Authors: Amanda Carpenter
her ask Greg if he had been starving the poor hound.
'It's the second time he's been fed today,' he replied dryly, crossing
his arms and leaning against the doorway. 'That "poor hound" gets
fed three times a day. I don't think he's hurting any.' Looking at
Beowulf s sleek shiny coat and firm rippling muscles, Sara had to
agree. He looked trim and fit, but he certainly didn't look thin or
weak from lack of food.
Greg poured her another cup of coffee, and they lounged in the
kitchen without saying much. It was a perfect opportunity for her to
study him in depth. She was genuinely puzzled.
The barrier, so obvious yesterday evening and the first time she had
met him, was missing today. He was showing himself to be a warm,
compassionate man, sensitive to her needs and caring about her. His
eyes were warm and sparkling, not hard and repelling. His face was
still hard; nothing could soften those features after a point, but his
expression was relaxed and easy, not wary and guarded.
He was an enigma. He was tantalising and unknown. In many ways
he was a contradiction in terms. She couldn't get her mind off him.
There was a power of being about him that manifested itself in
certain ways: in the hard line of his jaw, in odd inflexibilities of his
speech, in his quicksilver intelligence that forced her mind into a high
gear of thought, in his quiet self- confidence. After a prolonged study
of the lines of his face, Sara realised that he was like steel tempered
by fire. The lines were not from maturity in years, but rather from
suffering and hardship. She guessed that he had been through some
kind of hell, and very probably was still dwelling in a private prison
of damnation.
By the end of the afternoon, she had come to think of him as being
beautiful, and she watched for every change in his mobile face, every
different expression. He soon picked her up and carried her off to the
downstairs bathroom, plunking her down decisively on the stool. She
was laughing breathlessly, her hair all over her face, and she asked
him with a mock sternness in her voice that was betrayed by a slight
quiver, 'Just what do you think you're doing? If you think I'm going
to go to the bathroom with you in here, you've got another think
coming, buster! Beowulf s just the same. He insisted on coming into
the bathroom with me when I took my shower.'
Greg knelt at her feet with a smile tugging at the corners of his lips
and started to remove her socks. 'I'm going to have a look at the
bottoms of your feet. I should have done this last night, but you were
out like a light as soon as you hit the bed, and I didn't have the heart
to disturb you.' He turned one small foot over gently and studied her
bruises and lacerations.
It looked very small and white, held like that in his big-boned, darkly
tanned hands. The delicate arch of her foot was mottled with black
bruises and red cuts.
Sara wasn't thinking about her foot, though. She was still mulling
over Greg's words. It must mean, she thought, with a squirm and a
sudden rush of red, that he put me to bed last night. No wonder I
didn't remember changing into my nightgown! His dark head came
up and he sent her a slanting, mocking glance as if he knew what she
was thinking. She said hurriedly, 'I made sure they were clean when I
took my shower.'
'That must have hurt. I think we would be wise to put some antiseptic
on those lacerations, just in case, since we left them a while before
checking. Besides, I'd like to wrap them in gauze bandaging to keep
them clean. That way you won't stick to your socks by the time you
get ready for bed.' He turned, opened a small cabinet, and took out a
first aid kit and soon was applying antiseptic to her feet. It made her
eyes water from pain in spite of his obvious attempts to be gentle,
and she took in a shaky breath when he finished one foot and
wrapped it several times before sliding it back into her sock. By the
end of the second foot she was gripping the edge of the sink and
holding her lips so tightly that there was a white line around them.
Looking up, he caught sight of her pain, and took her unhesitatingly
into his arms. The onrush of warmth from his caring and sympathy
had her clinging to him with something akin to desperation. It felt so
safe. He drew in a breath, looked down at her face so close to his
own, and brought down his mouth. He was warm and his lips were
firm and yet mobile. It shook her. He brushed her mouth over and
over, then deepened the kiss with a gentle persuasion that had her
responding almost before she realised it.
Afterwards, he helped her into the den, and Sara knew without any
words being spoken that he had retreated once again.
GREG was very thoughtful. Sara was made comfortable and he
brought her a paperback to read, and she had never felt so alone
before in her life when he closed the door to his study after
explaining that he needed to do some work.
Some time later she knocked on his door softly and was rewarded
with an immediate and rather short, 'Come in.' She poked her head
around the edge of the door after opening it halfway and Greg leaned
back in his swivel chair, gesturing impatiently. 'I said come in, not
peep at me like a mouse!'
So she limped in and leaned against the back of the chair in front of
his desk to take the weight off her feet. 'I'm going back to the house
now,' she began, and paused, and Greg came forward out of his chair
with a resounding crash. It was quite an effective silencer and it had
her staring at him with wide eyes.
'Like hell you are!' he shouted furiously. 'You've got to be crazy to
even contemplate staying there after what happened! No way, lady,
you are going to stay right here!'
She cocked an eyebrow, attempting to hide the flush of anger that
suffused her mind. It had been a good eight years since anyone had
dared to talk to her like that. Her mother was the last, and it had been
a decade since she had heeded anything delivered to her in that tone
of voice. She wasn't about to stand for it now, not from Greg or
anyone else for that matter. 'Thank you for hearing me out,' she said
sarcastically. The biting edge to her voice was keen. She knew her
own voice intimately; she had to, to perform as well as she did.
She used her voice inflections to advantage now, and she saw him
wince slightly. 'But I was about to finish with "pick up a few things."
Now that you mention it, though, I might add another thank you for
your kind hospitality last night, but I really must be going.' With that
statement, she closed her mouth in what she knew to be an infuriating
manner, turned her back on Greg, and limped with dignity out of the
room. He caught up with her faster than she had expected.
She was whirled around and pushed against the nearby wall,
imprisoned with two strong arms one to each side. Incensed with his
cavalier manner, she brought up a stiff warning forefinger to stick it
in front of his nose with a hiss through bared teeth, 'Watch it!'
He ignored the finger hovering near his nose. 'Where are you going?'
It was a harsh tone of voice, one that she resented like she resented
his attitude.
She answered him snappily, 'I'll let you know when I decide!' He was
very big, she realised suddenly. His lower body was leaning against
hers to keep her in place, and she found it quite distracting.
'Are you wanting to check into a motel, or are you going to go
home?' he insisted, a thread of urgency colouring his question.
Sara's eyes dropped with a suffusion of doubt, and something in his
face made her answer him seriously, 'I don't know, really. I hadn't
thought about it.' With a quick sideways look up at his shadowed
expression, she admitted tersely, 'You made me very angry.'
'I know,' he responded absently, 'Sara, don't feel you have to go home
just because of this. Don't cut your vacation short. You can stay here
if you like, for as long as you want. You'd be safe. Even if I needed
to leave the house for a while, Beowulf is here and he would protect
you.'
She stared at his shirt front, longing to stay so badly that she could
taste it in her mouth. Uncertainties were undermining her thinking,
though, and she couldn't seem to come to any rational decision.
'What—what about your privacy? I'd be an imposition, I'd upset your
routine, I'd . ..'
He interrupted. 'You wouldn't be an imposition. Sara, do you want to
stay?' An insistent hand was forcing her chin up, compelling her to
look into his very serious eyes. She did so and found she couldn't
look away.
'Yes.' It was a bare thread of sound, but he heard it anyway.
He said in a low voice, 'Then stay.' It was most persuasive, the intent
and almost pleading way he spoke.
Sara closed her eyes and nodded.
Greg didn't accompany her back to the house since he had several
things that he needed to do, but he insisted that she take Beowulf
with her and let him run through the cabin before she entered. It was
a good suggestion, and she accepted gratefully.
He told her not to be surprised if she found items in the house moved
around a little. 'I took the liberty of calling the police this morning
while you were in bed,' he explained, 'and they went through the
house to check for fingerprints, but didn't find any. Whoever it was
had to be wearing gloves. They also determined his mode of entry.
He'd picked the lock, I guess.'
The front door swung open silently and the house loomed so quiet
and empty in front of her that she was more than happy to let the
huge dog bound ahead and sniff out the place. While he disappeared,
she inspected the front lock like Greg had suggested, and noticed the
scratch marks around the lock. It was immensely frightening, those
small, telltale marks.
Beowulf was trotting back into the living room easily, his demeanour
placid, so she went in and locked the door behind her, only
afterwards realising how futile that really was. She had a competent
guard dog with her, though, and she felt more or less at ease. Even so
she didn't want to waste time.
She went straight to. the phone and dialled long-distance to
California, and soon she heard Barry's voice, sounding as if he was
speaking through fuzzy cotton. 'Barry?' she asked.
'Sara!' he exclaimed in understandable surprise. 'Love, this is
unexpected but rather sweet of you. I had an uneventful flight,
nothing unusual.'
She had to laugh. 'That's not why I'm calling, you muttonhead!'
He grunted. 'Figured as much, but you can't blame a fellow for trying.
What's wrong? Spent all your money already?'
'I wish it was that simple. Barry, I had a midnight intruder last night.'
A brief silence. 'Are you all right, babe? You weren't—I mean,
nothing occurred—oh hell!'
'No, I wasn't raped, if that was what you meant. I couldn't sleep and
when I heard someone in the living room, I crawled out my bedroom
window and ran to a neighbour's house. We came back later and
things were ripped up in my bedroom, but nothing was stolen, and
frankly that scares the hell out of me. Barry, I'm afraid it might have
been someone who knows who I really am.'
He asked her, 'Are you coming back right away? Where are you now,
at a motel?'
'No, I'm back at the house getting a few things.'
'You little idiot!' he exploded. She had to hold the phone receiver
away from her ear slightly. 'Of all the damn-fool things to do, that
takes the icing right off the cake . ..'
'Hold your spittle, Barry,' she protested, chuckling. 'I've a very big
and very black Dobermann panting at my side at the moment, and I
don't plan on staying.
What I'm calling about is to tell you that I'm staying a while longer in
the area with a friend, and if you want to get in touch with me just
write here. I'll be over for mail every day. But Barry, use my real
name, just in case someone decides to look at my mail. Also, I want
you to do something else for me. Do you remember those crazy fan
letters that I was getting around six months ago?'
'Sure, I remember,' he responded immediately. 'Do you think the guy
who wrote those could be your intruder?'