long day, let’s step back from the edge of the philosophical cliff, and just say I’m telling you this as my bedroom isn’t at its best.”
“Are you looking for a grade?”
“As long as there’s a very generous curve. Come on up, Dr. Maguire.”
“This used to be the pool house,” he said as she led the way.
“The Browns did a lot of entertaining, so they redesigned it as a kind of spare guest house. Then when we opened the business, we redesigned again for the studio. But up here, it’s all personal space.”
A master suite sprawled over the second story, layed out, Carter saw, to accommodate a sitting area where he imagined she might read, nap, watch TV.
Color dominated, with the muted, misty gold of the walls serving as a backdrop for strong blues, greens, reds. Like a jewel box, he thought, with everything cluttered in, tangled, and gleaming. Clothes draped over the arms of chairs. Bright sweaters, soft shirts. Throws and pillows tumbled over the bed, the couch, like bold stones and rivers.
A wildly ornate mirror hung over a painted chest that served as a dresser. The top held jumbled and fascinating pieces of her. Earrings, magazines, bottles, and pots. Photographs served as art, portraits of those close to her. Posed and candid, pensive and joyful. With them scattered over the walls, she’d never be alone here.
“There’s so much of you here.”
“I try to shovel some of it out every couple of weeks.”
“No, I mean it reflects. Downstairs reflects your professional side, and this, the personal.”
“Which circles back to my point about being a messy woman.” She opened a drawer, pushed in a discarded sweater. “With a lot of drawers.”
“So much color and energy in here.” It was how he saw her. Color and energy. “How do you sleep?”
“With the lights off.”
She stepped to him, laid her finger on his bruised jaw. “Still hurt?”
“Actually . . . yes.” Now, alone in her jewel-box room, he did what he’d wanted to do all day. He kissed her. “There you are,” he murmured when her lips warmed to his. “Right there.”
She let herself lean into him, let herself sigh as she rested her head on his shoulder. Yes, she’d think later. When he wasn’t holding her, when her mind wasn’t fuzzed with fatigue and longing.
“Let’s get you into bed.” He kissed the top of her head. “Where are your pajamas?”
It took her a minute to process the question, then she leaned back to stare at him. “My pajamas?”
“You’re so tired.” He stroked a finger down her cheek. “Look how pale you are.”
“Yeah, and me with my ruddy complexion. Carter, I’m confused here. I thought you were staying.”
“I am. You’ve been on your feet all day, and waged war for part of it. You’re tired.”
He unbuttoned her suit jacket in the practical way that reminded her of the way he’d once buttoned her coat.
“What do you sleep in? Oh, maybe you don’t.” His eyes came back to hers. “Sleep in anything, I mean.”
“I . . .” She shook her head, but none of the thoughts inside it fell into place. “You don’t want to go to bed with me?”
“I am going to bed with you. To sleep with you because you need sleep.”
“But—”
He kissed her, soft and slow. “I can wait. Now, pajamas? I hope you say yes because otherwise one of us isn’t going to get much sleep.”
“You’re a strange and confusing man, Carter.” She turned, opened a drawer to pull out flannel pants and a faded T-shirt. “This is what I call pajamas.”
“Good.”
“I don’t have any in stock that’ll fit you.”
“I don’t actually wear . . . Oh. Ha.”
He’d change his mind when they were in bed, she thought as they undressed. But he got points for good intentions. Yes, she was tired, her feet ached and her brain felt dull, but that didn’t mean she couldn’t find energy for sex.
Especially really good sex.
When he slid into bed beside her, she curled into him, trailing her hand over his chest, lifting her mouth to his. She would arouse and seduce, and then—
“Did I tell you about the lecture I’m planning on methodological and theoretical analysis of the novel, with a specific emphasis on home—both literal and metaphorical—as motif ?”
“Ah . . . uh-uh.”
He smiled in the dark, gently, rhythmically rubbing her back. “It’s for seniors in my advanced classes.” In a quiet monotone designed to bore the dead, he began to explain his approach. And he explained it as tediously as