wide, sweeping staircase as if she weighed nothing.
But that was a romantic notion of the kind her mother lived on, the kind that had no place here. She kept that cautious hand pressed to a shoulder that felt like a sculpted curve of rock.
âThank you forâ¦â She trailed off. Sheâd turned her head just a fraction, and now her face was close to his, her eyes only inches from his eyes, her mouth a breath from his mouth. A sharp, unexpected thrill stabbed clean through her heart. The strike was followed by a hard jolt that was something like recognition.
âDo I know you?â
âWouldnât you have the answer to that?â He leaned in, just a little, breathed. âYour hair smells of rain.â Even as her eyes went wide, he skimmed his mouth from her jaw-line to her temple. âAnd your skin tastes of it.â
Heâd learned to savor over the years. To sip even when he wished to gulp. Now he considered her mouth, imagined what flavors her lips would carry. He watched them tremble open.
Ah, yes.
He shifted her, drawing her ever so slightly closer. And she whimpered in pain.
He jerked back, looked down and saw the raw scrape just below her shoulder, and the tear in her sweater. âYouâre injured. Why the bloody hell didnât you say so before?â
Out of patienceânot his strong suit in any caseâhe strode into the closest bedchamber, set her down on the side of the bed. In one brisk move he tugged the sweater over her head.
Shocked, she crossed her arms over her breasts. âDonât you touch me!â
âHow can I tend your wounds if I donât touch you?â His brows had lowered, drawn together. She was wearing a bra. He knew they were called that, as heâd seen them worn on the television and in the thin books that were called magazines.
But it was the first time he had witnessed an actual female form so attired.
He liked it very much.
But such delights would have to wait until he saw what condition the woman was in. He leaned over, unhooked her trousers.
âStop it!â She shoved, tried to scramble back and was hauled not so gently into place.
âDonât be foolish. Iâve no patience for female flights. If I was after ravishing you, tâwould already be done.â Since she continued to struggle, he heaved a breath and looked up.
It was fear he sawânot foolishness but raw fear. A maiden, he thought. For Godâs sake, Flynn, have a care.
âKayleen.â He spoke quietly now, his voice as soothing as balm on a burn. âI wonât harm you. I only want to see where youâre hurt.â
âAre you a doctor?â
âCertainly not.â
He seemed so insulted, she nearly laughed.
âI know of healing. Now be still. I ought to have gotten you out of your wet clothes before.â His eyes stayed on hers, seemed to grow brighter. And brighter still, until she could see nothing else. And she sighed. âLie back now, thereâs a lass.â
Mesmerized, she lay on the heaps of silk pillows and, docile as a child, let him undress her.
âSweet Mary, youâve legs that go to forever.â His distraction with them caused the simple spell to waver, and she stirred. âA manâs entitled to the view,â he muttered, then shook his head. âLook what youâve done to yourself. Bruised and scraped one end to the other. Do you like pain, then?â
âNo.â Her tongue felt thick. âOf course not.â
âSome do,â he murmured. He leaned over her again. âLook at me,â he demanded. âLook here. Stay.â
Her eyes drooped, half closed as she floated where he wanted, just above the aches. He wrapped her in the quilt, flicked his mind toward the hearth and set the fire roaring.
Then he left her to go to his workshop and gather his potions.
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He kept her in the light trance as he tended her. He wanted no maidenly fidgets when he