“Aren’t Morgan and Dante here to greet you?” Lou asked.
“No. They’re traveling. A delayed honeymoon, I guess.” She smiled up at him. That smile hit him in the solar plexus every time she flashed it, and this time was no different. “Besides, I think Morgan wanted to make sure I understood the place was really mine now. Give me time to settle in, get comfortable here. You know?”
He nodded, looking around. “So where’s the office going to be?”
“Oh, we already started setting up—took a drive up here last weekend. It’s the room Morgan used for her writing when she was here. I think it was originally a den.” She walked as she spoke, glancing over her shoulder once. “Stormy …?”
“She’s going through some stuff in her car,” he said. He saw the way Max’s eyes clouded with worry. “Was she okay the rest of the way here?”
“Seemed to be.”
“But you’re still worried.”
She sighed. “You think I’m being dumb.”
“I think it’s great the way you worry about her, Max. You’re the most loyal person I know.”
“Yeah?” She smiled again. “That’s sweet, coming from a guy who’s as miserly with compliments as you are.”
“Am I?”
“You’d think they were an endangered species.” She looked toward the door again. “Lou, something’s wrong with Stormy.”
He frowned, a little shiver tingling up the back of his neck. “She said she fell asleep.”
“She lied.” Max shook her head and paced back to the entryway to stare out at Stormy, who was still picking through the luggage in her trunk. “I think she’s been keeping something from me for a while now. Since the coma.”
“Any idea what it’s about?”
Max shook her head. “Back there, when she went off the road, I could have sworn for just a second that her eyes were jet-black.”
Lou frowned at her. “What color are they usually?”
“Blue,” she said. “You telling me you never noticed the color of Stormy’s eyes?”
“It’s not the kind of thing I notice. So shoot me.”
“You’re a cop. You notice everything.”
“Ex-cop,” he corrected.
Max flattened a palm over her eyes. “What color are mine?”
They were green, he thought. Huge, sparkling green eyes like a pair of emeralds in the sunlight. Aloud, he said, “I haven’t got a clue.”
She lowered her hand, looking partly hurt and partly skeptical.
“So you’re saying Storm’s eyes changed color?”
“It was more than just the color, Lou. It was like—like they weren’t even her eyes.” She rubbed her outer arms as if she were suddenly cold.
“You wanna know what I think?”
“Of course I do.”
He nodded. “Good, because I was going to tell you, anyway. I think you’re overly worried about her. And you’re overwhelmed with this move, the new business, the new house.”
“In a good way, though.”
“Doesn’t matter. Max, it was only a few months ago you found out your birth mother was a reformed prostitute and that you had a twin sister. You located Morgan, only to learn she was terminally ill and apparently being stalked—by a freakin’ vampire, of all things. Then you found out the vamp was the good guy, after damn near getting him killed.”
Max shrugged and averted her eyes. “So shoot me for thinking undead meant evil. It seemed like a logical assumption. Besides, it all worked out okay. He changed her. She won’t die now. Ever.”
“Still and all,” Lou said. “You’ve barely had time to digest all that. You’re suddenly unsure about everything you ever believed. What’s real and what’s not. The lines that used to be clear are all blurry in your mind.”
Max looked at him intently. “That’s pretty good.”
“I know it is. Don’t think I haven’t been going through a lot of the same stuff, Max. But here’s the thing. With all that fueling it, your imagination is bound to be stuck in high gear. Even more so than usual.” She sent him a smirk but he kept on talking. “So Stormy—after damn near dying on you a few months ago—goes off the road, scares the hell out of you, and you rush back there, your emotions heightened to the breaking point, and the sun hits her eyes in a certain way, and bam! There you have it.”
She tilted her head. Her copper-red curls brushed past her shoulder on one side, fell behind her neck on the other. He tried not to notice, and noticed, anyway. “You really think that’s all it is?” she asked.
“I really do.”
Max sighed, nodding slowly. “I suppose you could be right.”
He almost gaped in surprise, until she added, “But I doubt it.”
Yep, that was the reaction he’d expected. The two of them were so opposite it was predictable. “I suppose you have a theory of your own?”
“I’m working on one.”
“And I suppose it’s something flaky.”
“By flaky you mean …?”
“Paranormal. Supernatural. Otherworldly. Extra—”
“Yeah, something flaky.”
He sighed, disliking the way this conversation was going. Now that one of her far-fetched theories had been proved correct, there would be no talking her down from the next one. “I’m afraid to ask.”
“Then don’t. It’s still in development.” She shrugged, dropping the subject. “I’m really sorry I made you miss your fishing trip.”
“No you’re not.” Hell, he wasn’t, either. He would rather spend time with Max, far-fetched theories and outrageous flirting and all, than in a boat with a fishing pole. But he would be damned if he’d admit it. It would only encourage her.
“You’re right, I’m not.”
At least she was honest. For the most part, though he had no doubt she was even now plotting ways to get him to stay longer than he intended.