Her fingers whitened on the handle of the kettle. "Are you?"
He looked away from her, toward the window and the softly falling snow. "No."
She closed her eyes, telling herself it was relief she felt at his answer. Only relief. "Well, then there's no problem."
"No, everything's dandy." His voice was as cool and detached as hers. "You don't want romance, saves me the trouble. You don't want promises, I don't have to lie. We want each other in bed." He reached for two mugs. "That keeps it simple."
"I want you in bed." Pleased with her casual tone, she took the mugs from him. "But if I didn't like who you are, we wouldn't have gotten there. I've wanted other men."
In a deceptively calm gesture, he flicked her hair behind her ear. "Now you're trying to make me mad."
The fact that he couldn't see how difficult it was for her to be so open, to keep things simple, made it easier. Oddly enough, this kind of openness seemed completely natural with him. "I'm trying to give you a complement. I wouldn't have come here last night, hoping you'd be here, if I hadn't cared about you." "You came to drop off candlesticks."
"You're an idiot." Amused at both of them, she poured coffee. She hadn't realized sexual frankness could be fun. "You didn't really buy that, did you?"
Intrigued, he took the mug she offered. "Yeah, I did."
She sipped, smiled. "Sucker."
"Maybe I don't like sneaky, aggressive women."
"Yes, you do. In fact, you're hoping I'll seduce you right now."
"Think so?"
"I know so. But I want my coffee first."
He watched her take another delicate sip. "Maybe I want my shirt back. You didn't ask if you could borrow it."
"Fine." With one hand, she undid the buttons. "Take it."
He nipped the coffee from her hand, set both mugs aside. Her smug smile had him scooping her off her feet. She was laughing and assaulting his ear as he carried her back down the hall. The front door swung open, letting in cold and blowing snow and a figure crusted with white.
Shane dragged off his cap and shook himself like a dog. "Hey." Casually he kicked the door closed. "Your car's buried to the wheel wells, Regan."
"Oh." With a fumbling hand, she clutched the shirt together and tried to mirror his easy tone. "We got a lot of snow."
"Over two feet." Unabashed, he grinned at his brother. "Figured you'd need someone to plow you out."
"Does it look like I want you to rescue me?" Disgusted, Rafe strode into the parlor and dumped Regan on the settee. "Stay right there."
"Rafe!" Futilely she tried to tug the hem of the shirt down over her legs. "For heaven's sake!"
"Right there," he repeated, and headed back into the hall.
"That coffee I smell?" Shane asked conversationally. "I could use some."
"Give me one reason why I shouldn't break your neck."
Shane took off his gloves, blew on his chilled fingers. " 'Cause I rode over here in a blizzard to save yours." He leaned forward, but couldn't quite see into the parlor. "She's sure got legs."
"Where do you want to die?"
"Just an observation." His grin only widened, the MacKade dimple flashing. "Hey, who knew? I figured you were stuck here, without transportation. Alone. Then, when I saw her car, I thought maybe she needed a lift into town." Again he inched forward, hopeful. "Maybe I should ask her."
"One more step and they won't find your body till spring."
"If I win, can I keep her?" When Rafe snarled, Shane erupted with laughter. "Don't hit me, I'm frozen. I'll break."