Authors: Amanda Carpenter
She shook her head slowly. 'No. All the cash I had is still here, and
my identification. See, even my lip gloss . . . no, everything is
untouched.' She held the things in both hands and looked up with
eyes that didn't see him. 'What do you suppose he wanted?'
'Your car is still in the garage. I think we'd better drive it over to my
place just in case.' Beowulf came panting up and bumped Greg's
knee, and he reached down to rub the dog's head absently. 'There's
room in my garage.' His gaze sharpened on her. 'Stop it, Sara! He
didn't really have time to steal anything. We got here too quickly for
that; in fact, we probably scared him away. Sara?' Her eyes focussed
on him. 'You're safe, I promise. Okay?' At her nod, he said bracingly,
'Good girl. Are you packed?'
'I need my things from the bathroom,' she replied tiredly. 'I'll go and
put them in my handbag.' Greg was trying to make her feel better, but
all the same, she would have felt a little better if the unknown
intruder had at least taken her handbag. He had taken the time to rip
her room apart, surely he could have taken the time to look into
cupboards if he had been a thief. Her handbag had not been hidden,
merely put away. But she knew deep down that the intruder had not
been a thief. He had known that she was homeland it would not be
hard to find out that she lived alone. No thief would want to take the
chance of getting caught by the house's occupants; they would wait
until the occupants were gone before attempting to rob a place. That
was what scared her, and Greg knew it.
She had given him her car keys before going into the bathroom and
getting her toothbrush, cleansing cream and cosmetics, stuffing them
haphazardly into the recesses of her handbag. Then she went back
into the living room and sat quietly on the couch until Greg came
back into the house. He passed by her, however, and soon emerged
from her bedroom with a leather jacket in his hands.
'You'll need this. It's getting cold.' She stood and he helped her into it
and then, turning out all of the lights and whistling for Beowulf, he
led her out of the house. Sara saw a quick sharp glance from him, in
the light of the car's headlights. 'Do you mind if I drive?'
At that she grimaced at him. 'I'd prefer it, the way I feel now. I feel
just like a zombie!'
A guiding hand helped her into the passenger seat as he said quietly,
'You've just about had it, I think. It's been an unsettling day for such a
little girl.'
She chuckled at the gentle mocking tone. At the moment she felt like
a small child being helped by an older brother, and the feeling was
safe and pleasant. She leaned back in the bucket seat and drowsily
perused the profile of the man beside her. He was so hard and yet so
gentle. With a flash of perception she realised that he was probably
acting like an older brother on purpose. He had sensed that she was
close to the end of her tether.
Beowulf panted heavily in the small back seat, sprawled all over her
suitcase and handbag. She glanced back, grinning at his wicked white
smile and long tongue. A faint whine and wag of the tail was his
response.
They were very soon pulling into the long winding drive that cut into
Greg's property, and when he smoothly pulled the car to a stop and
got out, Sara slid across the seat to sit in the driver's position. Greg
went on into the house to open the garage door. Beowulf waited
patiently in the back of the car. A few moments passed and then the
long rectangular garage door slid silently up to reveal an empty
parking place beside an expensive model sports car.
She changed gears and quickly pulled her car into the parking
position and switched off the engine. Greg was there before the purr
of the car's motor had ceased, opening the door and helping her out.
He reached in the back and hauled out her suitcase after Beowulf had
bounded out.
Sara was reeling on her feet from exhaustion. She guessed fuzzily
that it must be around five in the morning or so, and a wave of weary
anger shook through her when she thought of the unknown intruder
who had disrupted her placid life and had caused her so much
personal anguish. 'Damn him!' she muttered half- tearfully. 'Damn
him to hell!'
A guiding hand propelled her forward, into the adjoining house, and
she was vaguely aware of the dark brown hues of the den passing by,
the stairs negotiated with considerable help from Greg, and then at
some indeterminate distance down the second storey hallway a
bedroom with a soft warm bed. That was all she noticed. As soon as
Greg had turned on the light, she headed for that bed. Without a
murmur she sank on to the bedspread and was out as soon as her head
hit the downy pillow. She never felt the gentle hands that undressed
her as- if she were a baby, pulling a loose nightgown over her
unconscious head and tucking her underneath the covers as lovingly
as any mother. She never realised the care with which her head was
arranged on the pillow, and she never felt the hand that stroked her
dark cloudy mane of hair before Greg removed himself and turned
out the light. He left the door open and Beowulf snoozed at the foot
of the bed.
Sara moaned and rolled over in bed. Her eyes flew open as she felt
how extraordinarily sore she was in certain areas, and her misty gaze
travelled wonderingly over strange walls and furniture. A puzzled
smile touched her lips as she vaguely wondered if she was still
dreaming, and then the events of last night came tumbling back into
her consciousness and she bolted up in bed like a rabbit breaking
from cover. Beowulf raised his black head and thumped his stump at
her. Funny, she thought, frowning, I don't remember undressing. She
put up a hand and scratched at her ribcage at a slight discomfort and
found that she was still wearing her bra. She never wore a bra to bed
and rarely wore one when she took a nap, it was so uncomfortable.
But then, she acknowledged wryly, she never ran down a beach in a
nightgown and got a man out of bed at three in the morning before,
either. She dismissed the whole train of thought as being
unimportant, since she didn't remember entering this strange
bedroom last night anyway. Actually, it was early this morning, but
who was counting?
She gingerly edged her feet off the bed and stood, wincing at the pain
from her feet. A quick inspection showed them to be lacerated and
bruised. A black mark was on her left ankle. A quick exploration of
the room revealed a small bath off to the left, and she went into it
with an anticipatory gleam in her eye. She was prevented from
shutting the door behind her, however, by a quick powerful shove
from a waist-high canine head. Beowulf watched her with velvet
eyes.
'Oh, all right!' she told him laughingly, and let him in to plop on the
tiled floor. 'I'll have you know, young man, that you're the first male
that I've ever let into my bathroom!' He looked duly appreciative of
that fact, then rolled over on to his side with a snort. He was still
there when she emerged from the shower stall some time later. She
had found several more bruises all over her body and whenever she
moved unwarily she felt painful twinges that warned her to be
careful. It had hurt, standing in the shower and having the warm
soapy water lap at her feet, but she knew that at least it had cleaned
out the cuts.
She dressed for comfort in the pair of jeans that she had donned
around four in the morning, and a red long-sleeved blouse. It helped
hide her bruises. Then she brushed her long black hair with the hand
dryer that she'd packed until her hair was moderately dry. Makeup? It
was out of the question; she felt strangely exhausted at the effort that
she had expended already. All she managed to do to her feet was pull
a thick pair of cushiony socks on. She had tried shoes and found they
hurt too much.
Beowulf accompanied her every move, even to sitting with his great
head on her knee as she blow-dried her hair. He was comic and
adorable, and by the time she had finished with her laborious toilet,
she had fallen into the habit of talking aloud to him. It was uncanny
how he managed to respond appropriately to various spoken
statements.
Sara was soon heading out of her bedroom door and attempting to
limp down the stairs when Greg appeared with a coffee mug in hand
and several papers in the other. He immediately put them on a side
table and jumped up the stairs when he took in her involuntary
winces of pain. He reached out, and she felt his hands take hold of
her in a firm grip, then the world swung around as he hauled her up
in his arms to carry her down the rest of the stairs.
She felt shy and awkward. All of the reactions from last night that
she normally would have felt but had been too upset to bother with
came rushing up. She remembered Greg's bare muscular body as he
had angrily shrugged into his jeans and sweater from last night, and
her face burned. She felt the natural embarrassment for putting
someone out, someone that she hardly knew. It coloured her voice.
'Good morning,' she began, but was cut short.
'Honey child, it's hardly morning,' he told her, amusement threading
his voice. 'In fact it's well into the afternoon.'
Her face, already flushed, turned even more red. 'I'm sorry -'
Greg stopped in the middle of the hall, with Beowulf behind him,
half on and half off the bottom of the stairs. His dark gaze caressed
her. 'Don't start that again, Sara. I've had enough humility and
contrite embarrassment to last me a long time!'
Her eyes twinkled tentatively. 'All right.' Greg resumed walking
down the hall and Beowulf was able to finish coming down the stairs.
Neither had noticed him.
She was asked, 'Are you feeling hungry?' to which she responded
with a nod. 'Good! How about keeping me company in the kitchen
while I fix us something to gobble?'
'Please.' He put her down on a bar stool beside a butcher block table
and she soon had a steaming cup of coffee in front of her to nurse
while he moved efficiently around the kitchen. Sara swung from side
to side in an effort to see the stove clock, but with Greg moving
around so much she couldn't see the time.
He caught her movement out of the corner of one eye and turned to
contemplate her sardonically. 'Practising to become a pendulum some
day?'
She chuckled. 'I'm trying to see what time it is. I have this very
nagging desire to see how much of the day I've missed.' He
obligingly moved out of the way, and she yelped. It was two-thirty
in. the afternoon.
'Want to lay odds on whether you'll be sleepy or not around ten this
evening?' Greg asked her with a crooked smile.
She hesitated. 'N-no. It was hard enough to get out of bed just now. I
think I'll be only too ready for bed tonight.'
He reached out for her cheek in a quick caress. It was an
absentminded gesture, but it still sent a thrill through her. 'You went
through a lot last night.' Her eyes slid away from his and she watched
tiny motes of dust dance along a yellow sunbeam that peeped through
a curtained window. 'Hey,' he said, 'cut it out. Don't think about it
now, d'you hear?'
'Okay.' It was an empty promise, though, and they both knew it.
'What do you want to eat?' Greg was perusing the contents of his
refrigerator, head cocked and foot tapping slowly.
'What have you got?' Sara's stomach was beginning to make sharp
demands and she rubbed it unobtrusively.
'Does an onion and mushroom omelette sound good to you?'
'It sounds wonderful,' she sighed. 'Can we eat it now and cook it later,
to save time?' His dark eyes laughed at her as he juggled items to the
table. She watched while he chopped the mushrooms and laughed
when her eyes watered as he peeled the onion. The aroma of eggs
nicely browning in butter made her mouth salivate. When he slid a
steaming plate of food her way, she tucked in with a neat concise
eagerness that made him smile to himself. He sat across from her.
After they had finished their meal, he stood and fed Beowulf, who
swiftly gobbled his portion of dog food with an avidness that made