fight me off.”
“A mistake, I assure you, that will not be repeated.” She made it to the sidewalk this time before he caught her.
“I don’t want you,” he said definitely.
Insulted, provoked beyond her control, she jabbed a finger into his chest. “Oh, really? Then perhaps you’d care to explain that ham-handed maneuver in there?”
“There was nothing ham-handed about it. I hardly touched you, and you went off like a rocket. It’s not my fault if you were ripe.”
Her eyes went huge, ballistic. “Ripe?
Ripe?
Why you—you overbearing, arrogant self-absorbed idiot!”
“Tell him, honey” was the advice of a toothy bag lady who shoved past with her teetering cart. “Don’t let him get away with it.”
“That was a bad choice of words,” Ry responded, goaded into adding more fuel to the fire. “I should have said
repressed
.”
“I am going to hit you.”
“And,” he continued, ignoring her, “I should have said I don’t like wanting you.”
Natalie concentrated for one moment on simply breathing. She would not, absolutely would not, lower herself to having a public brawl on the sidewalk. “That, Inspector Piasecki, may be the first and last time we ever have the same sentiment about anything. I don’t like it, either.”
“Don’t like me wanting you, or don’t like you wanting me?”
“Either.”
He nodded, and they eyed each other like boxers between rounds. “So, we’ll talk it out tonight.”
“We will not.”
He would, he promised himself, be patient if it killed him. Or her. “Natalie, just how complicated do you want to make this?”
“I don’t want to make it complicated,
Ry
. I want to make it impossible.”
“Why?”
She speared him with a look, skimming her gaze from the toes of his shoes to the top of his head. “I should think that would be obvious, even to you.”
He rocked back on his heels. “I don’t know what it is about that snotty attitude of yours—it just does something for me. You want to play this traditional, with me asking you out to dinner, thatroutine?”
She closed her eyes and prayed for patience. “I don’t seem to be getting through.” She opened them again. “No, I don’t want you asking me out to dinner, or any routine. What happened inside there was—”
“Wild. Incredible.”
“An aberration,” she said between her teeth.
“It wouldn’t be a hardship to prove you wrong. But if we started that again out here, we’d probably be arrested before we were finished.” Ryan was enjoying himself now, immersed in the simple challenge of her. And he intended to win. “But I see what it is. I’ve spooked you. Now you’re afraid to be alone with me, afraid you’ll lose control.”
Heat stung her cheeks. “That’s very lame.”
He shrugged. “Works for me.”
She studied him. He wanted to prove something? He was about to be disappointed. “All right. Eight o’clock. Chez Robert, on Third. I’ll meet you there.”
“Fine.”
“Fine.” She turned away. “Oh, Piasecki,” she called over her shoulder. “They frown on eating with your fingers.”
“I’ll keep it in mind.”
* * *
Natalie was sure she had lost her mind. She dashed into her apartment at 7:15. Facts, figures, projections, graphs, were all running through her head. And her phone was ringing.
She caught the cordless on the fly and dashed into the bedroom to change. “Yes? What?”
“Is that how Mom taught you to answer the phone?”
“Boyd.” Some of the tension of the day drained away at the sound of her brother’s voice. “I’msorry. I’ve just come in from the last of several mind-numbing meetings.”
“Don’t look for sympathy here. You’re the one who opted to carry on the family tradition.”
“Right you are.” She stepped out of her shoes. “So how’s the fight against crime and corruption in Denver, Captain Fletcher?”
“We’re holding our own. Cilla and the kids send love, kisses and so forth.”
“And send
Shayna Krishnasamy
Alexandra J Churchill
Lexi Dubois
Stacey Alabaster
Debra Dunbar
Brian Freemantle
Stormy McKnight
Don Pendleton
H.E. Bates
Alyse Carlson