Royce held out his hand. “Let me see your phone.”
She pulled back on the stool and dug the little phone out of the pocket of her blue jeans.
He slid it open and pressed the on button.
“Are you sure-”
“I won’t leave it on long.” He peered at the tiny screen. “Nope. No GPS function.” He shut it off and tossed it back to her. “Though they could, theoretically, triangulate while you’re talking, but you’re probably safe to text.”
“Really?” That was good news. She’d like to send another message to her mother. And Katie deserved an explanation.
He set out two small plates and spoons while she tucked the phone back into her pocket. She’d have to think about how to phrase her explanation.
Royce ladled the steaming soup into the bowls and set them back on the bar, taking the stool at the end.
“Thanks,” she breathed, inhaling the delectable aroma.
Royce lifted his spoon. “So, how long have you known?”
She followed suit, dipping into the rich broth. “Known what?”
“That you didn’t love him?”
Royce knew his question was blunt to the point of rudeness, but if he was going to make a play for Amber, he needed to know the lay of the land. He knew he’d be a temporary, rebound fling, which was not even remotely a problem for him. In fact, he’d gone into the situation
Last night, he’d known Amber was beautiful. Today, he’d learned she was positively fascinating. She was intelligent, poised and personable, and she could actually speak Chinese. Her reaction to the puppies was cute and endearing. While her fiance’s and family’s ability to intimidate her made him curious.
Why would such an accomplished woman give a rat’s hind end what anybody thought of her decisions?
She stirred her spoon thoughtfully through the bowl of soup. “It’s not so much…” she began.
He waited.
She looked up. “It’s not that I knew I didn’t love him. It’s more that I didn’t know that I did. You know?”
Royce hadn’t the slightest idea what she meant, and he shook his head.
“It seems to me,” she said, cocking her head sideways, teeth raking momentarily over her full bottom lip, “if you’re going to say ‘till death do us part’ you’d better be damn sure.”
Royce couldn’t disagree with that. His parents obviously hadn’t been damn sure. At least his mother wasn’t. His father, on the other hand, had to have been devastated by her betrayal.
Amber was right to break it off. She had absolutely no business marrying a man she didn’t love unreservedly.
“You’d better be damn sure,” Royce echoed, fighting a feeling of annoyance with her for even considering marrying a man she didn’t love. This Hargrove person might be a jerk. So far, he sounded like a jerk. But no man deserved a disloyal wife.
Amber nodded as she swallowed a spoonful of the soup. “Melissa looked sure.”
“Melissa
Amber blinked at the edge to Royce’s tone. “What?”
“Nothing.” He tore a bun in half.
“You annoyed?”
He shook his head.
“Melissa and Jared seem really good together.”
“You do know it’s kinder to break it off up front with a guy.” Royce set down his spoon.
“I-”
“Because, if you don’t, the next thing you know, you’ll have two or three kids, the PTA and carpool duty. You’ll get bored. You’ll start looking around. And you’ll end up at the No-Tell Motel on Route 55, in bed with some young drifter. And Hargrove, whoever-he-is, will be going for his gun.”
“Whoa.” Amber’s eyes were wide in the stark kitchen light. “You just did my whole life in thirty seconds.”
“I didn’t necessarily mean you.”
“What? Are we talking about Melissa?”
“No.” Royce gave himself a mental shake. “We are absolutely not talking about Melissa.”
“Then who-”
“Nobody. Forget it.” He drew a breath. So much for making a play for her. It wouldn’t be tonight. That was for sure. “I just don’t understand why you’re feeling guilty,” he continued. “You are absolutely doing the right thing.”
“I believe that,” she agreed.
He held her gaze with a frank stare. “And anybody who tries to talk you out of it is shortsighted and just plain stupid.”
“You know you’re talking about my father.”
“I know.”
“He’s Chairman of the City Accountants Association, and he owns a multimillion-dollar financial consortium.”
“Pure blind luck, obviously.”
A small smile crept out, though she clearly fought against it. “The No-Tell Motel?”
“Metaphorically speaking. I’m sure you’d pick the Ritz.”
“I’ve never been unfaithful.”
Royce knew he should apologize.
“I’ve dated Hargrove since I was eighteen, and even though he’s not the greatest-” She snapped her mouth shut, and a flush rose in her cheeks as she reached for one of the homemade buns.
Okay, this was interesting. “Not the greatest what?”
“Nothing.”
“You’re blushing.”
“No, I’m not.” She tore into the bun.
Royce grinned. “Were you going to say
“No.” But everything in her body language told him she was lying.
He gazed at her profile for a long minute.
Eighteen. She was eighteen when she took up with Hargrove. Royce could be wrong, but he didn’t think he was. Amber hadn’t had any other lovers. She was dissatisfied with Hargrove, but she had no comparison.
Interesting. He chewed a hunk of his own bun.
A woman deserved at least one comparison.
“What did you find?” Royce’s voice from the office doorway interrupted Amber’s long day of office work.
The sun was descending toward the rugged mountains, while neat piles of bills and correspondence had slowly grown out of the chaos on the desktop in front of her.
Now she stretched her arm out to place a letter on the farthest pile. It was another advertisement for horse tack. She was fairly sure the junk mail could be tossed out, but she wasn’t about to make that decision on her own.
“You’ve got some overdue bills,” she answered Royce, twisting her head to see him lounging in the doorway, one broad shoulder propped against the doorjamb, his hair mussed and sweaty across his forehead and a streak of dirt marring his roughened chin. She met his deep blue gaze, and a surge of longing clenched her chest.
“Pay them,” he suggested in a sexy rumble, crossing his arms over his chest.
“You going to hand over your platinum card?”
His lips parted in a grin. “Sure.”
“Then you better have a high limit. Some of them are six figures.” Feed, lumber, vet bills. The list went on and on.
He eased away from the door frame and ambled toward her. “There must be a checkbook around here