said.
âYouâre not kidding.â
âWhere are you staying?â
âIn town.â
Nice and non-specific. âIâm a bit... I get a bit tired of eating in the bus. On my own. Can I interest you in something to eat, later?â
âI donât think so.â
Walk away, Eve.
That would be the smart thing to do.
âIâll change the subject. Not my brother. Not your...â
Not your Christine?
âWe can talk about places weâve been. Favourite sights.â Her voice petered out.
His eyebrows folded down over his eyes briefly and disguised them from her view. But he finally relented. âThereâs a café across the street from my motel. End of this road.â
âSounds good.â
She didnât usually eat out, to save money, but then she didnât usually have the slightest hint of company either. One dinner wouldnât kill her. Alone with a stranger. Across the road from his motel room.
âItâs not a date, though,â she hastened to add.
âNo.â The moustache twisted up on the left. âItâs not.â
And as he and his leather pants sauntered back out of the bar, she felt like an idiot. An adolescent idiot
. Of course
this was not a date and
of course
he wouldnât have considered it such. Hairy, lone-wolf types who travelled the country on motorbikes probably didnât stand much on ceremony when it came to women. Or bother with dates.
Sheâd only mentioned a meal at all because she felt bad that sheâd pressed an obvious sore point with him after heâd shown her nothing but interest and acceptance about Travis.
*facepalm*
Her brotherâs favourite saying flittered through her memory and never seemed more appropriate. Hopefully, a few hours and a good shower from now she could be a little more socially appropriate and a lot less hormonal.
Inexplicably so.
Unwashed biker types were definitely not her thing, no matter how nice their smiles. Normally, the
eau de sweaty man
that littered towns in the Australian bush flared her nostrils. But as Marshall Sullivan had hoisted her up against his body out in the street sheâd definitely responded to the powerful circle of his hold, the hard heat of his chest and the warmth of his hissed words against her ear.
Even though it came with the tickle of his substantial beard against her skin.
She was
so
not a beard woman.
A man who travelled the country alone was almost certainly doing it for a reason. Running from something or someone. Dropping out of society. Hiding from the authorities. Any number of mysterious and dangerous things.
Or maybe Marshall Sullivan was just as socially challenged as she was.
Maybe that was why she had a sudden and unfathomable desire to sit across a table from the man again.
âSee you at seven-thirty, then,â she called after him.
* * *
Eveâs annoyance at herself for being lateâand at caring about thatâturned into annoyance at Marshall Sullivan for being even later. What, had he got lost crossing the street?
Her gaze scanned the little café diner as she enteredâover the elderly couple with a stumpy candle, past the just-showered Nigel No Friends reading a book and the two men arguing over the sports pages. But as her eyes grazed back around to the service counter, they stumbled over the hands wrapped around
Nigelâ
s battered novel. Beautiful hands.
She stepped closer. âMarshall?â
Rust-flecked eyes glanced up to her. And then he pushed to his feet. To say he was a changed man without the beard would have been an understatement. He was transformed. His hair hadnât been cut but it was slicked back either with product or he truly had just showered. But his face...
Free of the overgrown blondish beard and moustache, his eyes totally stole focus, followed only by his smooth broad forehead. Sheâd always liked an unsullied forehead. Reliable somehow.
He slid a serviette into