think. Until he was certain he could do both, he was silent.
âGo to bed, Charity.â
She stayed where she was, certain that if she took a step her legs would give way. He was still close enough for her to feel the heat radiating from his body. But she looked into his eyes and knew he was already out of reach.
âJust like that?â
Hurt. He could hear it in her voice, and he wished he could make himself believe she had brought it on herself. He reached for his beer but changed his mind when he saw that his hand was unsteady. Only one thing was clear. He had to get rid of her, quickly, before he touched her again.
âYouâre not the type for quick sex on the kitchen floor.â
The color that passion had brought to her cheeks faded. âNo. At least I never have been.â After taking a deep breath, she stepped forward. She believed in facing facts, even unpleasant ones. âIs that all this would have been, Roman?â
His hand curled into a fist. âYes,â he said. âWhat else?â
âI see.â She kept her eyes on his, wishing she could hate him. âIâm sorry for you.â
âDonât be.â
âYouâre in charge of your feelings, Roman, not mine. And I am sorry for you. Some people lose a leg or a hand or an eye. They either deal with that loss or become bitter. I canât see what piece of you is missing, Roman, but itâs just as tragic.â He didnât answer; she hadnât expected him to. âDonât forget the lights.â
He waited until she was gone before he fumbled for a match. He needed time to gain control of his headâand his handsâbefore he searched the office. What worried him was that it was going to take a great deal longer to gain control of his heart.
***
Nearly two hours later he hiked a mile and a half to use the pay phone at the nearest gas station. The road was quiet, the tiny village dark. The wind had come up, and it tasted of rain. Roman hoped dispassionately that it would hold off until he was back at the inn.
He placed the call, waited for the connection.
âConby.â
âDeWinter.â
âYouâre late.â
Roman didnât bother to check his watch. He knew it was just shy of 3:00 a.m. on the East Coast. âGet you up?â
âAm I to assume that youâve established yourself?â
âYeah, Iâm in. Rigging the handymanâs lottery ticket cleared the way. Arranging the flat gave me the opening. Miss Ford is . . . trusting.â
âSo we were led to believe. Trusting doesnât mean sheâs not ambitious. What have you got?â
A bad case of guilt, Roman thought as he lit a match. A very bad case. âHer rooms are clean.â He paused and held the flame to the tip of his cigarette. âThereâs a tour group in now, mostly Canadians. A few exchanged money. Nothing over a hundred.â
The pause was very brief. âThatâs hardly enough to make the business worthwhile.â
âI got a list out of the office. The names and addresses of the registered guests.â
There was another, longer pause, and a rustling sound that told Roman that his contact was searching for writing materials. âLet me have it.â
He read them off from the copy heâd made. âBlockâs the tour guide. Heâs the regular, comes in once a week for a one- or two-night stay, depending on the package.â
âVision Tours.â
âRight.â
âWeâve got a man on that end. You concentrate on Ford and her staff.â Roman heard the faint
tap-tap-tap
of Conbyâs pencil against his pad. âThereâs no way they can be pulling this off without someone on the inside. Sheâs the obvious answer.â
âIt doesnât fit.â
âI beg your pardon?â
Roman crushed the cigarette under his boot heel. âI said it doesnât fit. Iâve watched her.
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