was danger and adventure at every step. Her convent-raised heroine was having a devil of a time, but she was coping. Strong. Jackie couldn't have written about a weak-minded woman if she'd had to.

And her hero. Just thinking about him made her smile. She could see him perfectly, just as if he'd popped out of her imagination into the tub with her. That dark black hair, thick, glinting red in the sun when he removed his hat. Long enough that a woman could get a handful of it. The body lean and hard from riding, brown from the sun, scarred from the trouble he never walked away from.

You could see that in his face, a lean, bony face that was often shadowed by the beard he didn't bother to shave. He had a mouth that could smile and make a woman's heart pump fast. Or it could tighten and send shivers of fear up a man's spine. And his eyes. Oh, his eyes were a wonder. Slate gray and fringed by long, dark lashes, crinkled at the comers from squinting into the Arizona sun. Flat and hard when he pulled the trigger, hot and passionate when he took a woman.

Every woman in Arizona was in love with Jake Redman. And Jackie was pleased to be a little in love with him herself. Didn't that make him real? she thought as the bubbles swirled around her. If she could see him so clearly, and feel for him this intensely, didn't it mean she was doing the job right? He wasn't a good man, not through and through. It would be up to the heroine to mine the gold from him, and accept the rough stones along with it. And boy, was he going to give Miss Sarah Conway a run for her money. Jackie could hardly wait to sit down with them so that they could show her what happened next. If she concentrated hard enough, she could almost hear him speak to her.

'What in the hell are you doing?'

Still dreaming, Jackie opened her eyes and looked into the face of her imagination. Jake? she thought, wondering if the hot water had soaked into her brain. Jake didn't wear suits and ties, but she recognized the look that meant he was about to draw and fire. Her mouth fell open and she stared.

His hair was shorter, but not by much, and the shadow of beard was there. She pressed her fingers to her eyes and got chlorine in them, then blinked them open. He was still there, a little closer now. The sound of the spa's motor seemed louder as it filled her head.

'Am I dreaming?'

Nathan's eyes narrowed. She wasn't the rowdy redhead he'd pictured, but a cute, doe-eyed brunette. Either way, she didn't belong in his house. 'What you're doing is trespassing. Now who the hell are you?'

The voice. Good grief, even the voice was right. Jackie shook her head and struggled to get a grip on herself. This was the twentieth century, and no matter how real her characters seemed on paper, they didn't come to life in five-hundred-dollar suits. The simple fact was that she was alone with a stranger and in a very vulnerable position.

She wondered how much she remembered from her karate course, then took another look at the man's broad shoulders and decided it just wasn't going to be enough.

'Who are you?' The edge of fear gave her voice haughty, rounded tones her mother would have been proud of.

'You're the one who has questions to answer,' he countered. 'But I'm Nathan Powell.'

'The architect? Oh, I've admired your work. I saw the Ridgeway Center in Chicago, and…' She started to scoot up, no longer afraid, but then she remembered she hadn't bothered to put on a suit and slumped back again. 'You have a marvelous flair for combining aesthetics with practicality.'

'Thanks. Now-'

'But what are you doing here?'

His eyes narrowed again, and for the second time Jackie saw something of her gunslinger in them. 'That's my question. This is my house.'

'Yours?' She rubbed the back of her wrist over her eyes as she tried to think. 'You're Nathan? Fred's Nathan?' Relieved, she smiled again. 'Well, that explains things.'

A dimple appeared at the corner of her mouth when she smiled. Nathan noticed it, then ignored it. He was a fastidious man, and fastidious men didn't come home to find strange women in their tubs. 'Not to me. I'm going to repeat myself. Who the hell are you?'

'Oh. Sorry. I'm Jack.' When his brow rose, she smiled again and extended a wet hand. 'Jackie-Jacqueline MacNamara. Fred's cousin.'

He glanced at her hand, and at the glitter of jewels on it, but didn't take it in his. He was afraid that if he did he might just haul her out onto the tiled floor. 'And why, Miss MacNamara, are you sitting in my spa, and sleeping in my bed?'

'Is that your room? Sorry, Fred didn't say which I was to take, so I took the one I liked best. He's in San Diego, you know.'

'I don't give a damn where he is.' He'd always been a patient man. At least that was what he'd always believed. Right now, though, he was finding he had no patience at all. 'What I want to know is why you're in my house.'

'Oh, I sublet it from Fred. Didn't he get ahold of you?'

'You what?'

'You know, it's hard to talk with this motor running. Wait.' She held up a hand before he could hit the Off button. 'I'm, ah…well, I wasn't expecting anyone, so I'm not exactly dressed for company. Would you mind?'

He glanced down automatically to where the water churned hot and fast at the subtle curve of her breast. Nathan set his teeth. 'I'll be in the kitchen. Make it fast.'

Jackie let out a long breath when she was alone. 'I think Fred did it again,' she muttered as she hauled herself out of the tub and dried off.

Nathan made himself a long gin and tonic, using a liberal hand with the gin. As far as homecomings went, this one left a lot to be desired. There might have been men who'd be pleasantly surprised to come home after an exhausting project and find naked women waiting in their sun rooms. Unfortunately, he just wasn't one of them. He took a deep drink as he leaned back against the counter. It was, he supposed, just a question of taking one step at a time-and the first would be disposing of Jacqueline MacNamara.

'Mr. Powell?'

He glanced over to see her step into the kitchen. She was still dripping a bit. Her legs were lightly tanned and long-very long, he noticed-skimmed at the thighs by a terry-cloth robe that was as boldly striped as Joseph's coat of many colors. Her hair curled damply around her face in a soggy halo, with a fringe of bangs that accented dark, wide eyes. She was smiling, and the dimple was back. He wasn't sure he liked that. When she smiled she looked as though she could sell you ten acres of Florida swampland.

'It appears we're going to have to discuss your cousin.'

'Fred.' Jackie nodded, still smiling, and slipped onto a rattan stool at the breakfast bar. She'd already decided she'd do best by being totally at ease and in control. If he thought she was nervous and unsure of her position… Well, she wasn't positive, but she had a very good idea she'd find herself standing outside the house, bag in hand. 'He's quite a character, isn't he? How did you meet him?'

'Through a mutual friend.' He grimaced a little, thinking he was going to have to talk with Justine, as well. 'I had a project in Germany that was going to keep me out of the country for a few months. I needed someone to house-sit. He was recommended. As I knew his aunt-'

'Patricia-Patricia MacNamara's my mother.'

'Adele Lindstrom.'

'Oh, Aunt Adele. She's my mother's sister.' It was more than a smile this time. Something wickedly amused flashed in Jackie's eyes. 'She's a lovely woman.'

There was something droll, a bit too droll, in the comment. Nathan chose to ignore it. 'I worked with Adele briefly on a revitalization project in Chicago. Because of the connection, and the recommendation, I decided to have Fred look out for the house while I was away.'

Jackie bit her bottom lip. It was her first sign of nerves, and though she didn't realize it, that small gesture cleared a great deal of ground for her. 'He wasn't renting it from you?'

'Renting it? Of course not.' She was twisting her rings, one at a time, around her fingers. Don't get involved, he warned himself. Tell her to pack up and move out. No explanations, no apologies. You can be in bed in ten minutes. Nathan felt rather than heard his own sigh. Not many people knew that Nathan Powell was a sucker. 'Is that what he told you?'

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