'You're being absurd.'

'I'm being absurd? I'm being absurd?' With a sound of disgust, she reached for the closest thing to hand-a nineteenth-century Venetian bowl-and smashed it to the floor. 'You obviously wouldn't recognize absurd if it shot you between the eyes. I'll tell you what's absurd. Absurd is loving someone and having them love you right back, then refusing to do anything solid about it because maybe, just maybe, it wouldn't work out perfectly.'

'I'm not talking about perfect. Damn it, Jack, not that vase.'

But it was already a pile of French porcelain shards on the floor. 'Of course you're talking about perfect. Perfect's your middle name. Nathan Perfect Powell, projecting his life years into the future, making certain there aren't any loose ends or uneven edges.'

'Fine.' He swung her around before she could grab something else. 'That should be enough right there to show you I'm right about this, about us. I like things done a certain way, I do plan ahead and insist on completing things as carefully as they're begun. You, by your own admission, never finish anything.'

Her chin came up. Her eyes were dry. The tears would come later, she knew, torrents of them. 'I wondered how long it would take you to throw that in my face. You're right about one thing, Nathan. The world's made up of two kinds of people, the careful and the careless. I'm a careless person and content to be so. But I don't think less of you for being a careful one.'

He let out a quiet breath. He wasn't used to fighting, not unless it was over the quality of materials or working conditions for his men. 'I didn't mean that as an insult.'

'No? Well, maybe not, but the point's taken. We're not alike, and though I think we're both capable of a certain amount of growth and compromise, we'll never be alike. That doesn't change the fact that I love you and want to spend my life with you.' This time she grabbed him, by the shirtfront. 'You're not your father, Nathan, and I'm sure as hell not your mother. Don't let them do this to you, to us.'

He covered her hands with his. 'Maybe if you weren't so important it would be easier to risk it. I could say all right, we want each other, so let's take the chance. But I care for you too much to go into this with two strikes against me.'

'You care too much.' The tears were going to come, and soon, so she backed away. 'Damn you for that, Nathan. For not having the guts to say you love me, even now.'

She whirled around and ran out. He heard the front door slam.

Chapter Twelve

The masons lost two days with the rain. I'm putting on double shifts.'

Nathan stood at the building site, squinting into the sun, which had finally made an appearance. It was cold in Denver. Spring hadn't floated in gently. The few hopeful wildflowers that had poked up had been carelessly trampled over. By next spring, the grounds would be green and trimmed. Looking at the scarred earth and the skeleton of the building, he already saw it.

'Considering the filthy weather you've been having, there's been a lot of progress in just under three weeks.' Cody, a Stetson shading his eyes, his booted feet planted wide apart, looked at the beams and girders. Unlike Nathan, he didn't see the finished product. He preferred this stage, when there was still possibilities. 'It looks good,' he decided. 'You, on the other hand, look like hell.'

'It's always nice to have you around, Cody.' Studying his clipboard, Nathan began a steady and detailed analysis of work completed and work projected. Schedules had to be adjusted, and deadlines met.

'You seem to have everything under control, as usual.'

'Yeah.' Nathan pulled out a cigarette, cupping his hands over his lighter.

As the flame leaped on, Cody noticed the shadows under Nathan's eyes, the lines of strain that had dug in around his mouth. To Cody's mind, there was only one thing that could make a strong man look battered. That was a woman.

Nathan dropped his lighter back in his pocket. 'The building inspector should make his pass through today.'

'Bless his heart.' Cody helped himself to a cigarette from Nathan's pack. 'I thought you were quitting these?'

'Eventually.' One of the laborers had a portable radio turned up full. Nathan thought of Jackie blaring music through the kitchen speakers. 'Any problems back home?'

'Businesswise? No. But I was about to ask you the same thing.'

'I haven't been there, remember? Got an update on the Sydney project?'

'Ready to break ground in about six weeks.' He took another drag, then broke the filter off the cigarette. Cody figured if you were going to kill yourself you might as well do it straight out. 'You and Jack have a disagreement?'

'Why?'

'Because from the looks of you you haven't had a decent night's sleep since you got out here.' He found a bent pack of matches in his pocket, remembered the club that was printed on the front with some fondness, then struck a match. 'Want to talk about it?'

'There's nothing to talk about.'

Cody merely lifted a brow and drew in more smoke. 'Whatever you say, boss.'

Nathan swore and pinched at the tension between his eyes. 'Sorry.'

'Okay.' He stood quiet for a time, smoking and watching the men at work. 'I could do with some coffee and a plateful of eggs.' He pitched the stub of the cigarette into the construction rubble. 'Since I'm on an expense account, I'll buy.'

'You're a sport, Cody.' But Nathan walked back to the pickup truck.

Within ten minutes they were sitting in a greasy little diner where the menu was written on a chalkboard and the waitresses wore holsters and short shocking-pink uniforms. There was a bald man dozing over his coffee at the counter and booths with ashtrays in the shape of saddles. The smell of onions hung stubbornly in the air.

'You always could pick a class joint,' Nathan muttered as they slid into a booth, but all he could think of was how Jackie would have enjoyed it.

'It ain't the package, son.' Cody settled back and grinned as one of the waitresses shrieked out an order to a stocky, grim-faced man at the grill.

A pot of coffee was plopped down without being asked for. Cody poured it himself and watched the steam rise. 'You can keep your fancy French restaurants. Nobody makes coffee like a diner.'

Jackie did, Nathan thought, and found he'd lost his taste for it.

Cody grinned up at the frowsy blonde who stopped, pad in hand, by their booth. 'That blue plate special. I want two of them.'

'Two blue plates,' she muttered, writing.

'On one plate, darling,' he added.

She looked over her pad and let her gaze roam over him. 'I guess you do have a lot to fill up.'

'That's the idea. Bring my friend the same.'

She turned to study Nathan and decided it was her lucky day. Two hunks at her station, though the dark one looked as if he'd put in a rough night. Or a week of rough nights. She smiled at Nathan, showing crooked incisors. 'How do you want your eggs, sweetie?'

'Over light,' Cody told her, drawing her attention back to him. 'And don't wring all the grease out of the home fries.'

She chuckled and started off, her voice pitched high. 'Double up on a couple of blue plates. Flip the eggs but make it easy.'

For the first time in weeks, Nathan had the urge to smile. 'What is the blue plate?'

'Two eggs, a rasher of bacon, home fries, biscuits and coffee by the barrel.' As he took out one of his own cigarettes, Cody stretched his legs to rest his feet on the seat beside Nathan. 'So, have you called her?'

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