Keep this all business.



 

ÒIÕm glad youÕre back,Ó she said, tilting her head toward the vine-laden tree.

ÒLooks like I need your help. Those blossoms are too high for me to reach, and I would like to make sure that I have enough to examine so that I can do a thorough preliminary report for my uncle.Ó


 


ÒAh,Ó he said as he lowered the camera. ÒSo, you do need me.Ó


 


She let the comment pass as she seized a sample bag from her pack and led him toward the tree. They stood, heads tilted back, watching a wasp meander from one blossom to another. Trevor raised an arm and stretched upward, but the blossoms hung just above his reach. 

ÒYouÕll have to climb on my shoulders,Ó he said, discarding the camera atop the pack at his feet. Then he dropped to his knees, with his back to her.


 


She blinked at the top of his bowed head. He obviously expected her to just climb right on.



 

ÒUh, Trevor,Ó she said, crushing an empty plastic bag in her hand. I donÕt think this is a good idea.Ó 

ÒWhat? Are you afraid of heights?Ó



 

ÒNo.Ó She didnÕt feel like spreading her thighs and resting her bottom behind his head. ÒIÕll be too heavy for you.Ó


 


ÒWhat do you—never mind. IÕve stuck my foot in my mouth enough as it is.Ó He twisted around, sized her up with a lazy, roaming eye. ÒI can hold you, Kass. Climb on.Ó


 


He turned back around and bowed his head again. She took a deep breath. If she was ever going to get those flowers, she supposed she didnÕt have a choice. While this was just a hobby for her, these flowers could prove to be beneficial for her uncle and his research. So short of heading back home and hiking back here with a step stool or ladder this was her only choice. Not only would she kill time doing so, the action would make her look very foolish.


 


Her decision made, she swung one leg over his shoulders. He slapped his palm around her calf. She braced her fingers on his shoulder between his neck and her thigh, then swung her other leg over. Her shorts slid up; his hair tickled the inside of her thighs. Then he tightened his grip on her leg and made a lumbering lurch upward. Her feet left the ground. He leaned forward. She slid forward until her crotch bumped against the back of his head. Then he rose high, hiking her up with him, lifting her up into the boughs of the tree and their twines of fragrant blossoms.


 


For a moment she just braced herself in the shadow of the tree branches, drunk with the scent of the blossoms, dizzy with the height and feel of his firm hands on the bare skin of her legs, dizzy with the crush of his head against her stomach and the heat of his breath along the inside of her thighs, shaking with the sensation of being off-balance, out of control of her own body in this high, fragrant place.


 


His voice sounded strained. ÒCan you reach it now?Ó


 


ÒYes, I can,Ó she said. 
Back to the task at hand, Kassady. 

She lifted one hand off his head and un-crumpled the bag. Peeling her other hand off his head, she tightened her thighs and started picking. ÒStay still for a few minutes,Ó she said hoarsely, Òand IÕll be done here as soon as I can.Ó


 


ÒRelax, Kass.Ó He stroked her legs, massaged her tight thighs. ÒYouÕre choking me.Ó


 

ÒSorry.Ó



 

She tried to loosen up. But her skin still tingled where his hands had touched her. And if she eased the tension in her thighs too much, her buttocks sank down deep into his shoulders. She felt, too keenly, the shape of his head between her legs, the surprising silkiness of his hair.


 


ÒSo,Ó he said, flexing his grip, Òhow did you get so interested in flowers? You donÕt strike me as the country sort of gardening girl.Ó


 


ÒIÕm not.Ó She pulled the nearest blossoms off and stuffed them in the bag. ÒI grew up in Santa Monica.Ó



 

ÒSanta Monica, California?Ó



 

ÒMove up a little,Ó she said. ÒThere are more closer to the trunk.Ó


 


ÒVery interesting,Ó he said as he stepped forward. ÒI never imagined you to be a Cali girl.Ó


 


ÒIÕm not sure if that is a compliment or an insult.Ó


 


She stuffed more blossoms into the bag, ducking her head to dodge an angry wasp. ÒIÕm finished,Ó she announced, sealing the bag with a quick swipe of her fingers. She looked through the plastic at the stuffed bruised blossoms and frowned. It would have to do. It would be a preliminary analysis, nothing more. She could bring a ladder or a step stool next time. But she had to get off this manÕs shoulders, now. ÒYou can let me down.Ó



 

ÒThat was quick.Ó


 


ÒI donÕt need much.Ó She sank along with him, watching the ground as it rose to meet her, felt it hard and stable beneath her hiking boots. She braced her feet on the solid ground. He unlocked his head from the vee of her thighs, lowered his chin and swept his head out behind her, rasping the tender skin of her inner thighs, scraping the full sweep of her crotch. As she stumbled at the loss of his steadying influence, he rose up behind her and grasped her arms. 

ÒSteady, Kass.Ó


 

He drew her back against his chest. Forcing her spine straight, forcing her head into the nook between his shoulder and his jaw. She breathed heavily, felt her chest heave with each exhale, felt the heaviness of her breasts in the silk cups of her bra. Her button-down shirt gaped; she sensed his gaze sweeping downward, burning a trail through the thing material to the pucker of her nipple.



 

ÒSo, Cali girl,Ó he said against her hair, Òif you like the city life so much, what are you doing here in the woods of Colorado?Ó


 


ÒWhatÕs with all the questions, Trevor?Ó



 

ÒJust making conversation.Ó



 

Frustration and guilt rushed through her, adding to the massive web of tangled emotions. She was doing it again—being cold and prickly to someone whoÕd taken the time to help her out, who was trying to make up for past mistakes. She had to get a handle on this, to get a handle on him. She shook herself free, turned and faced him—and immediately wished she hadnÕt. It was hard enough to concentrate without all six feet or so of him so close to her, a big lumbering hunk of breathing, sweaty man in the warmth of a hot summer morning.


 


He deserved an answer, he was waiting for one, and standing here, she couldnÕt think of a legitimate reason not to tell him the truth.


 


ÒI suppose,Ó she began somewhat reluctantly, Òthat it started with my grandfather.Ó



 

ÒAh.Ó


 


ÒHe had this great big plot of land in Texas, half of it cultivated, half left to grow wild,Ó she explained. ÒHe was an amateur herbalist and knew the name of every plant on his property.Ó


 


ÒAs brainy as his granddaughter,Ó Trevor murmured. ÒYou spent a lot of time there, then?Ó


 

ÒNot at all,Ó she responded. ÒMy mother would have never allowed that. I had school. I hadÉlessons.Ó



 

Dance lesson. Etiquette lessons. Piano lessons.



 

ÒI spent many of my summerÕs there, thatÕs all.Ó



 

The best summers of her life, she remembered. Not a scheduled activity for almost three months. Not a single textbook that had to be read, not a single concerto that had to be memorized. Long days bright and full of discovery by her grandfather and uncleÕs side as she plucked samples for the house. Sage, thyme, rosemary, Saint-JohnÕs wart and so many others, fragrant, mysterious and full of magic. She, her Grandpa and her uncle—when he could join them—would spend hours meandering over the property, watching a seed go from sprig to flower to fruit. Quiet, slow hours that seemed to stretch on forever.


 


That perhaps, was the greatest gift Grandpa and her uncle had given her; the memory of all those sweet, shared uncluttered hours. The feeling that she—tall curvaceous, big brained Kassady—had been important enough in someoneÕs life to merit the deep-focused expenditures of a commodity as precious as time.



 

ÒWhat are you thinking about?Ó


 


She glanced up at him and took a sharp, painful breath. HeÕd spoken in a low voice, deep and resonant, and he stood just by her side. Big. Big and breathing, warm and all male.


 


ÒTell me,Ó he urged, Òwhat you were just thinking of.Ó



 

ÒWhy?Ó


 


ÒYour entire facial expression changed.Ó He traced his finger down her cheek.

 

ÒYou went soft, Kass. Like you were thinking of a lover.Ó



 

She sucked in a deep breath of surprise. His hand was gritty against her cheek. Then laid his hand against her jaw, a warm pressure. The world beyond him spun on a kaleidoscope of color and light. 

A lover. 

She knew nothing of lovers, nothing of passion, nothing of the crazed mindlessness that overcame a sane woman when she was in love. Though sheÕd seen it happen to her friends over the years. Such a strange phenomenon, sheÕd thought each time she witnessed that distinct intensity. Such a waste of energy and time, lolling about gazing into a loverÕs eyes. What did they see? SheÕd never seen it in LanceÕs eyes, dear, sweet, kind Lance, who had left her with such biting words.



 

TrevorÕs eyes were deep, intensely gray, a shade she couldnÕt recall seeing before now. Deep and full of shifting currents, strange messages, strange emotions, strange meaning—curiosity and concern and something far darker, far more needy, far more intense.


 


The pressure of his hand on her jaw intensified, and she felt another pressure, deep inside her, a coiling, heated sensation in the hollow of her abdomen. A fierce and sudden hungry taste in her mouth for things sheÕd not known in years—the touch of hot flesh, the taste of a manÕs sweat, the desire of sex.



 

The need was deep, visceral and sent shock waves right down to her hiking boots. ÒMy grandfather,Ó she said swiftly, trying to regain control of herself. ÒI was thinking of my grandfather. We had many good years together before he died.Ó


 

Trevor didnÕt say anything. He didnÕt move. She could see the reflection of her own quivering response in his gaze. He made no attempt to move back and break the invisible vines that held them to the spot. His grip tightened suddenly on her jaw. ÒHell, Kass. This was going to happen sooner or later.Ó


 


Then he crushed her mouth with his lips.