white towel anchored at his waist. He used another to rub at his wet, unruly hair. He stopped when he spotted Sydney. Something flickered in his eyes as he let his gaze roam down the long, cool lines of the dress. Then he smiled. âIâm late,â he said simply.
She was grateful sheâd managed not to let her mouth fall open. His body was all lean muscle, long bones and bronzed skinâskin that was gleaming with tiny drops of water that made her feel unbearably thirsty. The towel hung dangerously low on his hips. Dazed, she watched a drop of water slide down his chest, over his stomach and disappear beneath the terry cloth.
The temperature in the room, already steamy, rose several degrees.
âYouâreâ¦â She knew she could speak coherentlyâin a minute. âWe said seven.â
âI was busy.â He shrugged. The towel shifted. Sydney swallowed. âI wonât be long. Fix a drink.â A smile, wicked around the edges, tugged at his mouth. A man would have to be dead not to see her reactionânot to be pleased by it. âYou lookâ¦hot, Sydney.â He took a step forward, watching her eyes widen, watching her mouth tremble open. With his gaze on hers, he turned on a small portable fan. Steamy air stirred. âThat will help,â he said mildly.
She nodded. It was cooling, but it also brought the scent of his shower, of his skin into the room. Because she could see the knowledge and the amusement in his eyes, she got a grip on herself. âYour contracts.â She set the folder down on a table. Mikhail barely glanced at them.
âIâll look and sign later.â
âFine. It would be best if you got dressed.â She had to swallow another obstruction in her throat when he smiled at her. Her voice was edgy and annoyed. âWeâll be late.â
âA little. Thereâs cold drink in the refrigerator,â he added as he turned back to the bedroom. âBe at home.â
Alone, she managed to take three normal breaths. Degree by degree she felt her system level. Any man who looked like that in a towel should be arrested, she thought, and turned to study the room.
Sheâd been too annoyed to take stock of it on her other visit. And too preoccupied, she admitted with a slight frown. A man like that had a way of keeping a woman preoccupied. Now she noted the hunks of wood, small and large, the tools, the jars stuffed with brushes. There was a long worktable beneath the living room window. She wandered toward it, seeing that a few of those hunks of wood were works in progress.
Shrugging, she ran a finger over a piece of cherry that was scarred with grooves and gouges. Rude and primitive, just as sheâd thought. It soothed her ruffled ego to be assured sheâd been right about his lack of talent. Obviously a ruffian whoâd made a momentary impression on the capricious art world.
Then she turned and saw the shelves.
They were crowded with his work. Long smooth columns of wood, beautifully shaped. A profile of a woman with long, flowing hair, a young child caught in gleeful laughter, lovers trapped endlessly in a first tentative kiss. She couldnât stop herself from touching, nor from feeling. His work ranged from the passionate to the charming, from the bold to the delicate.
Fascinated, she crouched down to get a closer look at the pieces on the lower shelves. Was it possible, she wondered, that a man with such rough manners, with such cocky arrogance possessed the wit, the sensitivity, the compassion to create such lovely things out of blocks of wood?
With a half laugh Sydney reached for a carving of a tiny kangaroo with a baby peeking out of her pouch. It felt as smooth and as delicate as glass. Even as she replaced it with a little sigh, she spotted the miniature figurine. Cinderella, she thought, charmed as she held it in her fingertips. The pretty fairy-tale heroine was still dressed for the ball, but one foot
Guillermo Orsi, Nick Caistor