“I wondered where you’d wandered off to,” Lilah continued, and cupped a hand under Max’s chin to examine his face. “You look a little better,” she decided as the dog started to sniff at Max’s bare toes. “That’s Fred,” she told him. “He only bites criminals.”
“Oh. Good.”
“Since you have his seal of approval, why don’t you come down? You can sit in the sun and have some lunch.”
He would dearly love to sit, he realized and let Lilah lead him away. “Is this really your house?”
“Hearth and home. My great-grandfather built it just after the turn of the century. Look out for Fred.” The dog dashed between them, stepped on his own ear and yelped. Max, who’d gone through a long clumsy stage himself, felt immediate sympathy. “We’re thinking of giving him ballet lessons,” she said as the dog struggled back to his feet. Noting the blank look on Max’s face, she patted his cheek. “I think you could use some of Aunt Coco’s chicken soup.”
She made him sit and kept an eye on him while he ate. Her protective instincts were usually reserved for family or small, wounded birds. But something about the man tugged at her. He seemed so out of his element, she thought. And helpless with it.
Something was going on behind those big blue eyes, she thought. Something beyond the fatigue. She could almost see him struggle to put one mental foot in front of the other.
He began to think that the soup had saved his life as surely as Lilah had. It slid warm and vital into his system. “I fell out of a boat,” he said abruptly.
“That would explain it.”
“I don’t know what I was doing on a boat, exactly.”
In the chair beside him she brought up her limber legs to settle in the lotus position. “Taking a vacation?”
“No.” His brow furrowed. “No, I don’t take vacations.”
“Why not?” She reached over to take one of the crackers from his plate. She wore a trio of glittering rings on her hand.
“Work.”
“School’s out,” she said with a lazy stretch.
“I always teach summer courses. Except...” Something was tapping at the edges of his brain, tauntingly. “I was going to do something else this summer. A research project. And I was going to start a book.”
“A book, really?” She savored the cracker as if it were laced with caviar. He had to admire her basic, sensual enjoyment. “What kind?”
Her words jerked him back. He’d never told anyone about his plans to write. No one who knew him would have believed that studious, steady-as-she-goes Quartermain dreamed of being a novelist. “It’s just something I’ve been thinking of for a while, but I had a chance to work on this project... a family history.”
“Well, that would suit you. I was a terrible student. Lazy,” she said with a smile in her eyes. “I can’t imagine anyone wanting to make a career out of a classroom. Do you like it?”
It wasn’t a matter of liking it. It was what he did. “I’m good at it.” Yes, he realized, he was good at it. His students learned—some more than others. His lectures were well attended and well received.
“That’s not the same thing. Can I see your hand?”
“My what?”
“Your hand,” she repeated, and took it, turning it palm up. “Hmm.”
“What are you doing?” For a heady moment, he thought she would press her lips to it.
“Looking at your palm. More intelligence than intuitiveness. Or maybe you just trust your brains more than your instincts.”
Staring at the top of her bent head, he gave a nervous laugh. “You don’t really believe in that sort of thing. Palm reading.”
“Of course—but it’s not just the lines, it’s the feeling.” She glanced up briefly with a smile that was at once languid and electric. “You have very nice hands. Look here.” She skimmed a finger along his palm and had him swallowing. “You’ve got a long life ahead of you, but see this break? Near-death experience.”
“You’re making it up.”
“They’re your lines,” she reminded him. “A good imagination. I think you’ll write that book—but you’ll have to work on that self-confidence.”
She looked up again, a trace of sympathy on her face. “Rough childhood?”