“Can I get you coffee, Ms. Fraser?” Sandra asked, her voice shaky.
“No, no,” Kim said. “Don’t go to any trouble.”
Sean smiled at Sandra. “I think a big pot would be grand, Sandra. I’ll help you, shall I?”
Sandra softened under his look, and she and Sean walked to the back of the house to the kitchen. Sean went in first, then ushered Sandra in with his hand on the small of her back.
“What was that about?” Kim asked Liam.
“Sit down, Kim. You look all out.”
She hadn’t really expected him to answer. Kim collapsed to the sofa with a grimace and laid her briefcase on the coffee table. Her feet were killing her. She ran her finger inside her shoes, but it didn’t do much good.
“Are you hurting?” Liam sat down next to her—right next to her, inside her personal space. “Let me see your feet.”
Kim blinked. “Sorry?”
“I saw you limping. Get those ridiculous shoes off and swing your feet up here.”
His eyes were so damn blue. Why did she suddenly long to feel his warm hands on her feet, on her ankles, up her legs under her skirt to where her stockings ended at bare thigh…?
He was a Shifter. This wasn’t right.
“I can’t do that.”
“You mean you won’t.”
“How do you think that would that look? For the mother of the man I’m defending to come back in and find you giving me a foot massage?”
“She’d think it was the first sensible thing you did. You hide behind those clothes like they’re a suit of armor. She’ll not open up to you if you do that.”
“But she will if I play footsie with you?”
Liam smiled a heart-thumping smile. “Get your damn shoes off, woman.”
Oh, to hell with it. When in Rome…or Shiftertown.
Kim couldn’t stop her groan of relief as she eased the heels from her feet. Liam patted his lap. Kim leaned into the corner of the couch and plopped her ankles on Liam’s thigh.
“Is everything in Shiftertown backward?” she asked.
“Backward?”
“Men enter a room first, it’s better to kick off your shoes on a stranger’s couch than be businesslike, and you say hello by rubbing yourselves all over each other.” Kim sagged in pleasure as he moved strong hands over her feet. “Ooh, that’s good.”
Liam’s thumb traveled over her arch to her heel, his touch warm. Did the man know how to loosen tension, or what?
Another groan escaped her. “This is better than any day spa I’ve been to. You could make money doing this.”
“Shifters aren’t allowed in any profession where they touch humans.” His voice went soft. “We might bite.”
Kim didn’t think she’d mind being nibbled on by him. Her nervousness about Shifters hadn’t quite drifted away, but Liam was dissolving her fears little by little, at least about him. “I think I’d make an exception for you.”
“Pheromones.”
Her eyes popped open. “Sorry?”
“Sean and I felt Sandra’s distress, and we calmed her down. She needed our touch. Like you need me rubbing your feet.”
Kim thought about their caressing, group hug. “She must have been very distressed.”
“She is. Why wouldn’t she be?”
“Was Sean distressed when he came in your office? You hugged him too.”
“Of course I hugged him. He’s my brother. Don’t you hug your brother or your sisters?”
“I don’t have a family,” Kim said. She couldn’t keep the sorrow out of her voice. “Not anymore.”
Liam gave her a look of open pity. “No wonder you’re so tense. What happened to them?”
“I don’t like to talk about it.”
“Talk about it anyway.”
Kim had always thought it best not to open up, but Liam’s blue eyes and gentle voice pried something loose. “It’s no big secret. My brother Mark died when I was ten. He was twelve. He was hit by a car while he was walking down to a corner store with his friends—a hit and run. My parents passed away a few years ago, within months of each other. Old age, is all. They had their kids late in life. So now it’s just me.”
The story was simple, easy to relate. Her grief had burned away to emptiness long ago. She lived in the big house she’d inherited from her parents, and it was—so quiet. She tried to cheer it up with weekend parties or office mixers, but the warmth never lasted. Her parents’ neighborhood was one of standoffish elegance; no kids would dare splash in plastic pools in any front yard on her street.
Liam gently squeezed her feet. “I’m sorry for you, Kim Fraser. It’s the hardest thing, losing a brother. It’s like losing a part of yourself.”
He was too right. Kim’s next words came reluctantly. “When Mark was killed, I blamed myself. I know that’s stupid. I was at a friend’s house miles away, and I was ten years old—what could I have done? But I kept thinking that if I’d been there, I could have warned him, pulled him out of the way, kept him home altogether. Something.”
Liam’s warm, relaxing fingers slid beneath each of her toes. “Sean and me, we had a brother. Kenny. We lost him about ten years ago. You always wonder, if you’d persuaded him to do something different that day, would he still be alive?”
“Exactly.” After seventeen years, Kim had never found anyone who really understood, not friends or colleagues or the child counselor she’d been hauled off to. Now a Shifter she’d met an hour ago wrung the truth from her heart. “I’m sorry, Liam. About your brother.”