But, after one quick trace of his tongue between her lips, he abruptly pulled away and stepped back from her. She was leaning into him so hard he had to put his hands on her shoulders to steady her.<br />Catherine’s eyes flew open. Releasing her shoulders, he pointed past her to the books he’d set on the desk.<br />She opened her mouth to protest, but closed it again. As she followed Jim, she caught a glimpse of his profile when he picked up the books and slate. There was a smug grin on his face. He was toying with her, teaching her a lesson—that two could play at heating things up and abruptly cooling them down.<br />Indignation and amusement competed in her as she took her seat beside him and he handed her the paper he’d written. She hadn’t set him any homework. He’d done it on his own, printed a brief description of their picnic in short sentences or single words. It was<br />almost like a poem without rhyme. “Fish swim water. Sky. Trees. Leaves. Eat food. Drink.”<br />She smiled at him. “Very good.”<br />He touched his lips, puckering them in<br />a kiss, and tapped the signing book.<br />“Kiss,” she said and looked up the sign for it. “Fingers touching thumbs as both<br />hands come together,” the text said. Her cheeks flushed as she read, “trembling slightly to indicate the degree of passion.”<br />Catherine made the movement as she repeated the word aloud. “Kiss.”<br />Jim copied the movement, shaping his lips like hers. He pointed to the slate and offered her the chalk so she could spell the word. He studied each letter as she wrote it, before printing them himself: K-i-s-s.<br />Catherine’s cheeks flamed even hotter from seeing it written in glaring white against the black slate. Kiss. Kiss. Somehow there seemed to be no denying or hiding it now that it was written down. She glanced at Jim’s lips and her nipples tightened at the memory of<br />his mouth sucking them.