conversation with him was as easy as getting a politician to tell a straightforward, uncoated, denuded truth.
She raised her right shoulder in a limp shrug. Damned if she was going to let him bamboozle her every time he rearranged his face into a provocation for female capitulation. Sheâd like to meet the woman who walked out on that man. She watched his lilting strut as he crossed the street on his way home. Maybe he wasnât sex personified, but, to her, he was a tantalizing tidbit. Or, perhaps sheâd been working in the boondocks too long. However you sliced it, Reid Maguire looked to her the way upstream salmon looked to a hungry bear.
A judge! Was fate playing games with him, putting him on his honor? If Kendra Rutherford presided in Queenstown, chances were fair that she would hear his case against Brown and Worley, provided he managed to bring it to trial. She hadnât been reluctant to give him good advice, and he meant to follow it, but the less he saw of her, the better it would be for both of them. Heâd spent six long years on Philip Dickersonâs estate, during which time he hadnât wanted a woman and hadnât touched one. Before Myrna walked out of his life, he hadnât been celibate or even considered it since he was thirteen, but his disappointment in Myrna had so embittered him that he couldnât have made love with a woman if his life had depended on it. Yet, the minute he saw Kendra sprawled out on the ice, relaxed and yielding to her inability to get up, much like a dying man submitting to the inevitable, his libido had returned with a vengeance.
It wouldnât have concerned him too muchâafter all, a man wanted to know that he could cut the mustard if he wanted to, but she knew he was there, and she knew it the minute she looked at him. That made the nagging desire that afflicted him when he saw her more difficult to ignore. But he had a long way to go before he could consider tying up with a woman; he meant to clear his name and reestablish himself, both of which could take years. By that time, Kendra Rutherford would have long forgotten that Reid Maguire existed.
He walked into his bedroom, pulled off his jacket and hung it up. He wouldnât mind having some more of that wonderful coffee sheâd made. âOh, damn. I left my drawing pad in her house. Too bad. Itâll just stay there. Iâm not going to give her the impression that I left it as an excuse to go back there. Iâll use some plain bond paper.â He remembered that a former classmate had settled in Caution Point and telephoned him.
âMarcus, this is Reid Maguire.â
âGreat guns! How are you, Reid? Itâs been years. Are you in town?â
He explained where he was, where heâd been and the reason for his call. âI canât even begin work, because I know nothing about Caution Point. What kind of place is it?â
âWeâre right at the edge of the Albemarle Sound, a sleepy town that looks old. You wouldnât want to put anything like the Sydney Opera House here. New buildings are usually dark-red brick or cement, and almost none are glass-fronted. Trees everywhere, park benches and wide streets. The tallest building is around eight stories, and we have only a few of those. Iâm glad to know youâre back in business, man. When you come here, Iâd like you to meet my family.â
âIâll let you know. Thanks for your help, Marcus.â
He hung up, satisfied that he could acquit himself well. The structure shouldnât be ultramodern, but neither should it be standard. He decided to produce a design that resembled a huge multi-level private house with a glass-and-cement exterior. Trees would surround its front and sides, and every long walkway would have two-way moving walks with comfortable, built-in seating at strategic stops. He warmed up to the idea, and was still hard at work at two oâclock the following