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had been new. Bemused, she ran a hand over it.

      “I remember how it looked wrapped around you.”

      Her hand remained on the blanket. Her gaze flew to Cole’s—and the past crashed into the present, smashing itself all over her, making a mess of her mind and her heartbeat.

      At that moment she wanted him. Wanted him badly.

      Twenty-two fuzzy pounds thumped against her leg, nearly knocking her over and making a noise like a chain saw.

      Cole’s eyes widened. “What in the world—?”

      “Meet Hulk.” Thank you, Hulk, she told him silently, bending to pick him up. He sprawled, limp with pleasure, over her shoulder while she ran a hand over cowlicky gray fur. Hulk loved attention.

      “As in The Incredible?” Cole looked dubious. “He is a cat, right?”

      “That’s the rumor.”

      “I’d better let my mother know about him.”

      “She’s not allergic or something, is she? Mercedes said it was okay to bring him.” She rubbed him under the chin the way he liked, and his motor revved loudly. “He always travels with me.”

      “I’m sure it will be fine. I don’t think she was prepared, though. She hasn’t stocked the grounds with antelope or gazelle for him to feed on.” He eyed the cat. “Good thing there aren’t any small children in the neighborhood.”

      “Very funny. Hulk’s big, but he’s a sweetie. He loves everyone, children included.”

      “For dessert?”

      She huffed out a breath. “What do you have against my cat?”

      “Tilly.”

      “There shouldn’t be a problem. If he has to, Hulk will take to a tree, but he isn’t easily intimidated.”

      “Tilly is. Though terrified describes her better.”

      Oh. She grimaced. “I’ll try to keep him in.” She detached Hulk and poured him onto the couch. He gave her a reproachful look and jumped down. Cat honor demanded that he not stay where he’d been put, even if he wanted to.

      It took three more trips to finish unloading her suvvy. Dixie managed not to slide back into memory land, but she was very ready for Cole to leave by the time they brought in the last few items. Her emotions were a jumble. She needed a sit.

      With typical contrariness, once he’d deposited her bag of books Cole seemed ready to stay and chat. “Weird pillow,” he said, nodding at the zafu she’d placed on the floor by an empty wall. “Gives me all kinds of kinky thoughts.”

      “It’s for my sits.” When he looked blank she added, “Meditation, Cole. You have heard of meditation?”

      “Ah.” He nodded. “Does that mean you aren’t practicing witchcraft anymore?”

      “It wasn’t my path.” She huffed out an impatient breath. “Look, do you still run all the time?”

      “Two or three times a week.”

      “That’s your mental-health break. I sit.”

      He burst out laughing. “No, no—” he said, holding up a hand. “Don’t blow up at me. I just thought that I should have known you’d prefer sitting to running.”

      She couldn’t help grinning. It was appropriate. “I can’t see the appeal in sweating.” Though it was hard to argue with the results. Cole was as lean and sculpted at thirty-five as he’d been at twenty-four.

      At least, he seemed to be. A dress shirt and slacks don’t make everything clear…Don’t go there, she told her imagination.

      He leaned against the wall, crossing his arms over his chest. “Going to offer me a cold drink now that I’ve flexed my muscles for you?”

      “You didn’t put on the tank shirt,” she pointed out, setting her laptop on the table. “Besides, I haven’t been to the store yet.”

      “Mother will have seen that the refrigerator and pantry are stocked with the basics.” He cocked his head. “Nervous, Dixie?”

      “Of course not.” Oh, God would get her for that lie. “But I do need to get settled in. Shouldn’t you be working?”

      “I’ve been known to go for whole minutes at a time without my calculator these days. So why are you here?”

      She blinked. “You’re having a little trouble with your memory?”

      “You’re in a position to pick and choose your jobs. You picked Louret. I want to know why.”

      She made her shrug as casual as she could, considering the irritating way her heartbeat was behaving. “First, you’re paying me a good deal of money. Second, Mercedes asked me to do it. Third…while ignoring your existence has been a pleasant habit, it’s getting in the way of my friendship with your sister now that I’m back in California.”

      “So you’re here because of me.” He started toward her.

      “Your ego is showing.”

      “Call it unfinished business, then.”

      He was standing too close, but damned if she was going to retreat. “That’s part of it. A small part.”

      “Good.” He leaned in even closer and kissed her.

      Shock held her still for the first instant, long enough for the liquid roll of desire to hit. Instinct had her reacting in the next.

      She shoved him. Hard.

      He staggered back a step, tripped over Hulk and fell flat on his butt.

      Dixie burst out laughing.

      To her surprise, he chuckled, too. “The idea was for me to sweep you off your feet, not to get knocked off mine. Your demon cat—”

      “You’d better not have hurt him.” She looked around and saw Hulk sitting by the couch, busily smoothing his ruffled fur with his tongue. No damage there, obviously.

      “That’s right. Worry about your cat, not me.”

      “You’re bigger than he is.”

      “Not by much.” But he was grinning as he got to his feet.

      She raised her eyebrows. “You have changed.”

      “I’m not twenty-four anymore.” The smile lingered on his mouth, but his eyes held a different message. One that hit her harder than that so-brief kiss. “Understand this—what we had eleven years ago is a closed account. That doesn’t keep us from opening a new one.”

      “I’m not interested.” Her body might be, but her body wasn’t in charge.

      “I am. Tell me—do you still have that tattoo?”

      “Go away, Cole.”

      “I’ll be out of town for a couple days, but when I come back, I plan to find out about that tattoo.” With that he turned and left, pulling the door closed behind him.

      All sorts of emotions jostled around inside Dixie. She bit her lip. For a second she tasted him again, salt and coffee and the subtle blend that was pure Cole. Oddly, though, her ghosts were silent.

      Maybe memories are like the moon, she thought. Reflected light is never as bright and strong as what you get direct from the source…and the source of her ghosts had just kissed her for the first time since she left him eleven years ago.

      Shouldn’t she be cautioning herself about all sorts of things?

      But the interior tumult gradually settled into a smile, and it was filled with speculation, not nostalgia. She’d agreed to the job as a favor to Mercedes and because she did need to deal with some ghosts. But

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