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Authors: Unknown
quietly alert, and where someone had hit him by the mouth there was a shadow that was
darker than the short growth of beard. 'What about you?'
He brushed the enquiry aside impatiently, exploring the bump past the edge of her
hairline. 'Don't worry about me.'
She hadn't foreseen the end of her fuse, but Francis had just lit it. The inside of her head
exploded. 'Fine, that's great to know for the next time, isn't it? I'll know better than to
worry, won't I? It's rather nice to know what to expect, if you're going to throw punches
like there's no tomorrow! Whatever possessed you?'
He considered her steadily, the evidence of strain and the remnant of fear still dilating
her grey eyes, the shock and the upset she was bitterly trying to control. He slid his
hands to her neck and began to massage where the tendons stood against the thin
delicate skin, and he said with quiet simplicity, 'The man pushed you down. It made me
mad. I lost my temper, when the first sight of trouble in places like that can make them
flare like tinderboxes. I didn't think fast enough to the consequences. No excuses.'
Her eyes wavered and fell at the unexpected scope of his honesty, and with a sigh the
tension flowed out of her. 'That man was hellbent on destruction. There was simply no
reasoning with him, so I don't really think you could have stopped it from happening,'
she muttered. 'I shouldn't have yelled at you. It's just that—you really scared me,
Francis.'
'I
scared
you?'
With a groan he hauled her against his chest, holding her fiercely and
shaking his head over her, for all the world as if she were some newfound precious chick
and he the clucking hen. 'You frightened the daylights out of me! When I got outside and
found you weren't there, I was frantic to get back inside! How did you get past me?'
'I didn't,' she told him, her voice muffled against his chest. She abandoned pretence and
common sense and buried her face in the vital comfort. 'I got pushed out of a side exit
and came up behind you.'
A heavy sigh shook his chest. With one hand he reached for the interior light and flicked
it off. When Kirstie glanced up, Francis was studying the street for signs of disturbance,
scenting the air like a hound. At her movement he brought one hand up and stroked her
hair absently. 'We should go,' he said finally. 'It isn't safe here. I'll take you back to my
place.'
She stirred at that suggestion, disturbed at the thought of his elegant empty apartment.
'No,' she replied slowly, bringing her wristwatch up. 'It's late. You'd better take me home
instead.'
His green eyes came back to her speculatively. 'You need an ice-pack for your sore
cheek.'
She couldn't look at him. 'I can fix one at home.'
'We still haven't really talked.'
'I know.' She pushed herself upright and his arms fell away. 'But I—I'm too tired to face
it tonight.'
There was a little silence that went on too long. She turned, stared down the length of
the darkened pavement.
'I'll call you next week.'
'Fine. That's fine.'
He tried to see her expression, wouldn't leave it alone. 'You will come?'
Kirstie made a gesture which felt so awkward that she tucked her arm close to her side
right afterwards. 'I don't know why.'
'Don't you?' he asked oddly, and she sent a furtive sideways glance at his impassive face.
With an unsmiling shrug, he reached forward and started the engine.
The trip back to Montclair was silent. Kirstie rode with her head back on the rest,
lethargic after the unexpected stresses of the evening. Francis was preoccupied,
concentrating on the road with a frown. He seemed so thoroughly self-contained as to be
unapproachable, and she wondered if she should say something and, if so, what it would
be.
There were so many things she wanted to ask, but it wasn't the time or the place, and she
certainly didn't have the right. When they turned on to her street and pulled up by the
house, she looked at him across the widening gulf between them and knew it was
insurmountable.
'I'll call you,' he said. She gave a little nod, while wondering if he would. And at the last
he reached forward and touched her sore cheek with a gentleness that brought a wet
sheen to her eyes.
She knew she couldn't reply without making an utter fool of herself, so instead she just
turned and got out of the car. All her thoughts were behind her with the man in the silver
BMW that purred down the street into the night. That was why she never saw the twitch
of a curtain at the lit front window, or the shadow of the woman that moved away.
CHAPTER EIGHT
THERE was no sign of Louise when Kirstie let herself quietly into the house. She breathed
a silent word of thanks, negotiated her way around the squeaky third stair from the top
of the staircase and locked herself in the bathroom.
A quick study of her reflection assured her that, though her cheek was a bit swollen and
red, it wouldn't necessarily bruise. She stripped off all her clothing, turned on the shower
and stepped into it with a long-drawn-out sigh.
The hot, steamy water jetted down on her slim body, washing away all the accumulated
aches and tension. After working overtime for most of the evening, her numb mind
refused to work any more, and like an automaton she soaped all over, rinsed, and dried
off.
With the towel wrapped around her sarong-fashion, she slipped out of the bathroom and
into her bedroom, sparing a quick glance at Louise's closed door. It looked as if at least
some measure of luck was with her. She could afford to relax and not worry about what
tomorrow would bring. Kirstie drew an oversized nightshirt over her damp body and,
without even bothering to comb her tangled hair, she fell into bed and slept like the
dead.
The morning came far too early. Kirstie surfaced out of a murky dream to the sound of
someone knocking on her bedroom door. She rolled over, stretched and groaned at the
protest of stiff muscles. Her cheek where it pressed into her pillow was tender. So too
was the top of her head when she ran her fingers through her hair.
'What do you want?' she croaked.
'Good morning!' called Louise cheerily. 'I'm cooking breakfast and wanted to know how
many eggs you could eat!'
'None!' The thought of food made her stomach distinctly unhappy, and she huddled into
a ball under her blankets. 'I don't want any breakfast. Thanks anyway.'
'Oh, come on, Kirstie! I've already got the bacon cooking, and coffee made. You'll wake
up after you've had a cup. I'll go get you one.'
For whatever reason, Louise was not about to let her pretend that Saturday hadn't come
and, lacking the strength for any more shouted arguments, Kirstie gave in. She cleared
her throat and called out resignedly, 'No, don't bother. I'll be downstairs in a few
minutes.'
'Good,' said Louise with, satisfaction. 'See you then.'
Having committed herself, Kirstie swung her feet to the floor and sat on the edge of the
bed, yawning. She glanced at her clock and found to her horror that it was just eight-
thirty in the morning.
Then, as she shook off the last remnants of sleep, she sat still under the first wave of
cold, clear thought. What in the world was Louise doing up at eight-thirty? Her sister
was a habitual late riser on the weekends, and for that reason alone rarely cooked
breakfast as it was usually lunchtime before she was hungry. Kirstie went to wash her
face and then pulled on jeans and a sweatshirt, to the tune of alarm tells ringing caution
in her head.
Downstairs in the kitchen, Kirstie found Louise humming under her breath as she
buttered a piece of toast. The older woman looked enchanting wrapped in a pale pink
dressing-gown with a ruffled collar, her golden curls tumbling from a carelessly used
rubber band. 'Coffee coming up in a moment,' she said, as Kirstie eased into a chair at
the table. Louise turned and briskly set the toast in front of her,, along with an empty
mug into which she poured the steaming aromatic brew.
'Thanks,' muttered Kirstie with a sarcasm she was sure her sister wouldn't catch. She
pushed away her toast and took her mug to sip at it delicately.
Louise brought to the table a plate full of bacon and scrambled eggs and took the seat
opposite her. 'It's a beautiful morning,' she said. 'Have you seen it?'
Kirstie shook her head. 'No, I was too busy sleeping.'
'Ah,' nodded her sister. She took a bite of toast and watched Kirstie sharply. 'Late night,
was it?'
Kirstie almost smiled. So that was the reason for the breakfast and expansive mood.
Louise was curious about where she was last night and wanted to pump her for
information. 'Something like that,' she agreed.
'Did you go out all by yourself?'
The question seemed innocuous enough, but Kirstie was too wise to fall into that trap,
and leaving her car in the driveway was a clear indicator otherwise. She ignored the
question and asked one of her own. 'Were you in last night? I didn't think to check.'
There was a silence. 'Yes,' replied her sister.
Kirstie affected remorse. 'If we'd known, you could have come out with us. I went into
New York with a friend of a friend. We didn't do anything exciting, just ended up at the
cinema.'
Louise stabbed another piece of egg without looking up. 'Do I know the man?'
'I'm not sure you do,' replied Kirstie quietly.
Louise's lips thinned into a humourless smile, her blue eyes cold. 'Gallivanting around
New York with a mystery man in tow,' she said lightly. 'If you're not careful, you could
make me jealous.'
So she suspected, but didn't know for sure. Having Louise as an enemy was a startling
and sobering thought. Kirstie raised her eyebrows and replied, just as lightly, 'I stand
warned.'
By Wednesday Francis still hadn't called, which was no more than she had expected.
Kirstie kept very busy, very reasonable, and struggled with her temper which was
unaccountably volatile. The tourist business was running strong throughout the summer
months. She patiently ferried a rich Texan and his beautiful, spoiled wife around the
New York sights and at the end of the day walked into the central offices of Philips
Aviation with a fifty-dollar tip tucked in the back pocket of her jeans.
'How did it go?' asked Paul when she reported back at his office.
'Well enough, I suppose,' sighed Kirstie, as she rubbed at her tired eyes.
Her older brother looked nothing like his blond siblings, favouring their father's side of
the family with straight brown hair, pleasant if unremarkable features and a steady,
unimaginative disposition. He leaned back in his chair and frowned. 'Were they happy
with the tour?'
'I think so, at least as happy as that pair will ever be. They quarrelled most of the time. I
have the distinct impression that I was given conscience money at the end,' she told him
with a grimace. 'I'm through for the day, so I might as well go home.'
'Fine. See you tomorrow.' Then, as Kirstie turned to leave, Paul said suddenly, 'Wait a
minute. There's a message for you somewhere. I think I have it here on my desk.'
Kirstie froze and inwardly cursed the sudden hammering of her heart. She watched as
her brother seemed to take an inordinate amount of time searching through his pile of
papers, to emerge with a crumpled slip which he held out to her. She snatched at it and
looked at the telephone number written in Paul's large clear script. 'Is that all? Didn't he
leave a message?'
'He?' repeated Paul. 'It wasn't a man, it was a woman. Did I forget to write her name
down? Helen, I think it was.'
Just as she cursed her wild excitement, so she swore at the leaden sense of
disappointment that dragged her mood into depression. Kirstie kept her gaze on the
paper for a long moment until she got herself under control, then said flatly, 'I don't
know any Helen.'
'Well, give her a call anyway before you leave. It's probably business.'
Kirstie found that the office that Paul's secretary used was empty, so she dialled for an
outside line and punched in the number on the slip. After getting an engaged signal on
three tries, she gave up, stuffed the number in her pocket and left for home.
That evening she curled into a ball on the couch and watched a weepy movie while
eating through the contents of a box of chocolates. Louise breezed out of the house at
around seven o'clock, so she knew she could enjoy at least a few hours of solitary peace.
She told herself she'd had a good day. She tried to feel pleased at the prospect of
spending her fifty dollars. She had just decided to skip the end of the movie and go to
bed when the phone in the kitchen shrilled.
Kirstie fell off the couch and ran to answer it. 'Hello?' she said breathlessly before she
had the receiver to her ear.
'Did I catch you at a bad time?' murmured familiar deep tones.
Francis. She caught her breath, found her voice and lied, 'No, I—was just walking