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His Private Pleasure(13)

By:Donna Kauffman


He grinned and downed the rest of his wine, but didn’t leave the subject alone as she’d hoped. “The reason I assumed you’d chosen to leave was arrived at more simply.” He gestured with his wineglass over the railing. “We’ve already deduced your ride didn’t exactly roll off the used car lot. And I’m willing to bet those spikes on your feet didn’t come from Payless.”

“Ah, well, any good detective knows that things aren’t always as they appear. Maybe I had family money. Maybe I just played at being a businesswoman.”

“I don’t think so.” He grinned. “Instinct. When Psych 101 and deductive reasoning skills fail me, I rely on instinct.” He set his glass down and folded his arms on the table. “So, am I right?”

“Let’s just say I’m glad I’m not some perp you’re trying to pump.” He merely lifted an eyebrow and she couldn’t help it, she began to laugh. “You’re terrible.”

He stood, and with an easy smile and complete humility, said, “No, I’m quite good, actually.”

He walked over to retrieve their steaks and potatoes from the grill.

“That you are,” she murmured, finishing off her own wine as she studied the continually confounding Sheriff Dylan. “Too damn good for me.”





6




“THAT WAS REALLY FABULOUS,” Liza said as she finished her last piece of steak.

Dylan nodded and wiped his mouth with his napkin. “Nothing tastes better.”

He watched those eyes of hers twinkle. “Well, I could beg to differ, but as dinners go, you do have a point.”

He’d forgotten how stimulating verbal foreplay could be with a woman who knew what real foreplay was all about. He swallowed a laugh at his own expense. Like he knew so much about women. But he did know that women in Canyon Springs didn’t come with that kind of built-in savvy. And the women he’d met in Vegas had savvy of an entirely different sort, learned from a different set of circumstances.

This…this was refreshing. And damn if he wasn’t ready to move past the verbal and on to the physical. He had a feeling Liza liked to move things along at her own pace and that most men didn’t care as long as they had her undivided attention. Well, she already knew he wasn’t “most men.” Now she was about to learn that he had his own ideas about pace. Besides, it might be fun to see how she liked being pushed.

He stood and picked up their plates. “Why don’t you bring the glasses inside? Grab the rest of the wine, too.”

He saw her eyebrow flicker just the tiniest bit, but she merely nodded and scooped up their glasses and the bottle of wine. “I should tell you,” she said as they entered his living room, “in addition to not being a chief cook, I’m also not much in the way of a bottle washer. But I load a mean dishwasher if you have one handy.”

“Don’t worry about it. Guests don’t cook or clean.”

“I like that rule.”

She followed him as he wove through the living room into the kitchen and set the plates in the stainless steel sink.

“This is nice. Warm. Cozy.”

“I put a lot of thought into this room.” He imagined she’d seen places a lot snazzier than this, so he liked that she appreciated what he’d been going for in here. “I spent a great deal of time in our kitchen growing up. It was my favorite place. The one place the flock didn’t intrude. Even my bedroom had brooders in it half the time.”

“Brooders? Flock?”

“My mother’s home is more aviary than house. Mango isn’t her only baby. Avis Jackson is the original bird lady of Canyon Springs. We started with parakeets and finches when I was two. She was breeding them by the time I was five. I was seven when she took the neighbor’s sun conure after the noise got to them.”

“And Mango?”

“We ended up with him permanently when another neighbor developed an allergy to the cockatoo dust their feathers create. Then came Harris the blue-fronted Amazon, who was found in a gas station garage, all filthy and underweight, living in a rusted out cage. Pippin the African gray and Laslow the greenwing macaw were both found in a basement closet with a blanket thrown over them because the kids hated the noise they made. And well, before long she was the expert on bird rescue. When the Internet came into play, she linked up with several people in the Southwest who also do rescues. Many of the birds get placed with other owners, some go to a sanctuary in Arizona. And some, like the gang I mentioned, she keeps.”

“Wow, sounds interesting.”

“It’s her passion. The birds are her whole life.”

Liza cocked her head. “But not yours, I take it?”

He smiled dryly. “She does great work and it’s sorely needed. But let’s just say I was glad to stop being chief cage cleaner and vegetable washer when I graduated from high school and left town.”

“What did your dad think of having his house taken over by exotic birds?”

“He was killed in Vietnam when I was a toddler. Actually, I think she got into it when he first went overseas. It gave her something to do, and I think she needed to feel needed. By more than me, anyway.”

“I’m sorry. I’m the last one who should make assumptions about family units.”

“That’s okay.” Dylan remembered Liza had said something to that affect earlier today. He didn’t bother reminding himself that he wasn’t trying to get to know her better, just to get her into bed. But damn if she didn’t interest him. “I don’t remember him at all,” he added, “but Mom kept his letters and some of his things, so I got a sense of who he was. His folks were my only grandparents and we were close while I was growing up. I’ve got a couple of aunts and uncles and more cousins than I can name. It was one of my uncles who got me interested in being a cop. He’s a retired captain out of Albuquerque.”

Dylan grinned. “I think my mom put him up to that particular rescue mission. She was better with birds than people. Still is. But Uncle Pete knew from boys, having four of them himself. If it wasn’t for him, God knows how I’d have turned out.”

Liza smiled, and there was something a bit wistful in it that made him wonder. “Big family. Sounds wonderful.”

He shrugged. “It gave me a place to go when I needed to escape the jungle, anyway.” Again he wondered about her family. He wondered where they fit into her sabbatical.

He opened his mouth to ask, but she said, “Avis never remarried?”

“She gave her love to the flock. It makes her happy.”

Liza’s gaze sort of penetrated him for a second, leaving him feel oddly vulnerable. “Sounds like you all found what you needed. That’s good.” Then she smiled and turned her attention back to the kitchen. “It’s obvious you love this room,” she said, clearly changing the subject. It was in the part of the house that snugged into the mountain, so he’d wanted to make sure it didn’t look cavelike or dark. The walls were a rich yellow and the floor a warm, honey-gold tile. The cabinets were light pine with glass fronts and the center island, half stainless steel, half butcher block, had padded stools on one side and was ringed overhead with copper and stainless steel pots and pans.

“A lot of gear for a single guy,” she observed. “You have a lot of parties up here?”

“I like to have the right tool on hand when I want it.”

She had a delightfully rich laugh. “I won’t even touch that one.”

He closed the distance between them. “We’ll see about that.” She shifted ever so slightly and set the glasses down on the center island, but he took the bottle from her hand before she could pour, and set it down as well.

“I thought we might have another glass,” she said, not moving away from him, but doing what he’d bet she typically did—steering the course of events back to her preplanned path. Or trying to.

“And I thought I’d see if your mouth tasted as sassy as it sounds.”

“Oh.”

He liked that little blink of surprise. It encouraged that bad boy part of him that had never completely gone away. So he tucked her small, tight body between him and the island and slowly pushed his fingers into her soft curls. “Oh,” he echoed. “Yeah.” Then he dipped his head to kiss her, only to stop just before making contact. “Do you always keep your eyes open during a kiss?”

“Depends on the kiss.” She hadn’t pulled away or stiffened when he’d moved against her. Nor had she opened up or invited him to go further. It was like she was hovering outside the intimate little circle he’d created, gauging, planning.

Well, he’d see about that.

“You’ll have to let me know which kind this is, then.” And he lowered his mouth the rest of the way. She tasted…warm. There was the spice of the wine and something else that was pure Liza. She tasted every bit as sassy as her personality, and it made him want to lap up each part of her. Something he might just be able to work out. He didn’t push the kiss into anything heavy, nor did he try to seduce her into it. He merely took, tasted, tested…and enjoyed.

Not that she wasn’t kissing him back, but there was a sense of gauging in her kiss, and he discovered he was a bit irritated by her somewhat removed, observatory attitude. At the same time, he was forced to admit he was anticipating what kind of counterassault she’d mount when it was her turn. And there was no doubt she saw this as a campaign of some kind, a strategic battle to be guided to a conclusion that would be most satisfactory for her. And perhaps him as well. He doubted she suffered many complaints.