Authors: Kris Pearson
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Women's Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Contemporary Fiction
Fiona dashed through.
“Stop for God’s sake!” he yelled. “Get some proper shoes on. Your feet’ll be cut to ribbons.” Relief shot through him when she skidded to a halt in time.
The huge garage door was bent and buckled. Part of it remained, hanging askew, creaking in the slight breeze. Suddenly it, too, fell with a squealing metallic thump. Dust and concrete fragments flew everywhere in a blinding cloud. Christian cursed foully, and Fiona buried her face in her arms to protect her eyes.
“Bastards took the Jag,” he snapped. “Call the cops for me, eh?”
There was no sign now of him being anything but totally alert.
She wondered about that as she pulled out her phone, dialed the emergency number, and relayed the details she was sure about.
“Just a moment,” she said, handing the phone over to Christian.
She checked on Nicky who was half-awake but so drowsy she was easily soothed. Then she hurried into her own bedroom and rummaged through her shoes. She laced on a pair of white trainers, hoping their thick soles would be protection enough from all the glass.
Christian talked on, giving the registration number and other details of his beloved E-type.
“Thank God I keep the Rolls way at the back,” he said as he disconnected. “The garage lights have blown. I can’t see what the damage really is. That explosion will have flung shards of metal and concrete all over the place. The other cars could be mincemeat.”
Neighbors started to appear— curious, startled, and concerned. Fiona picked her way to the entrance and peered upwards. The pressed-steel garage door lay buckled and crumpled on the forecourt like a couple of huge dead animals. A handful of concrete chips pattered down beside her.
“Get back, Fee!” Christian yelled as part of the main support beam gave way and crashed down. She leapt sideways, tripped on some of the debris, felt a huge surge of pain, and blacked out. She never knew how feverishly he worked to clear the heaviest pieces away from her crumpled body, or how tenderly he covered her with a blanket and watched over her until the paramedics arrived.
She regained proper consciousness the next evening. Christian sat close by her hospital bed, staring blankly ahead, but his gaze ricocheted across as she uttered a soft moan of complaint.
There were flowers everywhere, and her whole body ached like fury.
He instantly pressed the Call button and reached for her hand. His over-firm grip was far from steady. His fingers shook as he laced them through hers.
“I thought I’d lost you,” he said in a hoarse and weary voice, eyes so intense and hopeful she’d have sprung from the bed undamaged, had it been possible. “Hell that was stupid thing to do, Fee. Don’t ever scare me like that again.”
So much for a tender welcome back to the land of the living…
She moved her other arm and gasped with pain, but knowing he’d kept watch sent a wash of warmth through her and almost made up for his rough words. How long had he been there?
A nurse bustled through the door a moment later and Fiona tried to lift her head before subsiding back into the pillows with a groan. Christian rose from the chair, wincing as he stretched from the vigil at her bedside.
“Long wait?” Fiona murmured.
He shook his head as though the answer didn’t matter. “I’ll call Greg and Rebecca back,” he said, digging his mobile from a pocket. He stood looking down at her, dark face unreadable, while the nurse fussed and checked. Then he disappeared into the corridor and she heard jubilation in his voice as he made the call.
He returned, sat again, and retrieved her hand. Slowly he recounted the whole story until she had it straight in her slightly addled brain. She was severely bruised, somewhat concussed, but against all odds unbroken.
She decided woozily that he must have employed magic to get her parents there so fast—Auckland was almost a day’s drive from Wellington. But twenty hours had slid by, and they’d flown down early that morning and only recently left the hospital to find dinner. Fifteen minutes later, she heard the rapid tattoo of her mother’s heels. Her parents burst in, tired, concerned, and thankful.
“Oh my darling girl,” Rebecca faltered, bending over to caress her brow and kiss her cheek. “The thought of losing both my daughters...”
She left the words hanging and turned aside to hide tears of relief.
“Awful scare. Awful,” Greg Delaporte said in a gruff voice, reaching out to clasp a cautious hand over hers.
After a few moments, her mother checked the chart at the end of her bed, drew a deep breath and nodded. Fiona imagined she’d done it dozens of times already
“I’m sure they’re looking after you as well as possible,” Rebecca said. “But there’s one thing hospitals provide that’ll do you no good at all—these awful gowns.” She gave the sleeve of Fiona’s a disparaging twitch. “I brought a couple of my old button-through nightdresses with me. Nice and soft, and just as accessible for the staff if they want to change your dressings.” She bent to retrieve one from the bedside locker and shook out its folds.
Fiona managed a half-hearted smile. Trust her practical mother to think of something like that!
“Thanks Mom. These lumpy back fastenings are horrible to lie on—yours’ll be great to have.”
“And how are feeling, really?”
“Lucky to be alive I suppose. It could have been worse.”
“Much worse,” her father agreed.
“I’ve spoiled your dinner.”
“I’d choose a daughter over a dinner any day,” he said.
She tried to push herself up a little on the pillows.
“Ow…” she growled.
Christian’s sleepy eyes snapped alert.
“Stop trying to move,” he insisted. “One thing’s for sure—you’re in no shape to travel. You won’t be going back with Greg and Rebecca. You need to stay in Wellington for a while yet.”
“You need to stay in
hospital
for a while yet,” her father corrected.
Being the daughter of two doctors assured her of A-grade treatment anyway. But really, there was nothing much anyone could do—she needed rest, but little else.
However keen her parents were that she returned to Auckland with them, Christian was equally persuasive about her remaining with him so he could look after her.
“I’m off work for a while yet to care for Nicola,” he insisted. “Amy Houndsworth is coming in daily to clean and to cook the evening meal. There’s no point in taking either of you two away from important jobs.” He raised his voice as her father started to object. “I’ll make sure Fiona eats and has her check-ups. It’ll save her traveling while she’s so sore. What more will she need?”
Not much, it seemed. But as she lay uncomfortably in the hospital bed her thoughts returned again and again to the prospect of being cared for by the man she needed to stay away from. How would she manage? She could barely move yet. He’d be uncomfortably close. Temptingly close.
Although she knew what mustn’t happen between them, it was tempered by warm and guilty thankfulness she didn’t have to leave him yet...that maybe...no, it wasn’t possible. Of course it wasn’t. He was Jan’s, not hers.
Still, her brain whirled with private fantasies. Then she castigated herself for thinking such things and apologized silently to her beloved sister.
She made enough progress to be released from hospital two days later. Her parents flew home. And Christian arrived to take her back to recuperate in the huge house on the Roseneath cliff-top. The tables had been very neatly turned.
How strange. A few days ago he came up with every possible reason to get rid of me. Now it seems he’s moved heaven and earth to ensure I stay.
Her battered brain wasn’t up to solving conundrums like that.
Climbing from the hospital wheelchair into the plush leather-upholstered back seat of his Mercedes was hugely more difficult than she’d expected. The crutches they’d supplied put too much strain on her injured shoulders. Everything hurt—and in the end, Christian gritted his teeth and took over. He picked her up in his arms, and, apologizing for the pain he must be causing, set her down gently in the car.
Fiona didn’t feel a lot of pain.
Heat, yes. She felt she was somewhere as tropically hot and humid as Singapore instead of temperate breezy Wellington.
She felt his incredible strength for sure. Long strong arms, and shoulders bunched with hard muscle had lifted her and lowered her without effort.
She felt too close—definitely way too close!
She also felt she’d like to sneak a little kiss onto his beautiful stern mouth while it was so near to her own.
It’s the drugs. It
must
be the drugs
.
She was
on
drugs, wasn’t she?
Painkillers, of course. But they didn’t usually affect her like this. So it had to be the anesthetic. People sometimes had very funny reactions to anesthetics, didn’t they? But had she been anesthetized? Well no, perhaps not. She’d knocked herself out cold with no need for chemical intervention.
Ummm...
No better explanation than out-and-out lust occurred to her.
CHAPTER SIX
To her dismay, she had to concede a couple of days had weakened her resolve rather than strengthening it. Sitting behind him, propped on pillows and covered with a soft mohair blanket, she watched Christian in the rear-view mirror until his eyes meshed with hers. She flicked her gaze away, embarrassed to be caught inspecting him.
He drove his big silver Mercedes at an uncharacteristic crawl, being careful not to jar her bruised body.
“Okay?” he asked, gliding slowly around a corner.
“Fine.” She sneaked another peek at his mouth. A wide mouth with sharply defined edges. Just below a long straight nose. Just above a very determined chin.
A mouth that needed rescuing from its recent rather grim and sorrowful expression. She had plenty of ideas on how to do that but she wasn’t the right person to do it, no matter how much she might yearn to be.
“I’ve never been so well looked after in my life,” she added, feeling something else was called for.
He grunted, and she stifled a smile.
“You’re going straight to bed,” he added, catching her eye in the mirror again.
“I’ve had enough bed lately. Couldn’t I lie down on the window-seat with lots of cushions? Enjoy the view? Feel like part of the real world again?”
“I’m putting you to bed,” he said implacably. He gave her the fierce dark-eyed ‘don’t-mess-with-me’ stare he’d tried a few days ago when he was insisting she left. It hadn’t worked then, but Fiona didn’t have the energy to fight him now. She supposed she’d have to concede defeat, at least for today.
He
was putting her to bed?
The words crackled through her hazy brain as he drew up outside the house. She had a sudden vivid picture of him lifting her in his arms and laying her on cool sheets before he sank down beside her, black-coffee eyes holding hers.
More muscles... more heat... more ‘way too close’.
If only!
She saw the security gates were once-again functioning as their arrival activated the sensor. But the garage front remained a mess, and tradesmen had started on the huge clean-up job.
Christian parked as close to the house entrance as possible. She gazed in dismay at the destruction.
“How bad were your cars?”
“Better than I feared. Some new windscreens. Broken windows. There’s panel and paint damage to those in the front row. The ones right at the back fared better. We got them all out before the roof came down. I’ve already had my best men do a rush-job on the Merc. Could have been a hell of a lot worse.”
“Did they catch anyone yet?”
She saw his mouth flatten. “Two stupid country kids. With explosives intended for some rock-blasting on a river-bluff. One of them used to work for me. God knows what they thought they were playing at—or how they expected to end up with a car worth driving after blowing the garage door off.”
Fiona bit her lip.
“They were damned lucky they didn’t kill themselves,” he added. “They must have broken the side window of the garage and had things ready to go right before we got home. Maybe we panicked them. I’d be interested to know who told them the garage door couldn’t be opened from the inside, though.”
Her blood ran cold at how much worse things could have been. “What if they’d set it off when you and I were wheeling Nicola to the front door?”
Christian shook his head. “Doesn’t bear thinking about, does it? Just be glad it didn’t happen.”
“Oh Christian,” she murmured. “Thank God, thank God.”
She heard him expel all his breath in a gusty sigh. “Anyway the Police recovered the Jag. But the kids had given it hell. Misjudged a bend and went over a steep bank.”
“Not pretty?”
“Break your heart.”
“Joy-riders, I suppose?”
He nodded, mouth again a tight line. “They won’t get much joy if I get hold of them. Although I gather they’re banged-up worse than you are.”
“Justice of a kind, then?”
He shrugged, and pushed the driver’s door open. “Wait,” he said, in a tone that brooked no dispute.
Fiona bristled, but sat helplessly as he went to unlock the house. Even though there was access from the garage wing, it would be impossible to get through that way until the builders had finished.