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Eyes stormy, she took a step back toward him. “Is that what this is all about?” she demanded. “You’re still steaming because you fell off that stupid motorcycle and bruised your inflated male ego?”

“That wasn’t the only thing that got bruised—or scraped or lacerated.” He remembered the way she’d looked. God, she couldn’t have been more than sixteen. Rushing out of her car, her hair windblown, her face pale, her eyes dark and drenched with concern and fear.

And he’d been sprawled on the side of the road, his twenty-year-old pride as raw as the skin the asphalt had abraded.

“I don’t believe it,” she was saying. “You’re still mad, after what, twelve years, for something that was clearly your own fault.”

“My fault?” He tipped the bottle toward her. “You’re the one who ran into me.”

“I never ran into you or anyone. You fell.”

“If I hadn’t ditched the bike, you would have run into me. You weren’t looking where you were going.”

“I had the right of way. And you were going entirely too fast.”

“Bull.” He was starting to enjoy himself. “You were checking that pretty face of yours in the rearview mirror.”

“I certainly was not. I never took my eyes off the road.”

“If you’d had your eyes on the road, you wouldn’t have run into me.”

“I didn’t—” She broke off, swore under her breath. “I’m not going to stand here and argue with you about something that happened twelve years ago.”

“You came here to try to drag me into something that happened eighty years ago.”

“That was an obvious mistake.” She would have left it at that, but a very big, very wet dog came bounding across the lawn. With two happy barks, the animal leaped, planting both muddy feet on Suzanna’s shirt and sending her staggering back.

“Sadie, down!” As Holt issued the terse command, he caught Suzanna before she hit the ground. “Stupid bitch.”

“I beg your pardon?”

“Not you, the dog.” Sadie was already sitting, thumping her dripping tail. “Are you all right?” He still had his arms around her, bracing her against his chest.

“Yes, fine.” He had muscles like rock. It was impossible not to notice. Just as it was impossible not to notice that his breath fluttered along her temple, that he smelled very male. It had been a very long time since she had been held by a man.

Slowly he turned her around. For a moment, a moment too long, she was face-to-face with him, caught in the circle of his arms. His gaze flicked down to her mouth, lingered. A gull wheeled overhead, banked then soared out over the water. He felt her heart thud against his. Once, twice, three times.

“Sorry,” he said as he released her. “Sadie still sees herself as a cute little puppy. She got your shirt dirty.”

“Dirt’s my business.” Needing time to recover, she crouched down to rub the dog’s head. “Hi, there, Sadie.”

Holt pushed his hands into his pockets as Suzanna acquainted herself with his dog. The bottle lay where he’d tossed it, spilling its contents onto the lawn. He wished to God she didn’t look so beautiful, that her laugh as the dog lapped at her face didn’t play so perfectly on his nerves.

In that one moment he’d held her, she’d fit into his arms as he’d once imagined she would. His hands fisted inside his pockets because he wanted to touch her. No, that wasn’t even close. He wanted to pull her inside the cottage, toss her onto the bed and do incredible things to her.

“Maybe a man who owns such a nice dog isn’t all bad.” She tossed a glance over her shoulder, and the cautious smile died on her lips. The way he was looking at her, his eyes so dark and fierce, his bony face so set had the breath backing up in her lungs. There was violence trembling around him. She’d had a taste of violence from a man, and the memory of it made her limbs weak.

Slowly he relaxed his shoulders, his arms, his hands. “Maybe he isn’t,” he said easily. “But it’s more a matter of her owning me at this point.”

Suzanna found it more comfortable to look at the dog than the master. “We have a puppy. Well, he’s growing by leaps and bounds so he’ll be as big as Sadie soon. In fact, he looks a great deal like her. Did she have a litter a few months ago?”

“No.”

“Hmm. He’s got the same coloring, the same shaped face. My brother-in-law found him half starved. Someone had dumped him, I suppose, and he’d managed to get up to the cliffs.”

“Even I draw the line at abandoning helpless puppies.”

“I didn’t mean to imply—” She broke off because a new thought had jumped into her mind. It was no crazier than looking for missing emeralds. “Did your grandfather have a dog?”