Authors: Christina Crooks
“Right, then,” she muttered, beginning to clear away the blockage.
She stumbled when his hard body shoved hers to the side, but caught herself before falling. “Keep out of the way,” he commanded, large hands grabbing and throwing debris, clearing the trunks faster than she could have.
He uncovered destruction.
Ginnie inhaled sharply. One of the trunks had broken open, and the painstakingly wrapped and packed marionettes had spilled out. From where she stood, she could see one small, laboriously crafted puppet hand jutting from the crack in her basement’s foundation as if reaching for help.
At her sound of dismay, the man turned. “What now?” he snapped.
“I can see Little Jeffrey.”
He froze mid-throw. His voice was more low and dangerous than she’d yet heard it. “There’s a
kid
down here?”
“Not a kid.”
He turned around to face her fully. She blinked, the sight of his wine-colored sweater fitting a heartbreakingly broad chest, and those jeans encasing one strong, perfect-looking lower half distracting her momentarily. A movement drew her attention back up. His hand, filthy with the dirt and dust of her wrecked house, raked through dark brown hair. He left a smudge on his forehead.
“What, then? A pet?” He scanned the area around the trunks, impatient. “Where?”
Ginnie blinked again. “A special marionette.”
“A special marionette.” He blew his breath out in an exasperated whoosh. “We don’t have time for this conversation.” He turned his back, grabbed a trunk handle and lunged. He managed to slide one trunk out. Plaster rubble skidded off, hitting the hard floor with small thuds. The particleboard stayed wedged. It blocked access to the second, more damaged trunk.
A concrete block the size of a refrigerator had flattened a full quarter of the box. Shards of wood fanned out from underneath, pinched securely. Puppets and their broken body parts lay at awkward angles. Small, still victims of disaster.
Little Jeffrey’s hand seemed to summon her.
Before the man could object, she darted into the space where the first trunk had been. She grabbed Little Jeffrey’s meticulously crafted fingers and pulled him up, careful not to scrape his paint. Placing him safely to the side with one hand, she reached into the crack to see if any more marionettes needed rescuing. She saw none. Reaching, stretching her muscles until they ached, searching, she winced when thick trunk splinters drew blood. The block of concrete didn’t even budge.
“You’re lucky you weren’t killed by that,” her would-be rescuer said, stalking toward her. “Dumb luck. This house has always—”
Something crunched under his foot.
“No!” she shrieked, but it was too late.
He froze, looking down. “Uh oh.”
They both stared at the remains of Little Jeffrey.
He grimaced, lifted his foot. “Whoops.”
Her eyes were locked on her crushed marionette. “If it’s not too much trouble, take the closed trunk upstairs. Now, please.”
She raised her eyes to his. For a moment, he seemed about to apologize.
Then her house shifted with a deep groan. He moved fast, with more grace and speed than her old martial arts instructor, carrying the trunk before him up the stairs. After quickly filling her arms with as much as she could hold, she raced after him.
When she ascended to the hallway, she felt another bass thump beneath her feet, followed by a displacement of air that blew her hair sideways.
“Out. Now.”
This time she obeyed. She trod on his heels getting out the front door, down her porch steps and into the rain. He carried one trunk with difficulty.
He let it drop onto the sidewalk next to an Aston Martin. His, presumably.
She opened the wooden trunk, placed her own armload inside as gently as if it were roses inside a casket, then closed it before the rain could damage things more.
At the sound of wrenching wood and plaster, they both turned to stare at her home.
The steeply pitched roof sagged, opening a gaping dark canyon that bisected her kitchen. One wall tilted to an unlikely angle, jagged holes appearing where its double-hung window had torn free, one windowsill jutting up like a broken tooth. The chimney had vanished.
“Get in the car.”
She looked at him doubtfully, though the rain still pounded. The car would be welcome shelter.
He looked at her with exasperation. She began to think it was probably his usual expression. “I won’t hurt you.”
“How’d you get into my house?”
He jangled his keys in front of her, clearly impatient, and nodded to the car. “I’m getting in,” he announced. “You do what you want.”
So he was her landlord? He seemed far too arrogant, too handsome, rich and confident to be a mere landlord. It had been a woman who’d shown her the place and initiated the paperwork. And another woman who’d answered the phone when Ginnie had called for repairs—repairs she never got. Maybe this handsome man was those women’s boss at the company? Ginnie shrugged, opened the door, slid inside. “I’m ruining your seats.”
“Damn the seats.” He inserted a key into the ignition, turned it. He looked at her, then cranked up the car’s heat. “Are you okay?” The man touched her shoulder. “You look…”
Ginnie knew how she must look. Probably almost as good as she felt.
She peered out the side window. The rain had eased up. She focused on one of the small iron rings set in the sidewalk. The neighborhood was so old it used to accommodate horses. The house probably hadn’t been repaired since before the cars replaced the horses. She was lucky to be alive.
She waited until she felt capable of speech. Then she straightened her shoulders and extended her hand to him. He enclosed it with a warm grip that seemed to impart much-needed strength to her.
She felt an answering heat surge through her body that owed nothing to the car’s efficient heater. She smiled up at him. “You saved my life, I’m pretty sure. Thanks. My name’s Ginnie. Oh, I guess as the landlord, you knew my name already.”
She looked at him expectantly. He stared back. She could almost hear the click as her gaze locked with his. The spark of interest in his eyes warmed her. His grasp lingered too long.
She tilted her head, fascinated and feeling more than a little giddy. All the stress, she told herself. “You know…there’s an old Chinese proverb that says if you save a life, you’re linked to it forever.”
Harry stared at Ginnie. Linked to her life forever? Her direct gaze distracted him. What was she talking about, linked to her? Her tilted head gave her a severely flirtatious look, especially with her reddish-brown curls sticking wetly to her too-thin sweater. He glanced down her body, just long enough to verify her seductive shape. One of her shoes had come off.
Her hazel eyes glinted with humor.
She’d been joking about the linked-to-her-forever comment, of course.
He’d like to be linked to her, he suddenly realized with a surge of heat. Just not forever, and certainly not just by the hand.
He withdrew his hand, the air in the car chilly compared to her warm palm. “You’re welcome.” For the life of him, he couldn’t figure out what to make of her. Or what to say. Unusual. She was a ditz, risking them both the way she had. She was also cute, distractingly so, actually, and he didn’t need that particular complication.
He glanced at her body, just to check.
She had “complication” written all over her.
“I believe my link with you ends…” He checked his platinum Rolex, waterproof thank God, “…right about now. Glad to have met you, Ginnie. Where can I drop you off? Do you want me to call someone for you?” Harry reached for his cell phone.
He almost made it. Her feather-light touch stopped him. “I don’t have anyone. No money. Nothing valuable except my puppets. And there’s an ex-fiancé who’s probably on his way back to stalk me some more since the rain let up. He was stomping around on my roof. I think he was trying to scare me.”
The protectiveness and anger that flashed through him took him by surprise. Someone was stalking her? Unacceptable.
He stared at her, having trouble imagining her scared. She’d handled her home falling in pretty well, all things considered.
“There has to be someone. Everyone has someone.” Except him, but she didn’t need to know that. His solitude was by choice, and he certainly had the means to take care of himself. “Look, I have to drop you somewhere.”
“I heard Portland is a pretty good city for homeless people. Soup lines and shelters.” Ginnie smiled, an uncertain quirk of the lips. Her eyes sparkled. It had better not be tears.
She spoke of the city as if she was new to it. Maybe she truly didn’t have anyone.
His need to return to his isolation tugged at him. But he couldn’t move. Harry felt a stab of lust at the way her sweater tightened over her chest. It didn’t, however, keep him from noticing the unnatural brightness in her eyes, or the tremor in her voice. Or the way she leaned a little too heavily on her armrest. “I just don’t want to abandon my gear. The puppets,” she clarified in a pained, soft voice.
His heart thudded once, hard. She looked so hot, and so lost. And there was a stalker after her too? He glanced past her, at the house. The rental was demolished. Had it hurt her when it came down? He spoke gently. “Were you injured?”
She looked down for a few long moments, as if considering her physical state for the first time. She kicked off her remaining shoe. When she met his gaze again, her eyes showed no trace of tears.
“My knee’s weird.” He watched her bend her right leg. She flinched, then laughed, bewildered. “I don’t remember hurting it. I remember my arm being trapped, though. And then you slapping me.”
“I didn’t slap you. Well, okay, I did, but—”
“Slapped me awake. Lifted that beam like Superman. Saved my life.” She looked at him.
“I’m not Superman.” Harry wasn’t at all comfortable with the way she was looking at him. “If you’re feeling better now…”
“I think I might be in shock. Look.” She lifted her arm, pulled back her sleeve to reveal an ugly red weal seeping droplets of blood. He could see the flesh around it darkening. She would have a hell of a bruise. Her fingers trembled slightly, as if she were cold.
Or in shock.
“I should take you to a hospital.”
“All I need’s some antibiotic ointment and a bandage.” She looked at him hopefully.
“I have some in my upstairs bathroom at home. I’ll have to check, but it’s been awhile since—” He cut himself off. He would accomplish nothing by telling her his life story. Or by describing the layout of his house. Or by taking her home. What the hell was he thinking?
Directing a pointed look at her, he asked, “Seriously. Is there someone I can call? I’ll be happy to phone your family. I can take you to them.”
She just looked at him with a strange, sad smile.
“A friend? A colleague?”
“There’s no one local. I know the telephone numbers to literally no one here. I just got a job a few days ago. I only moved from California last month. Well, there’s the property manager who rented me that house. But I don’t really want to talk to her right now.”
Harry gazed at the ruins of the house. “Can’t say I blame you.” The reminder of the irresponsible property manager he’d fired stirred feelings of guilt. He should’ve kept a better eye on the company. He’d spent too much time up there in that catbird seat. Too much time alone and aloof.
When he didn’t say anything else, she seemed to draw herself inward, contracting. The evidence of a protective shell surrounding such a forthright woman piqued his interest. She was a complex one, all right. And really cute. And no boyfriend. Not that it was relevant, of course.
She scooped up her single shoe. “If you don’t want to help me, I’ll manage.” She grabbed at the edge of the seat, as if lightheaded. “Whoa. Sparkles.”
He had a vivid mental image of her getting out of his car only to tumble right back down onto the sidewalk in a faint. Breaking her neck. Suing him. She might already have grounds for a lawsuit. He’d have to consult his legal department. He could afford it, of course, but didn’t enjoy being sued.
He
really
wouldn’t enjoy watching this woman crack her silly head open. With a curse, he revved the engine and whipped the steering wheel to the left in a tight and illegal U-turn. “My house is nearby. I’ll patch you up, then we’ll figure out where you’ll stay, and it won’t be with me.”
“My puppets!” Her hand clutched glass. “We can’t leave them there!”
“I’ll use the truck to pick them up. That wood trunk will fit on my porch. As I said, my house is nearby.”
“My hero,” Ginnie told him while still clutching her shoe. He could hear the smile in her voice.
He snorted his exasperation. She’d manipulated him as neatly as any scheming woman. She started by squeezing his nuts in her basement! And now this latest display of getting him to do what she wanted. He was beginning to remember why he’d chosen to remain alone and aloof.
At least her dangerous hands were occupied, now.
She sat as still and obedient as a schoolgirl.
He remembered how warm and right her body had felt in his arms.
Harry felt something in him loosen, even as new dread and misgivings raced up and down his spine, settling in his stomach. What was he doing, taking her home with him? For more than a year, his humble home’s secret location had kept him out of the prying public eye. He was bringing her to his only unviolated shield against the greedy world, and he was doing it because she’d played him like one of her puppets.
As soon as he patched her up, he was tossing her out on her dirt-streaked butt.
Her handsome rescuer helped her inside only to push her unceremoniously onto a couch. The moment her grimy hands touched the whisper-soft material covering it, she froze.
As a connoisseur of material, from the rarest European velvet stage curtains to regional tailored silks from India to clothe her marionettes, she knew shoddy from fine. The couch she sat on was the finest. Expensive. And cream-colored?
Too late. She brushed at dirt and blood streaks surreptitiously.
“Don’t bother.” Her landlord circled the metal-studded dark leather recliner diagonal from her, his eyes taking in every movement she made. “Lie back. Relax.” He looked anything but relaxed himself.