heâd just given her. She licked her dry lips, then jerked her gaze up to his when he let out a low and very soft moan.
âHave I mentioned youâre killing me?â he asked quietly, running those fingers down her throat now, and very lightly over her collarbone.
A shudder wracked her.
âYes.â Her voice was a mere whisper. âYouâve mentioned.â
âGood.â
He turned to go, then speared her with one last searing look. âNext time you want to play with me, Princess, just remember what it is I want.â
She was fairly certain she would remember.
The moment he was gone, she sank to her bed, then fell to her back, gaze on the ceiling, fanning air in front of her hot, hot face.
10
T HEY WENT BACK to business only.
Then, the next afternoon, when Taylor had been forced by her cell phone to stand outside to get reception, Mac came through the yard, lost in thought with a set of plans in his hands. Without looking up, he brushed against her, his shoulder rubbing hers.
Did he even see her? As he walked away, he glanced over his shoulder at her, eyes hot enough to melt every bone in her body.
Oh yeah, he saw her.
An hour later he came through the entrance hall where she was studying paint samples, and ran his hand across her lower spine to make room for himself to pass.
Her entire body reacted.
Incidental contact?
Nothing with Mac was incidental.
He was playing with her, when heâd warned her not to do that very thing to him.
Payback time, she decided. The very next morning she acted first, and âaccidentallyâ brushed herbreasts against his arm when she leaned over to point something out on the plans.
He inhaled sharply.
She loved that, because it made it real, this thing he wanted to ignore. Whether he liked it or not, what they felt was real.
After that, she made sure it happened every time.
A touch, a lookâ¦
Mac never said a word about it, but he would reach out and brush his fingers over her hair, making her want to purr like a kitten and beg to be stroked.
While talking to her about concrete or wood, heâd drop his gaze to her mouth. If no one else was around, heâd lightly graze his knuckles over her jaw.
Once he ran a finger down her arm. She had the tingles for hours.
But they never spoke about it again, never spoke about anything other than the work.
And there was plenty of it. She had the second floor unit and the loft to color scheme in anticipation of the finished renovation and subsequent renting.
And there were also the two retail units down stairs. One for Suzanne, the other forâ¦the skyâs the limit. An art gallery, or a unique little gift shopâ¦maybe even a bookstore. She loved books.
But she knew what she really wanted. Just thinking about her storage unit, about all the antiques she had left, the precious commodities sheâd collected over the years, made her heart sigh.
Sheâd gathered these things around her like her family over the years. They were her security blanket. Sheâd sold some, but not as many as sheâd thought sheâd have to.
Which led her to believe she really could do it, she could keep that second retail unit for herself, for her antique shop.
The more she thought it, the more she wanted it.
Her cell phone beeped. Looking down at the missed call made Taylor sigh again. As if her mother had been able to read her mind from across town, as if she knew her daughter was thinking of doing something crazy, sheâd left a message.
Their relationship was pretty much a series of left messages, which made Taylor feelâ¦sad. Sad enough that she actually returned the phone call.
But the moment she heard her motherâs cool voice, she hesitated. âUhâ¦hello, Mom.â
âTaylor! How lovely.â
âIâm returning your call.â
âOh, of course. Well, I wanted to remind you Iâm campaigning again. My people suggested I get a family portrait
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