for a sniff. "That's some bad face you've got there, Henry."
Obviously torn between terror and delight, Henry inched his snout forward, took some testing whiffs. His tail whapped the back of Laine's knees before he collapsed, rolled and exposed his belly for a rub.
"He has no pride," Laine stated.
"Doesn't need any." Max became the newest love of Henry's life by giving the soft belly a vigorous rub. "Nothing like a dog, is there?"
First there'd been lust, she thought, naturally enough. Then interest and several layers of attraction. She'd been prepared-or had been trying to prepare-to shuffle all those impulses aside and be sensible.
Now, seeing him with her dog, she felt the warming around the heart that signaled-uh-oh-personal affection. Add that to lust and attraction and a woman, even a sensible woman, was sunk. "No, there really isn't."
"Always had a dog at home. Can't keep one in New York, not the way I travel around. Doesn't seem right." His hand slid up to rub Henry's throat and send the dog into ecstasy.
Laine very nearly moaned.
"That's the downside of city living for me," Max added. "How'd they get around him?"
"I'm sorry?"
He gave Henry a last thumping pat, then straightened. "I heard about the break-in. Big dog like this should've given them some trouble."
Down, girl, Laine ordered herself. "Afraid not. One, he was shut in the mudroom. That's his place when I'm out. And second, well..." She looked down at Henry, who was slavishly licking Max's hand. "He doesn't exactly have a warrior's heart."
"You okay?"
"As good as it gets, I suppose, the morning after you come home and find somebody's trashed your house and stolen your property."
"You're pretty secluded back here. I don't guess anyone saw anything."
"I doubt it. Vince, the police chief, will ask, but I'm the only house back on this lane."
"Yeah, I met the chief. Another reason I came by was to make sure you didn't think I asked you to dinner to get you out of the house so this could happen."
"Well, of course not. Why would..." She followed the dots. "Vince. I hope he didn't make you uncomfortable."
"It's his job. And now I see I've put the same suspicion in your head."
"No, not..." But she was trying it on. "Not really. It's just been a very strange week, I think I've dealt with Vince twice on a professional level since I moved here. Now it's been twice in a matter of days. He must've come by your hotel room this morning. I'm sorry."
"Just routine. But coming home and finding your house has been burgled isn't." He reached out, touched her cheek. "I was worried about you."
The warmth pumped up a few degrees. She told herself it wasn't a good fit-Willy Young and Max Gannon in league. And that if Max was of the ilk, she'd know.
Like, she believed, recognized like.
"I'm okay. Jenny and Angie will work the shop today while I put the house back into shape." She gestured toward the living room. "I've barely made a dent. Good thing I like to shop, because that'll be stage two."
He stepped around her, looking into the room himself.
It could be taken for a spate of vandalism accompanying a burglary. But to Max's eyes it looked like what it was: a fast, nasty search. And if they'd gotten what they were after, he didn't think Laine would be calmly clearing up the debris and talking about shopping.
Nobody was that cool.
On the tail of that thought, he imagined her coming home alone, in the dark, and opening her house to this. Small wonder she had shadows under her eyes and the pale look of a woman who'd spent a sleepless night.
"They did a number on you," he murmured.
"Not the usual thing in the Gap. When I lived in Philadelphia, I worked with a woman who went home one night, found her apartment broken into. They cleaned her out and spray-painted obscenities on the walls."
He looked back at her. "So it could be worse?"
"It can always be worse. Listen, I've put the kitchen back together and made a quick morning run to the store so there's
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