The Night that Changed Everything. Anne McAllister

The Night that Changed Everything - Anne  McAllister


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been wrong.

      The inadequacy of that house compared to the time he could have had with her still gutted him. He ground his teeth, cracked his knuckles. Swallowed hard.

      “What happened?” Edie asked quietly.

      “She died.”

      He said the words baldly. Forced himself to confront the mistake he’d made. He didn’t look at Edie. This wasn’t about her. It was about him. And Amy.

      For a long moment Edie didn’t say anything, either. Nick wasn’t surprised. What, after all, was there to say?

      He should have kept his own mouth shut. He couldn’t imagine what he’d been thinking, dragging out his private pain for a woman he’d known less than a couple of hours.

      “Forget it,” he muttered. “I shouldn’t have said anything.”

      “I asked.” She reached out, touched his arm. “I am so very sorry,” she told him.

      A lot of people had said they were sorry. But Edie’s words didn’t sound like a platitude. He could hear the earnestness in her voice, and there was something so close to pain in her tone that it surprised him. He turned to look at her.

      “You lost her,” Edie said, “and you lost your own future as well.”

      “Yes.” It was something that no one else seemed to get. He wasn’t the one who had died, after all. He should just get on with his life. If they didn’t say it—and some did before many months had passed—he could see it in the way they looked at him, in the suggestions for dates, in the offers to set him up with eligible women.

      “I understand,” she said.

      He doubted it. “Thank you,” he said politely and looked away out the window.

      “My husband died two years ago.”

      Nick’s gaze snapped back, shocked, to meet hers. His “I’m sorry” felt as feeble and inadequate as a platitude now. “I didn’t know.”

      “I don’t generally announce it,” Edie said lightly. Then she gave him a faint smile. “I don’t suppose you do, either.”

      “No.” It had been, literally, years since he’d talked about Amy to anyone. Now he paused, considering. “That was why you were upset about Mona’s matchmaking?”

      She thinks I need to start dating again. Nick remembered Edie’s earlier words. Remembered wondering about the again. Now he knew.

      She hesitated, then nodded. “Yes.”

      He understood. It made perfect sense. He didn’t look at her. He didn’t think she was looking at him. She was probably thinking about the husband she’d lost much more recently than he’d lost Amy.

      And he was thinking about—her. About Edie.

      He tried to think about her as someone’s wife. He wondered what had happened, didn’t feel as if he could ask.

      She wasn’t that close to him. Three feet, maybe even four. But even without looking he could feel her presence. There seemed to be a hum of awareness between them. Or maybe it only went one way. However it went, Nick felt a connection. He wanted to soothe away her pain, make her forget.

      But he knew better than anyone that you didn’t forget.

      Now he heard her move, step away from the side of the table and he turned to face her again. She was smiling, but it was a faint smile. Sad, he thought. And why not? She had reason to be sad.

      “I should go,” she said now. “I’ve intruded on you enough.”

      But as she moved past him toward the door, he caught her arm. “Don’t,” he said. And when she looked up into his eyes, he said, “Stay.”

      Just one word. Low, rough, but laced with an urgency that surprised him. The very word surprised him. The request. The command.

      He didn’t know what to call it. Only knew he didn’t want her to leave.

      Edie looked surprised, too. Her lips parted, but for a moment no words passed through them. She seemed to be weighing her answer, deciding how to respond. Finally she said lightly, “You’re not done with the tour yet?”

      The question allowed them both to back off. Nick nodded. “You haven’t seen the tower.”

      “The tower?” she echoed.

      “I’ve been redoing the stairway up to the parapet, rebuilding the tower and the battlements. There’s a fantastic view. You should see it.” But he said wryly, “You’re not exactly dressed for it.” She was, of course, still in her stocking feet.

      “I’ll risk it,” she said promptly.

      “I’d carry you, but the passage is too narrow.”

      “It’s all right. I can climb.”

      “The stones are too rough. Hang on. I’ll get you something to wear on your feet.”

      He strode down to his own room and came back moments later with a pair of his flip-flops. He grimaced. “They’re too big. But if you really want to do it, they’re better than nothing.”

      “I really want to do it.”

      So did he. He crouched down to put the flip-flops on her, then realized at the same time she did that she would have to shed her stockings first.

      There was a moment’s pause. Edie’s toes curled, then a second or two later slowly straightened again. Nick’s mouth felt suddenly dry.

      “Let me help you,” he offered, lifting his gaze to her face.

      It was shadowed. Her expression was hard to read, but he saw her touch her tongue to her lips. Then she bit down on the lower one and, looking down at him, held perfectly still.

      He took that for agreement. “Hang on,” he instructed her, and hoped to God he could do the same.

      It was hardly the height of intimacy, sliding his fingers up beneath her dress to find the tops of her stockings or panty hose or whatever she was wearing.

      On the other hand, it was pretty damned erotic. The stockings felt like real silk, smooth and warm against her legs, so fine that he was afraid his callused fingers would snag them.

      So he proceeded slowly, trying to be careful, to move lightly. But the hint of firm flesh beneath that silken barrier was enticing. He loved to touch. He wanted to stroke as his hands snaked over her calves, past her knees, up her thighs. He could feel her legs tremble.

      Fingers suddenly clutched his head, gripping his hair. He sucked in a breath. “S-sorry,” she muttered. Her fingers loosened their grip, then as his continued their journey, hers tightened again. They sent a shiver down his spine.

      But that sensation was nothing compared to the shaft of desire that shot straight to his groin as the silk beneath his fingers turned to lace and then, an inch later, to warm bare skin.

      Nick sucked air, then tried to steady his breathing, to be matter-of-fact. This wasn’t a seduction—unless he was the one being seduced.

      Now he hooked his fingers inside the top of one stocking and drew it down, then slipped it off her foot. Then he skimmed his fingers back up the other leg. But knowing what he would encounter didn’t make it any easier to feign indifference.

      He wasn’t indifferent. And when he stood up—provided he could manage to stand up—she would know it.

      So he took his time, sliding her feet into the flip-flops, then picking up the stockings and folding them.

      “I’ll do that.” Edie nearly snatched them out of his fumbling hands. Hers seemed to be full of thumbs as well. But at least her focus on them allowed Nick to wince his way to his feet and adjust his trousers so that his reaction was not immediately obvious.

      He


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