Page 36 of Lovescenes
âAnd make sand-castles?â
He grinned. âNot just sand-castles. Sand extravaÂganzas. Want to learn?â
âCade, Iâve really got to go back to the city.â
âSure,â he said pleasantly. âGo on. I showed you which way to go.â
He ducked as she flung a handful of sand at him. âIâll ignore that act of violence for the time being, Padgett. Pay attention, now. All you need is something to carry waterâthis cup will be fineâand a little imagination. And then, you pick the perfect spotâright about here should do it. Weâll have to make strong fortifications, though. I get the feeling that a really big wave washes up here once in a while.â
Shannon watched in silence while he began scooping up handfuls of the fine white sand and flinging it aside. Finally, she shook her head.
âAre you crazy?â
âOK, donât help me. See if I care! I built my best castles without girls, anyway. Girls donât know the first thing about defenses and walls and turrets. Girls...â He ducked as a mussel shell hit him on the shoulder. âSecond act of violence. Three strikes and youâre out.â
âGirlsâeven in Kansasâbuild mud pies and play in the dirt. And we know all about turrets. After all, did you ever hear of princes getting locked away in castles? Itâs always princesses, isnât it? Rapunzel and Sleeping Beauty and... go on, Morgan, shove over,â she said, pushing up her sleeves and kneeling opposite him. âIâll build you a castle the likes of which youâve never seen before. Just donât get in my way.â
Ignoring Cadeâs snort of disbelief, Shannon began to dig in earnest. The top layer of sand was sun-warm under her fingers, but as she dug deeper, it became pleasantly cool and damp to the touch. She glanced at him as she worked; he was concentrating on his piece of the sand sculpture with the same intensity he seemed to bring to everything. It was what sheâd seen in his performance that night at the Coliseum, and it was what had imÂpressed her most during the time theyâd spent together on the set and at the workshop.
Was it that intensity that heâd bring to their love scene, she wondered suddenly, or was it something else?
âHowâs it coming,?â he said. âReady to admit that all the engineers in the world should be men?â
She gave him her number one nasty smile. âGo on, laugh. Just wait until the first wave comes in. Weâll see whoâs the better builder.â
Maybe his walls were stronger-looking, she thought, glancing from her piece of the castle to his, but her turrets were more imaginative. Surely that was important. Turrets were...
âRats!â she shrieked, scrambling to her feet as a sudden wave engulfed the shoreline, racing across her bare feet and ankles. The water was so cold that it took her breath away, but all that mattered was that it knocked down a piece of her wall. She fell back to the wet sand and touched the damaged structure with one finger. âCade,â she wailed, âlook what happened!â
He sighed dramatically as he knelt beside her. âI should have known a woman couldnât compete in a manâs game. You faked me out with that bit about mud pies, but whatâs a mud pie, after all? It doesnât require a manâs skill and talent. It... Hey, no fair, Padgett, cut it out!â
Her first handful of sand missed its target, but the second sprayed over his shoulders and face. âCanât take the truth, huh?â he laughed, reaching for her hands. âIs that your problem?â
âYouâre a male chauvinist pig, Cade Morgan. That wave came in and headed straight for me... Cade, donât! Come on, thatâs not fair! Cade...â With a shriek of laughter, Shannon tried to roll free of his grasp, but he pulled her down to the sand and stuffed a handful of the damp stuff down her collar. âThatâs not fair... Cade...â
âDamned right itâs not,â he laughed, throwing his leg across her and pinning her body beneath his. âMen build better castles than women, Padgett. Theyâre also bigger and stronger.â
âThatâs it,â she gasped, âif you canât win fair and square, win by intimidation.â
She was laughing up at him, squirming beneath his weight like a kid in a wrestling match when suddenly the laughter caught in her throat.
Cadeâs eyes met hers; the gleam in them faded, replaced by a dark intensity that made something stir deep within her.
âCade...let me up.â
; Her plea was a whisper, a husky sigh on the salty breeze. He shook his head.
âYouâre beautiful, Shannon,â he said softly. âMy fairyÂtale princess with sand on her cheeks.â
She drew in her breath as he reached out and stroked her face. Her skin felt as if it were glowing beneath his fingers.
What would he do if she turned her head and pressed her mouth to his palm, she wondered suddenly? Would he take her into his arms and kiss her? Would he make love to her here on the empty beach, with only the gulls to see them while the ocean roared and the wind cooled their passion-heated flesh?
âListen,â he said, and she could hear a touch of urÂgency in his voice, âlisten, forget the damned play.â
âWhat?â She closed her eyes and then opened them again. âIâm not thinking of the play. I...â