more remote. Occasionally the wind gusted, rattling the panes.
At dawn Roman had watched Charity, bundled in a hooded windbreaker, take Ludwig out for his morning run. And he had watched her come back, dripping, forty minutes later. Heâd heard the music begin to play in her room after she had come in the back entrance. She had chosen something quiet and floating with lots of violins this time. Heâd been sorry when it had stopped and she had hurried down the hallway on her way to the dining room.
From his position on the second floor he couldnât hear the bustle in the kitchen below, but he could imagine it. Mae and Dolores would be bickering as waffle or muffin batter was whipped up. Charity would have grabbed a quick cup of coffee before rushing out to help the waitress set up tables and write the morningâs menu.
Her hair would be damp, her voice calm as she smoothed over Doloresâs daily complaints. Sheâd smell of the rain. When the early risers wandered down she would smile, greet them by name and make them feel as though they were sharing a meal at an old friendâs house.
That was her greatest skill, Roman mused. Making a stranger feel at home.
Could she be as uncomplicated as she seemed? A part of him wanted badly to believe that. Another part of him found it impossible. Everyone had an angle, from the mailroom clerk dreaming of a desk job to the CEO wheeling another deal. She couldnât be any different.
He wouldnât have called the kiss theyâd shared uncomplicated. There had been layers to it he couldnât have begun to peel away. It seemed contradictory that such a calm-eyed, smooth-voiced woman could explode with such towering passion. Yet she had. Perhaps her passion was as much a part of the act as her serenity.
It annoyed him. Just remembering his helpless response to her infuriated him. So he made himself dissect it further. If he was attracted to what she seemed to be, that was reasonable enough. Heâd lived a solitary and often turbulent life. Though he had chosen to live that way, and certainly preferred it, it wasnât unusual that at some point he would find himself pulled toward a woman who represented everything he had never had. And had never wanted, Roman reminded himself as he tacked up a strip of molding.
He wasnât going to pretend heâd found any answers in Charity. The only answers he was looking for pertained to the job.
For now he would wait until the morning rush was over. When Charity was busy in her office, he would go down and charm some breakfast out of Mae. There was a woman who didnât trust him, Roman thought with a grin. There wasnât a naive bone in her sturdy body. And except for Charity there was no one, he was sure, who knew the workings of the inn better.
Yes, heâd put some effort into charming Mae. And heâd keep some distance between himself and Charity. For the time being.
***
âYouâre looking peaked this morning.â
âThank you very much.â Charity swallowed a yawn as she poured her second cup of coffee.
Peaked
wasnât the word, she thought. She was exhausted right down to the bone. Her body wasnât used to functioning on three hoursâ sleep. She had Roman to thank for that, she thought, and shoved the just-filled cup aside.
âSit.â Mae pointed to the table. âIâll fix you some eggs.â
âI havenât got time. Iââ
âSit,â Mae repeated, waving a wooden spoon. âYou need fuel.â
âMaeâs right,â Dolores put in. âA body canât run on coffee. You need protein and carbohydrates.â She set a blueberry muffin on the table. âWhy, if I donât watch my protein intake I get weak as a lamb. âCourse, the doctor donât say, but I think Iâm hydroglycemic.â
âHypoglycemic,â Charity murmured.
âThatâs what I said.â Dolores decided she liked