This Perfect Stranger. Barbara Ankrum
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу This Perfect Stranger - Barbara Ankrum страница 8

Название: This Perfect Stranger

Автор: Barbara Ankrum

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Зарубежные детективы

Серия:

isbn:

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ “I never said that.”

      “Well, that puts you miles ahead of the competition.”

      “Competition?”

      “Never mind.”

      She turned and he knew he’d said something wrong. Dammit.

      “No, wait. Mrs. Cortland. I may be a little outta practice, but I think I just stepped on your toes. I’m…sorry.”

      Maggie turned around, her expression thawing as she hugged herself with her arms. She exhaled slowly. “No, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to— It’s been a bad day. You have nothing to do with that.”

      “Look—” He stared down at a callus on his hand. “Maybe I should just go.”

      “No, don’t. I mean…” She pressed her hands together and he had the oddest feeling that what he’d heard in her voice was desperation. “What I mean is, I still have to feed you. You did say you’d stay for lunch? Right?”

      Her eyes had gone dark. Not desperation. Fear. Not of him, but of something. Like a child scared of being alone in the dark, afraid the boogyman would come out of her closet.

      He shouldn’t care, he told himself.

      No, make that, he didn’t care.

      He couldn’t afford to get involved with this woman’s troubles. He had enough of his own. But something about her—maybe it was her stubborn pride—made him want to tell her that everything would be all right. Hold her against him until the worry melted from her eyes.

      Hell.

      As if he could. As if he had it in him to try. She was a means to an end. That’s all. She’d offered him food and he’d take it and go. Simple. Clean.

      No fuss, no muss. That was his motto. And he’d damned well better stick with it if he was ever going to—

      “Why don’t you come in and wash up,” she said, before he could finish his thought. Turning abruptly, she headed toward the house. “I hope you don’t mind chicken. I thought I’d fry it.”

      Chicken? His mouth watered instantly at the very sound of the word and his empty belly growled.

      No fuss, no muss, he thought, falling in behind her with all the self-restraint of a back-door dog.

      Yeah, right.

      Chapter 3

      Four hours and a dozen chores later, Maggie stood in her doorway holding the glass of lemonade she’d poured for Cain, watching him wield an axe over the ancient limb of the oak that had fallen across her yard in the last storm. She hadn’t asked him to do it. He’d insisted. Something about paying her back for the chicken and biscuits she’d fixed him.

      She allowed herself a smile, remembering how he’d devoured the meal she’d made him. She suspected that it had been more than a couple of days since his last full meal. It made her wonder about him. A drifter, but not like any drifter she’d ever known. What had brought him to this? Where had he been and what had happened to him?

      It was none of her business, of course, and she settled for the fact that she had, in a small way, repaid the debt she owed him for saving her life. How odd, she thought, that it could give her such pleasure, such a simple, old-fashioned thing as watching a man sate his hunger with her cooking. It made her feel useful. Necessary.

      But now, as the rhythmic sound of the axe echoed across the shadow-drawn yard, she realized that “necessary” didn’t adequately describe what she was feeling as she watched him. She felt her pulse skitter and told herself she shouldn’t stare. But with his back to her, she indulged herself.

      Where Ben had been compact, Cain’s build was lean and powerful. The muscles in his back and arms bunched and flexed as he hefted the axe over his head and brought it down hard against the ancient wood. There was a controlled violence to the way he dismantled that limb. Piece by piece. Stroke by stroke. The only break in his rhythm had come when he’d paused to add the chopped wood into a neat and growing pile that stood now to his left.

      He was thinner than he’d been once. She could see that in the way his jeans fit—loose and low on his hips—and in the definition of his ribs. But whatever muscle mass he’d lost to hunger was more than compensated for by the sleek, animal-like grace with which he moved.

      It wasn’t so much an economy of motion, she decided, studying him, as it was a deliberateness. She wondered absently where a man like him learned that kind of self-containment. And what in his past that had taught him to always watch his back.

      Almost as if he’d heard her thought, he stopped chopping, catching sight of her watching him. Jigger, who’d been lying in the shade watching Cain, too, lifted his big, dark head and thumped his tail happily against the damp soil in greeting.

      “You’ve got quite a rapt audience,” she told Cain.

      “He’s just keepin’ an eye on me.” Cain wiped the sweat from his face with the back of his wrist and reached for his black T-shirt. “That for me?” he asked, indicating the lemonade.

      She pushed away from the door and started toward him. “I thought you might be thirsty.”

      He tugged his T-shirt on, then took the glass from her and guzzled down the contents in four serious gulps. Maggie stared, unable to take her eyes off him, or off the stray rivulet of moisture trickling down his chin.

      He gave a sigh of satisfaction and dragged a forearm slowly across his mouth, all the while watching her. “Thanks.”

      She swallowed hard. Lord, what was wrong with her?

      Taking the empty glass, she fixed her gaze on the stack of wood. “You must have been a Boy Scout once.”

      “Nope. My old man never believed in team player mentality,” he said, stroking the old oak handle of the axe as though he was prepared to tolerate her interruption politely. “Whacked apart my share of tree limbs, though.”

      “I’ll bet. Grow up on a farm?”

      He tossed a look in her direction. “Ranch.”

      Ah. “That must account for the laconic cowboy conversationalist you’ve become.”

      He grinned, staring off at the sun as it settled between the peaks of the Bitterroots. “You wanna talk? Or you want me to chop up this limb?”

      She hugged herself against the chill beginning to settle in the air. Maggie glanced at the sinking sun, too, remembering how many sunsets she’d watched alone lately. “It’ll be dark soon.”

      His gaze slid to her. If another man had ever made her feel utterly naked with one look before, she couldn’t remember it. “You know,” she began, “I really…appreciate what you’ve done here, but you don’t have to finish.”

      “I said I would.”

      “I mean, it’s a big limb and when you volunteered you didn’t even know my chain saw was broken and now I really owe you so much more than a chicken dinner for all that you’ve done СКАЧАТЬ