She had to keep reminding herself, of course, but she definitely knew better.
“Anyway,” she said pointedly. “The fact is that tonight you’ll be sleeping alone and you’ll be doing it here.”
“That’s really not necessary.”
“What kind of person would let someone risk life and limb to get a stupid purse back and then just send him on his way?” She shook her head. “Not me. Now get upstairs, mister. You need to rest.”
He stood up and faltered, losing his balance ever so slightly, but enough for her to say, “See? That proves my point.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“I have some big old T-shirts,” she went on. “I’ll get you one and you can sleep in that.”
“I sleep naked,” he said, a sly grin playing on his lips. “Have you forgotten?”
She sucked in a breath. No, she hadn’t forgotten. When she was sleeping with him, she slept nude as well.
It saved time.
But she wasn’t going to think about that and she wasn’t going to give Evan any indication that she’d thought about it, so she simply said, “I thought the circumstances might make you more modest.”
“The circumstances are making me more.” He shook his head. “Well, anyway, I get the point.”
“Good. Keep it covered. There’s a bathrobe on the door of the bathroom. You can put that on and toss me your jeans and … everything. I’ll wash them.”
“You really don’t have to do that.”
“Stop saying that. Just give me the clothes, would you?”
“You’ve sure gotten bossy over the years.”
“Evan.”
He put his hands up in surrender. “Okay, okay, I hear you. I’ll strip for you. No problem.”
She sighed. “You know all that stuff I said about being able to work with you?”
“Uh-huh.”
“I’m starting to think I should ask for a raise.” She smiled. “They’re not paying me enough for this.”
He laughed. “I’ll talk to the boss on your behalf.”
“Good.” She led him to the bottom of the staircase. “Now go. Toss your stuff down to me when you’ve got it off.”
“Fine.” He made his way up the stairs and she leaned against the wall and waited for him.
About two minutes later he tossed his things down and said, “No starch!”
It was going to be a long night.
Chapter Eleven
It was a strange feeling having Evan Hanson sleeping in her house.
A very strange feeling.
As Meredith sat by the washer and dryer, waiting for them to complete their cycles so she could take Evan’s clothes to his room and go to sleep, she had to keep reminding herself that this was all really happening.
There was once a time when she would never have imagined herself forgiving him and facing him again, but that was fading now. It wasn’t Evan’s fault that her father’s business had been ruined, it was George Hanson’s. The more she dug around Hanson Media Group, and the more people she spoke with, the more obvious it was that he had been a completely ruthless businessman for whom nothing was personal and everything had been war.
Now, instead of blaming Evan for his father’s misdeeds, she pitied him for having had that sort of man for a father. As rough as it was to compete with him in business, it had to be almost as rough to live up to his standards as a son.
As a matter of fact, she remembered some of Evan’s struggle with George Hanson. Not that Evan had talked about it much, but he’d gone through periods of quiet introspection that had worried her sometimes, and it wasn’t until she’d drawn him out that she knew it was because of his father’s heavy hand.
For her, it was just one more thing to hate about George Hanson.
When she’d taken this job, she’d thought it would be easy because of the unpleasant connotations she had with the Hanson family name. She thought she’d feel no hint of conscience or betrayal because any personal warm feelings she’d had for anyone in the family had long since died and been replaced by the opposite.
In a way it had seemed like the perfect opportunity to get back at them, even though they’d never know it was her.
Now … well. Now things were getting a little more complicated. She’d still do her job; she was nothing if not professional.
But she was going to have to get some perspective where Evan was concerned. And that she would get by reminding herself how, even though he didn’t have anything to do with the greatest tragedy of her life—her father’s ruin and death—he was directly responsible for the greatest heartbreak of her life.
There was no way around that one.
The dryer stopped and she took the warm jeans out. Size 32 waist. He’d filled out.
But of course she knew that.
She started up the stairs and remembered a conversation she’d had with him once. The memory hit her with crystal clarity and hit her so hard she had to stop and sit down.
They’d snuck out in the night once because it had seemed so romantic. It had been her idea, as she recalled, but Evan had indulged her. He’d come to her window at 2:00 a.m. and she’d climbed down the trellis, just like a cliché in a movie.
It was summer, and hot. Even the nights were hot, and the air was damp with humidity. They’d gone to a small private cove he knew of on Lake Michigan and they’d sat on the beach and talked for hours.
She couldn’t remember most of what they’d said. It was a lot of talk about their pasts, their dreams and the other typical things that kids that age could expound upon.
She remembered the night specifically because a quick but wild thunderstorm had come out of the blue, interrupting the clear starry night with about ten minutes of drama.
Kissing in that thunderstorm had been one of the most romantic moments of her life.
It was amazing that she could remember anything else, but she did. Evan had asked her if her father had ever thought about selling his newspaper business.
“I don’t know. Why?”
Evan had shrugged. But now, when she saw it again in her memory, she realized he had looked tense.