didnât seem to hear him. âIâm going to need keys to your home and 24-hour access.â
Right. She was going to be in his home, every night. Another part of the challenge he hadnât thought through. The realization had his control tilting off balance again. He dashed off his address on the back of a business card, then extricated the house key from his personal key ring. âOf course. As I said, I donât eat breakfast and I take most of my meals here, so the keys to my house will rarely be necessary.â
She curled her fingers around the key, clearly taking his words as a further challenge. âAnd yet, thatâs where Iâm going to feed you tonight. At your house. Iâll see you at seven.â
âMake it eight. And plan on dining with me. What good is a fine meal when eaten alone?â
He wasnât sure what made him tack on that last requirement of the challenge, but his blood heated at the thought. What better incentive for pulling himself away from the office earlier than sharing nightly meals with the beguiling Emily Ford?
The pink returned to her cheeks. âThatâs not necessary.â
âOh, I think itâs very necessary. Consider it an extended interview.â
âFine. Then Iâll see you tonight at eight.â
Anticipation coursed through him with intoxicating purpose as he watched her stride from the room. No matter how this little experiment turned out, the daily battle of wills with Emily Ford was bound to keep him on his toes. He couldnât wait.
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Chapter Three
Emily stood on the wooden dock attached to Knoxâs boathouse and watched the final rays of sun dance on ripples in the lake. Her mind drifted over the menu sheâd built for her and Knoxâs first dinner together.
Damn it. She sucked a breath in through her teeth, royally peeved at herself. She had to stop doing that, turning even the most benign thoughts into something pseudo-sexualâespecially when it came to the man who held her future in his handsâno matter how achingly handsome he happened to be. Sheâd long considered herself immune to desire, ever since her epiphany after a bad date two years earlier when sheâd realized how much more satisfying food was than sex or men or any sort of lust-fueled bullshit. Like a nun, she had a higher calling than succumbing to a mere mortalâs baser needs.
She forced her attention back to the lake, where tendrils of fog were settling in for the night. More than any other season, she loved the way autumn felt. The chill in the air and the low, early retiring sun made people hungry for the types of foods she most loved to cook: hearty, soul-nourishing foods that connected people to the earth and the soil. The kind of food Knox Briscoe should be eating, if only he would abandon his ridiculous âfood as fuelâ naivety.
Nearby, a fish jumped from the water with a tremendous splash that sent droplets raining down on the wood and her feet. She wasnât the greatest when it came to identifying species of fish unless they were on ice at her favorite fishmongerâs storefront, but she was pretty sure it was a carp. Or maybe a bass. Either way, it looked like a protein sheâd love to design a meal around, if only she knew how to fish.
It was a tough sell to tear herself away from the peace of the water, but she wanted to make one more pass through Knoxâs house and search for future menu inspiration before he arrived to dine on a meal that included seared foie gras with vadouvan-spiced bread and huckleberry compote. It was a great menu with a flavor profile sure to wow anyone, but she was still having trouble figuring out exactly what made Knox tick, and therefore, the ideal emotions to elicit in him with her food.
She walked up the well-worn dirt path from the lake to the stairs that led onto the deck, then let herself in through the kitchen door. Her produce was drying on a towel near
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