Unlikely Lover. Diana Palmer

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Unlikely Lover - Diana Palmer


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floor. His eyes were blazing in a face that had gone ruddy in anger. He held on to a chair and rose slowly, glaring at Lillian’s half-hidden face with an expression that told her there was worse to come.

      “She’s really a nice girl, boss,” Lillian began, “once you get to know her.”

      He brushed back his soaked hair with a lean, angry hand, and his chest rose and fell heavily. “I have a meeting just after supper,” he said. “I sent the rest of my suits to the cleaner’s this afternoon. This is the last suit I had. I didn’t expect to go swimming in it.”

      “We could dry it and I could…press it,” Lillian suggested halfheartedly, pretty sure that she couldn’t do either.

      “I could forget the whole damned thing, too,” he said curtly. He glared at Lillian. “Nothing is going to make up for this, you know.”

      She swallowed. “How about a nice freshly baked apple pie with ice cream?”

      He tilted his head to one side and pursed his lips. “Freshly baked?” “Freshly baked.”

      “With ice cream?”

      “That’s right,” she promised.

      He shrugged his wet shoulders. “I’ll think about it.” He turned and sloshed off down the hall.

      Lillian leaned back against the wall and stared at her transfixed niece. “Honey,” she said gently, “would you like to tell me what happened?”

      “I don’t know,” Mari burst out. “I went in to call him to the table, and I started looking at that beautiful artificial stream, and the next thing I knew, he’d fallen into it. I must have, well, backed into him.”

      “How you could miss a man his size is beyond me.” Lillian shook her head and grabbed a broom and dustpan from the closet.

      “I had my back to him, you know.”

      “I wouldn’t ever do that again after this if I were you,” the older woman advised. “If it wasn’t for that apple pie, even I couldn’t save you!”

      “Yes, ma’am,” Mari said apologetically. “Oh, Aunt Lillian, that poor, brave man.” She sighed. “I hope he doesn’t get a chill because of me. I’d never be able to live with myself!”

      “There, there,” Lillian assured her, “he’s tough, you know. He’ll be fine. For now, I mean,” she added quickly.

      Mari covered her face with her hands in mingled relief and suppressed amusement. Ward Jessup was quite a man. How sad that he had such little time left. She didn’t think she’d ever forget the look on his face when he climbed out of the indoor stream, or the excited beat of her heart as she’d run from him. It was new to be chased by a man, even an ill one, and exhilarating to be uninhibited in one’s company. She’d been shy with men all her life, but she didn’t feel shy with Ward. She felt…feminine. And that was as new to her as the rapid beat of her heart.

       Chapter Three

      “I didn’t mean to knock you into the pool,” Mari told Ward the minute he entered the dining room.

      He stopped in the doorway and stared at her from his great height. His hair was dry now, thick and straight against his broad forehead, and his wet clothes had been exchanged for dry jeans and a blue plaid shirt. His green eyes were a little less hostile than they had been minutes before.

      “It isn’t a pool,” he informed her. “It’s an indoor stream. And next time, Miss Raymond, I’d appreciate it if you’d watch where the hell you’re going.”

      “Yes, sir,” she said quickly.

      “I told you not to let him put that stream in the living room,” Lillian gloated.

      He glared at her. “Keep talking and I’ll give you an impromptu swimming lesson.”

      “Yes, boss.” She turned on her heel and went back into the kitchen to fetch the rest of the food.

      “I really am sorry,” Mari murmured.

      “So am I,” he said unexpectedly, and his green eyes searched hers quietly. “I hope I didn’t frighten you.”

      She glanced down at her shoes, nervous of the sensations that his level gaze prompted. “It’s hard to be afraid of a man with a lily pad on his head.”

      “Stop that,” he grumbled, jerking out a chair.

      “You might consider putting up guardrails,” she suggested dryly as she sat down across from him, her blue eyes twinkling with the first humor she’d felt in days.

      “You’d better keep a life jacket handy,” he returned.

      She stuck her tongue out at him impulsively and watched his thick eyebrows arch.

      He shook out his napkin with unnecessary force and laid it across his powerful thighs. “My God, you’re living dangerously,” he told her.

      “I’m not afraid of you,” she said smartly and meant it.

      “That isn’t what your Aunt Lillian says,” he observed with narrowed eyes.

      She stared at him blankly. “I beg your pardon?”

      “She says you’re afraid of men,” he continued. He scowled at her puzzled expression. “Because of what happened to you and your friend,” he prompted.

      She blinked, wondering what her aunt had told him about that. After all, having your purse pinched by an overweight juvenile delinquent wasn’t really enough to terrify most women. Especially when she and Beth had run the offender down, beaten the stuffing out of him, recovered the purse and sat on him until the police got there.

      “You know, dear,” Lillian blustered as she came through the door, shaking her head and smiling all at once. She looked as red as a beet, too. “The horrible experience you had!”

      “Horrible?” Mari asked.

      “Horrible!” Lillian cried. “We can’t talk about it now!”

      “We can’t?” Mari parroted blankly.

      “Not at the table. Not in front of the boss!” She jerked her head curtly toward him two or three times.

      “Have you got a crick in your neck, Aunt Lillian?” her niece asked with some concern.

      “No, dear, why do you ask? Here! Have some fried chicken and some mashed potatoes!” She shoved dishes toward her niece and began a monologue that only ended when it was time for dessert.

      “I think something’s wrong with Aunt Lillian,” Mari confided to Ward the moment Lillian started back into the kitchen for the coffeepot.

      “Yes, so do I,” he replied. “She’s been acting strangely for the past few days. Don’t let on you know. We’ll talk later.”

      She nodded, concerned. Lillian was back seconds later, almost as if she was afraid to leave them alone together. How strange.

      “Well, I think I’ll go up to bed,” Mari said after she finished her coffee, glancing quickly at Aunt Lillian. “I’m very tired.”

      “Good idea,” Ward said. “You get some rest.”

      “Yes,” Lillian agreed warmly. “Good night, dear.”

      She bent to kiss her aunt. “See you in the morning, Aunt Lillian,” she murmured and glanced at Ward. “Good night, Mr. Jessup.”

      “Good night, Miss Raymond,” he said politely.

      Mari went quietly upstairs and into her bedroom. She sat by the window and looked down at the empty swimming pool with its wooden privacy fence and the gently rolling, brush-laden landscape, where cattle moved lazily and a green haze heralded spring. Minutes later there was a stealthy knock at the door, and


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