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a helpless little sigh, Natasha bent to tie Freddie’s left shoelace. “Thank you.”

      “Your hair smells pretty.”

      Half in love, Natasha leaned closer to sniff Freddie’s. “So does yours.”

      Fascinated by Natasha’s tangle of curls, Freddie reached out to touch. “I wish my hair was like yours,” she said. “It’s straight as a pin,” she added, quoting her Aunt Nina.

      Smiling, Natasha brushed at the fragile wisps over Freddie’s brow. “When I was a little girl, we put an angel on top of the Christmas tree every year. She was very beautiful, and she had hair just like yours.”

      Pleasure came flushing into Freddie’s cheeks.

      “Ah, there you are.” Vera shuffled down the crowded aisle, straw carryall on one arm, a canvas bag on the other. “Come, come, we must get back home before your father thinks we are lost.” She held out a hand for Freddie and nodded to Natasha. “Good afternoon, miss.”

      “Good afternoon.” Curious, Natasha raised a brow. She was being summed up again by the little dark eyes, and definitely being found wanting, Natasha thought. “I hope you’ll bring Freddie back to visit soon.”

      “We will see. It is as hard for a child to resist a toy store as it is for a man to resist a beautiful woman.”

      Vera led Freddie down the aisle, not looking back when the girl waved and grinned over her shoulder.

      “Well,” Annie murmured as she stuck her head around the corner. “What brought that on?”

      With a humorless smile, Natasha shoved a pin back into her hair. “At a guess, I would say the woman believes I have designs on her employer.”

      Annie gave an unladylike snort. “If anything, the employer has designs on you. I should be so lucky.” Her sigh was only a little envious. “Now that we know the new hunk on the block isn’t married, all’s right with the world. Why didn’t you tell me you were going out with him?”

      “Because I wasn’t.”

      “But I heard Freddie say—”

      “He asked me out,” Natasha clarified. “I said no.”

      “I see.” After a brief pause, Annie tilted her head. “When did you have the accident?”

      “Accident?”

      “Yes, the one where you suffered brain damage.”

      Natasha’s face cleared with a laugh, and she started toward the front of the shop.

      “I’m serious,” Annie said as soon as they had five free minutes. “Dr. Spencer Kimball is gorgeous, unattached and…” She leaned over the counter to sniff at the rose. “Charming. Why aren’t you taking off early to work on real problems, like what to wear tonight?”

      “I know what I’m wearing tonight. My bathrobe.”

      Annie couldn’t resist the grin. “Aren’t you rushing things just a tad? I don’t think you should wear your robe until at least your third date.”

      “There’s not going to be a first one.” Natasha smiled at her next customer and rang up a sale.

      It took Annie forty minutes to work back to the subject at hand. “Just what are you afraid of?”

      “The IRS.”

      “Tash, I’m serious.”

      “So am I.” When her pins worked loose again, she gave up and yanked them out. “Every American businessperson is afraid of the IRS.”

      “We’re talking about Spence Kimball.”

      “No,” Natasha corrected. “You’re talking about Spence Kimball.”

      “I thought we were friends.”

      Surprised by Annie’s tone, Natasha stopped tidying the racetrack display her Saturday visitors had wrecked. “We are. You know we are.”

      “Friends talk to each other, Tash, confide in each other, ask advice.” Puffing out a breath, Annie stuffed her hands into the pockets of her baggy jeans. “Look, I know that things happened to you before you came here, things you’re still carrying around but never talk about. I figured I was being a better friend by not asking you about it.”

      Had she been so obvious? Natasha wondered. All this time she’d been certain she had buried the past and all that went with it—deeply. Feeling a little helpless, she reached out to touch Annie’s hand. “Thank you.”

      With a dismissive shrug, Annie turned to flick the lock on the front door. The shop was empty now, the bustle of the afternoon only an echo. “Remember when you let me cry on your shoulder after Don Newman dumped me?”

      Natasha pressed her lips in to a thin line. “He wasn’t worth crying over.”

      “I enjoyed crying over him,” Annie returned with a quick, amused smile. “I needed to cry and yell and moan and get a little drunk. You were right there for me, saying all those great, nasty things about him.”

      “That was the easy part,” Natasha remembered. “He was a dork.” It pleased her tremendously to use the young Freedmont boy’s insult.

      “Yeah, but he was a terrific-looking dork.” Annie allowed herself a brief reminiscence. “Anyway, you helped me over that rough spot until I convinced myself I was better off without him. You’ve never needed my shoulder, Tash, because you’ve never let a guy get past this.” She lifted a hand, pressing her palm against empty air.

      Amused, Natasha leaned back against the counter. “And what is that?”

      “The Great Stanislaski Force Field,” Annie told her. “Guaranteed to repel all males from the age of twenty-five to fifty.”

      Natasha lifted a brow, not quite sure if she was amused any longer. “I’m not certain if you’re trying to flatter or insult me.”

      “Neither. Just listen to me a minute, okay?” Annie took a deep breath to keep herself from rushing through something she thought should be taken step-by-step. “Tash, I’ve seen you brush off guys with less effort than you’d swat away a gnat. And just as automatically,” she added when Natasha remained silent. “You’re very pleasant about it, and also very definite. I’ve never seen you give any man a second’s thought once you’ve politely shown him the door. I’ve even admired you for it, for being so sure of yourself, so comfortable with yourself that you didn’t need a date on Saturday night to keep your ego out of the dirt.”

      “Not sure of myself,” Natasha murmured. “Just apathetic about relationships.”

      “All right.” Annie nodded slowly. “I’ll accept that. But this time it’s different.”

      “What is?” Natasha skirted the counter and began to tally the day’s sales.

      “You see? You know I’m going to mention his name, and you’re nervous.”

      “I’m not nervous,” Natasha lied.

      “You’ve been nervous, moody and distracted since Kimball walked into the shop a couple of weeks ago. In over three years, I’ve never seen you give a man more than five minutes’ thought. Until now.”

      “That’s only because this one is more annoying than most.” At Annie’s shrewd look, Natasha gave up. “All right, there is…something,” she admitted. “But I’m not interested.”

      “You’re afraid to be interested.”

      Natasha didn’t like the sound of that, but forced herself to shrug it off. “It’s the same thing.”

      “No, it’s not.” Annie put a hand over Natasha’s and squeezed. “Look, I’m not pushing you toward this guy. For all I know, he could have murdered his wife and

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