noticed that when we were packing up.”
“I buy them at garage sales. Cheap matters more to me than matchy-match.”
He chuckled.
“What’s funny?” Was he making fun of her frugality?
“Nothing.”
“Stop laughing at me.” She pretended to be miffed.
“I’m not laughing at you.”
“No?”
“None of my dishes match either. I do the very same thing. I thought matching silverware mattered to women.”
“Depends on the woman.”
“No doubt.”
She blew across the steaming spoonful of stew, but didn’t meet his gaze. Her insides felt hot and shivery, like when you have a fever, and she had no idea why. “I would have thought that since you’d been married once, you’d have things that match.”
“Naw. Shaina took the wedding gifts.”
“She didn’t leave you anything?”
“My freedom. Mismatched dishes. Small price to pay.”
“Yeah,” she said, as if she knew what she was talking about.
A long silence stretched between them. Tara felt the need to say something in order to keep from thinking too much. “You ever notice how food tastes better when it’s cooked over an open flame?”
“You’re just hungry.”
“Seriously, there’s something about the outdoors. The stars twinkling overhead. The smell of wood smoke...”
“We’re burning cornhusks.”
“The smell of cornhusk.” Balancing her bowl of stew in one hand, Tara leaned forward on her knees to poke the fire with a stick. The flame hissed, flared high. She didn’t know why she’d poked it, other than her restless need to move. It had nothing to do with the fact that Boone stirred feelings in her that no one else had ever stirred.
Liar, liar, pants on fire.
The heat was so intense that she jerked back, dropping both the stick and the bowl of stew. She gasped, and toppled backward onto Boone.
“Whoa.” He grabbed her with an arm as strong as a steel band, momentarily holding her aloft in midair.
His wounded leg was between them. She twisted sideways, struggling not to fall on it. He was doing some fancy maneuvering himself to avoid the same thing. With his arm clutched tightly around her, he rolled onto his back, pulling her flush against him. Somehow, she ended up with legs dangling off to one side, skirt hem flipped up, her butt in the air and her pelvis pressed sideways against his lower abdomen.
She was so stunned, that for a second she just lay there, trying to figure out how she had gotten herself into this predicament.
Boone’s body tensed beneath her weight and she felt something hard. Oh dear, was that...? Tara gulped.
He grew harder still. “Get off!” he hollered.
She scrambled up, spun around and sprinted toward the car, stumbling in the darkness, her cheeks burning hotly.
Fudge on a cracker! She’d given Boone an erection.
* * *
D AMMIT !
He’d already apologized to her once and it had taken everything he could muster to admit he was wrong. Asking for forgiveness felt like weakness and he was weak enough as it was with a bum leg.
But when her warm, tight body lay stretched across his he’d gotten aroused. It was a normal biological reaction. How could she blame him for something he had no control over? Was she insulted? Scared that he was going to take advantage of her? She’d run away from him. Clearly, he’d made her uncomfortable. Hell, he’d made himself uncomfortable. He didn’t like facing the fact that flaky Tara Duvall turned him on.
Boone let loose with a stronger curse word. They were still a very long way from Key West. He had to do something to smooth things over. Apologize again, if needed. He winced and struggled to his feet. He didn’t bother putting on his brace and he had to pick his way carefully over the uneven ground. In the light from the half-moon, he could make out her silhouette. She was leaning against the back of the U-Haul, her head bowed.
A spurt of alarm went through him. Was she that upset? Frig. Now he felt like a pervert.
“Tara,” he said softly