"What
are you doing here, Ella?"
His
voice was a little soft, a little rough, and it rode the
endings of her nerves, sending shivers up her spine. She
straightened her shoulders. There was no way on God's green
earth she would let him know he got to her in any way. And
he sure didn't want to spend two days with her. Not once in
twelve years had he made any effort to see her whatsoever.
She'd let him off the hook all for the price of his name
beside the X.
She
lifted her chin, tucked her notebook more firmly into her
handbag. "Does it matter?"
He
nodded, slowly. "You bet your designer bag it does. And I'm
pretty sure paying two thousand dollars for two days with me
wasn't the reason. Though we could have a lot of fun in two
days, don't you think? For old times' sake?"
Memories of bygone days swirled around her, seducing. "Shut
up, Dev," she murmured.
He
boosted himself away from the truck and came closer. She
could smell his woodsy aftershave, feel his body invade her
personal space and hated herself for liking it. Craving it.
He
leaned into her ear while the hairs on her neck stood up
from the close contact of his breath on her skin.
"You
could have had me for free."
She
planted her hands on his shoulders and pushed, skittering
away on her heels. "I was sent on a story. It had nothing
to do with you, you egomaniac."
He
snorted, looking at the ground and scuffing it with the toe
of a sorry looking boot. "A story. Of course. Makes sense to
send a big-city reporter to a dive like Ruby's for some
trumped-up charity event."
He
wouldn't understand. He never had. This was why she'd sent
him divorce papers several times, even back when the legal
fees to do so meant she had to eat peanut butter for a few
weeks. "There's something bigger at work than Betty Tucker's
illness, you know." She straightened her blouse and raised
an eyebrow at him. Damn straight. There was corruption from
the top down, and Betty Tucker was only one victim. Bringing
an expose against Betty's insurance company would guarantee
Ella her choice of assignment.
"I bet
Betty Tucker wouldn't think so. Do you think a woman who
might be dying cares at all about how many newspapers get
sold in Denver?"
Damn
him. He'd always had a way of making her feel small when
that wasn't what she'd meant at all. Couldn't he see it was
a greater-good issue? But Dev had never been one to see the
big picture. He'd had the most annoying tunnel vision of
anyone she ever met. Right and wrong. Black and white.
"I
don't expect you to understand," she huffed, lifting her
nose and moving to walk past him to her car. Forty-eight
hours. Hmph. If he'd sign by the X right now, he'd be off
the hook and she'd consider it two thousand dollars well
spent. They could end this farce of a marriage and get on to
their respective lives.
He
reached out and grabbed her arm.
"You
never expected me to understand, Ell." The words were laced
with unexpected venom. "I understand a hell of a lot more
than you think."
His
fingers burned holes in her sleeve and she fought back the
thrill of excitement thrumming through her just by having
his hands on her again. It shouldn't happen after all this
time, but he'd always had that effect on her. She pasted on
the brightest smile she could muster. "Brilliant. So why
don't you tell me what I'm thinking right now?"
He
still had a firm grip on her bicep and she tilted her
chin way up to look at him. Even with her heels on, he was
taller than her. Over six feet of manly sexiness. Her gaze
caught on his lips. Those lips had known every inch of her
when they'd been little more than kids. She blinked. Back
then he'd been the solution, not the problem. The savior,
not the devil.
"You're
thinking, how am I going to get Dev to sign those papers
I've got sitting in my car?"
She
twisted out of his grip and stomped to the car as his
knowing laughter echoed behind her. She had been
thinking exactly that. Along with wondering how his mouth
would feel over hers when she wanted nothing more than to be
free of him. For good. How was it possible to think both at
the same time?
"Well. You're smarter than you look," she answered, determined he
not know the effect he was having on her. If ever she'd
needed confirmation that she'd done the right thing by not
looking back, here it was staring her in the face. She
couldn't even manage a simple conversation with him without
losing perspective.
"Yep.
So where to now, Ell? Because according to your terms of
purchase, we've got forty-eight whole hours."
A
shiver went through her at the possibilities. But
possibilities got a girl absolutely nowhere. "You sign these
now, and we'll call it even. Both of us free as a bird."
He came
towards her, walking with that lazy long stride she
remembered. His T-shirt was untucked and had a line of dust
across it from the floor inside. She wanted to reach up and
brush it off. But she didn't. She couldn't touch him. Not
after the way her body had reacted when he'd whispered in
her ear.
She
backed up against the door of her car, her breath hardly
moving her chest.
"I'm in
no rush, Ella McQuade."
"You
never were." She said it with a snarky twist so he'd be sure
to get the insult. "And don't call me that."
His
body was warm as they hovered only inches apart. If she
leaned forward the slightest bit they'd be touching in
several places. Her body strained against her clothing while
her head warned her to stay put.
"Why
not? It's your name."
"Not
anymore."
He
lifted his hand and traced a finger down her sleeve. She
shivered. He'd always been that way. He'd always known what
a simple touch could do to her. They'd learned together,
discovering all the special spots. Only now it was worse.
Now they were older, wiser. Knowing he still had that effect
on her hurt. She should have moved on by now. Moving on was
the entire reason she'd brought those papers to begin with.
"It is
until I sign those."
"Please, just sign them then. Sign them and I'll be out of
your hair for good."
His
finger went up her sleeve and down again. "Not yet. Come
back to the house. I still have some things of yours anyway.
You can pick them up."
"Devin." She looked up at him, censoring him with her eyes.
"You know that's not a good idea."
Dammit,
saying it did nothing more than give credence to the
attraction shimmering between them.
"When
have you and I ever had good ideas?"
The
door to Ruby's opened and shut again and she sighed. Did she
really want to argue this in a public place?
"Almost
never," she admitted.
"Forty-eight hours. That's my deal, Ell. You spend the
weekend with me, and at the end of it I'll sign your
precious papers. You'll be free as a bird, as you said."
He
would have to make this more difficult. He was on the verge
of giving her the very thing she wanted. Only he would make
her spend two days with him to get it. The last place on
earth she wanted to go was the house where they'd lived for
a whole month before she disappeared. But she was an adult.
She could control her urges, couldn't she? How was she going
to handle tough assignments if she couldn't handle one itty
bitty little husband?
"Maybe
I'd like to be rid of you as much as you'd like to be rid of
me," he continued, the softness of his voice belying the
returning barb.
"If
you'd wanted out, all you had to do was ask. Or sign the
papers any of the times I couriered them to you."
He
regarded her strangely. "I had my reasons." He put his hands
in his pockets. "So what will it be, Ell? Those are my
terms. How much do you want the divorce?"
She
slid out around him and heaved a sigh. "You take your
truck," she conceded, her stomach curling with dread. This
had disaster written all over it, but she had to see it
through. "I'll follow you."
Reviews
"a remarkable
story...The magnetic chemistry between Ella and Dev pulses
through each page..." singletitles.com
"What do you
get when you mix an author who
writes highly psychological,
well motivated romances with an
author who writes really hot
lovemaking passages that are
strikingly fresh and free of
cliche? You get Donna Alward in
"Sold to the Highest Bidder". "
Vince, reader
"...steamy and
passionate..." Joyfully Reviewed, 4 stars
"Once I started reading this
story I could not take my eyes from the screen." Drea's
Reviews
"...a
delightfully enjoyable book. It bursts at the seams with
conflict and a love that will bring a smile to your face.
The characters as well as the storyline will pull you in and
not let go. I couldn’t put it down until I finished the last
word." Book Wenches