“I thought you could use the sleep, and I didn’t want to give you any more time to distract me.”
His eyes slanted up to hers as he nibbled on her knuckles. “I’d like to spend several hours distracting you.”
Her knees went weak. “I’ll give you a chance later.”
“We could have dinner.”
“We could.” Her blood was beginning to hum, but she couldn’t make herself pull her hand free.
“Why don’t I pick something up, bring it by?”
“Why don’t you?”
He opened her hand to press a kiss on the palm. “Seven thirty?”
“Fine. You’ll let Pan out, won’t you?”
“Sure.” His teeth grazed her wrist and sent her pulse soaring. “Morgana, one more thing.”
Her body yearned toward his. “Nash, I really can’t—”
“Don’t worry.” But he could see that she was worried, and it delighted him. “I’m not going to muss you up. It’s going to be too much fun thinking about doing just that for the next few hours. I left something for you on the front stoop last night. I was hoping you’d find time to read it.”
“Your script? You’ve finished?”
“All but some fine-tuning, I think. I’d like your opinion.”
“Then I’ll try to have one.” She leaned over to kiss him again. “Bye.”
“See you tonight.” He settled back with the cooling coffee, then swore.
Morgana turned at the doorway. “What?”
“My car’s parked behind yours. Let me get some pants on.”
She laughed. “Nash, really.” With that, she strolled away. The cat jumped off the bed and followed.
“Yeah,” Nash said to the now-snoozing Pan. “I guess she can take care of it.”
Sitting back, he prepared to drink his coffee in solitary splendor. As he sipped, he studied the room. This was the first chance he’d taken to see what Morgana surrounded herself with in her most private place.
There was drama, of course. She walked with drama wherever she went. Here it was typified in the bold jewel colors she’d chosen. Turquoise for the walls. Emerald for the spread they had kicked aside during the night. Bleeding hues of both were in the curtains that fluttered at the windows. A daybed upholstered in sapphire stretched under one window. It was plumped with fat pillows of garnet, amethyst, and amber. Arched over it was a slender brass lamp with a globe shaped like a lush purple morning glory. The bed itself was magnificent, a lake of tumbled sheets bordered by massive curved head and footboards.
Intrigued, Nash started to get up. Pan was still pinning his legs, but after a couple of friendly nudges, he rolled aside obligingly to snore in the center of the bed. Naked, mug in one hand, Nash began to wander the room.
A polished silver dragon stood on the nightstand, his head back, his tail flashing. The wick between hisopen jaws announced that he would breathe fire. She had one of those pretty mirrored vanities with a padded stool that Nash had always considered intensely feminine. He could imagine her sitting there, running the jewel-crusted, silver-backed brush through her hair, or anointing her skin with the creams or lotions from one of the colorful glass pots that stood on it, winking in the sunlight.
Unable to resist, he picked one up, removing the long crystal top and sniffing. At that moment she was so much in the room with him, he could almost see her. That was the complexity and power of a woman’s magic.
Reluctantly he recapped the bottle and set it aside. Damn it, he didn’t want to wait through the day for her. He didn’t want to wait an hour.
Easy, Kirkland, he lectured himself. She’d only been gone five minutes. He was acting like a man besotted.Or bewitched. That thought set off a niggling little doubt that he frowned over for a moment, then shoved aside. He wasn’t under any kind of spell. He knew exactly what he was doing, and he was in complete control of his actions. It was just that the room held so much of her, and being in it made him want.
Frowning, he ran his fingers through a pile of smooth colored stones she kept in a bowl. If he was obsessing about her, that, too, could be explained. She wasn’t an ordinary woman. After what he’d seen, with what he knew, it was natural for him to think about her more often than he might about someone else. After all, the supernatural was his forte. Morgana was living proof that the extraordinary existed in an ordinary world.
She was an incredible lover. Generous, free, outrageously responsive. She had humor and wit and brains, as well as an agile body. That combination alone could make a man sit up and beg. When you added the fairy dust, she became downright irresistible.
Plus, she’d helped him with his story. The more Nash thought about it, the more he was certain the script was his best work to date.