Born In Ice

Born In Ice by Nora Roberts Page B

Book: Born In Ice by Nora Roberts Read Free Book Online
Authors: Nora Roberts
Ads: Link
face, Brie. What are you up to?" "I'm trying to put in some seeds-but there's hardly room for them now."

    "Mind your hands, boy-o," Maggie muttered. He only grinned and stuck them in his pockets. "I heard my name mentioned. Is there a problem?"

    "There wouldn't be if she wasn't so stubborn." Maggie tossed up her chin and decided to dump the blame at Gray's feet. "She needs to go to Dublin next weekend, but she won't leave you."

    Gray's grin turned into a satisfied smile as his gaze shifted from Maggie to Brianna. "Won't she?" "You've paid for room and board," Brianna began. "Why do you need to go to Dublin?" he interrupted. "Our uncle's getting married," Maggie told him. "He'll want her there, and that's as it should be. I say if she won't leave you behind, she should take you along."

    "Maggie, Gray doesn't want to be going off to a wedding, with people he doesn't know. He's working, and he can't just-"

    "Sure he does," Gray cut her off. "When do we leave?" "Good. You'll stay at our house there. That's settled."

    Maggie brushed her hands together. "Now, who's going to tell Mother?"

    "I-"

    "No, let me," Maggie decided before Brianna could answer. She smiled. "She'll really hate it. We'll have the plane take her out Saturday morning so you won't be badgered by her the whole trip. Have you a suit, Gray?"

    "One or two," he murmured.

    "Then you're set, aren't you?" She leaned forward, kissed Brianna firmly on both cheeks. "Plan to leave Friday," she ordered. "I'll call you from Dublin."

    Gray ran his tongue around his teeth as Maggie slammed out. "Bossy, isn't she?"

    "Aye." Brianna blinked, shook her head. "She doesn't mean it. It's just that she's always sure she's right. And she has a deep fondness for Uncle Niall and for Rogan's grandmother."

    "Rogan's grandmother."

    "That's who he's marrying." She turned back to her potting, hoping to clear her mind with work.

    "That sounds like a story."

    "Oh, it 'tis. Gray, it's kind of you to be so obliging, but it's not necessary. They won't miss me, really, and it's a lot of trouble for you."

    "A weekend in Dublin's no trouble for me. And you want to go, don't you?"

    "That's not the point. Maggie put you in a difficult position."

    He put a hand under her chin, lifted it. "Why do you have such a hard time answering questions? You want to go, don't you? Yes or no."

    "Yes."

    "Okay, we go."

    Her lips started to curve, until he leaned toward them. "Don't kiss me," she said, weakening.

    "Now, that's a lot of trouble for me." But he reined himself in, leaned back. "Who hurt you, Brianna?"

    Her lashes fluttered down, shielding her eyes. "It may be I don't answer questions because you ask too many of them."

    "Yes,

    "Did you love him?"

    She turned her head, concentrated on her pots, very much."

    It was an answer, but he found it didn't please him. "Are you still in love with him?"

    "That would be foolish."

    "That's not an answer."

    "Yes, it is. Do I breathe down your neck when you're working?"

    "No." But he didn't step back. "But you have such an appealing neck." To prove it, he bent down to brush his lips over the nape. It didn't hurt his ego to feel her tremble. "I dreamed of you last night, Brianna. And wrote of it today."

    Most of her seeds scattered on the workbench instead of in the soil. She busied herself rescuing them. "Wrote of it?"

    "I made some changes. In the book you're a young widow who's struggling to build on a broken past."

    Despite herself, she was drawn and turned to look at him. "You're putting me in your book?"

    "Pieces of you. Your eyes, those wonderful, sad eyes. Your hair." He lifted a hand to it. "Thick, slippery hair, the color of the coolest sunset. Your voice, that soft lilt. Your body, slim, willowy, with a dancer's unconscious grace. Your skin, your hands. I see you when I write, so I write of you. And beyond the physical, there's your integrity, your loyalty." He smiled a little. "Your tea cakes. The hero's just as fascinated with

Similar Books

Complete Plays, The

William Shakespeare

Miss Buncle Married

D. E. Stevenson

Riding Hard

Vicki Lewis Thompson

Fire Flowers

Ben Byrne