made it roughly possible, though of course she had no doubt Richard was the father. Yes, that might work. Tell him about the abortion, that it had been his, but when Richard found out about the child, he had assumed it was his and that was why they were being divorced. That would obligate Carson to cover some of her financial obligations. Yes, she would prefer doing it that way.
If he balked, then she would bring out the big guns.
C HAPTER
    F IVE
T he chill was worse. Sweeney sat huddled in the blanket, shivering continually. She felt as if she might die from the cold and had some fun imagining the medical examinerâs perplexity at someoneâs dying of hypothermia in an eighty-degree apartment on a warm September day. She thought of going back to bed and getting under the electric blanket, but if she did that, she would have to admit she was sick, and she didnât want to do that. When the doorbell rang, she ignored it, because by staying huddled she could conserve what little heat she generated, and moving around made her even colder.
But it rang again, and again, and at last she struggled to her feet. âWhat!â she snapped as she neared the door.
There was a curiously muffled sound, and shestopped in her tracks, sufficiently city-smart not to go any closer. âWho is it?â
âRichard.â
Stunned, she stared at the wood panels. âRichard?â
âRichard Worth,â he added helpfully. She thought she could hear laughter in his voice.
She thought of not opening the door. She thought of simply walking away and pretending she hadnât said anything. The thing was, he owned the building, and even though it wasnât the ritziest place in the world, she suspected he could get a lot more in rent than what she had been paying. And right now, she couldnât afford to pay more, so it behooved her to be polite to the landlord. That was the excuse she gave herself as she fumbled with the locks, and of course it was the cold that made her fingers tremble.
He stood in the hallway with its dingy, worn carpeting. He would have looked totally out of place, in his expensive Italian suit, if it hadnât been for those stevedore shoulders and that hard, almost-craggy face. Her artistâs eye noted every detail, almost hungrily drinking them in; if she had hoped yesterday had been an aberration, the sight of him disillusioned her. Her stomach fluttered, her mouth watered just as it did when she saw cheesecake. This couldnât be a good sign.
He was smiling, but the smile quickly faded at the sight of her standing there swaddled in a blanket. His dark gaze went swiftly down her, then returned to her face. âAre you sick?â he asked in a brusque tone, stepping forward so that he crowdedher back, and that easily he was inside her apartment. He closed the door and reset the locks.
âNo, just cold.â She moved away from the dangerously close proximity to him, scowling. âWhat are you doing here?â She felt terribly off-balance; she wasnât prepared to see Richard at all, much less be alone with him in her apartment. This was her sanctuary, where she could let down the guard she always kept between herself and the rest of the world, where she could relax and paint and be herself. Closing the door behind her often felt as if she had left a ton of chains in the hallway. Here she was free, but she could be free only if she was alone.
âI came to take you to lunch.â
âI told you no yesterday afternoon.â She hugged the blanket around her, suddenly self-conscious about how she must look. She was still wearing sweats, and she hadnât brushed her hair, so she knew it was bushed around her head in a wild tangle. A long curl hung in her eyes; she pushed it back and blushed, then scowled. She didnât like the feeling of embarrassment. She couldnât remember the last time she had cared what someone thought of how she