Once the dirt and blood were wiped away, Lourdes couldn’t deny his appeal. Even with a swollen eye, a split lip and discoloration from the bruises, he was remarkably handsome.
Cáco handed her a fresh washcloth. “Finish bathing him, and I’ll tend to the rest of his medicine.”
After her surrogate grandmother left the room, Lourdes sat on the edge of the bed. He made a rough sound, a low masculine groan, as she sponged his neck and worked the damp washcloth over his chest, unintentionally arousing his nipples.
She inhaled a shaky breath and took care to bathe his stomach. It revealed a ripple of muscle, a line of hair below his navel and the horrible marks where he’d been pounded or kicked.
“I’m sorry someone hurt you,” she said, wondering if he knew how intimately he’d touched her cheek. If he’d meant for her to feel that tingly connection.
He didn’t respond. Instead the mysterious stranger closed his eyes and slept, leaving her with the echo of a rapidly beating heart.
And the image of her most prized possession blazing against dark, dangerous skin.
Hours later, after completing her chores on the ranch, Lourdes prepared the family meal.
Aside from modern appliances, the kitchen reflected vintage charm. She supposed the old place was a bit eclectic, with its unusual style. The house had been built in the ’40s and remodeled in the ’70s, and both decades melded together in a hodgepodge of warm woods, gold-and-green tiles and crystal doorknobs.
She seared pork chops and added grated cheese to a big pot of elbow macaroni, making her daughters’ favorite dish.
Cáco came in and drew her attention. The old woman placed an empty cup in the sink. Lourdes knew she’d fixed a coral root tea for her patient to drink, along with a comfrey poultice for his bruises. Cáco acquired herbs from suppliers all over the country, keeping whatever she needed on hand.
“How is he?” Lourdes asked.
“Confused,” the older woman answered. “But that’s to be expected. He mumbled some nonsense for a while, then went back to sleep.”
Lourdes leaned against the counter. “We should call the sheriff.”
“What for?”
“To report what happened to him.”
Cáco washed her hands and dried them on a paper towel. Her bun had come loose, and now her bound hair dangled softly on the back of her head. Silver discs danced in her ears, spinning two carefully engraved bear paws.
“We don’t know what happened to him,” she finally said.
Lourdes turned to stir the macaroni and cheese. “He was beaten.”
“Yes, he was.” The old woman began mixing a ranch dressing for the salad. “But he was meant to come here. To find you. To return the necklace.” She lifted her head, her dark eyes glittering. “And we’re meant to help him. To be here when he needs us.”
Lourdes wanted to argue, but she couldn’t. Cáco often knew things, sensed things that left other people with goose bumps. Of course that didn’t make her an all-wise, all-knowing Indian. Sometimes she twisted logic and made life seem more supernatural than it was.
Cáco’s superstitions ran deep. She refused to gaze in a mirror when the sky thundered, fearful lightning would look in and strike her. She’d tied crow feathers to the twins’ cribs when they were babies to protect them from evil influences. Cáco had insisted on either that or a taxidermy-stuffed bat to watch over the girls.
Lourdes had agreed to the feathers.
She looked up to find Cáco staring at her.
Okay. Fine. A stranger had appeared out of the blue, wearing a piece of Lourdes’s heart.
“I won’t call the sheriff,” she found herself saying. She wouldn’t let the authorities intervene. Not yet. Not while the man was still under Cáco’s care.
“Good.” The stubborn old woman’s lips twitched into a triumphant smile. She liked getting her way.
Lourdes added a little water to the pork chops, making them sizzle. Her skin had sizzled, too. Heated from his touch. “He’ll probably want to contact the police on his own.”
“Maybe.” Cáco blended the salad dressing with a whisk. “And maybe not. We shouldn’t push him. He needs to rest.”
Already the old woman had become possessive of the injured stranger, protecting him as if he were one of her own. But Lourdes had expected as much.
“Mama?” a small voice said.
Lourdes turned to see her daughters standing in the doorway. Her beautiful girls, with their long, tawny hair and root beer-brown eyes. They held hands, as they often did, clutching each other the way they must have done in the womb.
Nina, the chatterbox, and Paige, the observer. Sometimes they conversed in an odd guttural language, words only the two of them understood.
They probably wouldn’t have minded being watched over by a stuffed bat.
“Can we see the sick man?” Nina asked.
Lourdes wanted to gather her inquisitive little chicks and hug them close, shield them from what had been done to the stranger, but keeping them away from him would only make them more curious.
She glanced at Cáco for approval and received a silent nod in response. Then a word of caution.
“Try not to wake him.”
Nina’s eyes grew big and innocent. “We’ll be quiet.” She turned to her sister. “Won’t we?”
Paige bobbed her head, and as Lourdes led them to the guest room, both girls walked with an exaggerated tiptoe, proving how quiet they could be.
Their silence didn’t last.
They gasped when they saw him, sleeping amid his bruises.
“He has lots of ow-ees,” Nina said.
“Yes, he does.” Lourdes gazed at Cáco’s patient. He lay on his side, one long leg exposed, the other tangled within the sheet. He held a pillow next to his body, the way a man might hold a woman he intended to keep.
Gently, possessively.
Suddenly her skin grew warm, and she longed to touch him, to feel the impression the silver cross made against his chest.
What impression?
The necklace wasn’t a brand. And for now, it was hidden, trapped against the pillow in his arms.
“Did somebody hurt him, Mama?” Paige, the observer, asked.
“Yes.”
“Who?”
“I don’t know.”
Paige and Nina moved forward. Lourdes tried to stop them, but the children slipped past.
The four-year-olds stood for a moment, just staring at the stranger, then they reached out and patted his hair, giving him the kind of comfort they liked to receive.
Lourdes’s eyes went misty. Her girls had never known a father. There were no important men in their lives, no one to offer masculine guidance.
Of course the louse who’d sired them wouldn’t have fit the bill. Gunther Jones had been a criminal and a convict, a drug addict and a thief.
And what kind of man are you? she wanted to ask the sleeping stranger.
Maybe he was married. Maybe he had a wife and children, a family who loved him, who wondered and worried why he hadn’t come home.
She glanced at his left hand, at the absence of a ring. Then again, maybe he was single. Or divorced. Or—
What? A criminal? A thief?
I should call the sheriff, she thought.
But she’d promised Cáco that she wouldn’t.
“Come on,” she said to the twins, drawing them away from the bed. “It’s time to eat.”
She prodded her daughters out the door, then stopped to look back at the man.
The handsome intruder was already weaving his way into her life.
Two
Something went bump in the night. Battling sleep, Lourdes glanced at the clock—2:46 a.m.
Another bump sent her reaching for her robe. The house might be old, with creaking floors and rattling windows, but she recognized human footsteps when she heard them.
Belting her robe, she crept to her door and peered out.
The shadowy figure co
ming down the hall stood tall and broad-shouldered.
Was he sleepwalking?
She blew out a breath and prepared to guide him back to bed. She’d read somewhere not to awaken a sleepwalker, not to alarm the person into consciousness.
Would it be all right to talk?
Probably not.
Silent, she headed toward him, stopped and took his arm. He wasn’t a shadowy figure anymore. He was solid and real, his muscles strong and hard beneath her fingers.
“Can’t find the bathroom.”
She started at the sound of his voice. “You’re awake?”
“Gotta pee.”
Oh, my. “Okay. But you’re going the wrong way.” Still holding his arm, she turned him around. He didn’t seem particularly steady on his feet, and she was too concerned to let go.
“It’s here. This door.” She put his hand on the wood, guiding him as if he were blind. Could he do this by himself? Lord, she hoped so. “Are you going to be all right?”
“Know how to use the bathroom,” he muttered. “Not a kid.”
No, he was a grown man, struggling to find the doorknob. “Maybe a bedpan would be better for now.” Not that they had one lying around, waiting for this opportunity to present itself. “Or a bucket,” she added, deciding Cáco had probably placed a basin of some sort near his bed. The older woman wouldn’t have left something like that to chance.
“No bedpan. No bucket.” He pushed the door open and fumbled for the light switch.
She turned it on for him, blasting them with a hundred-watt bulb.
He squinted, and she noticed the glazed look in his eyes. He had no idea where he was or who he was talking to. All he knew, apparently, was that his bladder was full.
He zigzagged into the bathroom, then closed the door with a resounding click.
Lourdes stood by nervously, not wanting to listen, but knowing she had to. In case he tripped and stumbled. Bashed his head against the sink.
She heard the telltale sound and breathed a sigh of relief. Of course, it wasn’t a very consistent sound, making her wonder if his aim was off. After a long pause, the toilet flushed. Then running water. Even in his confused state, he’d managed to wash his hands. Habit, she supposed.
He opened the door and stared at her.
She reached for his arm. “I’ll take you back to your room. But next time, I think you should use a bedpan.” Or one of those plastic bottles designed for his gender, she thought. The pharmacy probably stocked them.
“No bedpan,” he told her.
“Stubborn man,” she said.
“Stubborn woman,” he parroted.
Lourdes couldn’t help but smile. Never in a million years could she have imagined engaging in a conversation like this one, with a stranger no less.
His room was dark, so she turned on a night-light. He made a beeline for his bed, climbed in and pulled the sheet to his waist. He’d kicked away the rest of the covers, she noticed.
Was he still feverish?
She decided not to jam a thermometer under his tongue. Instead she pressed a hand to his forehead.
“You’re a little cooler, but still warm.” She reached for the pitcher on the nightstand and filled his glass, which already contained a straw. “Do you want some water?”
He shook his head. “Who are you?”
“Lourdes.”
“Like the place in France?”
“Yes.”
“Are you a dream?”
“No. I’m real.”
She picked up the water he’d refused, encouraging him to drink. He sipped from the straw and winced. Not from the taste, she suspected, but from the nasty cut on his lip.
“Will you lie down with me?”
Her heart jumped, pounding triple time. “I can’t. I have my own room.”
“Will you kiss me?”
Heaven help her. “Your lip is split.” Had he already forgotten the pain?
He made a face. “This is a crummy dream.”
She set his water down, realizing the glass was sweating in her hand.
“I have a headache,” he said suddenly. Tilting his head, he measured her with swollen, glassy eyes. “Sorry. That should have been your line.”
Lourdes nearly laughed. In spite of his concussion, he had a sense of humor.
“You should go back to sleep,” she told him.
“I’m already asleep. Can’t dream when you’re awake.”
Oh, but you could, she thought.
Of course, she never did. She was too busy to daydream, to create fantasies in her mind. Her life consisted of hard, strong doses of reality.
A horse farm she could barely keep afloat.
“Good night,” she said, rising to shut off the light.
“Lourdes?”
She turned, surprised to hear her name in his rough timbre. “Yes?”
“Are you sure you can’t lie down with me?”
She smiled. She shouldn’t have, but she did. He was quite the charmer.
“Yes, I’m sure,” she said, wondering how much of this he would remember in the morning. “I’ll bring you breakfast.” She glanced at the clock. “When it’s light out.”
Just to see if he recalled that the lady named Lourdes wasn’t a dream.
The aroma of fresh-perked coffee, frying eggs and bacon sizzling and snapping on the grill wafted through the air.
Lourdes followed the glorious scent and found Cáco in the kitchen, where she bustled around the stove in an oversize dress and a tidy bun.
“Good morning.” Cáco stopped bustling long enough to pour a cup of coffee and hand it to Lourdes.
“’Morning. Thank you.” Lourdes added a nondairy powdered creamer. She never used milk. She liked her coffee piping hot, and diluting it with another liquid defeated the purpose.
She’d dressed for a long day on the farm, donning jeans and boots and clipping her dark blond hair back with a huge barrette. Already she’d called a friend who’d offered to loan her a ranch hand until she could find someone permanent.
Lourdes was picky about who worked for her. With only women and children in her household, she wasn’t willing to take chances.
Yet she’d allowed an injured stranger into one of her beds.
Find the logic in that, she told herself, recalling every detail from last night, including her offer to bring him breakfast.
The logic? Hadn’t Cáco already convinced her they were meant to help him?
“Is your patient ready for solid food?” Lourdes asked.
The old woman lifted the lid on a small pot. “Oatmeal.”
Hot cereal made sense, she supposed. Easier on the stomach than bacon and fried eggs, but heavy enough to stick to his ribs.
“I dressed his wounds this morning,” Cáco said. “Argued with him to take his medicine, too.”
“Argued?”
“He doesn’t like the taste. Stubborn man.”
“Yes.” Lourdes’s entire body went warm.
Stubborn man. Stubborn woman. Will you lie down with me? Will you kiss me?
She finished her coffee and spooned oatmeal into a bowl. “Is it all right to bring him some juice?”
Cáco looked up. “You’re feeding him?”
Not literally, she hoped. “You’re busy. I don’t mind helping out.”
“Give him fruit instead.”
“Canned peaches?” Her daughters liked them in the morning. Maybe he would, too.
“That’s fine. Don’t dawdle. Your own breakfast is almost ready.”
With an indignant sniff, Lourdes prepared his tray. “I never dawdle.”
Cáco sniffed, too. “You haven’t been in the company of a handsome man in a long time.”
She wouldn’t let the old woman rile her. Not now. Not while her heart had picked up speed at the prospect of seeing him. “He’s handsome? I hadn’t noticed. It’s a little hard to tell through all those bruises.”
“You’re a bad liar.” Her surrogate grandmother almo
st smiled, then added a napkin to the tray. “And I suppose your breakfast will keep.”
Okay, so she’d been found out. But hey, she had the right to look, didn’t she?
Yes, but not too closely, she decided as she ventured down the hall with his breakfast. He could be married. Not all married men wore wedding bands. She’d do well to remember that. To keep reminding herself that she knew absolutely nothing about him.
Lourdes found him sitting up in bed, staring into space.
“Hi.” She moved closer. “I brought you some food.”
He shifted his gaze, looked at her. “Where am I?”
“You’re in Texas, on the outskirts of Mission Creek.” Not knowing what else to do, she placed the tray in front of him and sat on the edge of his bed. “At a horse farm. We’re taking care of you until you feel better.”
“I’m not a horse.”
She almost smiled. “No, of course not.” Adjusting the tray, she centered it over his lap. She wanted to comfort him. To ease his confusion. “Do you remember me? My name is Lourdes.”
He measured her, the way he’d done last night. “The girl from France. From my dream.”
“It wasn’t a dream, and I’m not from France. But my father was.” She caught sight of the silver cross. Her father’s necklace, the one he’d given her mother a month before he’d died. “Do you like oatmeal? Cáco added milk and sugar to it.”
“Cáco?”
“My surrogate grandmother. She helped raise me.” When Lourdes was a child, Cáco had been hired as a cook and housekeeper, but somewhere along the way, she’d become family.
“The gray-haired lady?”
“Yes. It’s okay to think of her as an old woman. She’s Comanche, and they recognize five age groups.” Or at least Cáco did. “Old men and women are one of the age groups.”
“She made me drink that awful tea. I don’t like tea.”
Now Lourdes did smile. “Coral root is a plant that grows around the roots of trees in dry, wooded areas. It’s rather scarce. Some people call it fever root because it’s an effective fever remedy.”
He reached for his spoon and tasted the oatmeal. Then alternated to the peaches and back again. She poured him a glass of fresh water. He put his cut-and-swollen mouth around the straw and sipped.
The Heart of a Stranger Page 2