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No, damn it, she wasn’t going to add this to the list of things that bothered her. She was going to prove she was a friendly neighbor if she had to nail his hide to the closet door.
“After work I stopped at Sam Wong’s.”
He frowned as he looked at the contents within the box. It had been mislabeled. These things belonged in the kitchen. Okay, so maybe he would unpack a few things, he decided. “Good for you.”
Since he’d left himself open for a moment, she jumped right in. “They have the best Chinese takeout in the city.”
He began to drag the box into the kitchen, doing his best to ignore this woman who was bent on invading his apartment. It was akin to trying to ignore a jack-in-the-box that kept popping up at inopportune times. “I’ll keep that in mind.”
She followed him into the small kitchen. The management had just had it painted a stark white that was all but blinding. She squinted slightly to compensate. “I bought more than I could eat for dinner.”
Digging into the box, Quade hauled out a stack of carefully wrapped dishes. His sister had packed them while trying to talk him out of moving. But it was something he had to do, at least for now. At least until the hole in his gut got smaller.
“Wasteful,” he commented.
She was barely two steps away from exploding. Why was he treating her as if she were some kind of leper when all she was doing was trying to be neighborly? “Would you like to share some?”
Putting the wrapped dishes on the counter, he finally looked at her. “Why would you share it with me?”
“Maybe it’s your sparkling personality I can’t resist.”
For a second, he looked as if he would chew her up and spit her out whole. But then he surprised her. He laughed. Just before he dug into the box again for a second stack of dishes. “Then I’d say you had a serious problem.”
“I don’t, but you might.” The bag was beginning to get heavy. MacKenzie leaned it against the counter. “Are you always like this?”
He hadn’t the vaguest idea what she was talking about. All he knew was that Carla had packed too many things. All he really needed was a single setting, not eight. That had been Ellen’s domain. She was the one who’d liked company. All he’d ever liked was Ellen.
“Like what?” he bit off.
“Like you’re Mr. Wilson and everyone else is Dennis the Menace.”
He stopped unpacking and gave her a long, penetrating look that ended with a glance toward her purse. “Only when confronted with Dennis.”
“Meaning me.”
Polite lies had never been part of his makeup. “See anyone else around?”
The way she saw it, she could either turn on her heel, tell him to go to hell and retreat into her apartment, or start over. Because she was an optimist at heart and hated the thought of anyone disliking her, she opted to start over.
Leaving her purse on the counter, she put out her hand. “I think we got off to a wrong start. My name is MacKenzie Ryan.”
He stood contemplating the extended hand for a moment, as if shaking it were a step he wasn’t prepared to take, then shrugged before slipping his strong, bronzed fingers around hers.
“Quade Preston.” He didn’t bother giving her his job title. The less he shared, the better. Dropping her hand, he turned away. “Now if you’ll excuse me, I have work to do.”
Oh well, she’d tried.
“On that sparkling personality, no doubt.” Turning on her heel, MacKenzie, her purse and her belated peace offering began to walk away.
She was almost at his door when she heard him say, “You need an oil change.”
MacKenzie stopped and turned around. Part of her thought that she’d imagined hearing his voice. “Excuse me?”
“An oil change,” Quade repeated. “Your car’s burning oil.” He shoved the half-emptied box aside. “Saw it as you pulled away this morning.”
MacKenzie ventured back into the room. “You’re a mechanic?”
He shook his head, walking out of the kitchen and past her. God, he was tall, she thought.
“Just observant. When was the last time you changed your oil?” His deep voice floated back to her out of the bedroom.
MacKenzie attempted to think. Car maintenance was one of those things that was strictly an afterthought with her. She knew that her father and brothers would have hooted about her negligence, but with everything she did, something had to go to the bottom of the list. In this case, it was the car.
“I remember that it was snowing.”
“Might be easier if you went by the odometer instead,” he told her, reemerging into the room. “Every three thousand miles is a good rule of thumb.”
She pretended to examine her digit. “My thumb doesn’t have any rules.”
And neither, most likely, did she, he thought. No surprise there. “I had a feeling.”
She decided to make another effort. “So, could I interest you in some Chinese?”
He’d grabbed a hamburger and fries at a fast-food restaurant when he’d gone to get gas for the truck, so hunger was not a problem at the moment. But the meal had come with a soft drink whose container could have been used to replenish a small lake. “I’d be more interested in your bathroom.”
Her eyes narrowed. “Excuse me?” she said again.
He jerked his thumb toward the back, where his own bathroom was. “Super shut down the water coming into the apartment. Something about having to refit the pipe leading into the shower.”
She drew the logical conclusion, picking up on the last thing he said. “So you can’t take a shower.”
“Or anything else.”
She was very aware of the need for a bathroom. MacKenzie beckoned for him to follow her. “Sure. Come on in.”
Walking out, she began to search through her purse for her keys. As she approached her own door, the take-out bag she was holding against herself was in danger of spilling its contents at her feet.
Seeing it tilt, Quade took the bag from her. She flashed him a smile as she dug farther into her purse.
He eyed the potential weapon with respect and disdain. “Just what do you keep in that thing?”
“My life,” she replied.
He looked at the shape of the purse, which could have doubled as a portfolio case, something it once had been in her early days.
“Your life is large and flat?”
“Some