“But family shouldn’t hurt.”
“No, they shouldn’t.” Before her eyes, his temper drained. Something flickered in his gaze then. Sympathy? Compassion? Whatever it was, she couldn’t handle it, not when the urge to weep still had her eyes stinging. “Let’s finish the floor.” Again she turned away.
But Hunter just pulled her back. “What do your parents think of good old Uncle Victor?”
“They’re gone.”
He winced. “Hell. I’m sorry.”
“It was a very long time ago. My aunt and uncle raised me, and my aunt died not too long ago, which is why ... why he calls,” she finished lamely.
“Does he call often?”
“Weekly. I usually manage to avoid him, which makes me feel even guiltier.”
“Sounds like that’s part of his purpose.”
“Guilt is his specialty.” Why was she telling him this? It would only reinforce what he thought of her. She clamped her jaws shut.
His gaze searched her face deeply, as if he could see past her facade and into her very soul. Uncomfortable, Trisha squirmed away, unwilling to allow this man more insights than she’d already given him.
“I’d probably avoid him too,” Hunter observed, setting his hands on his hips. “He didn’t have much of value to say about you or your life.”
He never did. With a meaningful glance toward the tools, Trisha said, “The floor. I think we should—”
“Is he your only family?”
“Now who’s full of questions?”
“Is he?”
She sighed. “Yep. Just good old Uncle Vic and me. The floor, Hunter.”
“He sounded ... demanding.”
“He’s military,” she said with a shrug, wondering at his curiosity. “My aunt wasn’t as bad, but she attended mass daily, sometimes more than once. They aren’t exactly what you would call openhearted or forgiving.”
“Sounds tough. And you were all alone with them, no siblings to deflect some of the anger?”
She never talked about this, not even to Celia. Her new outlook on life—namely, being positive no matter what—didn’t allow it.
Diversion was self-defense. Backing away from both him and his touch, she said pointedly, “The floor, Hunter. We’ve got to finish it today.”
Again, he just looked at her, his green eyes seeing far more than she wanted him to. “I’m sorry he upset you, Trisha.”
He said this so lightly, with such tenderness and understanding, that her throat tightened again. “I’m ... just fine.”
“Then why are you twisting the phone cord as if you need something to strangle?”
Looking down at her tangled-up fingers in the long cord, she grimaced. “Can we drop this? Please? I’m really rotten with pity.”
“I’m not—” He broke off when she walked away from him, heading to where they’d been working. “Gee, I guess we’re done talking,” he muttered, and followed her.
She knelt, keeping her head down. What was it about this man that stripped her bare? “Are you going to help, or what?”
Yeah, he was going to help. Probably more than he wanted, but dammit if she didn’t look unexpectedly small, alone, miserable. God, he was a sucker. Dropping to his knees beside her, he looked into her drawn face. “I’m going to help.”
“Good.” She sniffed, blew her nose.
His heart broke a little. “For the record, I don’t pity you.”
“No?” One side of her mouth quirked. “Why not?”
“You’re too damned ornery.”
She laughed, as he’d hoped she would. Some of her color had come back, he noted, and that relieved him. For one horrified moment, when he’d been pushing her for answers as if she’d been an experiment of his, he’d thought she was going to burst into tears.
It had been a favorite tactic of his mother, and his two ex-fiancées.
Hunter Adams didn’t do well with weepy women.
But Trisha, she did something to him, something he was unaccustomed to. Listening to her battle with her uncle for pride and confidence stirred within him a fierce protectiveness he hadn’t known he possessed.
It