"We're going in a different direction," he reminded her, and put the Healy into gear, pulling out of the arrivals parking lot.

They escaped the airport congestion and swung onto the parkway. It was closing in on the end of October, and the leaves were almost at peak. It would be a glorious weekend, and with luck the weather would hold. It had been a perfect day coming in. The sky was a clear blue and the sun bright. It didn't seem possible she had been gone just over a week. They were both quiet as he drove. He seemed to sense her need for it.

Emily brightened, however, as they came off the parkway onto the local country road that meandered into Egret Pointe. The village was decorated for autumn. The tall trees along Main Street where the old-fashioned shops were located were surrounded by cornstalks tied with bright orange ribbons. At their feet were piles of pumpkins and gourds, along with small baskets of apples. A banner was hung across the street announcing the Egret Pointe Harvest Festival, which was being held the coming weekend.

"Wanna come?" she asked him. "We raise money for the hospital at the festival."

"Yes," he replied. "How?"

"The proceeds from it all go to it. We've got booths selling handiwork, jams and jellies, baked goods, knitted goods, bird-houses," she explained. "I even have a table selling my author copies, personally inscribed, of course. And there's a big harvest supper in a tent. And, of course, the Dr. Sam Dunk. That always raises a pretty penny."

"What's the Dr. Sam Dunk?" he asked her, smiling at her enthusiasm. He turned onto Colonial Avenue, and then Founders Way.

"Dr. Sam sits over a tank of Jell-O," she said. "You get three balls for two bucks. If you hit the mark right, Dr. Sam goes into the Jell-O. At this time of year the gelatin is a bit warmer than water, but he usually gets the sniffles anyway. He's an awfully good sport about it. His great-grandfather started the hospital, you know. There's always been a Dr. Seligmann in Egret Pointe."

He pulled the Healy into her driveway. "You love this town, don't you?"

Emily nodded. "I gain my strength from living here," she said. "When do you have to go back? Not right away, I hope."

"I'll drive in tomorrow morning," he said, leaning over to kiss her. "I missed you, Emily." His big hand cupped her face, and he kissed her again, this time lingeringly, longingly. "I didn't like having you on the other side of the pond."

"I missed you too," she told him. "As nice as it was to be with Sava, I missed you, Devlin. Maybe we shouldn't be apart again."

"Maybe not," he agreed. Then he got out of the car. "I'll get the bags. I hope you bought something outrageous for Essie in London. I think she's expecting it."

"I never forget my friends," Emily told him. "And I bought a lovely teddy bear for her new grandchild, and two sets of old-fashioned wooden soldiers for her grandsons. They don't make tin ones anymore. Something about the lead content. I asked."

He took her bags in and up to her room. Emily wanted a quick nap before lunch, and so Michael Devlin went upstairs to her office in the widow's-walk room to make some calls while she napped. He made a point of saying that was where he would be, for Essie's benefit, and sure enough the housekeeper trudged up at one point to see if he needed anything. He thanked her and said he was just fine, grinning at her retreating form. He knew from having been raised in his own small Irish village that people were probably talking at this point, but no one here-except Rina and Dr. Sam, of course-really knew what was happening between Emily Shanski and her editor from New York.

What was happening? Michael Devlin asked himself for the thousandth time. He was in love with her, and he knew now that he had never really been in love before. He was going to have to make a decision sooner rather than later. Was forty too old to get married for the first time? He had never lived with a female except his grandmother, although there had been several invitations over the years from women whom he had dated. But it hadn't felt right to him. They hadn't felt right. This was different, however. Picking Emily up at Virgin Atlantic this morning, driving her home, planning to spend the night, and driving into town in the morning-that felt right. But was he ready for a lifetime of moments like that? Yeah, he finally thought he was, but he'd give it a few more weeks before making a final decision. Forty wasn't the end of the world for a man.

They ate lunch out on the side porch: bowls of Essie's thick corn chowder, home-baked bread and butter, warm apple Betty with heavy cream.

"I'm going to get fat eating like this," he said with a smile.

"No, you aren't," she assured him. "You're too active. We'll go for a walk after lunch down by the beach."

"I thought we'd take a nap." He leered at her, waggling his bushy black eyebrows.

Emily laughed. "Not until Essie goes home, Devlin. I'd like to keep the town guessing awhile longer, if you don't mind."

He laughed aloud. "Agreed."

Essie came out to collect the dishes. "You want me to get something out of the freezer for supper?" she asked.

"Lamb chops," Emily told her.

"Chops?" Essie cocked her head to one side.

"Mr. Devlin is remaining the night. I've been away a week and missed our working weekend, Essie. We have to catch up if the manuscript is going to be in on time. You know I've never missed a deadline."

"And you ain't ever had an editor working with you on weekends either," Essie observed. "I think you should know people are talking, Miss Emily."

"Oh, I'm sure they are, Essie," Emily agreed, "but no matter the talk, I still have to get my work in on time. This book is a little different, and I needed my editor's help."

"Mrs. Seligmann says it's going to be sexier, like Miss Savannah's books," Essie noted, a faint hint of disapproval in her voice.

"Yes, Essie, it will be sexier," Michael Devlin spoke up. "It's what the reading public wants, and Emily has got to go with the flow if she wants to keep working. But it's nothing like Savannah Banning's novels, I promise you. I edit both women."

Essie nodded, obviously satisfied. "I'll get the chops out," she said, taking the dishes and departing the porch.

"She's very protective of you," he noted.

"She was Gran O'Malley's last housekeeper," Emily replied. "I couldn't do without her. Not with my lifestyle, Devlin. I'm amazed how well Savannah manages, especially with children. She's a wonder."

"She manages because she's Lady Palmer," he said. "She's got a cook who has a kitchen maid, a housekeeper, two maids, a chauffeur, and a nanny for Wills and Selena. She's just like you in that her work is her rationale, and she has the time for it. A lot of writers don't, you know. They have to balance everything in their lives-house, husband, kids, maybe a second job, and their writing. You know as well as I do that to be successful in this business you need a strong work ethic, the luck of the devil, the hide of a rhino, and a devoted and detail-oriented guardian angel."

Emily laughed aloud. "I don't think, Devlin, that I've ever heard it described so aptly. Now I know why you are such a good editor, other than your talent at it. You've put yourself in a writer's shoes. That's pretty terrific."

"Yoo-hoo!" Rina Seligmann came out onto the porch.


"I didn't hear you drive up," Emily said, getting up and hugging the older woman.

"I wanted to make certain you got home all right," Rina said. "Hello, Mick. Have you called Aaron? He worries like an old woman." She chuckled, sitting down in a wicker rocker. "I told Essie to bring me an iced tea. It still isn't that cold outside."

"I'll go in and call him right now," Emily answered her. "Then Devlin and I are going for a walk. Want to come?"

Rina Seligmann looked as if Emily had just asked her to take a stroll over a bed of hot coals. "No," she said. "I'll leave the exercise to you two."

Emily grinned and hurried into the house. Essie arrived with the glass of iced tea and returned inside. Rina Seligmann looked at Michael Devlin.

"So?" she said.

He laughed. "If anything happens I don't doubt you'll be the first to know, Rina," he told her.

"If? So you're thinking about it?" she returned.

Michael Devlin sighed. "Rina, I'm forty."

"Mick, you're scared," she answered him.

"I suppose I am," he agreed.

"Don't you dare hurt her," Rina said.

"How do I avoid it at this point?" he asked her.

Rina nodded. "Maybe you shouldn't have let it get this far, Mick. But then again, maybe you should have. I can see you love her, and I know she loves you."

"She hasn't said it," he remarked.

Rina Seligmann laughed helplessly. "Mick, women usually don't say 'I love you' first. They wait until the man has said it. They don't want to be rejected or act too soon or feel they've made fools of themselves." She sighed. "Same thing with men, I suppose. Well, what's going to happen is going to happen, as my Russian grandmother said when the Cossacks razed her village. Just keep in mind you love her, and she loves you, Mick. It would be a shame to waste all that love because of pride."

Emily came back onto the porch. She was practically bouncing. "I spoke to Aaron, and wow! J. P. Woods must really think The Defiant Duchess is going to be good. She's made us a marvelous offer. She wants to read the manuscript, though, before anyone signs on the dotted line."

Michael Devlin nodded. "That's fair," he agreed. "How about if you print me out what you've got tonight, and then I'll bring it in with me in the morning?"

"No," Emily said. "I've got two more chapters to write, and I never allow a partial manuscript to be read. Most people don't have the imagination to know what's coming next, Devlin. They get ideas in their heads, and then when it doesn't turn out the way they thought it would, they don't like what you've done. No. Whole manuscript or nothing. I can have it done by Thanksgiving. You're coming for dinner, aren't you?"