"Sure. No problem."

"Thankth. I owe ya one."

"How could I say no to a guy who sounds like Daffy Duck?"

"Ha, ha, ha. You're hythterical. Thee you tomorrow." Glenn clapped his hand over his mouth and left.

Postponing his coffee break for the moment, Chris opened the folder Glenn had given him. He froze the instant he saw the name at the top of the first page.

Melanie Gibson.

His attention riveted, he scanned Glenn's notes. Melanie was applying for a fifty-thousand-dollar loan to purchase a catering truck and had hired Waxman, Barnes, Wiffle, and Hodge to conduct the independent review required by the bank. Chris noted that the bank was one of his firm's clients.

So that's why the name Pampered Palate had seemed so familiar to him. He must have heard Glenn or one of the other partners talking about the upcoming review. As it wasn't his client, he wouldn't have paid particular attention.

Until now.

According to Glenn's scribbled notes, he needed conduct an on-site inspection of the facilities and pick up the client's paperwork and books. Bob Harris, a junior accountant, would be handling the actual review. They had an appointment at the Pampered Palate at four o'clock.

Chris glanced at his watch. Ten past three. A slow smile eased over his face. He'd known he would see Melanie again-he'd had every intention of making sure that happened.

He just hadn't realized it would happen quite so soon.


* * *

At five minutes to four, Melanie paced around the Pampered Palate's kitchen like an expectant father in a maternity waiting room. The butterflies in her stomach had butterflies. She tried taking deep breaths, but she was afraid she would hyperventilate.

There's no reason to be nervous. Of course not. It's not like this was important or anything.

Nana laid a comforting hand on Melanie's arm. "Calm yourself. The apple pie is cooling, the ice cream is made, and the dinner rush won't start for another hour. It's not going to help if you faint on them."

Melanie smiled and laid her hand over Nana's. "I know. I just want everything to be perfect."

"Everything is perfect. Stop worrying. You'll get pimples."

"Goodness knows I don't need…" Her voice trailed off as the bell on the front door jingled. "Oh, boy. It's them." Squaring her shoulders, she drew a deep breath, beat back her panic, and left the kitchen.

Two tall men stood in the front room. One was handsome and unfamiliar.

The other one smiled at her and she all but swallowed her tongue.

Good grief, what was he doing here? She couldn't talk to him now. The accountants were coming!

And darn him for casually dropping by and reminding her how beautiful he was. It had been at least three minutes since she'd thought of him. How was she supposed to forget him if he kept on showing up?

Forcing a calm she definitely didn't feel, Melanie walked around the counter. Before she could utter a word, the unfamiliar man asked, "Are you Miss Gibson?"

At her nod he extended his hand. "I'm Bob Harris. From Waxman, Barnes, Wiffle, and Hodge. Chris tells me the two of you have already met."

Melanie wasn't sure what kind of expression she had on her face, but whatever it was, it prompted Bob Harris from Waxman, Barnes, Wiffle, and Hodge to add, "We're the accountants. I, er, believe you were expecting us?"

Melanie shook his hand, somehow remembering how to speak. "I had an appointment with Glenn Waxman."

When Chris extended his hand, Melanie shook it and tried to ignore the sizzle that snaked up her arm at his touch.

"Glenn had an emergency," Chris said, holding her hand just a bit longer than necessary. "He asked me to fill in for him today. Bob here will be doing the bulk of the work, and Glenn will review it."

"So the accounting firm you work for is-"

"Waxman, Barnes, Wiffle, and Hodge," Chris said. "Guardian Savings and Loan is our client."

"I see." Perfect. Just when she needed all her wits about her, she was faced with the one man who made her forget her own name.

Melanie decided her only defense was to not look at him. If she didn't see him, she wouldn't think about him. If she didn't think about him, she could concentrate on the task at hand. She therefore focused her attention on Bob Harris with the zeal of a scientist peering at brain cells through a microscope. "What do we do first?"

"Let's start with a tour of the facilities," Bob suggested with a friendly smile. He sniffed. "It sure smells great in here. Like apple pie."

"We just took one out of the oven," Melanie said, mentally blessing Nana as she led the way toward the kitchen. "Maybe you'd like a piece with some homemade vanilla ice cream before you leave?"

"Sounds great," said Bob.

The instant they entered the kitchen, Nana descended on them. "Well, if it isn't the hunk," she said, her face wreathed in a huge smile. She enveloped Chris in a bone-jarring hug, leaving floury hand prints on the back of his navy suit jacket.

"Nice to see you, Nana," Chris said, grinning.

"You, too, handsome." She jerked her head toward Bob. "You bring him along for me for a double date? He's kinda young, but that's okay. He's real cute. Great butt." She turned to Bob. "Want some pie, honey?"

The expression on Bob's face reminded Melanie of a driver's license photo-bewildered and dumbstruck. Choking back a laugh she said, "Nana, Chris and Bob are the accountants we've been expecting."

Nana looked crestfallen. "You mean no double date?"

Melanie shook her head. "’Fraid not."

"Dang it." Nana shrugged in a philosophical manner. "Oh, well, I'd best get back to work. Let me know when you're ready for that pie."

Melanie led the two of them on a complete tour of the spacious professional kitchen, explaining the daily operations.

"Each day starts off with our morning deliveries," she said. "Fresh bread and produce arrive daily; meat and fish usually twice a week. In addition to our regular menu, we offer two daily specials."

Indicating the huge freezer, she continued, "Some items, such as tomato sauce and soup stocks, are prepared ahead of time and frozen, but the bulk of our fare is made fresh every day. The morning is spent preparing for the lunch rush, and during the late-afternoon lull we get ready for dinner. We do a decent walk-in business, but corporate lunches and dinners are our specialty."

While she spoke, she noticed that Bob scribbled copious notes on a yellow legal pad, occasionally asking questions. Chris paid rapt attention but said nothing.

She dared a peek at him once, and her cheeks flamed when she discovered his gaze resting thoughtfully on her mouth. Although he stood a dozen feet away from her, it seemed as if he'd caressed her. He glanced up and their eyes met. The long, intense, heated look he gave her stopped her in midsentence.

Her mind emptied and a tremor sizzled through her. She couldn't have felt more scorched if she'd backed up into a 450-degree oven. Completely flustered, she turned away from him and focused her attention back on Bob.

Forty-five minutes later, Melanie said, "Well, that's it, gentlemen. Do you have any other questions?"

Bob shook his head. "No, I think I have everything I need. If you'll just give me your books and business records, I'll be finished."

Melanie pointed to a shopping bag bearing the Pampered Palate logo. "Everything's in there. Books, bills, receipts, corporate records, bank statements, the works."

Bob shot her a smile. "Great. You'll hear from us in two to three weeks. Now how about that pie and ice cream?"


* * *

By the time Melanie arrived home that evening, she was exhausted. Her unexpected meeting with Christopher Bishop had thrown her for a loop. She'd been nervous the entire time he was at the Pampered Palate, but at least Bob had done most of the talking. After barely surviving that sexy look Chris had thrown at her, she'd avoided looking at him.

He must have taken the hint because when they left, Chris had merely shaken her hand and smiled at her. Very businesslike, impersonal, and polite.

Melanie didn't know whether she was relieved or irritated.

Nana ambled off to bed with a hot toddy and a steamy romance novel, but Melanie's nerves were too frazzled for reading. She decided to indulge in a relaxing bubble bath.

Five minutes later, she sank up to her neck in a hot, gardenia-scented tub and heaved a blissful sigh. Ahhh. Just what the doctor ordered. Her tense muscles loosened and a small smile touched her lips. Now if she could just banish the image of Christopher Bishop from her mind, all would be right with the world.

No sooner had the thought entered her mind than the phone rang. Drat. It was one of the basic laws of physics: the moment a body is submerged in water, the telephone rings. I'll let the answering machine get it. The ringing stopped and she closed her eyes. Seconds later she heard a knock on the bathroom door.

"What is it, Nana?" Melanie asked.

Nana opened the door and walked in carrying the portable phone. Setting the instrument on the edge of the tub, she said, "It's for you." Before Melanie could utter a word, Nana left, closing the door behind her.

Great. Figures. Probably someone wanting to sell her insurance or a cemetery plot. She grabbed the receiver. "Hello?" she all but barked into the phone.

"I can't stop thinking about you," said a low, sexy voice.

Uh-oh. If this was someone selling cemetery plots, she could be in trouble. It's not good to have people looking for cadavers say they can't stop thinking about you.

But she knew it wasn't someone wanting to measure her for a crypt. It was him, and damn it, he was just as deadly.