A Marked Man. Stella Cameron
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Max ran the fingers of his right hand through his black hair and it sprang up in spikes. “If I have wine, will you join me?”
That was the moment when the reluctant heat broke free and rushed to her face. She touched her cheeks and laughed. “Cold, white wine?” she said.
“I’ll get it,” he told her and went into the kitchen. White maple, black granite and stainless steel confronted him. It seemed almost as unused as the living room.
Steadying himself with one hand on the refrigerator door and the other on a counter nearby, he stiffened that elbow and stole a moment to recover. The animal every man hid, some larger, more dangerous animals than others, had just put in a real inconvenient appearance. He opened the refrigerator and stared inside. Max had confronted his animal on numerous previous occasions but during the sexual hiatus while he worked to make a new life, the beast had apparently been on steroids.
He found a good bottle of Pinot Grigio, took it out and tried to decide where he’d be if he were a corkscrew.
Max shook his head.
“The bottle opener’s in this drawer,” Annie said, coming up behind him and reaching around to display a drawer where the only utensil was the corkscrew. She opened a cupboard empty but for a few glasses, some of them wine. Max took out two and uncorked the wine. He poured a little, stuck his nose in the glass and grinned. “Smooth, opinionated—brash even. A hint of white baking chocolate and squash casserole. Memorable.”
Her giggle and the poke in the ribs she gave him didn’t cool the tension any more than his silly assessment of the wine had. “Here you go.” The first glass he poured he gave to Annie, then he took his own.
She walked out of the kitchen. “I’ll show you the rest of the place, if you like. But maybe we should drink some of this first.”
Following her, Max paused to look toward the square. “Are they going to have the holiday lights on for the rest of the year now?” he said.
“I don’t know. This is my first year here.” She came to his side. “It’s silly, but I love those lights. They’ve just forgotten to reset the timer after the fair, or whatever it was.”
“I’ve always enjoyed lights, the more the better,” Max said. “Every Christmas my parents’ home looks like Aladdin’s cave. I always look forward to seeing it. Roche likes all the glitter, too, but Kelly’s the tasteful one. He’d bring in a designer if Mom would put up with it.”
They were making conversation again. Tipping up his glass, Max took a long, cold swallow of wine. Could be that alcohol was a bad idea while he wasn’t exactly in control of all systems.
Annie took hold of his forearm and turned him toward her. “You’re a lot taller than me.”
“I do like my women to be observant.” She isn’t my woman. Dumb remark.
“Be nice. And kneel down. You should be able to rest your arms on the windowsill and have a place for your glass, too.”
“Why would I do that?”
“Because I’m going to and I’m inviting you to join me—because you like holiday bling.”
Barefoot and fleet, she went around the room switching off lights. With the last one, she paused. “You aren’t afraid of the dark?”
Not until now. “I can handle it.”
She plunged the room into darkness and returned to him. In the glow from outside, her blouse turned brilliant, translucent white. When she knelt beside him only her face and neck cleared the sill.
Silent, they stared into the skeins of tiny colored lights swaying and bobbing in the trees. Annie sighed and he glanced at her. “Makes me nostalgic,” she said. “Not that we ever did much decorating, but I think I’m nostalgic for the feelings I got in the holidays. All we need now is snow.”
He laughed. “Dream on. But I know what you mean about nostalgia.”
She didn’t reply, but she took several sips of wine.
“Are you all right like that?” he asked. “Or is your back killing you?”
“I’m okay.”
Cautiously, he put an arm around her waist. “I’ll hold you up,” he said. “And don’t argue.”
Had anyone ever held her that way? With a warm, strong arm that made her feel…different?
For a long time they didn’t speak. A wind picked up and the lights danced. And she was dancing, Annie thought—with danger. Bobby’s angry face kept shoving itself into her mind. They’d met once since she left St. Martinville and that had been earlier today. Now he’d decided he was driven to force a new friendship. Funny to think about now, but they had been close friends once.
Max’s fingers spread at her waist and she almost arched her back.
“I came for one reason,” he said. “But I think I should tell you something else first in case you’d rather not be around me when I’m finished.”
“You couldn’t say anythin’ that would affect me like that.” But she was foolish to pursue what was happening between them. It couldn’t come to anything.
Max didn’t expect her to remain so understanding. “I’ve been involved in some nasty stuff, Annie. Believe me, this is going to be hard for you to take. It wasn’t my fault, but you only have my word for it. I should have told you about this weeks ago when it first looked like we enjoyed each other’s company.”
“Don’t tell me anything that will make you unhappy.” She stared at the black sky.
“It may make us both unhappy but I’ve got to take that chance. I’ve had two brushes with the law.” Max pressed his lips together and collected himself to go on. “The first time, my college girlfriend was murdered and I was accused, then cleared.”
He caught the glitter in her eyes when she turned to stare at him. “How awful. Who killed her?”
“They never found out.” What felt like a brick in his throat made it tough to swallow.
“I’m so sorry.” She rubbed his shoulder and rested her cheek there. “I wish I’d been around to support you.”
His eyes stung and he blinked. “Thank you.” Her breast was full and firm against his side. Staying focused mattered now, really mattered.
“I could have told them you would never do something like that,” she said.
A bitter taste entered his mouth. “Thank you.” He closed his eyes and pinched the bridge of his nose. “Three years ago it happened again. My girlfriend was…someone killed her.”
Chapter Ten
Her absolute stillness should be what he