Authors: Amanda Carpenter
few minutes before.
Her eyes cleared, and she could see him, hair tousled and face hard
and the eyes so concerned that she nearly started to cry again, but
caught herself up in time. He asked softly, 'Better now?' and she
nodded a quick jerk of the head. 'Perhaps you can tell me about it,
then?'
The words tumbled out about the seven steps in the living room and
the creaky floorboard and that she didn't shut her bedroom door and
the tree roots that she stumbled over and the whole thing had started
when she couldn't sleep. Greg's face showed incomprehension.
'Sara, honey, maybe it's because I've just woken up, but I don't seem
to understand a word ...' He paused and his face whitened, and his
hand at her cheek slid to her collarbone to tighten convulsively,
making her wince. Then he was speaking in such a harsh voice that
she couldn't believe that it came from the same person. 'Someone
broke into your house? Tonight—just now? Someone was in your
house?' She nodded, and he seemed to hesitate, with a strangely sick
fear in his eyes. Then, 'Did he hurt you, Sara?'
She shook her head dumbly, sniffing a little. His dark eyes travelled
over her stained nightgown and bare legs, took in the bruised and
bleeding feet, the slender fingers nearly blue with cold, the trembling
lips. He then saw for the first time the crumpled dressing gown on the
floor and the small pair of shoes tumbled beside it. She saw his face
become expressionless, then realised that his eyes had turned nearly
black with a molten rage. He was nearly choking her and didn't seem
to realise it and she croaked, 'Please, your hand!'
She was loosened immediately, and Greg stood up in one lithe
upsurging motion. If she had thought he had looked dangerous before
tonight, she hadn't seen anything to compare with the murderous look
in his eyes and the taut, jerking line of his jaw muscle. His big hands
were clenched with the bones showing white and his body was held
like a weapon. When he turned on his heel and simply left the room,
she was left feeling nonplussed. Whatever she had expected from
him, it hadn't been that.
After a minute, she stood and followed him, wincing at the throb
from her bruised feet. Being alone in the den made her nervous. She
followed the hall to a stairway and uncertainly climbed the stairs. At
the top, she found a light streaming from an open door and,
approaching hesitantly, she saw Greg pulling jeans over brief
undershorts. His bare body looked very powerful, the chest muscles
and flat stomach gleaming in the yellow golden light thrown by the
bedside lamp. His face was like granite. After the jeans came a thick
pullover sweater, and he drew that on, shoulder muscles flexing. Sara
watched with a growing perplexity and fear. It didn't even occur to
her to be embarrassed by his naked body; she was too overwhelmed
with the problems of the moment to notice.
'What are you doing?' The question came out in a whisper, but he
heard and turned, his dark head moving in a neat swift movement.
'Getting dressed; what does it look like?' He was terse, angry. He was
angry with her. She crossed her arms over her chest in a defensive
gesture, her face flooding with unhappiness. The whole thing was
just such a nightmare. Greg crossed over to her and passed his hand
over her hair swiftly, his face gentling as he saw her distress. 'I'm
going to your house.'
'
No!
' she burst out, clutching his arms before he withdrew. 'You can't!
What if—what if he's still there?'
His dark eyes mocked her gently. He seemed almost calm. That was
why his words were so shocking to her. 'Then I think I might kill
him.'
The shock stayed with her until he had sat down on the edge of the
bed to pull on socks and shoes, and then she erupted in a wild babble
of incoherency. 'Greg, it's insane, you can't . . . you could get hurt,
killed—oh, please, promise me you won't go until tomorrow, no, you
mustn't leave me .. .' Then, as he bent to pick up his jacket, she cried
out,
'Greg, don't leave me here alone!'
That sank in. His head jerked and he stared at her with his eyes
widened, taking in her tangible fear, the shadows behind her, the
quiet house. He hesitated, then came over to her. 'You'd be all right
here with Beowulf. Nothing could happen to you.'
'What about you?' Her eyes searched his face. 'Please, if you go, then
I want to go, too. I—Greg, I can't stay here alone!'
'I know,' he soothed, then hesitated. 'I know. Come on, let's go get
your dressing gown and shoes. You're not going back barefoot.'
Sara didn't know whether to feel weak from relief that she wasn't
staying in a strange house alone or whether to feel sick from the fear
of going out into that dark night again. After she had slipped on her
shoes and dressing gown, he turned off the lights and put an arm
around her shoulders as he opened the door for them to go out on to
the porch. Beowulf slipped out of the door and then Greg was
locking it. All too soon they were back on the path that would take
them to Sara's house and, as if he knew just what she was feeling,
Greg put his arm around her, holding her firmly to his side. He didn't
let her go until they reached the end of the path, then he whispered in
her ear, 'Stay here a minute.' She barely had time for a nod before he
was slipping away, melting into the night like a shadow.
What would he find? What if he was attacked? She knelt and found a
thick stick by the path and was after him before she let her fear
conquer her. She came up behind him just as he reached the porch
and gently touched his arm. He whirled, incredibly fast, with arm up
and fist clenched, checking only when he saw it was her. He took in
her wary stance, and the stick in her hand before she felt a hand
plucking it wryly away. The moonlight was shining enough for her to
see his dark shape, bulky, strong, reassuring, in front of her. He was
hefting the stick thoughtfully. He kept it in one hand and held her
behind him with the other. In this way they crept to the dark rectangle
that was her front door. It looked so alien in the dark. She couldn't
have recognised it if she had been on her own.
A silent push of the foot had the door swinging gently open. She put
a hand over her mouth to stifle any noise she might make. Greg
pushed her against the outside wall and warned her with the hard
pressure of his hand to stay there. Then he crashed inside, flipping
the light switch by the side of the door and moving swiftly. There
was silence, and she couldn't stand it, so she came in too, her eyes
darting around the empty room.
Greg had disappeared and she followed him quickly down the hall to
the light shining from her bedroom. He was standing in the middle of
the floor, swinging the stick thoughtfully against his thigh as he
looked around at the wreckage of the room. He turned at the sound of
her footsteps. 'The light was left on, Sara, I'm sorry about the -'
Whatever else he said rushed away in the roaring that filled her ears
as she took in the ruined furniture, the clothes strewn about. A
reeking odour told her that her favourite bottle of perfume had been
smashed, and the sense of violation at this invasion of her privacy
was so intense that she swayed dizzily against the doorpost.
Greg was very quick. He was at her side in a split second, putting his
arms around her and supporting her, hiding the room from her gaze.
It was nice to be held and rocked so gently and easily. After a minute
she opened her eyes and stared into his dark intent gaze. He rubbed
her cheek. 'Okay now?'
'I think so. Sorry about being so stupid.' She was shaky when she
stood back from him, but he kept his arm around her waist until she
sat carefully on the bed.
His face crinkled into a smile. 'If you don't stop saying you're sorry, I
may get violent!'
Sara laughed shakily, appreciating his effort. 'Sorry.' He growled.
As she looked around, the mess all over the floor brought the same
fear back again, and her mouth shook when she saw her favourite
blouse thrown into the corner, ripped in two. When she looked back
at Greg, her eyes reflected her hurt and fear and vulnerability. 'Why?'
she whispered. 'Why me? Why would someone want to do this? I
don't understand it.' She bent and picked up a broken piece of
ceramic near her ankle. It had been a hand-painted vase, picked up in
Mexico along with the coffee mugs. She said a little forlornly, 'It was
my favourite piece, too.'
Greg knelt at her side and looked for the other pieces, finding four
altogether. He concentrated briefly and looked up with an
encouraging smile. 'Maybe we can glue them together again. See, it
didn't shatter, and the jagged edges fit together perfectly.'
Seeing him at her feet, eager to comfort and reassure after being so
intense and huge and violent, made her smile involuntarily. 'We'll
try.' His hand came up and gripped her a moment, then fell away as
he stood up briskly. A trip to her half open closet had him pulling out
a suitcase and dumping it on the bed. She watched, eyes huge in her
exhausted face. He started to pull out clothes that were still hanging
up, dumping them in the open suitcase. 'What are you doing?'
He grinned. 'Favourite question for the evening, is it? I'm packing for
you, sweet Sara-Sue. You're going to come home with me.'
She didn't feel guilt or embarrassment at this, perhaps because she
was so tired. Instead, she felt suffused with an intense relief. 'Oh,' she
sighed, 'can I?' It earned her a quick kiss on the forehead.
'Just try and stop it.' Greg looked around the room assessingly, and a
slightly puzzled expression puckered his eyes. 'How did you manage
to get out of the house, if you were all the way down at this end of
the hall, and the front and back doors at the other end of the house?'
She stood and went to the window, pulling back the curtains to show
him the unlatched side. 'I was lucky. There wasn't a screen on the
window, and I just slipped outside.' With a finger, she showed how
easily and silently it swung open, then she closed and latched it again
with a shudder.
Greg had watched her with a frown. 'Well,' he muttered, 'that's
something we can thank your landlord for, although normally I'd
chew him out for not properly covering the windows. Funny, isn't it?'
He ran an eye quickly down her, and she looked down at herself at
that. The dressing gown looked dirty, and the bedraggled nightdress
peeped out from underneath. 'You might like to put on jeans or
something until we get back. It looks like your nightgown has just
about had it for the night.'
She chuckled wryly. 'I see what you mean. It's so cold out, I'd
appreciate something warmer, anyway.'
He was walking towards the door and paused. 'How long do you
think it will take you to finish packing?'
Sara glanced at the mess he had made of things. 'Maybe fifteen
minutes?'
'I'm going to check out the rest of the house while you dress and
pack. Don't shut the door all the way, all right? Yell if you need
anything. I'll be just a call away.'
A call away. It sounded nice. She gave him a sweet smile before he
left, causing him to stop and stare at her with an unreadable
expression. She turned and, shivering slightly, twitched the curtains
closed, blocking out that black night. Alone, she quickly dragged on
a pair of jeans and a sweater. Rummaging around on the floor, she
managed to locate her brush, and a few flicks through her hair took
care of the tangles whipped in it from the wind. Then she set about
finding underwear and night-clothes that weren't saturated with
perfume, stuffing them into one side of the suitcase. She then
straightened the clothes that Greg had thrown in, adding the rest of
the undamaged things. After that, she walked down the hall in search
of her purse. It was where she had left it, in the hall cupboard at the
bottom, with the linen. Out of curiosity she rummaged through her
wallet with a puzzled frown. A step sounded behind her and she
jumped before realising that it was only Greg returning from the
garage. He surveyed her kneeling posture. 'Anything missing?'