were full, with the nipples showing hard and aroused against the soft material of her blouse.
Every starchy inch of Elizabeth Brown was aware of him, and he found that knowledge delicious!
She bristled at the accusation. ‘I—’
‘You’re clenching your left hand again, Elizabeth,’ he warned softly.
She frowned at the observation, but instantly lessened the tightness of the grip she had on the steering wheel. ‘You—’
‘Admit it, Liza.’ He deliberately gave her that sexy smile as he used the name he knew she objected to so strongly. ‘When you look at me, you like what you see!’
Her jaw tightened disapprovingly, although the blush in her cheeks and the catching of her breath in her throat told a completely different story…‘I told you not to call me—’
‘I like calling you Liza.’ Rogan turned in his seat so that he could look at her fully. ‘With your eyes shining brightly, and that colour in your cheeks, you’re much more of a Liza than you are a stiff and unapproachable Elizabeth,’ he said appreciatively.
‘Stiff and—!’ She gave an impatient shake of her head. ‘Are you deliberately trying to annoy me?’
He quirked dark brows. ‘Am I succeeding?’
‘Very much so!’
He grinned unrepentantly. ‘Enough to make sure that you definitely decide to high-tail it out of Sullivan House as soon as you can make the appropriate excuses?’
That blush in her cheeks deepened as she gasped softly. ‘How did you know…?’
‘That’s what you were thinking about doing a few minutes ago,’ Rogan finished dryly. ‘You’re pretty easy to read, Elizabeth.’ He gave an unconcerned shrug. Rogan hadn’t just learned to analyse computers over the last fifteen years; he had learned to read people too.
Although this woman was a little more complicated than most. No, make that a lot more complicated!
Why did a beautiful woman in her late twenties bury herself in academia? To such an extent that she even chose to occupy her vacation time buried in the wilds of Cornwall, cataloguing a private library? Did she ever let anyone past that spiky exterior? Rogan wondered. More to the point, had she ever let a man past that bristly exterior and into her body…?
Elizabeth wasn’t sure she liked Rogan finding her ‘easy to read’—especially considering some of the thoughts she had been having about him since first setting eyes on him the previous night!
Her mouth firmed. ‘I have no intention of “high-tailing it out of Sullivan House”, as you put it.’ Not any more, she didn’t. Not when he seemed to have so easily guessed that he would be the reason for her leaving! ‘Your father engaged me to catalogue his library, and if you still want me to continue, then I will fulfil that obligation.’
His mouth twisted. ‘Big on obligation, are you?’
Elizabeth stiffened at the taunt she heard in his tone. ‘Ibelieve that once given a person’s word should be honoured, yes.’
Implying, Rogan would guess, that someone close to her—or someone she had allowed close to her?—had once let her down pretty badly.
He nodded. ‘Are you hoping to find even more valuable first editions?’
‘It’s possible, yes,’ she acknowledged cautiously.
Rogan chuckled softly. ‘You don’t have to be so cagey, Elizabeth, I’m not about to steal any of them and sell them off for a huge profit!’
‘It would hardly be stealing when the books appear to be yours now,’ she reasoned.
‘But you do think I’m going to sell them off for profit at the first opportunity, don’t you? Don’t bother to deny it, Elizabeth.’ His tone was grim now, as he saw the truth of his accusation in her face. ‘You’re obviously as big on making assumptions about people as you are on honouring your obligations!’ he accused, with obvious disgust.
Was she? Elizabeth wondered. Perhaps. Where this particular man was concerned, anyway. He seriously threatened her peace of mind…
‘I—What are you doing in
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