grew slowly this time, giving her space to think about what sheâd said. She felt the flush start at her nethers and rise like the tide to her cheeks, firing her skin all the way.
Still, she pretended not to catch on. âIâve only got two dresses with me. I donât need you dripping on them.â
His smile widened. He rose.
With both of them barefoot, he had eight inches on her. She sidesteppedâÂnot a retreat, just a change of positionâÂand Tri let out a blood-Âcurdling squeal.
âOh God, oh no.â Chris dropped to her knees, patting the small body, terrified sheâd paralyzed him.
He rolled over to give her his belly.
Laughing, Kota squatted and scratched Triâs fun spot. âHeâs a drama queen. Any excuse.â
She sat back on her heels. âThe men around here.â
âLovable, right?â
âNot the word I was thinking of.â Cy chose that moment to bump her with his socket. âMore like needy,â she said, rubbing his gnarled head.
âWeâre easy. Scratch us in the right place and weâll follow you anywhere.â
She rolled her eyes. âSpeaking of following me, an earless black cat snuck into my room and tried to hex me.â
âThatâd be Van Gogh. He lost his ears somewhere.â
âHe wasnât born that way?â
âNope.â Kota dropped down cross-Âlegged, putting everything on display. She buried her face in Cyâs neck. Any port in a storm.
âVan Gogh had a tough life,â Kota said. âHe was next up for the needle when I got the call.â
âYour friend at the shelter again?â
âMmm-Âhmm. Black cats donât get adopted too often. Earless black cats, never.â
âAnd now heâs in paradise.â
âShows you never know from one day to the next.â
So true. Twenty-Âfour hours ago, Chris had no idea sheâd wind up here on Kotaâs island.
âAre there more?â she asked. More like her and Van Gogh. More refugees.
âEight cats, last I counted. Probably under the porch.â He knocked on the floor. âTheyâll come around when they get used to you.â
âAnd the horses?â
âStarving to death on a farm outside Sacramento.â
âHowâd you get them here?â
âOn a ship.â
âI see.â But she didnât, not really. It seemed a soft heart beat beneath those iron pecs. Not what sheâd expected.
His body wasnât what sheâd expected either. He was big, oh yes, but not bulky like a juiced-Âup bodybuilder. Defined, God yes, but not cut to shreds like a cartoon character.
His body, in all its glory, looked one hundred percent authentic, like it was built by beef and hard work, and he wore it like he owned it, not like a costume he put on for the camera.
It was who he was. It suited him down to the ground.
And she wanted to touch it. Just a squeeze here and there.
And yes, there too.
As if he read her mind, he leaned back on his hands, a devastating move that contracted his abs, flexed those pecs, and displayed his arms at a new and interesting angle. She could study them all day and never get bored.
Tempting fate, she flicked a glance at his face. Indigo eyes caught hers and held fast.
He wasnât laughing now.
âGo ahead,â he said. âTouch me.â
She licked her lips. âPfft. Get over yourself.â
âThen Iâll touch you.â His gaze was steady, intense. He reached out and traced a fingertip up the back of her arm.
She should stop him. Immediately.
She moved her arm.
Closer to him.
Over her shoulder he skimmed, then down the front of her arm, adding fingers along the way.
In the crook of her elbow, he drew a circle with the pad of his thumb, a barely-Âthere touch, lighter than a breeze, warmer than the sun. Sensual as sin.
She held herself still, afraid to move. Afraid heâd keep touching
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