his chair. He towered over her. He didnât like short women, but then, she wasnât really that short. It was just the damned sense of femininity about her that bugged him. She probably wasnât even thirty yet, but she had an old-fashioned air that annoyed him. He didnât want her staying, he hadnât had time to get acclimatized yet. But if she owned the inn then heâd be a fool to drive her away so quickly.
She didnât look too happy to be here, eitherâshe was looking for a chance to escape. âItâs Sophie,â she said. âIâm not married. And I really need to get back to the inn. I just wanted to welcome you to the neighborhood. When we open you should come by for dinner.â
She looked as if sheâd rather eat worms than feed him. Heâd failed to charm her, which was no surprise. She was looking at him as if she were Little Red Riding Hood and he, the Big Bad Wolf. She wasnât far off.
âSure,â he said. Lying. In two weeksâ time heâd be gone. With or without the answers he needed. âThanks for the muffins.â It was a curt dismissal, one she couldnât fail to notice.
Her smile was brittle. âAnytime,â she said, turning her back on him and heading off his porch, out of his life. Her flowered skirts flounced in the breeze.
He sat back down in his chair, watching her go, and his eyes narrowed. He didnât trust her, but then, he wasnât in the habit of trusting anyone. No one could be that squeaky clean. She said theyâd been working on the place for months. What kind of secrets had she uncovered? What had she obliterated? Heâd waited too damned long to face his past. He wasnât going to wait any longer, and no pink-and-pretty hausfrau was going to get in his way. No matter how tempting she was.
Â
âBastard,â Sophie muttered beneath her breath, making her way through the overgrown path to the inn. There was nothing worse than a good-looking bastard in the bargain. Sophie had to admit Marge was right about that. He was tall, with the rangy kind of body sheâd always found particularly appealing in men. His features were interesting rather than prettyâa bony nose, high cheekbones and a strong chin gave him the look of an ancient Roman bust. He was about as animated. His eyes were dark behind the wire-rimmed glasses, and his mouth would have been sexy if it had been employed in something other than a frown. His hair was too longâa tangle of gray-streaked dark curls, and he had the personality of a python.
There was a watchful stillness about him that made her nervous, and sheâd never been the paranoid type. But she couldnât rid herself of the notion that John Smith was looking for trouble.
It was just as well he was unfriendly, because when it came to good-looking men Marty didnât particularly care about age differences. Sheâd probably take one look at Mr. Smithâs elegant, classical face and fall madly in love. Sophie could only hope he was equally unwelcoming to Marty.
In the best of all possible worlds heâd provide enough distraction for Marty to cheer up. She was still mourning the loss of her latest boyfriend, an unpleasantly tattooed young man known as âSnake,â and so far her seclusion at the north end of the lake had kept her away from any possible substitutes. Sophie wasnât naive enough to think country boys were any safer than city boys, but if Marty developed a harmless crush on their unwelcoming new neighbor it might manage to keep her energized and out of trouble.
Assuming Mr. Smith would be just as unwelcoming to a nubile young woman as he was to her.
Sophie had no delusions about her own charms. She was nothing above ordinaryâaverage height, average weight verging dangerously toward plumpness, average features, ordinary hair. Sheâd never been one to inflame menâs passions, and given Mr. Smithâs