a ride back to the lodge.”
“Sure.”
“That easy?” He felt one eyebrow quirk. He hadn't expected her to give in without trying to talk him into staying longer.
“Why not?” she asked and looked away from him, shifting her gaze to sweep across the town square. She sighed again and this time her voice was so soft, he almost missed it. “I just wanted you to see Hunter's Landing. To meet some of the people, so you'd know who you and your friends are helping.”
“Thank you.” He heard the sarcasm in his own voice but didn't bother to try to take the sting out of it.
“I can take you by the clinic for a quick look on the way back. Then you can see exactly what we're planning.”
“Not necessary.”
Nathan blew out a frustrated breath. Everything in him was clamoring to be gone from this place. To pick up the threads of his life and get back to living the way he knew best. He didn't do well with other people. Didn't care to. And yet now …
Screw it.
“How about that ride?”
Frowning, she said, “You're just determined not to enjoy yourself, aren't you?”
“Was that a requirement?”
She muttered, “Kelly was right. You really are scary, aren't you?”
“What?”
“Nothing.” Reluctantly, she shrugged and said, “Let's go.”
He followed her to her truck and when she stumbled over a crack in the road, Nathan lunged forward to grab her before she could fall. Spinning her around, he pulled her in close and she laughed up at him. The woman was so changeable, he could hardly keep up.
“Thanks, didn't see that.”
“Weren't looking, you mean.”
Her hands were on his upper arms and even through the thick leather of his coat, he felt the heat in her touch and wanted more. Wanted to feel her hands on his bare skin, run his own hands over every curve of her body. Hear her sigh as he buried himself inside her.
The images in his mind were suddenly so clear, so overpowering, he could hardly draw a breath past the hot fist tightening around his lungs.
He willed himself to speak. “It's a wonder you're not covered in bruises the way you stumble around.”
“What makes you think I'm not?” she asked, still smiling.
He pulled in another deep breath of cold, mountain air and hoped it would help chill the fire in his blood. “What the hell are you doing to me?” he demanded.
“Depends, Nathan,” she said, her smile fading as her brilliant green eyes darkened with a need he recognized. “What do you want me to do to you?”
“I'm not interested in a short affair,” he said tightly, despite the fact that his body clamored for just that.
“Well, who asked you?” She pulled free of his grasp, straightened up and shook her hair back from her face. “Jeez, save a girl from a fall and then accuse her of trying to seduce you. Nice. Very nice.”
He pushed one hand through his hair and wondered why in the hell he tried talking to her anyway. “Can we just get in the damn truck?”
She dug her keys out of her pocket and bounced them on her palm. “You know, you were the one looking at me like you wanted to gobble me up.”
He blew out another breath and glared at her. “Call it temporary insanity.”
“Wow, one compliment after another,” she said and turned for the truck. “You're really on a roll here, Barrister.”
He stood just where he was and watched her open the driver's side door and step up into the cab. “You're an infuriating woman, did you know that?”
She glanced back at him over her shoulder. “Believe it or not, that's been said before.”
“My sympathies to the poor bastard, whoever he was.”
Her face froze up and her eyes shuttered as effectively as if she'd slapped on a pair of dark glasses. “He doesn't need your sympathy, Nathan. And neither do I. So, you getting in the truck or are you going to walk back up the mountain?”
Over the next week or so, every time Keira drove up the mountain, she was half afraid she'd find Nathan gone. After a really quiet ride back from the block party, she had dropped him off at the lodge and had hardly waited for his feet to hit the dirt before she gunned the engine and went home. It still embarrassed her to think about driving off in a huff like that.
She never should have let him get to her—couldn't understand why she had. But that little dig about giving his sympathies to whichever man had last been in her life had come a little too quickly after Kelly had brought up the same damn thing.
It wasn't that Keira was sensitive about her past; she just didn't like being reminded of what an idiot she'd been once upon a time.
But that was the past and this was now. And all that mattered now was making sure Nathan didn't leave before his month was up. She was pretty sure he was tired of having her show up on his doorstep every day, but she kept visiting him anyway, because she could practically see his need to leave vibrating in the air all around him.
And she wouldn't let that happen.
Parking the truck in the drive, she hopped out, slammed the door and headed for the front door. Dark clouds hung heavy over the mountains and the air felt thick with the promise of more snow. As much as she loved winter in the mountains, she was really ready for spring. Unfortunately, it looked as if nature didn't feel the same way.
She shivered, dug her hands into her jacket pockets and quickened her step, only to stop when she heard Nathan's voice shout, “Back here.”
Surprised to find him outside and away from the laptop that he clung to like his last link with civilization, Keira headed down the drive. She saw him at the lake's edge and she wasn't ashamed to admit, at least to herself, that the man was really sigh-worthy.
He wore that dark green cashmere sweater again over jeans that looked worn and comfortable. His brown leather jacket gave him a piratical air, and the wind tossed his hair across his forehead, making him look more free than she could remember seeing him before. Her heart jumped a little and her mouth went dry.
She could be in some serious trouble here. Especially if he started looking at her the way he had the night of the party.
“What're you doing?” she called as her boots crunched on the gravel drive.
He gave her a quick look, then shifted his gaze back to the steel gray surface of the lake. “Just looking. Needed some air.”
“Really?” she teased as she walked up to stop beside him. “I thought you were very happy breathing canned air and looking at nature through the beauty of clean glass windows.”
He snorted. “Let's just say I'm feeling a little cabin fever.”
There it was again. She could see how ready he was to chuck the whole month and escape from what he no doubt considered captivity. So what she had to do was take his mind off it.
“I can cure that.”
“How?”
“Take a walk with me.” She threaded her arm through the crook of his and smiled up at him.
“It's freezing out here,” he reminded her.
“If we keep moving, we won't feel it.” She tugged at his arm. “Come on. When's the last time you took a walk along a lake as beautiful as this one?”
His gaze swept out over the wide expanse of water and the pine-tree-studded shoreline before turning back to her. “Never.”