told her, reaching up to brush the dab of white away. His fingers lingered. Heâd always loved the softness of her skin, the contrast between it and his rough stubble.
âRemember that time we were fooling around in the trees outside my dorm, and Connie Fisher dumped
that bag of flour all over us?â she asked now, leaning over his shoulder as she surveyed his drawing. Heâd been sitting at the table with paper and pencil for the better part of an hour.
âShe was lucky she was up three flights,â he grumbled, remembering all right. Susan had just let him under her shirt for the first time and right before heâd had his first real handful of the breasts that had been driving him to distraction all semester, theyâd been ambushed.
And sheâd been donned the rest of the week for missing curfew. Heâd had to wait another five days to finally touch her.
Sheâd been so worth the wait....
âI think this is it.â He reined in his thoughts, not trusting himself to travel along the road theyâd taken. Which was ironic, considering the fact that sex with Susan was his whole reason for being there.
âI love the turret,â she said, smiling at the intricate drawing.
He handed her a stack of pages. âYour pattern pieces, madam.â
Taking them, she headed over to the dough sheâd rolled out on the counter and said, âThis is great, Michael. I canât wait to see the finished product.â
And because she sounded so happy with herself, neither could he.
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THE PIECES were all cut out, baked and cooling in layers in the freezer. Susan was washing the last of the dishes. It was still only seven oâclock.
Too early to go bed. Or at least, Michael amended that last thought, to go to sleep.
âIâll dry,â he said, grabbing a towel out of the drawer and moving to the sink beside Susan. She had a perfectly good dishwasher, but Susan preferred to wash the dishes by hand. Heâd long since concluded that she just liked playing in the suds.
He couldnât count the number of times heâd seen her standing at that very same sink, her arms elbow-deep in warm sudsy water. Or the number of times heâd stood beside her, drying the dishes as she washed, wanting her.
He could count the number of times it had happened since their divorce. Not once.
âWhy is it that we always seem to eat out when I come to town?â
Shrugging, Susan focused on the task at hand. âGuess itâs just easier.â
Maybe. Or had she been keeping a distance between them? A distance he hadnât even noticed until now.
Her arm accidentally touched his side. âSorry.â
âNo problem.â He continued to dry. And to watch the curve of her neck. She always shivered when he kissed her there. And tightened
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