He tried again, but this time he couldn’t completely contain his grin. “People never mock my intellect.”

“Really? Well, it’s about time somebody did.”

“Larry,” Jennifer shouted breathlessly, clambering back up on the bench and dumping a pile of tickets on the table. “Will you help us figure out what we can get?”

David was right behind, adding his own fistfuls of tickets to the pile.

“See that? Somebody out there respects my brain,” Larry said to Crystal.

“Is this what you do for NASA?” she asked him sweetly.

“Pretty much,” said Larry, helping the kids sort the tickets into piles of fives.

A RUBBER GECKO SQUEEZED tight in his chubby hand, David drifted off to sleep in the backseat of Larry’s car. A second glance in the rearview mirror told Larry that Jennifer wasn’t far behind. Her eyes had a dreamy look, and her blinks were long and slow.

He leaned toward Crystal and whispered. “Did we keep them out too late?” It had been a long time since his son Steve had been this age, and Larry couldn’t remember bed times.

Not that he’d ever paid that much attention to the details of childrearing. If he started work in his study at six, he often didn’t notice the time until well after midnight. Elizabeth was the reason Steve had survived childhood.

“They just had a good time,” said Crystal. “I won’t have any trouble getting them up for school.”

“They’re staying overnight with you?”

She nodded, a flinch of distress crossing her face. “I’m not sure what time Amber will get home.”

Larry nodded his understanding.

None of his business, of course. But what kind of a mother partied on a weeknight, potentially compromising her children’s education?

“What about you?” asked Crystal. “You have school tomorrow.”

“Classes are done,” said Larry. “I’ll mostly be compiling research over the summer.”

“Really? What are you researching?”

Larry hated this part. No matter how hard he tried to keep it simple, people’s eyes inevitably glazed over when he talked about his work. At parties, most people found a quick excuse to walk away.

“It’s not all that interesting.”

“Don’t mollycoddle me. I handled your IQ, didn’t I?”

“Fine,” said Larry. “I’m researching physical and hydrodynamical modeling for galactic superwinds.”

She blinked.

He took a breath, might as well find out now if she was going to walk away. “Specifically,” he continued, “the physical origin of X-ray emissions created when supernova remnants overlap in the star-forming regions of space. They form highly pressurized bubbles that burst into intergalactic space, redistributing mass and heat.”

The engine and tire noise filled in the silence.

“So, you don’t know yet what makes the X-ray emissions,” she said.

It was Larry’s turn to blink. “You got that?”

“Well, it may be rocket science, buddy. But it wasn’t like there were any new words in those sentences.”

He stared at her as long as he dared without crashing the car. “You understood what I just said?”

“Don’t get too impressed. It’s not like you can take me into the lab to help with the hydrodynamical modeling.”

Larry was speechless.

She took in his expression, an edge coming into her voice. “You never did ask me my IQ.”

“Well…I…” To be honest, Larry hadn’t been looking for intelligence from Crystal.

No. Wait. That sounded awful. She was obviously smart. Her sense of humor was sharp and sophisticated.

She glanced back at Jennifer.

Larry followed her gaze in the mirror and discovered the young girl was asleep along with her brother.

“You were too busy focusing on my hair,” hissed Crystal. “And my…other assets.”

“Whoa,” Larry put in. “I’ve never once fixated on your physical attributes over your personality.” He paused. “Okay, maybe the million-dollar ass comment was out of line. But it happens to be true.” Whatever else she had, Crystal was the most beautiful woman he’d ever met.

“Ask me my IQ,” she repeated.

The defiance in her voice gave him pause. “What’s your IQ?”

“One fifty-two.”

Okay. He was officially impressed. That number put her in the top one percent of his students. “Why didn’t you say something?”

“Until now, I didn’t think it mattered.”

“It doesn’t.” He knew she was smart. He simply hadn’t known how smart.

“Should we compare bank balances next?” she asked. “See who can pee the farthest?”

“You’re a girl.”

“And you’re a metaphor-phobe.”

“I don’t think that’s a real word.”

“Hey, who around here has a graduate degree in English?”

“You do,” he admitted.

They were both silent, while Larry made the last turn before the Softco Machine Works building.

“Are you really upset?” he asked.

“Not that much,” she admitted.

“I like that you understand what I’m doing. I didn’t mean to sound so surprised.”

“And I didn’t mean to go all ballistic feminist on you. I’m glad you like my…brain. Few people hang around long enough to see it.”

“Their loss,” Larry said softly, reaching for her hand.

Her fingers curled around his, and something felt totally right about the touch.

She closed her eyes and tipped her head back against the headrest. “What are we doing here, Larry?”

“I haven’t a clue,” he admitted. “You want to stop?”

To his relief, she shook her head.

He pulled into the parking lot of Softco, driving around the building to the back staircase that led to her apartment.

He killed the engine and flipped the catch on his seat belt. Jennifer’s eyes blinked blearily open, but David stayed sound asleep.

“I’ll carry him up,” Larry whispered into the silence.

Crystal smiled her appreciation, and she opened her door, flipping the seat forward to help Jennifer out.

Larry bundled David into his arms, making sure the gecko didn’t get dropped. Then he followed Crystal and Jennifer up the long staircase.

The dog named Rufus was waiting for them in the compact kitchen.

“Oh, man,” Crystal moaned. “The poor guy needs a walk.”

“I’ll take him,” Larry immediately offered, since, obviously, Crystal couldn’t leave the children to walk the dog.

After settling David in the spare bedroom, Larry clipped the leash on Rufus. The dog seemed more than willing to come with him, and Larry followed Crystal’s directions to a pathway that was partially lighted by the overhead lights of the parking lot.

It was a quick walk, and soon they were trotting back up the staircase.

Larry knocked gently on the door, and Crystal opened it, still in her pale-blue dress, but now with bare feet.

“Thanks,” she breathed, stepping out of the way. “I know you don’t like me to call you nice.”

He moved inside. “Couldn’t you call me rugged or macho or something instead?”

“It was very macho of you to walk my dog.”

“That’s better,” he acknowledged, pulling the door closed behind him and removing Rufus’s leash.

“Coffee?” asked Crystal.

He glanced at his watch. “You sure it’s not too late?”

“Nine-thirty?”

“You do have to get up for school in the morning.”

Crystal crossed to the cupboards, opened the corner one, then stretched up to reach the bright red mugs on the top shelf. The action pulled up her hem, revealing a few more inches of shapely thigh.

Larry felt a pulse throb through his brain.

“Cream or sugar?” she asked.

“Black,” he responded, dragging his gaze away.

She set the cups on the countertop, and her dress settled back into place.

The coffeemaker finished filling the carafe, and she poured two steaming cups, taking hers black as well. Then she handed one to Larry, nodding to the small, connected living-room area.

Rufus followed at Larry’s heels.

Crystal took one end of the burgundy couch, and Larry sat down in the other, setting his mug on the end table beside him. The dog curled up next to his feet.

“We okay?” he asked her.

She nodded, crooking one knee and planting her back against the arm of the sofa so that she faced him.

He nodded toward the bedroom. “They going to be okay?”

“I hope so,” said Crystal. “Zane won’t hang around long. I just hope…” She got a faraway look in her eyes.

“Hope what?” he prompted.

“Last time he did this, things got ugly for Amber.”

A horrible thought came into Larry’s mind. “Is he abusive?”

“Not physically. Certainly emotionally.” Crystal paused for a sip of her coffee. “Let’s just say my sister has a troubled relationship with alcohol. Normally, she’s fine. But in times of stress, she leans on it a bit too much for support. And the last time Zane left, it was a time of stress. I ended up keeping Jennifer and David here for a month until she got herself straightened out. I have a feeling it’s going to happen again.”

Rufus gave a little moan, shifting onto his side and stretching his legs out on the wooden floor.

“How long ago was that?” Larry asked.

“Two years.”

“So, the kids remember?”

She gave a nod. “They remember.”

Larry’s gaze flicked to the door of the spare bedroom.

“What about you?” he asked Crystal.

She looked puzzled. “Do I remember?”

“Any exes in your past likely to rear their heads?”

“My husband died two years ago.”

Larry felt an instant pang of empathy. “I’m so sorry. I lost my wife, Libby, three years ago.”

“Did you love her?” asked Crystal.

“Very much.”

“I didn’t love Simon.” Crystal surprised him by saying. Then she gave a nervous laugh. “That sounds callous, doesn’t it? But it’s true.”

“You married a man you didn’t love?”

That definitely puzzled Larry. Crystal must have had her pick of a thousand men.

“I thought I loved him. Doesn’t that sound pathetic? I saw what I wanted to see, until I couldn’t lie to myself anymore.”

“What was it you didn’t see?”

“His fixation on my body.”

“Ouch,” said Larry, feeling even guiltier than he had before. That must be why she’d jumped down his throat.

“To the exclusion of anything else,” she elaborated. “Simon and I had other problems.” She lifted her coffee mug in a mock toast. “He loved the red dress.”

“You don’t have to wear the red dress,” Larry quickly put in.

“I know,” she said. “Trust me when I tell you, I’m never wearing anything I don’t want to wear, ever again.”

Yet, she’d offered to wear the red dress for him. Larry didn’t want to speculate about what that meant. Well, he did want to speculate, but he knew that was dangerous territory.

“I’d asked him for a divorce,” she said, eyes getting a faraway look. “The night before he was killed. I was all set to divorce him, then suddenly I was the grieving widow.”

Larry couldn’t even fathom her experience. He’d mourned Libby for months, years even, taking solace in his work. “How was Simon killed?”

“Scuba equipment failure. He was in the Navy. What about Libby?”

“Heart attack,” said Larry, even now struggling to keep the emotion out of his voice. “We didn’t even know there was a problem with her heart.”

Crystal watched his expression closely.

“It was people like you that made me feel like a fake,” she whispered. “People who deserved the sympathy, the cards, the flowers and the eulogy. Through it all, I wanted to stand up and shout that I was a fraud. I was going to divorce the man. But I knew it wouldn’t have helped. Other people needed to grieve, and they needed me to play my role. So I pretended I’d loved him, pretended I cried and pretended he was the paragon they made him out to be at the memorial service.”

“You did the right thing,” Larry offered.

She wrapped her arms around herself in a hug. “And then there’s his service pension and life insurance.” Her voice went lower still. “I can’t spend it. Every penny of that money is still sitting in the bank.”

Larry glanced around the plainly furnished apartment. “You are his widow. You’re legally entitled-”

She shook her head emphatically.

“You have to do something with the money.”

“Maybe if I have kids someday. Maybe for Jennifer’s and David’s educations. But not for me.”

“Penance?” asked Larry.

“Integrity,” she responded.

He drained his coffee cup. “I can respect that.”

The woman had brains and integrity. He admired both. She looked so vulnerable curled up under the soft lamplight.

The urge to draw her into his arms was definitely growing strong. He forced himself to stand up, determined to get out of here before he did something both stupid and inappropriate.

CHAPTER FOUR