High Energy by Joy, Dara (ink book reader .TXT) 📗
Book online «High Energy by Joy, Dara (ink book reader .TXT) 📗». Author Joy, Dara
here all by himself, would you?"
Zanita frowned; Tyber knew exactly which button to push. "Well…"
He turned the dragon to face him. "I told you not to worry, Tubbs," he said,
sotto voce. "Piece of cake."
After they had made their purchases and left the store, Tyber asked her where
she was going to hang her dragon. "In the kitchen window, I think."
"Perfect place—Blooey will love him."
Zanita glanced over at him. She had meant her kitchen window at her apartment,
not his. Perhaps he hadn't realized what he'd just said. After all, she was only
in his home temporarily, until they finished this LaLeche business.
She shrugged her shoulders, deciding to let the remark pass. But later she
thought about it again when he insisted on buying her an antique shawl. It was
an old-fashioned violet crochet with tiny pink rosettes.
"The parlor can get drafty in the winter," he said by way of an explanation,
"even with the fireplace going. For all I've renovated it, the house is still
over a hundred years old. And much as I'd like to, I can't cuddle you all the
time, Curls."
She was not going to let that comment go.
"Tyber." She gritted her teeth. "Let's get one thing straight—you are not my
boy—"
"You don't like it?" He seemed vaguely hurt.
"It's beautiful, but I am not—"
"It's perfect for you; I can picture you wearing it, curled up in the big Queen
Anne chair in front of the fireplace, reading a favorite book while Hambone
nestles at your feet."
Her fists clenched. "I do not belong in that picture! It sounds like something
out of Little Women. Besides which, I don't think the story is going to take
that long."
"It might. And why should you suffer a drafty house because of it?"
She blinked. He was doing it again—confusing her with his obtuse way of making a
point. "What does that have to do with—why should—it doesn't…"
He regarded her from under half-lowered lashes. "It has; you should; and it
does." Her mouth gaped. "Now say thank you and let's go into this fascinating
but incomprehensible art gallery."
Before she could think of a response, he had ushered her into the shop.
By the time they stopped for lunch, they were pretty much shopped out. Tyber had
purchased two large jugs of maple syrup for Blooey and a piece of Vermont
cheddar for Hambone. When the store owner found out they had driven a motorcycle
to town, he graciously offered to drop off the jugs at their inn on his way home
from work.
The Hungry Kitten revealed itself to be a very elegant restaurant. Zanita had
misgivings about entering the linen-draped dining room in her jeans and boots,
but Tyber just clutched her hand in his, half dragging her to their Limoges and
crystal-set table.
"Isn't this rather fancy for lunch?" She looked around at the other diners, who
seemed to be dressed for the occasion and speaking in very hush-hush murmurs.
"Better enjoy it while we can; I don't think we'll make dinner this evening at
the inn. I suspect LaLeche expects us to stay the entire day and well into the
evening. And from what I remember of the offerings of food laid out on that
rickety table last night—"
"I get your point." Zanita eagerly opened her menu. "Jeez Louise! Look at these
prices!" She gaped at the menu in awe.
"Zanita," Tyber said dryly.
"I was going to treat you to lunch." She raised her violet eyes to his. They
were suspiciously moist. "But I—I can't afford this, Tyber."
He put his menu down and covered her hand with his. "It's nice of you to want to
take me out, sweetheart, but it's not necessary. There's absolutely no reason
for us not to completely enjoy this weekend as long as we're here."
"But Tyber—"
His eyes locked implacably with hers. "Don't worry about it." He picked up his
menu again. "Now let's see what looks good here—How about the lobster pie?"
While Zanita viewed her menu, Tyber thoughtfully gazed down at her bent head.
She had absolutely no idea how wealthy he was, he mused. Imagine becoming
overwrought about what he considered a simple, although elegant, lunch.
As a reporter bent on getting an interview with him, she had to know he held
literally hundreds of patents. Not to mention the income from his teaching
seminars and the books he had written. Somehow Zanita had blocked this all off
from her consciousness, choosing instead to see him for the most part as just an
interesting, albeit eccentric physicist.
And he knew why.
As long as she could view him in that manner, he wasn't so threatening to her.
He understood how she would see him as threatening in terms of a relationship.
On one hand, he wanted her to feel threatened by him. It meant she recognized
that he was shaking up her nice, safe world. On the other hand, what good was
having anything in life if you didn't allow yourself the pleasure of it?
Tyber wasn't about to let her fear of commitment color their time together. In
the broadest sense, it had nothing to do with money; it had everything to do
with his philosophy of life.
He was an unconventional man who believed in enjoying all aspects of life to the
fullest. Whether it was traveling first class on the Orient Express, the joy in
creating a masterpiece, or the sheer beauty of discovery. It was about
excellence. It was about being alive.
And he wanted Zanita to share those life experiences with him.
Now and in the future.
Because of her background, he realized she hadn't had the opportunity to
experience the kind of life he lived, but he was in the process of changing
that. Tyber knew Zanita possessed not only the capacity for it, but also the
zest.
To make his point, he ordered an extraordinary chilled wine to accompany their
main course.
"Lobster pie sounds good," Zanita said to the waiter in a small voice, not
looking up from her menu. Twenty-eight-fifty for lobster pie a la carte. She
swallowed a sip of water from a crystal goblet. For lunch. Tyber needed to get a
handle on reality, she thought.
The Doc lived a secluded life, enclosed behind the walls of his mansion, his
mind wrapped up in arcane subjects; she really didn't think he had a clue. The
poor, sweet, misguided man.
Well, now that
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