watched him round the hood. He'd ditched his tie and jacket, she noted, opened his collar. The casual, easy look suited those lineman's shoulders, she supposed, the beachcomber hair. She decided to realign her strategy and wait until they were at dinner before beginning the lecture she'd been planning.
She could, when necessary, manage small talk with the best of them.
"So, you're into classic cars."
He settled behind the wheel. The minute he turned the key the radio exploded with Marvin Gaye. Byron turned it down to a murmur before cruising through the lot.
"Sixty-five Mustang with a 289 V-8. A car like this isn't just a mode of transportation. It's a commitment."
"Really?" She liked the creamy white bucket seats, the trained-panther ride, but couldn't think of anything more impractical than owning a car older than she was. "Don't you have to spend a lot of time babying it, finding parts?''
"That's the commitment. Runs like a dream," he added with an affectionate stroke to the dash as he merged into traffic. "She was my first."
"First what? First car?"
"That's right." He grinned at her baffled stare. "Bought her when I was seventeen. She's got over two hundred thousand miles on her and still purrs like a kitten."
Kate would have said it was more "roars like a lion," but that wasn't her problem. "Nobody keeps their first car. It's like your first lover."
"Exactly." He downshifted, eased around a turn. "As it happens, I had my first lover in the backseat, one sweet summer night. Pretty Lisa Montgomery." He sighed reminiscently. "She opened a window to paradise for me, God bless her."
"A window to paradise." Unable to resist, Kate craned her neck and studied the pristine backseat. It wasn't very difficult to imagine two young bodies groping. "All that in the back of an old Mustang."
"Classic Mustang," he corrected. "Just like Lisa Montgomery."
"But you didn't keep her."
"You can't keep everything, except memories. Remember your first time?"
"In my college dorm room. I was a slow starter." Marvin Gaye had given way to Wilson Pickett. Kate's foot began to keep time. "He was captain of the debate team and seduced me with his argument that sex, next to birth and death, was the ultimate human experience."
"Good one. I'll have to try it sometime."
She slanted a look at his profile. Hero perfect, she judged, with just a hint of rugged. "I don't imagine you need lines."
"It never hurts to keep a few in reserve. So what happened to the captain of the debate team?"
"He was used to getting his point across inside of three minutes. That ability bled over into the ultimate human experience."
"Oh." Byron fought back a grin. "Too bad."
"Not really. It taught me not to build up unrealistic expectations and not to depend on someone else to fulfill basic needs." Kate scanned the scenery. Her foot stopped tapping as she tensed up again. "Why are we on Seventeen Mile?"
"It's a pretty drive. I enjoy taking it every day. Did I mention that I was able to arrange renting the house I'm buying until we settle?"
"No, you didn't." But she was getting the drift. "You said we were going to have dinner and a civilized discussion."
"And we are. You can take a look at the favor you did for me at the same time."
Even as she formulated several arguments against, Byron turned into a driveway and pulled up behind a dramatically glossy black Corvette.
"It's a '63, first year the Stingray rolled out of Detroit," he said with a nod toward the car. "Three hundred sixty horsepower, fuel-injected. An absolute beauty. Not that the original 'Vette wasn't a honey before the redesign. They don't make bodies like that anymore."
"Why do you need two cars?"
"Need isn't the issue. Anyway, I have four cars. The other two are back in Atlanta."
"Four," she murmured, and found this little quirk of his amusing.
"Fifty-seven Chevy, 283-cubic-inch V-8. Baby blue, white sidewalls, all original equipment." There was affection in his voice. Kate thought the southern heat of it flowed over the words like a man describing a lover. "Every bit as classy as the songs they wrote about her."
"Billie Jo Spears." Kate knew her music trivia. "Fifty-seven Chevrolet.'"
"That's the best." Surprised and impressed, he grinned at her. "Keeping her company is a '67 GTO."
"'Three deuces and a four speed'?"
"Right." His grin widened. "And a 389."
She grinned back. "Just what the hell are three deuces, automotively speaking?"
"If you don't know already, it would take a little time to explain. Just let me know if you ever