come back to him in emotional turmoil and rashly ask to do just that?
It made no sense at all.
He had always confused her, she thought as she turned restlessly in his bed. He had always been able to make her ignore her own common sense. Now that she was sleepingâor trying toâalone, her frustration was tempered by gratitude that he understood her better than she understood herself.
In all the years she had been away, in all the cities where she had traveled, not one of the men who had escorted her had tempted her to open the locks she had so firmly bolted on her emotions.
Only Brady. And what, for Godâs sake, was she going to do about it?
She was sureânearly sureâthat if things stayed as they were she would be able to leave painlessly when the time came. If she could think of him as a friend, a sometimes maddening friend, she could fly off to pick up her career when she was ready. But if he became her lover, her first and only lover, the memory might haunt her like a restless ghost throughout her life.
And there was more, she admitted with a sigh. She didnât want to hurt him. No matter how angry he could make her, no matter how deeply he had, and could, hurt her, she didnât want to cause him any real pain.
She knew what it was like to live with that kind of pain, the kind that spread and throbbed, the kind that came when you knew someone didnât care enough. Someone didnât want you enough.
She wouldnât do to Brady what had been done to her.
If he had been kind enough to allow her to hide in his home for a few hours, she would be kind enough to repay the favor by making sure they kept a reasonable distance between them.
No, she thought grimly, she would not be his lover. Or any manâs. She had her motherâs example before her. When her mother had taken a lover, it had ruined three lives. Vanessa knew her father had never been happy. Driven, yes. Obsessed with his daughterâs career. And bitter, Vanessa thought now. Oh, so bitter. He had never forgiven his wife for her betrayal. Why else had he blocked the letters she had sent to her daughter? Why else had he never, never spoken her name?
As the gnawing in her stomach grew sharper, she curled up tight. Somehow she would try to accept what her mother had done, and what she hadnât done.
Closing her eyes, she listened to the call of an owl in the woods, and the distant rumble of thunder on the mountain.
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She awoke at first light to the patter of rain on the roof. It sent music playing in her head as she shifted. Though she felt heavy with fatigue, she sat up, hugging her knees as she blinked at the gloom.
The dog was gone, but the sheets at her feet were still warm from him. It was time for her to go, as well.
The big tiled tub was tempting, but she reminded herself to be practical and turned instead to the glassed-in corner shower. In ten minutes she was walking quietly downstairs.
Brady was flat on his stomach in his twisted sleeping bag, his face buried in a ridiculously small pillow. With his dog sitting patiently beside him, he made a picture that turned her heart upside down.
Kong grinned and thumped his tail as she came to the bottom of the steps. She put a warning finger to her lips. Kongobviously wasnât up on sign language, as he let out two sharp, happy barks, then turned to lick Bradyâs face wherever he could reach.
Swearing, Brady shoved the dogâs face away from his. âLet yourself out, damn it. Donât you know a dead man when you see one?â
Undaunted, Kong sat on him.
âHere, boy.â Vanessa walked to the door and opened it. Delighted to have his needs understood, Kong bounded outside into the pattering rain. When she looked back, Brady was sitting up, the sleeping bag pooled around his waist. Bleary-eyed, he scowled at her.
âHow come you look so damn good?â
The same could be said about him, she thought. As heâd claimed, heâd
Edwin Balmer & Philip Wylie