but the man sure is interested in you.”
She stared at them blankly.
Remy nudged Chet. “Told ya she hadn’t even freakin’ noticed.”
She had noticed how Gavin acted around her—she’d have to be blind not to see how he looked at her sometimes, stupid not to recognize the familiar way he touched her and a complete idiot to pretend to be unaffected by his attention. It just surprised her that Chet and Remy West had picked up on the undercurrent so quickly.
Or had Gavin said something to them?
No. Gavin wasn’t like that. But as far as she was concerned, that topic was off limits. “The only thing I’m interested in is you guys taking some of these tomatoes off my hands. You can swing by your mama’s house and earn major brownie points.”
“That’d be great. You’re a doll,” Remy said.
“And just for that, I’ll send a loaf of bread home with you guys too.”
Chet groaned. “Man, I love your homemade bread. Don’t suppose you’ve got any extra honey lying around?”
“Jesus, Chet,” Remy said and smacked him in the back of the head. “Don’t be such a fuckin’ mooch.”
“I’m not a mooch, asshole. I was gonna buy it.”
Remy dodged Chet’s retaliatory swat.
“Boys. There’s enough to go around. Let’s head up to the house.” She purposely didn’t say my house.
Gavin didn’t appear until Chet and Remy were gone. He leaned against the porch support. “I see you take pity on poor bachelors and send them home with food.”
She hadn’t shaken off the disappointing news yet. “The bachelors I like, yes. Why? You jealous?”
“A little.” Gavin started down the steps. “But since you feed me on occasion, I get the better deal, since I’m living with you and all. That seemed to interest them more than it should have.” He stopped in front of her. “Is everything all right?”
The man had no concept of personal space. She considered saying something flip, but a soft, “No,” slipped out and she dropped her gaze to the empty basket still clutched in her hands.
He took the basket from her. When she looked up, he curled his hands around her arms, moving closer yet. “Rielle. What’s going on?”
“West Construction can’t start on my house until next spring.”
“Because of the garage addition? Dammit, I told them I could wait if it would affect—”
“No, it has nothing to do with that.”
A calculating look entered his eyes. “If you need—”
Lightning fast Rielle placed her fingers over his lips. “Don’t you assume anything and offer me money or I swear to God I will scream or…do something equally horrible to you.”
His lips curled into a smile and he lightly nipped her fingers before she pulled her hand away. “I like it when you get feisty. But if money isn’t the issue, what is?”
“Time. If they can’t get started until spring, then that means I’ll have to move into the cabin because I’m sure you don’t want me living with you and Sierra indefinitely.”
The immediate fierceness in his eyes made it hard to breathe. “Now who’s making assumptions?”
There wasn’t any sign of mild-mannered Gavin. In fact, she’d begun to wonder if that easy-going man had just been a figment of her imagination—a pencil-pushing pushover she’d never be attracted to, therefore she could keep him at arm’s length. But this Gavin? No pushover. All man. All the time. And her attraction to him kept getting stronger every day.
“Listen to me. You are not staying in that cabin unless living with me is so heinous that you want to kill me in my sleep.”
“It’s not, I mean, you’re not,” she assured him.
“Good. So we’ll stick to the original plan. Because I think it’s been working great.” He grinned. “So, pity a poor bachelor. What’s for lunch?”
Rielle growled and smacked him playfully with the basket. “You’re such a mooch.”
But she made him lunch anyway.
Chapter Seven
Gavin strolled into the kitchen and poured himself a