"No, thank you," she said faintly.

He just couldn't help himself. "Ever been to a hog butchering? It's quite an event. Real social. We usually hold one out here once a year, hook it up with a fund-raiser for the fire department. Hog butchering and all-you-can-eat pancake breakfast."

She pressed a hand to her unsteady stomach. "You're making that up."

"Nope. You haven't tasted sausage until—"

"I'm thinking about becoming a vegetarian," she said quickly, but pulled herself together. "That was nicely done, farm boy."

"It was a little too hard to resist." Appreciating her quick recovery, he gave her hand a quick squeeze. "You had this look in your eyes like you were calculating every squeal and cluck, filing it away somewhere for a report on the average American farm."

"Maybe I was." She shielded her eyes with the flat of her hand so that she could study his face. He really was a most remarkable-looking male. "Details interest me. So do reports. Enough details, and you have a report. A good report equals a clear picture."

"Seems to me somebody who's into details, reports and clear pictures wouldn't be out chasing ghosts."

"If scientists hadn't been interested in explaining the unknown, you'd still be working your land with a stone ax and offering sacrifices to the sun god."

With that she stepped into the barn. Stalls and concrete floors that sloped. Hay, motes of dust that tickled the nose. The light was dimmer here, and the scent of animal stronger.

Rebecca strolled toward the stalls, then let out a shriek as an enormous bovine head poked over a door and mooed at her.

"She's got an infection," Shane said, and wisely disguised a chuckle with a cough. "Had to separate her from the rest of the stock."

Rebecca's heart was slowly making its way from her throat back down to its proper place. "Oh. She's huge."

"Actually, she's on the small side. You can touch her. Here, top of the head." Taking Rebecca's reluctant hand, he held it between his and the cow. Rebecca was hard-pressed to decide which texture was tougher.

"Will she be all right?"

"Yeah, she's coming along."

"You treat the stock yourself? Don't you use a vet?"

"Not for every little thing." He liked the feel of her hand under his, the way it tensed, then slowly relaxed. The way her fingers were spread now and stroking curiously over the uninterested cow. "You don't run to the doctor every time you sneeze, do you?"

"No." She smiled, turned her head. "But I don't imagine you can find cow antibiotics at the local pharmacy."

"Feed and grain store carries most of what you need." But what he was interested in at the moment was the way she looked at him. So cool, so objective. She presented a challenge he couldn't resist. Deliberately he skimmed his gaze down to her mouth. "What do you do with all those degrees Regan says you have?"

"Collect them." With an effort, she kept her voice light. "And use them like building blocks, to get to the next."

"Why?"

"Because knowledge is power." Remembering that, and using the knowledge that he was teasing her with his easy sexuality, gave her the power to step aside. "You know, I am interested in the farm itself, and when we've got more time I hope you'll show me more of it. But what I'd really like to see now is the house and the kitchen where the young soldier died."

"We mopped up the blood a long time ago."

"That's good to hear." She cocked her head. "Is there a problem?"

Yeah, there was a problem. There were a couple of them. The first was that she was flicking him off as if he were a fly. "Regan asked me to cooperate, so I will. For her. But I don't much care for the idea of you poking around my house looking for ghosts."

"Certainly you're not afraid of what I might find."

"I'm not afraid of anything." She'd touched a nerve. A raw one. "I said I just don't like it."

"Why don't we go in, you can offer me a cold drink, and we'll see if we can come to some sort of compromise?"

It was hard to argue with reason. He took her hand again, more out of habit than in flirtation. By the time they reached the back door, he'd decided to give flirtation another shot. She smelled damn good, for a scientist.

He'd never kissed a scientist, he mused. Unless you counted Bess Trulane, the dental hygienist. He had a feeling that cool, sarcastic mouth of Rebecca's would be quite tasty.

"Got some iced tea," he offered.

"Great." It was all she said as she stood just inside the door, looking around with dark, seeking eyes.

Something. She was sure there was something here, some sensation just out of reach, blocked, she thought, by that almost overpowering male aura Shane exuded. It clouded things, she thought, annoyed. It certainly clouded the brain.

But there was something here, amid the scrubbed tiles, the spotless counters, the old but sparkling appliances.

It was a good-size kitchen, homey with its glass-fronted cupboards showing the everyday dishes. What she imagined one would call a family kitchen-plenty of elbow room, big wooden table, sturdy chairs with cane seats. The morning paper was still on the table, where he had left it, she supposed, after reading it with his morning coffee.

There were little pots of green plants on the win-dowsill. She recognized them by scent, as well as sight. Rosemary, basil, thyme. The man grew herbs in his kitchen. It would have made her smile, if she hadn't been trying to get beyond him into what the room held for her.

Shane held two glasses filled with golden tea as he frowned at her. Those eyes of hers were sharp, as alert as a doe's. And her shoulders, under that oversize jacket, were stiff as boards. It made him nervous, and just a little angry, that she was studying his things and seeing something that he didn't.

"Never seen a kitchen before?"

Pasting a cool smile on her face, she turned to him. She needed to be alone here, she decided. A few minutes alone, and maybe she would get beyond that block. "It's amazingly sexist of me, but I didn't expect to find it so tidy and organized. You know, the cheerful bachelor, living alone, entertaining willing women and poker buddies."

This time he lifted a brow. "I don't usually entertain them at the same time." He handed her the glass. "My mother was pretty fierce about keeping the kitchen clean. You eat here, you cook here. It's like making sure the milk house is sanitized."

"The milk house." It had a charming sound to it. "I'd like to see that next time."

"Come by about 6:00 a.m., you can see it in operation. Don't you want to take off that jacket? It's warm." And he wanted to see what was under it.

"I'm fine." She moved to the back window. "Lovely view. All the windows I've looked out of since I've been here have lovely views. Do you get immune to them?"

"No. You get proprietary." To please himself, he skimmed a finger over the back of her neck. She went as still as a stone. "You've got pretty hair, Rebecca. At least, what there is of it. Of course, chopped off like this, it shows the line of your neck, and it's a nice neck. Long and white and smooth."

She recited a chunk of the periodic table in her head, so that she was calm when she turned to him. Thinking it a defense rather than a challenge, she cocked a brow, and her lips curved into an amused smile.

"Are you hitting on me, farm boy?"

Damned if he didn't want a piece of her, he realized with more than a little irritation. He particularly wanted that piece that made her voice so cool and smug.

"I've got a curiosity." He set his glass on the counter behind her, then took hers and placed it beside his. In a smooth, well-practiced move, he caged her in. "Don't you?"

"Scientists are innately curious."

He could smell her now, clean, clear soap and a hint of citrus. "How about an experiment?"

She refused to fumble, to stammer, to let him see even for an instant that she was in way, way over her head. "Of what sort?"

"Well, I do this..

Chapter Four

He circled her waist with his hands—a surprisingly small waist—then ran them up her ribs, over to skim up her back. The punch of arousal wasn't particularly surprising. He'd certainly felt it before. But he hadn't expected quite the force of this, not with her.

Still, he enjoyed it, slid comfortably into it. When she didn't object, in fact didn't move a muscle, he aligned his body to hers until he felt her curves—not much in the way of curves—meet the angles of his.

Suddenly he really wanted to kiss her, to have a good, solid taste of that mouth. Not simply because it was female and thus desirable, but because it was Rebecca's and set in firm, almost disapproving lines.

He enjoyed being disapproved of.

But when he started to lower his head, she lifted her chin, just enough to put him off-balance.

"An experiment? What's your hypothesis?"

"Huh?"

"Your hypothesis," she repeated, relieved to have interrupted him. She'd have time enough to brace now, she decided. Time to prepare herself. "Your theory as to the outcome of your experiment."

"Theory, huh?" He kept his eyes on her mouth. It was a truly fascinating pair of lips, if a man took the time to really look at them. "How about mutual enjoyment? Is that good enough, Doc?"

"Sure." She was careful not to gulp. It would have been embarrassing, and certainly would have ruined her attempt at cool sophistication. "Why not? You want to kiss me, farm boy. Go ahead."

"I was going to." But he bypassed her mouth, just for a moment, and closed his teeth lightly over her jaw. She had the cutest little pointed chin.

Then he touched his lips to hers, just a whisper. He always liked to draw the pleasure out, for himself and the woman involved. He nibbled at them, testing their shape, their softness, and found them delightfully full, delightfully moist and giving.