Treasures Lost, Treasures Found

Treasures Lost, Treasures Found by Nora Roberts Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Treasures Lost, Treasures Found by Nora Roberts Read Free Book Online
Authors: Nora Roberts
voice and her eyes level. “I didn’t. Perhaps I decided a certain amount of recklessness had its uses.”
    “Find me useful, do you, Kate?”
    The waitress served the salads but didn’t speak this time. She saw the look in Ky’s eyes.
    So had Kate. “When I’m having a job done, I’ve found that it saves a considerable amount of time and trouble to find the most suitable person.” With forced calm, she set down her wine and picked up her fork. “I wouldn’t have come back to Ocracoke for any other reason.” She tilted her head, surprised by the quick surge of challenge that rushed through her. “Things will be simpler for both of us if that’s clear up front.”
    Anger moved through him, but he controlled it. If they were playing word games, he had to keep his wits. She’d always been clever, but now it appeared the cleverness was glossed over with sophistication. He remembered the innocent, curious Kate with a pang. “As I recall, you were always one for complicating rather than simplifying. I hadto explain the purpose, history and mechanics of every piece of equipment before you’d take the first dive.”
    “That’s called caution, not complication.”
    “You’d know more about caution than I would. Some people spend half their lives testing the wind.” He drank deeply of wine. “I’d rather ride with it.”
    “Yes.” This time it was she who smiled with her lips only. “I remember very well. No plans, no ties, tomorrow the wind might change.”
    “If you’re anchored in one spot too long, you can become like those trees out there.” He gestured out the window where a line of sparse junipers bent away from the sea. “Stunted.”
    “Yet you’re still here, where you were born, where you grew up.”
    Slowly Ky poured her more wine. “The island’s too isolated, the life a bit too basic for some. I prefer it to those structured little communities with their parties and country clubs.”
    Kate looked like she belonged in such a place, Ky thought as he fought against the frustrated desire that ebbed and flowed inside him. She belonged in an elegant silk suit, holding a Dresden cup and discussing an obscure eighteenth-century English poet. Was that why she could still make him feel rough and awkward and too full of longings?
    If they could be swept back in time, he’d have stolen her, taken her out to open sea and kept her there. They would have traveled from port to exotic port. If havingher meant he could never go home again, then he’d have sailed until his time was up. But he would have had her. Ky’s fingers tightened around his glass. By God, he would have had her.
    The main course was slipped in front of him discreetly. Ky brought himself back to the moment. It wasn’t the eighteenth century, but today. Still, she had brought him the past with the papers and maps. Perhaps they’d both find more than they’d bargained for.
    “I looked over the things you left with me.”
    “Oh?” She felt a quick tingle of excitement but speared the first delicate shrimp as though it were all that concerned her.
    “Your father’s research is very thorough.”
    “Of course.”
    Ky let out a quick laugh. “Of course,” he repeated, toasting her. “In any case, I think he might have been on the right track. You do realize that the section he narrowed it down to goes into a dangerous area.”
    Her brows drew together, but she continued to eat. “Sharks?”
    “Sharks are a little difficult to confine to an area,” he said easily. “A lot of people forget that the war came this close in the forties. There are still mines all along the coast of the Outer Banks. If we’re going down to the bottom, it’d be smart to keep that in mind.”
    “I’ve no intention of being careless.”
    “No, but sometimes people look so far ahead they don’t see what’s under their feet.”
    Though he’d eaten barely half of his meal, Ky picked up his wine again. How could he eat when his whole system was

Similar Books

Heaven Is High

Kate Wilhelm

What Price Love?

Stephanie Laurens

Acorna’s Search

Anne McCaffrey

Die Geschlechterluege

Cordelia Fine

Lies That Bind

Maggie Barbieri

Children of the Dawn

Patricia Rowe

The Diamond Moon

Paul Preuss