college when I found out
how
ill. I wanted to quit, come home, but the idea upset him so much I thought it was better to graduate. He hung on for another three years, but it was . . . difficult.â She didnât want to talk about the tears and the terror, or about the exhaustion of running the inn while caring for a near-invalid. âHe was the bravest, kindest man Iâve ever known. He was so much a part of this place that there are still times when I expect to walk into a room and see him checking for dust on the furniture.â
He was silent for a moment, thinking as much about what sheâd left out as about what sheâd told him. He knew her father was listed as unknownâa difficult obstacle anywhere, but especially in a small town. In the last six months of her grandfatherâs life his medical expenses had nearly driven the inn under. But she didnât speak of those things; nor did he detect any sign of bitterness.
âDo you ever think about selling the place, moving on?â
âNo. Oh, I still think about Venice occasionally. There are dozens of places Iâd like to go, as long as I had the inn to come back to.â She rose to get him another beer. âWhen you run a place like this, you get to meet people from all over. Thereâs always a story about a new place.â
âVicarious traveling?â
It stung, perhaps because it was too close to her own thoughts. âMaybe.â She set the bottle at his elbow, then took her dishes to the sink. Even knowing that she was overly sensitive on this point didnât stop her from bristling. âSome of us are meant to be boring.â
âI didnât say you were boring.â
âNo? Well, I suppose I am to someone who picks up and goes whenever and wherever he chooses. Simple, settled and naive.â
âYouâre putting words in my mouth, baby.â
âItâs easy to do,
baby
, since you rarely put any there yourself. Turn off the lights when you leave.â
He took her arm as she started by in a reflexive movement that he regretted almost before it was done. But it was done, and the sulky, defiant look she sent him began a chain reaction that raced through his system. There were things he could do with her, things he burned to do, that neither of them would ever forget.
âWhy are you angry?â
âI donât know. I canât seem to talk to you for more than ten minutes without getting edgy. Since I normally get along with everyone, I figure itâs you.â
âYouâre probably right.â
She calmed a little. It was hardly his fault that she had never been anywhere. âYouâve been around a little less than forty-eight hours and Iâve nearly fought with you three times. Thatâs a record for me.â
âI donât keep score.â
âOh, I think you do. I doubt you forget anything. Were you a cop?â
He had to make a deliberate effort to keep his face bland and fingers from tensing. âWhy?â
âYou said you werenât an artist. That was my first guess.â She relaxed, though he hadnât removed his hand from her arm. Anger was something she enjoyed only in fast, brief spurts. âItâs the way you look at people, as if you were filing away descriptions and any distinguishing marks. And sometimes when Iâm with you I feel as though I should get ready for an interrogation. A writer, then? When youâre in the hotel business you get pretty good at matching people with professions.â
âYouâre off this time.â
âWell, what are you, then?â
âRight now Iâm a handyman.â
She shrugged, making herself let it go. âAnother trait of hotel people is respecting privacy, but if you turn out to be a mass murderer Maeâs never going to let me hear the end of it.â
âGenerally I only kill one person at a time.â
âThatâs good
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