Page 14 of The Ideal Man (Buchanan-Renard 9)
âNo, the lavender room was the last,â William said.
âWho chose that color?â
Ellie was rinsing the salad bowl and putting it in the dishwasher. âYou donât like the color?â
âI didnât say that. I just wondered who chose it.â
Her parents glanced at each other before answering. The question seemed to surprise them.
âNo one chose it,â Ellieâs mother said. âWe purchased what was on sale, didnât we, dear?â
âThatâs right. That particular color had been discontinued.â
Max could understand why. The color practically glowed.
âWe got it for a song,â William said proudly.
âWould you like some coffee, Max?â Claire asked.
âNo, thank you.â
By this time, most of the dishes had been cleared, rinsed, and placed in the dishwasher by Ellie. Her mother carried a pitcher to the counter, and Ellie practically wrenched it from her hands to begin washing it.
âEllie,â her mother said, âwhy donât you and Max get settled in your rooms for the night. Itâs been a long day, and I know you two would like some alone time to catch up. And just maybe, after a good nightâs rest, youâll reevaluate your position on the wedding.â
âI assure you that wonât happen,â she said, and before her mother could start in again, Ellie rushed ahead, âAre you sure you donât want me to finish the dishes?â Without waiting for an answer, she grabbed Maxâs hand and headed for the back door.
Max made her wait while he thanked her parents for dinner, then followed her outside.
âI like your parents.â
She didnât look over her shoulder as she crossed the yard at a fast clip to get to the steps.
âUh-huh,â she agreed. âYouâve probably got a hundred questions about my family, donât you?â
âNo,â he answered. âOkay, maybe a couple.â
âYes?â
She rushed up the stairs and waited for Max to unlock the dead bolts. He leaned around her, wrapping her in his arms as he slipped the keys in the dead bolts and unlocked the door. If she moved at all, her lips would touch his warm skin. He swung the door open and pulled back so she could go inside.
She walked to the center of the living room, turned around, and folded her arms in front of her while she waited for him to lock the door and give her his full attention. As soon as he was facing her, she said, âOkay, start talking. Why are you here?â
He leaned against the door and grinned. âI thought it was my turn to ask questions.â
She sighed in frustration. âOkay, Iâll give you two. Then you start explaining. Go ahead. Ask away.â
âWhatâs a plus one?â
SIXTEEN
They were on round three of the argument.
Max had taken a shower, put on a clean T-shirt and jeans, grabbed the channel changer, and now sat on the lumpy sofa with his bare feet up on an ottoman, trying to watch the late news on a television screen the size of a breadbox while he patiently waited for Ellie to calm down and be reasonable. He doubted it was going to happen anytime soon.
The remote kept falling apart in his hand. It had been duct taped together, but the tape was obviously old. He made the mental note to buy a universal remote tomorrow or another roll of tape. It was downright barbaric not to have a decent channel changer.
âAre you listening to me?â she demanded.
âYes, I am,â he lied.
God, she looked good. He watched her resume her pacing while she ranted. She had also showered and was now wearing a pale pink-and-white-striped nightgown that barely touched her knees, and a matching long cotton robe that tied at the waist. The robe was too big for her, and the hem dragged on the floor, but to him she looked sexier than if she had been wearing a flimsy negligee. She looked hot in everything she wore, even the baggy scrubs heâd first seen her in.
Unaware of where his thoughts were, Ellie continued her tirade. She had every reason to be upset. She hadnât said a word while heâd explained his reason for coming to Winston Falls and his intent to be her shadow until the two of them returned to her home, but when heâd finished explaining, sheâd reacted. She hadnât flipped out on him, though. Sheâd become outraged, and he much preferred that reaction. Furious was better to work with than terrified or weepy.
âYou are not telling my father or my mother.â She was so irate her voice shook. She wasnât a screamer, and he appreciated that, too.
âYes, I am,â he calmly announced for the sixth or seventh time now. âThey need to be aware of the danger.â
âYou arenât even certain the Landrys hired anyone to kill Sean or me.â
âYes, I am certain. Ellie, weâve been over this. Iâm staying with you until youâre safely back home.â
âThen what?â
âIf Willis Cogburn hasnât been captured or killed, another agent will take over.â
âKilled?â
âIf he tries to hurt you, damn right Iâll kill him.â Anger swelled up inside him at the thought of anyone hurting her.
âYou have to capture him, not shoot him,â she muttered. âThen you can make a deal with him for a lighter sentence so heâll testify against the Landrys.â
âYouâre a physician, not an attorney,â he countered.
âIt makes sense, doesnât it? Ask a lawyer. Heâll agree with me. Willis Cogburn should stay alive to testify.â
âI am a lawyer,â he said. âAnd Iâm telling you, hit men donât usually testify. And if I have to shoot him, Iâm shooting to kill.â
Hands on hips, she glared at him. âWhen did you become a lawyer?â
The conversation was becoming ludicrous. She was acting as though heâd pulled a fast one on her by going to law school.
âRight after I graduated from Vanderbilt.â
âWhere?â
He smiled. âVanderbilt University Law School in Nashville,â he said.
âThen the FBI?â
âYes.â
âSo youâre smart, too.â
He shrugged. Tired of pacing, Ellie went into the tiny kitchen. She got a Diet Coke out of the refrigerator, got another for Max, and went back to the living room. She sat down beside him, handed him his drink, and swung her feet up on the ottoman next to his.
âYou saw the look on my fatherâs face when you got out of your car and he noticed the gun at your side. In that instant, he went from happy to scared.â She put her unopened can on the table, sat back, and said, âIâve taught him to expect the worst.â
Max put his arm around her and pulled her into his side. âEllie, you know Iâm right. Your dad needs to be aware, and Iâm required to inform him of the possible danger. Itâs just the way it is.â
âIâve put him through enough.â
âYouâve put him through enough? You havenât done anything wrong. You are not responsible for Evan Pattersonâs obsession.â
âIntellectually, I know thatâs true, but in my heart, I feel as though Iâm at fault somehow. I know it doesnât make any sense, but there it is all the same.â
âHow old were you when it started with Patterson?â
âI had just had my eleventh birthday.â It was a full year of hell, she thought but didnât say.
âReason it through. You were a little girl. You didnât do or say anything to encourage him.â
âI wasnât the only one affected by his bizarre behavior. Some days, especially when my dad wasnât home, he would walk up and down our street, staring at our house as he passed by. He would do it for hours and hours,â she said. âAnnie was terrified. She had to have all the lights on in her bedroom at night, and I could hear her crying under the covers. Thatâs why sheâs becoming a lawyer. Sheâll end up doing something in criminal justice. Ava went the other way. She lashed out. She was angry all the timeâangry at me.â
âCome on. You know none of this is your fault.â
âThat doesnât change how my famil
y feels. My poor dad is quietly freaking out because no one can find Patterson, and now you want to tell him that thereâs a killer out there hunting me.â
She stood, grabbed her can of soda, and put it back in the refrigerator. There was a door at the end of the kitchen that led down into the garage. She made sure it was locked, then checked the other door to make absolutely certain both dead bolts were in place, and headed to the bedroom.
She hadnât even thought about the sleeping arrangements or a bed with Max in it until she opened the door to the room sheâd slept in the night before. There was a queen-size bed her parents had gotten at a discount store. In the smaller bedroom was a double bed that used to belong to her aunt Eleanor, the woman she was named after. The bed had been in her auntâs guest room, but when the older woman downsized, sheâd donated the bed to the apartment.
Ellie thought she should probably sleep there because Max was so much bigger than she was.
Or she could sleep with him. That thought sent her heart racing. No, that canât happen, she told herself. She wanted him to go away, not stay . . . didnât she?
Talk about conflicted. Back home, after their date, heâd kissed her senseless, and when heâd left, she had regretted not sleeping with him. And now? Max was just feet away from her, and right this minute she couldnât come up with a single reason why she shouldnât throw herself into his arms.
The apartment seemed to be closing in on her. The air conditioner had stopped, and the temperature was rising. Thinking about wrapping her arms around Maxâs hard body wasnât helping her cool off. Just one night. What would be the harm?
Ellie went into the bathroom and brushed her teeth again just to give herself time to come to her senses. Yes, she wanted him. Okay, nothing wrong with admitting it, and, yes, it would be amazing and electrifying, but it would also just be a brief physical release. A great, mind-blowing release, she qualified.
The fantasies were bombarding her, but she blocked them from her mind. She couldnât let her hormones or her animal instincts take control. Besides, Max would still be here in the morning, so she couldnât pretend sheâd had a temporary lack of sanity.
She took a good long look in the mirror and shook her head at her reflection. She wanted more than casual sex. She wanted romance. She felt silly admitting it, even though it was true. She had worked so long and so hard on her career that it had all but consumed her, leaving no room for the fanciful or the impractical. But deep down, it had always been there. She was a romantic at heart. There wasnât anything practical or reasonable about it.
Okay, sheâd made up her mind. She wasnât a rabbit, and she wasnât going to hop into bed with any manâno matter how hot he wasâwithout first having an emotional connection.
As she was opening the door, it suddenly occurred to her that all her angst might have been for nothing. Max hadnât made any moves or given any indication that heâd like to go to bed with her. Still, the electricity was there between them. If she could feel it, so could he.
When she entered the living room, Max was sitting on the sofa, leaning forward with all the broken pieces of the channel changer spread out on the ottoman in front of him. The old tape hadnât held, and the plastic cover had broken in several places.
âSomeone must have thrown this against a couple of walls,â he remarked. âIs there any tape around?â
âIâll look,â she said as she retied the belt on her robe. It dragged on the floor when she walked into the kitchen, and she really wanted to take the thing off because the air was becoming stifling.
She found some Scotch tape in one of the kitchen drawers and two thick rubber bands.
Max quickly put the remote back together and reinforced it with the rubber bands, then he sat back and began to channelsurf. She sat down next to him.
âMen and their remotes,â she said, shaking her head.
âWomen and their hair stuff,â he countered.
She laughed. âHair stuff?â
He shrugged. âYou know. That lacquer stuff they spray on their hair. You donât,â he added, âbut a lot of women do.â
âWhat do you mean, I donât?â
He put his arm around her and his fingers slid through her hair. âItâs soft, not stiff, and my fingers donât get caught.â
âWhat kind of women have you been going out with?â
He didnât answer. He was rubbing the back of her neck, though, and it felt wonderful.
âYour hairâs so soft. Smells good, too. Like strawberries.â
âHow do you know . . .â
He smiled. âIâve got a good memory.â
Whoa. So did she. She remembered his mouth on hers, the touch of his tongue rubbing against hers, the taste of him, the way heâd held her in his arms, his masculine scent . . . oh yes, she had a good memory, too.
She cleared her throat. âItâs hot in here.â
âYes, it is,â he said, turning back to the television. âDid you turn the air conditioner up?â
âI should explain how the thermostat works. Itâs right outside your bedroom door,â she said. âYou get the bigger bed because youâre . . .â
Wow. All he had to do was look at her, and she lost her train of thought. There was a warm glint in his eyes that captivated her. The man just kept getting better and better.
âBecause Iâm what?â
She didnât have a clue. âWhat?â
He grinned. âYou said I get the bigger bedroom . . .â
âBecause youâre bigger than I am. Itâs a queen, so your feet may still hang over.â
âAnd the thermostat?â
âWhat about it?â She really needed to stop staring at him so she could concentrate.
âWhat is it I need to know?â
She forced herself to look at the television when she explained. âIt only has two settings no matter where you turn the dial. Hot, like nowâonly it will get hotterâor coldâand not just cold, arctic cold. You choose,â she said.
âSweat or freeze are the choices?â
âYes.â
âFreeze.â
She patted his knee. âThen thatâs what weâll hope for.â
He laughed. âYou donât have any control over it?â
âSorry, no.â
Sheâd found out the night before how faulty the air conditioner was. She had alternated between near heatstroke and frostbite all night long. It was miserable. She had intended to mention the problem to her father this morning, but sheâd forgotten about it until now, and the heat index was rapidly rising.
She loosened the neck of her robe and fanned herself. âDo you mind if I watch SportsCenter? The roundup is coming on soon.â
He handed her the remote as he asked, âHow old is the air conditioner?â
âItâs brand-new.â
âThen why . . .â
She found the channel, muted the program that was ending, and turned to Max. âDaddy got a deal,â she explained. âHe doesnât buy anything unless he can get a great deal.â
âI donât care if he got it for half price, if it doesnât workââ
âHalf price isnât a deal to my father. Eighty percent maybe, but not fifty.â
He shook his head. âHe should take it back.â
âYes, he should,â she agreed. âBut he wonât. Heâll get a repairman to fix it one of these days. Iâll mention it to him tomorrow. Would you like a beer? You canât watch SportsCenter without a beer.â
âSweetheart, youâre a dream come true. A beautiful woman who likes SportsCenter and drinks beer.â
âWeâre not such a rare breed,â she said.
She put his unopened can of Diet Coke back in the refrigerator, got out two bottles of Bud Light and a jar of mixed nuts, and went back to the sofa. She handed Max one bottle, twisted the cap off the other, then tapped his bottle and took a drink.
She put the jar of nuts on the table and sat down next to him. âItâs getting hotter in here,â she said as she plac
ed the cold bottle against the side of her neck. She adjusted her position on the couch a couple of times and ended up leaning into him. âIâd move over and give you some room, but thereâs a lump, and itâs very uncomfortable. I think a springâs about to pop through.â
âI like you pressed against me.â
âIâm not making you hot?â After asking the suggestive question, she put her bottle against his cheek. âFeel good?â
âYou feel good. The roundup is on.â
It was one of her favorite shows, and tonight the topic was once again the upcoming football season. Simonâs name was mentioned about a dozen times. Max was answering texts, but she noticed he smiled whenever one of the commentators complimented his brother. He didnât show any reaction to the criticisms.
Halfway through the program, Ellie removed her robe. She didnât care whether it was appropriate or not. She was burning up.
âWe could open the windows in the bedrooms, maybe get a crosswind. Theyâre the only windows that open.â
âWhatâs it like outside now?â
She found her cell phone, looked up the weather, and groaned. âItâs ninety and humid. I think weâre going to have to sleep in the house tonight. This is worse than paint fumes.â
âI donât think so,â he said. âItâs not so bad.â
âI can suffer through it if you can,â she said. âAnd itâs only for one night. Weâre leaving tomorrow.â
He nodded. âGood,â he said. âI was going to bring it up if you didnât. We canât stay here. If there were a fire, weâd be trapped, and walking down the outside steps would give anyone a clear shot. Weâre going to have to find a better place to stay, one that isnât openââ
âWeâre not trapped here,â she argued. âWe could go down the stairs that lead into the garage or even go out one of the back windows. Thereâs a rope in the garage, and it really isnât too much of a jump . . .â She stopped, realizing there was no need to protest. âYou misunderstand. I want to leave Winston Falls and go back to St. Louis. If I stay here, Iâm putting my family in danger.â
Ellie stared at the television but she wasnât paying attention to the program. Frustration was building inside her again because she didnât have any control over what was happening. She put her beer down and went to check the thermostat. She hadnât even touched it when she felt a blast of cold air come through the vent in the hall.