Her Baby's Father. Rebecca York
me if you hadn’t reacted.”
She nodded.
“Then you came up with a lot of details I didn’t notice.”
Her eyes snapped open. “I’ve trained myself to think about details. That’s part of my job.”
“Yeah. When the cop asked if you’d seen the guy before, you hesitated.”
She turned her head toward him. “I was trying to think if I had seen him.”
“And I assumed I hadn’t.”
“I guess it’s just the way we think about things.”
“Right,” he answered, still mulling that over. He hadn’t thought about his powers of observation until tonight.
Sara closed her eyes again, and he wondered if she wanted to sleep—or to avoid talking about their answers to the cop.
It was only a short ride to his house, which was a fifty-year-old rancher on a couple of acres off Route 144. The property had appealed to him because he hated the way the county was being built up with houses crammed onto tiny lots.
He shared a long driveway with several other home owners who also wanted some privacy. When he pulled up in front of the house, Sara opened her eyes and looked around. A security light had gone on, illuminating the low, rectangular front of the house, and he saw her looking at it.
“Not very impressive,” he said.
“I’m guessing you didn’t buy it to impress anyone.”
He laughed. “That’s for sure. I just wanted a place to live where I could be by myself.”
She nodded, and he wondered if he had given too much away with that answer. No use explaining that his parents had invited him to move back in to their mansion, and he hadn’t wanted the obligation of making conversation. Or having anyone comment on his physical-therapy schedule.
Jack knew that Mom and Dad were being protective of him. They hadn’t liked him joining the army. They’d been sick with worry when he’d gone off to Afghanistan. And they were still worried about his physical and mental shape.
He understood all that. Maybe he was making a dramatic improvement tonight. At least mentally.
He’d intended to tell Sara that he knew she was tired. Instead he heard himself say, “Do you want to come in?”
“Yes,” she murmured. “But I think I shouldn’t.”
“Because you decided this isn’t going anywhere?” he asked, wanting to get the disappointment over with in one fell swoop.
“Because I know it is. And if I come inside, there’s no telling what will happen. Then you’ll think I’m the kind of woman who…” She stopped and laughed. “I’d better not make suggestions, but I’m thinking we’re safe out here.”
As she spoke she reached for him across the narrow console, pulling him into her arms. “Oh, Jack,” she sighed, as she clung tightly to him.
“We both had a frightening experience,” he answered.
“It’s not just that, and you know it.” She pulled back so that her eyes could meet his.
“Yes.” He held her gaze for a long moment, then moved in closer again, lowering his head to cover her lips with his.
He was out of practice kissing. Out of practice with any kind of intimacy. But as soon as their mouths touched, he knew exactly what he was doing.
She made a small sound as his lips moved over hers, the friction setting up a vibration through his body.
He hadn’t wanted to admit it, but he knew that the two of them could have died on the street outside the restaurant. Or he could have, if she hadn’t been with him.
Would he just have handed over his wallet if he’d been alone?
Probably not.
Since he’d come home, his mood had been reckless. He hadn’t cared much about what happened to him. That had changed as they’d sat over dinner. Changed even more when the man had come at them with the gun.
“Something could have happened to you back there,” he whispered against her mouth.
“Or to you,” she answered, turning her head so that her lips rubbed against his, then settling down with a more steady pressure.
He didn’t have to ask her to open for him. She simply did it, giving him access to her sweetness.
He liked the faint taste of brandy in her mouth. He liked the way she kissed. Loved the way she was doing exactly what he wanted. Like she was reading his mind. She couldn’t be, but they’d clicked in a way that was almost magical.
He stopped trying to analyze the attraction or his reactions or anything else. He simply wanted to enjoy this moment with her—to enjoy this woman.
He loved the soft skin of her arms when he stroked them, the feel of her breasts pressed against his chest. Her scent, which wasn’t anything he could define but was unique to her.
She kissed him as though they were two lovers at the end of the world who had thought they were doomed to live out their days alone. Then they’d found each other, and everything had changed.
“Jack,” she murmured against his mouth, her tongue finding the inside of his lips, the line of his teeth, stroking him with a maddening sensuality.
They had met only today. He had to keep reminding himself of that when he wanted to pick her up in his arms and carry her into the house. Straight to his bed.
And she would have come with him. She’d as much as said she would. Or she wanted to.
He ached to slip his hand between them and cup her breast, and it took all his restraint to stop himself from doing it.
He warned himself not to go too fast. Not to do anything that would ruin things before they really got started.
Forcing himself to go slowly, he pulled away. His breath was coming hard and fast. So was hers.
She looked into his eyes for a long moment, then lowered her head to his shoulder, gripping his arms.
He could have sat here all night holding her, if she would let him. “You should go before I take this too far.”
“I know.” The broken sound of her voice tore at him.
She didn’t raise her head or let go of him, but stayed where she was.
“Jack,” she said again, his name easing out of her like a long sigh. “I never thought this would ever happen again.”
The words jolted him. “What do you mean ‘again’?”
Chapter Five
Sara pulled away and kept her head down, because looking at him might make her reveal what she knew about their past and their future. “I didn’t mean to say that,” she said. “It just slipped out.”
“I don’t have any right to pry,” he answered in a gruff voice, and she knew he was wondering about what she could possibly have meant.
She dragged in a breath and let it out, fighting panic. What was she going to say now? It had to be something that made sense, but her mind stayed blank until she heard words coming out of her mouth.
“I was in love with someone. It was a very intense relationship. We were going to get married. Then he died.”
“I’m sorry.”
“It was very difficult for me to deal with.”
“I understand,” he said, and she knew he must be trying to imagine what that must have been like for her.
She went on quickly. “I’ve