babe.
Your devoted father.
Dora didnât want to be amused, but she couldnât help smiling. The move was so obvious. Put her within elbow-rubbing space of an attractive man, and maybe, just maybe, she would fall in love, get married and give her greedy father more grandchildren to spoil.
âSorry, Dad,â she murmured. âYouâre in for another disappointment.â
Setting the note aside, she skimmed a finger down the lease until she came to Jedâs signature. It was a bold scrawl, and she dashed her own name on the line next to it on both copies. Lifting one, she strode to her door and across the hall and knocked.
When the door opened, Dora thrust the lease out, crushing the corner against Jedâs chest. âYouâll need this for your records.â
He took it. His gaze lowered, scanned, then lifted again. Her eyes werenât friendly now, but cool. Which suited him. âWhyâd the old man leave this with you?â
Her chin tilted up. âThe old man,â she said in mild tones, âis my father. I own the building, which makes me, Mr. Skimmerhorn, your landlord.â She turned on her heel and was across the hall in two strides. With her hand on the knob, she paused, turned. Her hair swung out, curved, settled. âThe rentâs due on the twenty-first of each month. You can slip the check under my door and save yourself a stamp, as well as any contact with other humans.â
She slipped inside and closed the door with a satisfied snick of the lock.
CHAPTER
THREE
W hen Jed jogged to the base of the steps leading up to his apartment, heâd sweated out most of the physical consequences of a half bottle of whiskey. One of the reasons heâd chosen this location was the gym around the corner. Heâd spent a very satisfying ninety minutes that morning lifting weights, punching the hell out of the heavy bag and burning away most of his morning-after headache in the steam room.
Now, feeling almost human, he craved a pot of black coffee and one of the microwave breakfasts heâd loaded into his freezer. He pulled his key out of the pocket of his sweats and let himself into the hallway. He heard the music immediately. Not Christmas carols, thankfully, but the rich-throated wail of gospel according to Aretha Franklin.
At least his landlordâs taste in music wouldnât irritate him, he mused, and would have turned directly into hisown rooms except heâd noted her open door.
An even trade, Jed figured, and, dipping his hands into his pockets, wandered over. He knew heâd been deliberately rude the night before. And because it had been deliberate, he saw no reason to apologize. Still, he thought it wise to make some sort of cautious peace with the woman who owned his building.
He nudged the door open a bit wider, and stared.
Like his, her apartment was spacious, high ceilinged and full of light from a trio of front windows. That was where the similarity ended.
Even after growing up in a house adorned with possessions, he was amazed. Heâd never seen so much stuff crammed into one single space before. Glass shelves covered one wall and were loaded with old bottles, tins, figurines, painted boxes and various knickknacks that were beyond his power to recognize. There were a number of tables, and each of them was topped by more glassware and china. A brightly floral couch was loaded with colored pillows that picked up the faded tones of a large area rug. A Multan, he recognized. Thereâd been a similar rug in his familyâs front parlor for as long as he could remember.
To complement the season, there was a tree by the window, every branch laden with colored balls and lights. A wooden sleigh overflowed with pinecones. A ceramic snowman with a top hat grinned back at him.
It should have been crowded, Jed thought. It certainly should have been messy. But somehow it was neither. Instead he had the impression of having opened some magic