Dreaming Of You. Margaret Way

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Dreaming Of You - Margaret Way Mills & Boon By Request

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bookshop, and Frieda hadn’t changed a thing.

      Therein lay most of its problems.

      ‘I’ll change the sign back. It’ll be finished by the close of business today.’

      She glanced back at him, a frown in her eyes. ‘Why you?’

      She turned around fully, folded her arms and leant against the nearest bookcase. To the right of her left hip a book in vivid blues and greens faced outwards—Natural Wonders of the World—it seemed apt. He dragged his gaze from her hips and the long, lean length of her legs. Way too apt.

      But…

      He’d never seen her wear such pretty, soft-looking trousers before. Mel would love those trousers. The thought flitted into his head unbidden and his heart clenched at the thought of his daughter. He gritted his teeth and pushed the thought back out again. He would not think of Mel and Jaz in the same sentence.

      But…

      Eight years ago he’d grown used to seeing Jaz in long black skirts…or naked.

      And then she’d removed herself from his world and he hadn’t seen her at all.

      ‘Is that what you’re doing these days—sign-writing?’

      Her words hauled him back and he steeled himself not to flinch at her incredulity. ‘Among other things.’ He shoved his hands in his pockets. ‘After graduation I took up a carpentry apprenticeship.’ He’d relinquished his dream of art school. ‘I run a building contractor’s business now here in Clara Falls.’

      Her jaw dropped. ‘What about your art?’

      Just for a moment, bitterness seeped out from beneath the lid he normally kept tightly sealed around it. ‘I gave it up.’

      Her head snapped back. ‘You what?’

      The madness had started the night he’d discovered Jaz in Sam Hancock’s arms. When he’d found out the next day that Jaz had left town—left him— for good, Connor had gone off the rails. He’d drunk too much…he’d slept with Faye. Faye, who’d revealed Jaz’s infidelity, her lies. Faye, who’d done all she could to console him when Jaz had gone. Faye whose heart he’d broken. When Faye had told him she was pregnant, he’d had no choice—he’d traded in his dream of art school to become a husband and father…and an apprentice carpenter.

      He hadn’t picked up a stick of charcoal since.

      ‘Is that somehow supposed to be my fault?’

      Jaz’s snapped-out words hauled him back. ‘Did I say that?’

      He and Faye had lasted two years before they’d finally divorced—Jaz always a silent shadow between them. They’d been two of the longest years of his life.

      It was childish to blame Jaz for any of that. He had Melanie. He could never regret his daughter.

      Jaz’s eyes turned so frosty they could freeze a man’s soul. Connor’s lips twisted. They couldn’t touch him. His soul had frozen eight years ago.

      And yet she was here. From all accounts a world-class tattoo artist, if Frieda’s boasts could be believed.

      Dianne was right. Clara Falls had no need for tattoo artists—world-class or otherwise.

      And neither did he.

      Silence descended around them. Finally, Jaz cleared her throat. ‘I take it then that you’re the builder Richard hired to do the work on this place?’ She lifted a hand to indicate the interior of the shop, and then pointed to the ceiling to indicate the flat upstairs.

      ‘That’s right.’

      She pushed away from the bookcase, glanced around. ‘Considering the amount of work Richard told me needed doing, the place looks exactly as I remember it.’

      Her eyes narrowed. He watched her gaze travel over every fixture and furnishing within her line of sight. ‘Exactly the same.’ She turned accusing eyes on him.

      ‘That’s because I’ve barely started work in here yet.’

      Her jaw dropped. ‘But…but your receptionist assured me all the work would be finished by Thursday last week.’

      The muscles in his jaw bunched. ‘You’re sure about that?’

      ‘Positive.’

      He didn’t blame her for her gritted teeth response. ‘I’m sorry, Jaz, but you were given the wrong information.’ And he’d be getting himself a new receptionist— this afternoon, if he could arrange it.

      She pressed her lips so tightly together it made his jaw ache in sympathy. Then she stiffened. ‘What about the OH and S stuff? Hell, if that hasn’t been sorted, then—’

      ‘That’s the part I’ve taken care of.’

      Several weeks ago, someone had filed an Occupation Health and Safety complaint. It had resulted in an OH and S officer coming out to inspect the premises…and to close the shop down when it had been discovered that two floor to ceiling bookcases, which should’ve been screwed fast to battens on the wall behind, had started to come away, threatening to topple and crush anyone who might happen to be below. Connor had put all his other jobs on hold to take care of that. The bookshop had only been closed for a day and a half.

      ‘Why?’

      ‘Why?’ What the hell… ‘Because it was dangerous, that’s why.’

      ‘Not that.’ She waved an imperious hand in the air. ‘Why is it your company that is doing the work?’

      Because Richard had asked him to.

      Because he’d wanted to prove that the past had no hold over him any more.

      She folded her arms. ‘I should imagine the last thing you wanted was to clap eyes on me again.’

      She was right about that.

      She stuck out a defiant hip. ‘In fact, I’d guess that the last thing you want is me living in Clara Falls again.’

      It took a moment for the import of her words to hit him. When they did, he clenched a fist so tight it started to shake. She glanced at his fist, then back into his face. She cocked an eyebrow. She didn’t unsay her words.

      ‘Are you insinuating that I’d use my position as a builder to sabotage your shop?’ He tried to remember the last time he’d wanted to throttle someone.

      ‘Would you? Have you? I mean… There’s that travesty of a sign, for a start. Now the delay. What would you think? You and Gordon Sears could be like that—’ she waved two crossed fingers under his nose ‘—for all I know.’

      ‘God, Jaz! I know it’s been eight years, but can you seriously think I would stoop to that?’

      She raked him from the top of his head to his boot laces with her hot gaze—blue on the way down, green when she met his eyes again on the way up— and it felt

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