day next week and come over. Bring your sketchbook.”
“What for?”
“An idea I have brewing. We’ll see if it suits both of us.”
It couldn’t hurt, she mused. And it would give her some time to think about everything that had happened that morning. “All right, but one day’s the same as the next to me. My schedule’s open these days.”
“You’ll know which day when it comes.” He reached out to toy with the ends of her hair. “So will I.”
“And that, I suppose, is some kind of Irish mysticism.”
“You don’t know the half of it,” he murmured. “A good day to you, Cousin Rowan.”
He gave her hair an absent tug, then turned and walked away.
Well, she thought, as days went, it hadn’t been half bad so far.
* * *
And when he came to her again in dreams, she welcomed him. When his mind touched hers, seduced it, aroused it, she sighed, yielded, offered.
She shivered in pleasure, breathed his name and sensed somehow that he was as vulnerable as she. For just that moment, just that misty space of time, he was tangled with her, helpless not to give what she asked.
If only she knew the question.
Even when her body glowed, her mind soared, part of her fretted.
What should she ask him? What did she need to know?
In the dark, with the half-moon spilling delicate light through her open windows, she woke alone. She burrowed into the pillows and listened with her heart aching to the sound of the wolf calling to the night.
Chapter 6
Rowan watched spring burst into life. And, watching, it seemed something burst into life inside her as well. Daffodils and windflowers shimmered into bloom. The little pear tree outside the kitchen window opened its delicate white blossoms and danced in the wind.
Deep in the forest, the wild azaleas began to show hints of pink and white, and the foxglove grew fat buds. There were others, so many others; she promised herself a book on local wildflowers on her next trip into town. She wanted to know them, learn their habits and their names.
All the while she felt herself begin to bloom. Was there more color in her face? she wondered, more light in her eyes? She knew she smiled more often, enjoyed the sensation of feeling her own lips curve up for no particular reason as she walked or sketched or simply sat on the porch in the warming air to read for hours.
Nights no longer seemed lonely. When the wolf came, she talked to him about whatever was on her mind. When he didn’t, she was content to spend her evening alone.
She wasn’t entirely sure what was different, only that something was. And that there were other, bigger changes yet to come.
Maybe it was the decision she’d made not to go back to San Francisco, or to teaching, or the practical apartment minutes from her parents’ home.
She’d been cautious with money, she reminded herself. She’d never felt any particular urge to collect things or fill her closet with clothes or take elaborate vacations. Added to that was the small inheritance that had come down to her through her mother’s family. One she had cautiously invested and watched grow neatly over the last few years.
There was enough to draw on for a down payment for a little house somewhere.
Somewhere quiet and beautiful, she thought now as she stood on the front porch with a cup of steaming coffee to welcome another morning. It had to be a house, she knew. No more apartment living. And somewhere in the country. She wasn’t going to be happy in the bustle and rush of the city ever again. She’d have a garden she planted herself—once she learned how—and maybe a little creek or pond.
It had to be close enough to the sea that she could walk to it, hear its song at night as she drifted toward sleep.
Maybe, just maybe, on that next trip to town she’d visit a Realtor. Just to see what was available.
It was such a big step—choosing a spot, buying a house—furnishing it, maintaining it. She caught herself winding the tip of her braid
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