After a moment, curiosity tugged Paige in. The paint was different and the teakettle from the top of the stove was gone. What else had changed?
The house was weirdly still. Mrs. Melker had always had music playing-Johnny Cash or Freddie Fender-and her little blue budgie twittering in its cage in the corner. Sometimes she had something baking that would make Paige's tummy rumble.
Paige wandered to the narrow door into the hall. It led from the parlor to the two bedrooms and bathroom. All the doors were shut. That part of the house was dark.
Sterling strode out of the parlor, heading down there anyway, surprising her with his sudden closeness. She stepped back, winced when she didn't manage the crutches right and put too much weight on the wrong part of her foot.
He paused, his expression hard to read in the shadows. "That's why it bothers you if I move in here."
"What. I hurt my foot."
He shifted his weight forward.
She retreated another clumsy step back.
He made a soft, "uh, huh," sound and turned as if heading for the bedrooms, shook his head and turned back to her. "You know, the only reason it's on my mind every time we're together is because it's so obviously on your mind."
She didn't know which way to turn, said, "Nothing's on my mind."
"Then why are you so jumpy around me?"
Because he was good-looking and funny and he had held her hand last night in a way that made her start believing in fairy tales. "I just don't want people to think things."
He snorted. "You can't control what people think. Who cares what they think?"
"So says the man who has never had anyone think badly of him."
"I don't know. Half the time you seem to think I'm something that needs hosing off the bottom of your shoe."
"I don't think badly of you. You're perfect, which is annoying, but-" Shut up, Paige. She leaned on the crutches, looked toward the door, glanced back to see if he was angry and saw he was suppressing a smile.
"Question is," he murmured, "do you also think about that night?"
Her breath stopped in her throat, until she finally forced out, "Since I'm not anxious to relive my most humiliating rejection, no. I never think about it."
In the silence that followed, she heard her own heartbeat pulsing in her ears. Okay, really. It was time to go. She moved the end of one crutch.
"Are we talking about what happened in my car before your dad grabbed me-"
"I'm not talking about anything," she insisted. "It was horrible."
"It was not." After a beat, he said, "Did you really think it was awful, Paige?" He sounded concerned. Shocked. "I thought it was..." She heard him swallow and he was very careful as he said, "Consensual."
Oh God. Why did every conversation with this man have to peel away every single layer of defenses she had?
"It was," she mumbled, ducking her head so her hair would cover her hot cheeks, embarrassed by remembered passion. Need. One kiss was all it was supposed to be, a light thank you for asking her on a date. The next minute their clothing had been askew and she'd been trying to crawl inside his skin. He'd felt so good!
Her body was burning. She wanted to leave, but was pinned by mortification.
"I liked you, Sterling. And when you kissed me, I thought it meant you liked me back." She sounded adolescent all over again. "But when you realized your good time was happening with a Fogarty, you got mad at me and acted like-"
"I wasn't mad." He had his hands in his pockets and slouched against the wall, his face still in shadow while she felt spotlighted by the light from the window and open door. A breeze through that door would be nice. "Not until after, when I thought you'd set me up. When I stopped, I was frustrated. Looks like anger, but it's different."
She thought back to a skinnier, big-handed, intense Sterling pushing her away, saying, What the hell? as if she'd been doing it all wrong. We're not having sex. Like the thought of it revolted him.
The black and white tiles had gold sparkles in them. She'd never noticed that before.
"I was hard as an uncut diamond, Paige. You can't seriously think I wasn't into you."
She remembered the hard as a diamond part, but from talk among her brother's friends, she'd been under the impression guys were pretty much permanently in that state so she hadn't taken credit for Sterling's arousal.
She shrugged, forcing herself to lift her face and look at him even though it made her feel very vulnerable. "You always acted like you didn't even know I existed."
"So did you."
And then they had finally spoken to each other, looked right at each other from across the width of a car and promptly collided like a pair of fusion atoms.
They were kind of looking at each other the same way now- Whew. Could they get some air in here? Please?
"I, um, didn't know how to handle attention from boys," she explained. Still didn't. "So I just pretended they weren't there." It wasn't working today.
His mouth twitched, the indent at one corner of his mouth deepening. Not laughing at her, laughing at the two of them. Dumb kids.
She still didn't get it, though. "Why did you push me away and say you didn't want to have sex then?"
"Because we were in the driveway?"
"Oh. Right." She dried her damp palms on her hips, fumbled to keep hold of her crutches, felt too aware of her unpolished appearance and the fact that her Fogarty-ness hadn't turned him off back then. She wondered what he thought of her now.
Oh, don't be such a girl.
He stood unmoving, all of his attention focused on her in a way that made the bottom of her stomach drop away.
Oh, dear. She needed some distance, stat.
"So you thought Lyle and I set you up? Because-"
"Your brother's a prick. If I think about it, I want to kick his ass, so let's never speak of him again. And be serious. All this time you've thought I drove to your house, asked you out, made the first move, then rejected you?"
She shrugged. "You wouldn't talk to me. Everything after was so awful I tried to forget the whole thing. Didn't you?"
"No." His tone scoffed at her for the notion. "Not all of it."
"What do you mean?"
"In my version we finish," he said with the kind of shrug men gave when they were acting like men. "So I think about it. Sometimes."
He had a version. She didn't know they were allowed to have versions. And he thought about it when he... Oh dear God.
"You're thinking about it now, aren't you?" he accused, an intimate teasing entering his voice. "Revising as we speak."
"I am not!" She was. Her palms were hot and slippery on the handles of her crutches. If she took out the part where he pushed her away and remembered the part where his hand shook when he touched her breast....
Her foot protested and she realized she had her feet mashed together, that she was pressing her thighs together. Oh, God.
He made a subtle adjustment against the front of his jeans.
Could this house get any more stifling? She had a feeling he was watching her mouth. He did that a lot. Last night, at the hospital, he'd seemed fixated on it. It made her self-conscious. She licked her lips, then pressed them together because she was making it worse.
"I'm leaving," she told him. "And we're adding this conversation to the list of things we never mention again." She arranged the crutches so she pointed toward the door.
"If we don't talk about it, how will we trade notes on our edits?"
She would have to drop a crutch to show him her middle finger, so she refrained, getting away from his laughter as fast as her hobbled gait could carry her.
~ * ~
Concentrate on the audit, Paige reminded herself for the millionth time and considered closing the door of her father's office to shut out the distractions, but every time she did, the scent of cigarettes condensed around her. Besides, it wouldn't help with the real distraction.
More yelling came through the venting system, originating from Walter's office.
She flinched, losing the thread of figures she was punching into her spreadsheet.
What was he doing to make his father react like that? Was it not enough that he invaded her thoughts all night, to the point she now had her own version of their near miss at sex, in which they didn't miss anything at all? Did he also have to attempt a coup d'etat on his father every day? Was he trying to cement his presence in her skull?
"Don't think I'm afraid to! I'll fire you if I see fit," she heard Walter shout.
Sterling's voice followed, coming to her as a murmur of sound, the tone firm, the sentences short and hard.
Then, the dreaded silence.
Terrific. He'd be up here in a minute, jockeying for her signature on whatever Walter was refusing to approve.
She debated closing the door, but the smell. Deodorizers weren't helping. Even washing the walls hadn't helped and that just took time away from what she was really trying to do.