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"Twenty-seven next month," Sebastian added helpfully.
"And I can continue to handle it. What's between Boone and me-"
"Ah." He held up a triumphant finger. "So there is something between you."
"Stuff it, Sebastian."
"She only talks like that when she paints herself into a corner,"
Sebastian told Mel. "Usually she's extremely mild and well-mannered."
"Careful, or I'll give Mel a potion to put in your soup that'll freeze your vocal cords for a week."
"Oh yeah?" Intrigued by the idea, Mel tilted her head. "Can I have it anyway?"
"A lot of good it would do you, since I do all the cooking," Sebastian pointed out. Then he scooped Ana up in a hug. "Come on, darling, don't be angry. I have to worry about you. It's my job."
"There's nothing to worry about." But she was softening.
"Are you in love with him?"
Instantly she stiffened. "Really, Sebastian, I've only known him for a week."
"What difference does that make?" He gave Mel a long look over Ana's head. "It took me less than that to realize the reason Mel irritated me so much was that I was crazy about her. Of course, it took her longer to understand she was madly in love with me. But she has such a hard head."
"I'm getting that potion," Mel decided.
Ignoring the threat, he drew back to consider Ana at arm's length. "I ask because he definitely has more than a neighborly interest in you. As a matter of fact, he-"
"That's enough. Whatever you dug out of his head, you keep to yourself.
I mean it, Sebastian," she said before he could interrupt. "I prefer doing things my own way."
"If you insist," he said with a sigh.
"I do. Now take your hawthorn and go home and be newly weds."
"Now that's the best idea I've heard all day." Taking a firm grip on her husband's arm, Mel tugged him back. "Leave her alone, Donovan. Ana's perfectly capable of handling her own affairs."
"And if she's going to have one, she should know-"
"Out." On a strangled laugh, Ana gave him a shove. "Out of my yard. I have work to do. If I need a psychic, I'll call you."
He relented and gave her a kiss. "See that you do." A new smile began to bloom as he walked away with his wife. "I believe we'll stop by and see Morgana and Nash."
"That's fine." She shot a last glance over her shoulder. "I'd like to hear what they have to say about this guy myself."
Sebastian laughed and hugged her close. "You are a woman after my own heart."
"No, I'm not." She kissed him soundly. "I've already got it."
For the next several days, Ana busied herself indoors. It wasn't that she was avoiding Boone-at least not to any great extent. She simply had a lot to do. Her medicinal supplies had become sadly depleted. Just that day, she'd had a call from a client in Carmel who was out of the elixir for her rheumatism. Ana had had just enough to ship, but that meant she had to make more as soon as possible. Even now she had dried primrose simmering with motherwort on the stove.
In the little room adjoining the kitchen through a wide archway, she had her distilling flasks, condensers, burners and bottles, along with vials and silver bowls and candles, set up for the day. To the casual eye, the room resembled a small chemistry lab. But there was a marked difference between chemistry and alchemy. In alchemy there was ritual, and the meticulous use of astrological timing.
All of the flowers and roots and herbs she had harvested by moonlight had been carefully washed in morning dew. Others, plucked under different phases of the moon, had already been prepared for their specific uses.
There was syrup of poppy to be distilled, and there was hyssop to be dried for cough syrup. She needed some oil of clary for a specialty perfume, and she could combine that with some chamomile for a digestive aid. There were infusions and decoctions to be completed, as well as both oils and incense.
Plenty to do, Ana thought, particularly since she had the touch of magic from the flowers picked in moonlight. And she enjoyed her work, the scents that filled her kitchen and workroom, the pretty pink leaves of the flowering marjoram, the deep purple of foxglove, the sunny touch of the practical marigold.
They were lovely, and she could never resist setting some in vases or bowls around the house. She was testing a dilution of gentian, grimacing at the bitter taste, when Boone knocked on her screen door.
"I really do need sugar this time," he told her with a quick, charming grin that had her heart pumping fast. "I'm homeroom mother this week, and I have to make three dozen cookies for tomorrow."
Tilting her head, she studied him. "You could buy them."
"What homeroom mother worth her salt serves the first grade cla.s.s store-bought? A cup would do it."
The image of him baking made her smile. "I probably have one. Come on in. Just let me finish this up."
"It smells fabulous in here." He leaned over to peek into the pots simmering on the stove. "What are you doing?"
"Don't!" She warned, just as he was about to dip a finger in a black gla.s.s pan cooling on the counter. "That's belladonna. Not for internal consumption in that form."
"Belladonna." His brows drew together. "You're making poison?"
"I'm making a lotion-an anodyne-for neuralgia, rheumatism. And it isn't a poison if it's brewed and dispensed properly. It's a sedative."
Frowning, he looked into the room behind, with its chemical equipment and its bubbling brews. "Don't you have to have a license or something?''
"I'm a qualified herbal pract.i.tioner, with a degree in pharmacognosy, if that relieves you." She batted his hand away from a pot. "And this is not something for the novice."
"Got anything for insomnia-besides belladonna? No offense."
She was instantly concerned. "Are you having trouble sleeping? Are you feverish?" She lifted a hand to his brow, then went still when he took her wrist.
"Yes, to both questions. You could say you're the cause and the cure."
He brought her hand from his brow to his lips. "I may be homeroom mother, but I'm still a man, Ana. I can't stop thinking about you." He turned her hand over, pressing those lips to the inside of her wrist, where the pulse was beginning to jerk. "And I can't stop wanting you."
"I'm sorry if I'm giving you restless nights."
His brow quirked. "Are you?"
She couldn't quite suppress the smile. "I'm trying to be. It's hard not to be flattered that thinking about me is keeping you awake. And it's hard to know what to do." She turned away to switch off the heat on the stove. "I've been feeling a little restless myself." Her eyes closed when his hands came down on her shoulders.
"Make love with me." He brushed a kiss on the back of her neck. "I won't hurt you, Ana."
Not purposely, she thought. Never that. There was so much kindness in him. But would they hurt each other if she gave in to what she wanted, needed from him, and held back that part of herself that made her what she was?
"It's a big step for me, Boone."
"For me, too." Gently he turned her to face him. "There's been no one for me since Alice died. In the past couple of years there was a woman or two, but nothing that meant any more than filling a physical emptiness. No one I've wanted to spend time with, to be with, to talk to. I care about you." He lowered his mouth to hers, very carefully, very softly. "I don't know how I came to care this much, this quickly, but I do. I hope you believe that."