Winning His Heart: The Millionaire's Homecoming / The Maverick Millionaire. Melissa McClone

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darkened in her eyes when he said that, and he wished he hadn’t because a strange, heated tension leaped in the air between them.

      “Fun is fun, and business is business,” he said sternly.

      And he was here on business. To return a sweater. But ever since he had walked in the door and felt almost swamped with a sensation of homecoming, his mission had felt blurry.

      “That’s not what you said in the article for Lakeside Life,” she told him stubbornly. “You said if a man does what he loves he will never work a day in his life.”

      What did it mean that she had read that so closely? Nothing, he told himself.

      “I’d play with the name,” she said, ignoring his stern note altogether. “That’s part of the reason I like it better than rose petal, well, that and the fact it would be cheaper to produce. I’d call this flavor Dandy Lion.”

      His look must have been blank, because she spelled it out for him. “D-A-N-D-Y L-I-O-N.”

      “Oh.”

      “Cute, huh?”

      “Not to be a wet blanket but in my experience, cute is rarely a moneymaker. Look, Kayla, if ever there was a time to worry, this would be it. I don’t think people are going to line up to eat dandelion ice cream, no matter how you spell it.”

      “Oh, what do you know?” she said, and her chin had a stubborn tilt to it. “They drink dandelion wine.”

      “They do? I can’t imagine why.”

      “Well, maybe not the people you hang out with.”

      “I haven’t seen any of the good wineries with dandelion wine,” he said, keeping his tone calm, trying to reason with her. “And you can bet they do their homework. In fact, Blaze Enterprises is invested in Painted Pony Wineries and—”

      But she turned her back to him, and turned on the machine and it drowned out his advice. He was pretty sure it was deliberate. She freed one arm to open a lid on the top of the stainless-steel machine, then tried to heft the huge bowl up high enough to pour the contents in a spout at the top.

      At her grunt of exertion, he stepped up behind her and took the bowl. He gazed down into the bright yellow contents.

      “Hell, Kayla, it looks like pee,” he said over the loudness of the machine.

      Her face scrunched up in the cutest expression of disapproval. “It doesn’t! It looks bright and lemony.”

      “Which, if you think about it, is what—”

      She held up her hand, not wanting to hear it. He shrugged. “Whatever. In here?”

      She nodded and he dumped the contents of the bowl in the machine through an opening she would have had to stand on a chair to reach.

      Unlocked doors. Precarious balancing on chairs. And no phone to call anyone if she found herself in an emergency. Plus, spending fifteen hundred dollars on an idea that seemed hare-brained, and that should still be in the research stages, not the investing-in stages.

      Why did he feel so protective of her? Why did he feel like she needed him? She had made it this far without his help, after all.

      Though good choices were obviously not her forte.

      It occurred to David that he felt helpless to do anything for his mother. And he hated that out-of-control feeling.

      Not that Kayla would appreciate his trying to control her. But if he could help her a little bit—find her dog, pour her recipe for her so she didn’t risk life and limb climbing on one of her rickety chairs with this huge bowl, save her from throwing away any more money on ice-cream-themed machinery—those could only be good things.

      Right?

      The machine gobbled up the contents of the bowl with a huge sucking sound. David had to stand on his tiptoes to look inside. The mustard-yellow cream was being vigorously swished and swirled, and the machine was growling like a vintage motorcycle that he owned.

      “How long?” he called over the deafening rumble.

      “It’s going to come out here!” She showed him a wide stainless-steel spigot and handle. “It will be six to twelve minutes, depending on how hard I want the ice cream. We’ll try a sample after six.”

      He peered back in the hole where he had dumped the cream. “Is this thing supposed to close?”

      “I’m not sure all the parts were there. I need to look up the manual online. It didn’t come with the manual. I saved over sixteen thousand dollars—I can live with that.”

      The stickler in him felt like now might be a really good time to point out to her that she hadn’t actually saved sixteen thousand dollars. She had spent fifteen hundred dollars.

      He had a feeling she wouldn’t appreciate the half-empty perspective.

      That was one of the glaring differences between them. That and the fact he would have looked up the manual before pouring several gallons of pricey cream into the vat.

      “You can turn up the beater speed here,” she said proudly, and touched a button.

      The growl turned into a banshee wail and then the yellow mixture was vomited out of the top of the machine through the same opening he had put it in. It came out in an explosive gush.

      He yanked back his head from the opening just in time to avoid having his eyes taken out. A fountain of yellow slush sprayed out with the velocity of Old Faithful erupting. It hit the ceiling and rained down on them and every other surface in the kitchen.

      He scrambled for the off switch on the ice cream maker and hit it hard.

      The room was cast into silence.

      Kayla stood there wide-eyed, covered from head to toe in yellow splotches. One dripped down from the roof and landed on David’s cheek.

      She began to giggle. He was enchanted by her laughter, and it made him realize there was something somber in her and that she had not been like that before. Not just somber. And not quite hard.

      Serious and studious, but not so...well, worried, weighed down by life. As if she had built a wall around herself to protect herself from life.

      Suddenly, her laughter felt like a wave that was lifting him and carrying him away from his own troubles. He found himself laughing with her. It felt so good to stand there in the middle of her kitchen and see the hilarity in the situation, to let go of all the dark worry that had plagued him since he arrived home.

      Then the laughter died between them.

      And then she stepped up to him, and ran her finger across his cheek. She held the yellow smudge up for his inspection, and then, still smiling, she touched it to his lips.

      The substance on her finger was already surprisingly chilled, and not quite liquid anymore, but like a frothy, cold mousse.

      He hesitated, and then touched his tongue to the yellow glob. In an act of startling intimacy,

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