up vigorously, washing Roland Carruthers right out of her hair. And St. John Electronics, too. Then she ducked her head beneath the shower and watched the lather disappear down the drain. In seconds it was gone.
She was clean, fresh, unencumbered.
And desirable.
An intriguing thought.
Syd turned off the water, toweled herself off and dressed in the clothes McGillivray had given her. Then, for luck,she dabbed a tiny bit of McGillivrayâs lime-scented after-shave on her pulse pointsâand began to plot the future.
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T HIS might have been a mistakeâbringing Sydney St. John home with him.
The woman was a menace, Hugh thought, banging around the kitchen, trying not to think about the naked woman showering just beyond that closed bathroom door. She was ten times more tempting than Lisa Milligan had ever thought of being, and she didnât even seem to know it.
And because he had done his best to preserve her modesty, sheâd thought he was gay!
Heâd never felt less gay in his life!
He stood at the kitchen counter now, in theory chopping up onions for an omelette, but in fact he had his eyes shut while in his mind he could still see her as sheâd shimmied out of that beaded dress on the boat. Judging from his reactions, his body remembered the view even better than his mind did.
And the glimpse heâd got when that quilt had fallen away just moments ago hadnât helped cool his ardor. He didnât need any more views like that one, thank you very muchânot unless she was going to follow it up with a little action.
Fat chance.
Wasnât going to happen.
He wasnât going to let it happen, because Sydney St. Johnâfor all her clothes shedding and shimmyingâwas no different than Lisa Milligan. If she had been telling the truth about what had happened on the yachtâand she had to be, simply because her story was so ridiculous she couldnât possibly have made it up!âthen she was obviously an idealist. Sheâd refused to marry Roland Whatâs-His-Name for business reasons. Ergo, she must have some romantic notion about marrying for love.
Nothing wrong with that.
Hugh believed in it himself. It was exactly what he had wanted with Carin.
But he couldnât have Carin, so he had learned to want something else. Fun. Games. A nightâs romp with no strings attached.
It didnât take a genius to see that Sydney St. John had more strings than a tennis racket. There would be no romping with her.
âNot gonna happen,â he told Belle. âNo sir. No way.â
So when Sydney St. John waltzed into the kitchen fifteen minutes later, he was prepared.
Or he thought he wasâuntil he caught a glimpse of her breasts bobbing beneath the soft cotton of his navy blue T-shirt and her endless legs below the hem of his boxer shorts. Then his firm commitment and his well-planned words dried right up.
âWell, that was refreshing,â she said, beaming at him. âI feel so-o-o much better.â
She looked better, too, if that were possible. She had her long hair tucked up inside a towel which made her look almost regal in a Queen Nefertiti sort of wayâall neck and turban.
And breasts. And legs. No way could he forget the breasts and legs. Hugh swallowed hard.
âGlad to hear it,â he managed, and was relieved that he didnât sound like a fourteen-year-old. Just to be sure, he cleared his throat before he went on. âSit down. Dig in.â He dumped an omelette on her plate, then gestured toward a plateful of toast and several bowls of leftovers from Lisaâs earlier seduction efforts. âThen we need to get some things straight.â
âSure.â Syd gave him a bright smile. Her breasts jiggled beneath his T-shirt as she sat down. Hugh looked away as she took a bite of omelette, then began heaping salad and coleslaw onto her plate.
âThis is great! Did you cook all this? I canât cook a