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eyes flinted and that pointed chin came up. Deliberately she removed her glasses. “Because I’m supposed to be here. I’m with the Lamar Home Maintenance Agency, and among other things I’m a house sitter. House-sitting your house,” she added. “It’s just part of the agency’s service.” Her gaze collided with his. “Wait a minute—you’re not supposed to be here. You didn’t notify me that you were returning!”

      “I didn’t know I had to notify you that I was returning,” Clint replied with cutting sarcasm. Twice in as many minutes, he’d literally had the wind knocked out of him. “And I don’t recall asking the agency,” he mocked, “for this particular service.”

      “Well, then your recall is wrong,” she retorted with a little more spirit.

      “Is it now! I don’t think so, lady.” Clint’s nostrils flared as a wisp of fragrant steam rose from the kettle simmering on the stove. His kettle, his stove. It was spaghetti sauce. His irritation swelled into a roar that he swatted down with sheer willpower. Be damned if he was going to lose his temper!

      “No,” he continued, his voice soft and steely. “I think what’s wrong is your presence on my property. In fact, I doubt you’re even with the agency, I think you just found an empty house, moved in and made yourself at home. Maybe even sold off a few things when you needed pocket money,” he added, looking around. Nothing appeared to be missing, but then he’d been gone so long, who remembered? “Maybe I should call the police.”

      “The police! But that’s crazy, I’m not a thief—there isn’t a thing missing from your house!” she replied, her bosom heaving with indignation.

      It really did heave, Clint thought, startled at his interest. The T-shirt displayed her small breasts to perfection. His willful gaze traveled down her slim waist to the soft denim hugging her thighs and long legs. She was tall for a woman—five foot nine, he estimated. And although trim and fit, she was no clotheshorse. She had hips, thighs and buttocks, he noted in that fleeting but quite intense scrutiny.

      When he brought his gaze back to her face, she squared her shoulders and firmed up her mouth.

      “If you’ll stop making these asinine accusations and let me explain, I’m sure we can clear this up,” she said. “I am with the agency and I am your house sitter—not some squatter staking a claim on your property!” she added with emerald-eyed disdain. “Personally I think you’re very fortunate to have me here looking after your interests. I’ve taken very good care of your home, Mr. Whitfield, really, I have.”

      She waved a slim, rose-tipped hand, encompassing the immaculate kitchen and den. “You can see that for yourself if you’ll just look around. But now that you’re back,” she said hastily, “I’ll be quick to pack up my stuff and leave without further ado. I’ll tell the agency that you’re back—you needn’t bother yourself, I’ll be glad to do it for you.”

      She gave him a piercingly sweet smile.

      Clint’s head suddenly reeled. He stepped back from her. “I bet you will,” he drawled, his annoyance almost too hot to handle. “But why don’t I just tell them myself?” He reached for the telephone.

      “You go right ahead and do that!” she snapped, then bit her lip. “Except it would do you no good. In the end you’d only get me. I mean, I’m in charge of you. Your file, that is.” Her head lowered a fraction, but she still met his gaze. “It says in your contract that you did want this service.”

      He leaned against the counter, studying her. He didn’t want to listen to her, he wanted to—needed to—vent this unreasoning anger. Besides, she was nervous about something. Not exactly lying—with those eyes, how could she lie? They had such depth and clarity. Moss green now, with little gold specks, tiny islands in a dusky sea that threatened to engulf him.

      Startled anew, Clint jerked his gaze away. “Now why would my contract say a thing like that? I certainly don’t remember putting it in there. In fact, when I left here I didn’t give a damn about this house. I handed it over to Lamar’s because it was the practical thing to do. And God knows I’ve always been practical,” he said with gritty irony. “Protect your investment, Whitfield, I told myself.”

      Clint shook his head. “Some bloody investment,” he added, looking around the lovely room. God, the bitter fights over this fine, Italian-tile floor and hand-carved cabinetry, those soaring windows… Catching himself in an iron grip, he shut down the sudden flow of memory. “Well?” he prodded, glaring at the aggravating Flynn woman. “What do you have to say for yourself?”

      His forceful demand seemed to fire rather than quell her defiance. Her eyes flashed. She threw back her head and that chin came up like an arrow aimed straight for his Adam’s apple.

      “I’ll tell you what I have to say! People like you make me sick, Clint Whitfield!”

      Clint reared back. “People like me?”

      “Yes, people like you! You have the money to build beautiful homes like this one, surround yourself with fine furniture, a fancy swimming pool and a big backyard, all the lovely things other people can only dream of. And then you walk off and leave it sitting empty! For years, Mr. Whitfield, just sitting here, lonely and devoid of life, not even a skeletal staff to tend it. You just abandoned it!” she accused with a passion that quite astonished Clint.

      “Abandoned?” he echoed, his own anger rising to match the blaze in those green eyes. “This house was hardly abandoned, Miss Flynn!”

      “All right, I concede that—but it felt abandoned!” She snatched a breath. “And don’t give me that look!” she warned fiercely. “It’s a home, Mr. Whitfield, and homes can feel abandoned just like people can! But you don’t care, do you? Like you said, you don’t give a damn for this house—it means nothing to you. You just take off on a some selfish whim and leave it behind like a cast-off garment!”

      She stepped closer, a stiff finger poking his chest for emphasis. “You’re a careless man, Mr. Whitfield, and there’s nothing worse in my opinion.”

      Furiously confused, Clint removed himself from her punishing finger. “I couldn’t care less about your opinion, Miss Flynn,” he roared with his own quite astonishing passion. “But I can get you fired, lady! So you’d damn well better care about mine!”

      Wheeling, he strode through the room and slammed out the front door.

      Regina Flynn stayed frozen to the spot, the fury of his exit still ringing in her ears. “Dear God, what have I done?” she whispered. She flung her hands to her cheeks. “Lost your temper, speared him with a fingernail, called him names, that’s all! You idiot!” she berated her fiery loss of control.

      Breathing in and out, something she actually had to think about in order to do it correctly, she found her way to the couch. Her knees were weak, her insides quivering. From what, the threat he’d implied? Or the immediate and powerful attraction he had exerted on her flurried senses?

      Closing her eyes, Regina pictured his face, hard, dangerous, tough as leather—he’d scared the wits out of her at first! Until that quick, sudden smile. It had touched something within her, a chord that had never been played before…

      A grin etched her mouth. There was something strangely wonderful about being near Clint Whitfield. Even when he was roaring at her. Lord, she marveled, who would have guessed he’d be so attractive?

      “Stop thinking below the waist, Flynn. He really could cause trouble. That’s the important thing here— I can get you fired, lady.” She mimicked his voice.

      And he just might. Chilled, Regina hugged a pillow to her chest. Indignation still sputtered inside her—she hadn’t done anything wrong! Not really. “It’s not my fault if he doesn’t bother reading his mail,” she fumed, mangling the pillow.

      Tears wet her cheeks. An emotional woman, she cried easily. Too easily. I shouldn’t have blown up like that. I should have explained, tried reasoning with him. Softly, sensibly. Instead I yelled

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