Hawkins.â
âCal.â He took her hand, shook it, then held it as he gestured to the door. âLetâs get you out of the wind.â
They stepped directly into a living room that managed to be cozy and male at the same time. The generous sofa faced the big front windows, and the chairs looked as though theyâd allow an ass to sink right in. Tables and lamps probably werenât antiques, but looked to be something a grandmother might have passed down when she got the urge to redecorate her own place.
There was even a little stone fireplace with the requisite large mutt sprawled sleeping in front of it.
âLet me take your coat.â
âIs your dog in a coma?â Quinn asked when the dog didnât move a muscle.
âNo. Lump leads an active and demanding internal life that requires long periods of rest.â
âI see.â
âWant some coffee?â
âThatâd be great. So would the bathroom. Long drive.â
âFirst right.â
âThanks.â
She closed herself into a small, spotlessly clean powder room as much to pull herself back together from a couple of psychic shocks as to pee.
âOkay, Quinn,â she whispered. âHere we go.â
Four
H EâD READ HER WORK; HEâD STUDIED HER AUTHOR photos and used Google to get some background, to read her interviews. Cal wasnât one to agree to talk to any sort of writer, journalist, reporter, Internet blogger about the Hollow, himself, or much of anything else without doing a thorough check.
Heâd found her books and articles entertaining. Heâd enjoyed her obvious affection for small towns, had been intrigued by her interest and treatment of lore, legend, and things that went bump in the night.
He liked the fact that she still wrote the occasional article for the magazine that had given her a break when sheâd still been in college. It spoke of loyalty.
He hadnât been disappointed that her author photo had shown her to be a looker, with a sexy tumble of honey blond hair, bright blue eyes, and the hint of a fairly adorable overbite.
The photo hadnât come close.
She probably wasnât beautiful, he thought as he poured coffee. Heâd have to get another look when, hopefully, his brain wouldnât go to fuzz, then decide about that.
What he did know, unquestionably, was she just plain radiated energy andâto his fuzzed brainâsex.
But maybe that was because she was built, another thing the photo hadnât gotten across. The lady had some truly excellent curves.
And it wasnât as if he hadnât seen curves on a woman before or, in fact, seen his share of naked female curves alive and in person. So why was he standing in his own kitchen frazzled because an attractive, fully dressed woman was in his house? For professional purposes.
âJesus, grow up, Hawkins.â
âSorry?â
He actually jumped. She was in the kitchen, a few steps behind him, smiling that million-watt smile.
âWere you talking to yourself? I do that, too. Why do people think weâre crazy?â
âBecause they want to suck us into talking to them.â
âYouâre probably right.â Quinn shoved back that long spill of blond.
Cal saw he was right. She wasnât beautiful. The top-heavy mouth, the slightly crooked nose, the oversized eyes werenât elements of traditional beauty. He couldnât label her pretty, either. It was too simple and sweet a word. Cute didnât do it.
All he could think of was hot , but that might have been his brain blurring again.
âI didnât ask how you take your coffee.â
âOh. I donât suppose you have two percent milk.â
âI often wonder why anybody does.â
With an easy laugh that shot straight to his bloodstream, she wandered over to study the view outside the glass doors that ledâas sheâd suspectedâto the rear portion of the circling deck.
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