Finally she couldn’t stand him staring any longer. She shut her book and stood. “It’s almost dinner time. I have some tuna in the pantry. I can’t do much with it. We’ll have to take it like it is. And I’d better light some candles. It’s getting dark.”
She placed the candles on saucers and set them on the table and prepared their meager meal. “Thanks,” he said. “Tuna by candlelight.”
Not what you’d expect of a candlelight dinner, Christy thought. Tasteless tuna on paper plates in a steamy kitchen. And yet, in the near-dark, with the candles flickering, and the light playing across J.D.’s skin and adding bronze highlights to his hair, she felt her heartbeat quicken.
Christy couldn’t keep her eyes off his smooth chest, the muscles that rippled in his arms. She’d seen his body—more of it, actually—last night, but this was different. Then he’d been a patient; now he was a man.
Disturbed by the powerful figure before her, confused by her response to him, Christy forced her gaze down to her plate. Her hand trembled as she picked up her fork. She knew why. There was always an attraction in danger—the challenge of seeing how close you could venture to the fire without getting burned. J.D. was danger personified.
They ate in silence. The only sound was an occasional growl of thunder and the incessant rain. And then it slacked off.
“It’s stopping.” Christy jumped up and ran to the window. The force of the rain had lessened, but even in the dark she could see that the sky was still leaden. Water lapped threateningly at the porch. No one was going to rescue them tonight.
She got out more candles, set them in saucers and lit them. The flames cast shadows that fluttered against the walls and disappeared like ghosts.
J.D. rose. He yawned and stretched, and, to Christy, his figure, silhouetted on the wall behind him, looked large, menacing. The man who’d intrigued her minutes ago now seemed threatening.
“You should get some rest,” she told him. Her voice sounded thin.
He nodded and picked up one of the makeshift candleholders. “You should, too.”
He was right. She couldn’t stay awake to watch him for another eight hours.
What should she do?
She wished she could lock him in the front bedroom, but the bedroom doors had no locks. Carrying her own candle, she followed him down the hall and into his room. “I want to check your wound,” she told him.
He gave her a little-boy frown. “Aw, geez, Mom, do you have to?”
“Yes, I do. Sit.”
He sat on the edge of the bed and clenched his fists while she dabbed more peroxide around the wound. “Nurse Ratched,” he muttered.
“I heard that.”
“Sorry.”
“You remember the book or, later, the movie,” she said hopefully.
“Sure. One Flew Over the…um, Robin’s Nest.”
“Cuckoo,” she corrected.
“You talkin’ to me?” he asked.
“Nope, and that’s another movie.”
He looked up. “Taxi Driver. Also about a nut case,” he said and gave her one of his dazzling smiles.
She backed quickly away. “Good night. Call me if you need anything.”
She hurried down the hall to her bathroom. She needed a long, cool shower, but she settled for a short one, then went to the bedroom. She shut the door, stared at it, then got a chair and shoved it against the door and under the knob. It wouldn’t keep him out if he really wanted in, but at least it would slow him down, give her time to get her weapon. Lord, how could she have predicted when the doorbell rang last night that she would spend tonight barricaded in her room?
She lay down and shut her eyes, but couldn’t sleep. The room was stifling. She cracked the window open, then shut it when rain blew in.
A floorboard creaked somewhere in the house. She held her breath. Was it him? Was he coming this way? She sat up, reached for her revolver and waited. Nothing happened and she ordered herself to calm down. They’d been alone all day and isolated. Why should she be any more afraid of him at night?
Who was he?
Unable to answer that question, she asked another. What did she know about him? What had she learned in the day they’d been together?
He was strong. In spite of his injury and what had to be considerable pain, he’d worked all day without a word of complaint. He’d been helpful and—and kind. He’d backed off immediately when she’d let him know his questions and his uncannily accurate observations made her uncomfortable. No matter who—or what—he was, there was something about him, something that drew her. Maybe it was his combination of strength and compassion; maybe it was because he was a mystery, even to himself. Although she believed people control their own destiny, she had a strange feeling that Fate had sent him to her door. Finally she fell asleep, seeing his face in her dreams.
Down the hall, J.D. lay awake, staring at the ceiling. Through clenched teeth, he whispered, “Who am I?”
Was someone searching for him? Agonizing over his disappearance? Maybe not.
For a while at least, Christy had thought he might be a criminal. Could she be right? He wanted to say no, but he remembered the bullet wound in his thigh, the blow to his head last night—evidence of violence, even though he didn’t think he was a violent person.
Maybe he didn’t remember what happened because he didn’t want to. He had no clue.
The only thing he was sure about was Christy. When she’d bent over him, he’d wanted to touch her, to draw in her scent, to see if her skin was as soft as it looked. He’d had to clench his fists to keep from reaching for her.
He shut his eyes, pictured her face and fell asleep.
His dreams were as disjointed as they had been last night and frightening. Empty rooms that weren’t really empty. Faces in the shadows. Someone stalked him, grabbed him by the throat. He twisted, groaned, trying to get away.
Christy woke abruptly. She sat up in bed, hugging the sheet around her. What was that noise?
A man’s voice.
Had someone broken in? Or was it J.D.? Was he all right?
Reaching for the gun, she held it in front of her as she’d been taught, then made her way down the hall. The noise came from his room: a moan, then a half scream.
With a trembling hand, she opened the door.
The sheets tangled around him, he tossed and turned on the bed, muttering unintelligible words.
She moved closer. The sheets were damp, his skin soaked with perspiration. She put her hand on his brow. “Shh, it’s all right,” she murmured…
From under the sheet, his hand whipped out. He grabbed her arm and jerked her forward with surprising strength.
Christy screamed as she toppled to the bed.
Chapter 5
“No!” Christy choked, struggling against J.D.’s superior strength. “No.” The gun dropped out of her hand and crashed to the floor.
All her earlier fears about him now stared her in the face.
He had her by the shoulders. She tried to kick, but her legs were tangled in the sheet, tried to twist away, but he held her fast. He forced her onto her back and she lay powerless, helpless to get away.
Terrified, fighting for breath, Christy stared up at him.
He loomed over her, nostrils flaring, his lips peeled back in a grimace. His eyes were…shut.
Asleep. He had to be asleep.
Forcing air into her lungs, Christy cried, “Stop, J.D. Let me go.”
He made a growling sound in his throat. And then his eyes opened.
“Wh—?” He stared at her as if he’d never seen her before. Then recognition dawned. “Christy?” he muttered. “What’s…going on?”
“You—you were having a nightmare.”
His grip loosened. “What happened? How did you…? How did I…?”
She sat up and struggled to control her shaky voice. “I—I stumbled into your bad dream. I came in to see what was wrong and—and you grabbed me.”
He stared down at
the hand that had seized her. “Ah, Christy, I—I—”
She saw the shock on his face, heard the revulsion in his voice, and her fear faded. “You were asleep. You didn’t know what you were doing.” But still, she rubbed the arm he’d jerked.
He sat up, wide awake now, his tone sharp. “Did I hurt you?”
She dropped her gaze. “Not much.”
“Let me see.” He took her arm, carefully this time as if afraid he might break it. “You are hurt. Bruised.” His voice filled with self-loathing, he let go of her. “Damn, what kind of man am I?”
“Don’t,” she said softly. “You didn’t mean to hurt me. I’m sure of that.” And she was…now.
Without thinking, she bent toward him and gently touched his cheek. “Relax,” she murmured to him. “Go back to sleep.”
He raised his eyes to hers. “Christy,” he breathed as she stroked the rough stubble on his face. “Christy…”
He leaned closer; his mouth was inches from hers. Her lips parted.
He put his hands on her shoulders. He was going to kiss her. She wanted this—the warmth of his breath, the taste of his mouth. Her eyes closed.
Gently, he pushed her away. “No.”
Her eyes flew open. Humiliated, she straightened as her ex-husband’s mocking voice sounded in her ear: I don’t want you. Neither did J.D.
This man was a stranger. His rejection shouldn’t sting the way Keith’s had. But it did.
She wanted to run away, hide her embarrassment and her hurt. Turning her back on J.D., she struggled to her feet.
J.D. caught her hand. “Christy, wait.”
“No, I…you…need to get back to sleep.” But he held her in place.
“Look at me,” he said, giving her arm a gentle tug, and slowly, unwillingly, she turned.
He urged her back down on the bed. When she perched stiffly on the edge, he dropped her hand and caressed her cheek, his fingertips soft on her heated skin. “I don’t know…who I am…or what my situation is.” He glanced at his left hand.
Christy’s eyes followed his. “There’s no ring,” she murmured.
“It doesn’t matter,” he said, his voice filled with regret. “There could be someone. I…don’t know, and until I do, I can’t do this to you. It wouldn’t be fair to either of us.”
“You’re right, of course,” she said. “I don’t know what I was thinking.”
“I do. And just for the record, I was thinking the same thing.”
If he could fight this attraction, so could she. She cleared her throat. “I, um, should go.”
“Yeah, you should.”
She got up, bent and picked up the gun. “Good night,” she whispered.
In her room, she sat on the edge of the bed and touched her still-warm cheek. She’d told J.D. she hadn’t known what she was thinking. Trouble was, she hadn’t been thinking at all. She’d been feeling. Wanting.
She’d been alone for nearly a year. Was that the reason? No, she’d had her chances to be with a man. Friends had urged her to start dating so she’d given in and gone out a few times. But she hadn’t enjoyed the dating scene, the rush to take someone to bed. Acquaintances—really nonacquaintances—of a few hours were ready to hit the sheets. Not Christy.
But tonight had been different. If J.D. hadn’t said no, she’d be in his bed right now. She covered her face with her hands.
He was a man with integrity, she thought. He’d saved them both from embarrassment, maybe even heartache.
She thought of the gentleness in his tone when he’d let her go, the sincerity in his eyes.
How different he was from Keith. J.D. didn’t know if he was involved, yet still he wouldn’t take a chance of hurting someone. Keith had no compunctions about betraying the wife he saw every day.
Christy glanced at the revolver she’d set on the nightstand and shook her head. Another embarrassment.
All her pride in her ability to defend herself had been in vain. Even with a gun in her hand, J.D. had easily overpowered her. In his sleep.
With a snort of disgust, she opened the drawer and shoved the gun inside, all the way to the back.
When Christy woke the next morning, she hurried to the window and opened the blinds. The rain had stopped, but the sky still looked ominous, and though the water was beginning to recede, the road was still flooded.
She dressed slowly. She dreaded coming face to face with J.D. after last night. After she’d practically jumped into bed with him. Well, she couldn’t avoid him. They were, after all, the only two people in their tiny, isolated world. She’d just have to pretend last night had never happened and hope he had the good manners not to mention it.
He didn’t say a word. He greeted her in the kitchen and handed her a glass of too-warm orange juice. “Sorry, the kitchen is still closed,” he said.
“Did you try the phone?”
“Still down.”
She took out her cell. Low battery, the screen said. And of course, she had no way to charge it. Damn, if something could go wrong, it would. She wanted to fling the phone onto the table. Instead she put it carefully into her pocket.
Now they could do nothing but wait.
She glanced across the table at J.D. as she nibbled on half-stale, untoasted bread.
He looked up from his breakfast and met her eyes. Goose-bumps erupted on her arms, a blush warmed her cheeks, and all her plans to keep silent about what had happened between them evaporated. “Um, about last night—”
“I don’t recall a thing. I have amnesia, remember?” That quick, charming grin spread across his lips.
“I guess I don’t remember either, then,” Christy said. But she knew she wouldn’t forget, not even when J.D. was out of her life. She’d still wonder how his lips would have tasted, still regret not finding out.
They finished their breakfast. “Do you want to put the furniture back?” J.D. asked.
“I don’t think so. It may rain again.”
“Didn’t you say your car wouldn’t start?” he asked. “Want me to take a look?”
Even with amnesia, the guy figured his auto mechanics gene was still functioning. Typical male. “Doesn’t matter if it works or not,” she said. “My Toyota’s so low to the ground it would drown in a few inches of water.”
“We could—”
The doorbell rang and Christy jumped up.
Was this a delayed response to her 911 call?
But when she opened the door, she found Warner Thompson, the retired banker who lived down the street, his ruddy face wreathed in a smile. “Glad to see you survived the storm, young lady. Have any problems?”
Her heart began to pound. Here at last was her chance to tell someone about J.D.
Christy hesitated as Warner waited for her answer. Say you have a problem, say a stranger invaded your house, ask Warner for help. Do it.
Yesterday she would have, without hesitation. But the words didn’t come. She and J.D. had reached a turning point last night. Everything was different now. She shook her head.
Behind her, she heard footsteps. J.D. strolled into the living room, carrying a glass in one hand and a dishcloth in the other. Warner’s eyes widened.
What did her neighbor see? A delightful domestic scene. He was probably mentally congratulating Christy on replacing Keith with such an attractive man.
“Hello there,” Warner said and put out a hand. “Warner Thompson.”
J.D. shook it. “J. D. Russell.”
Christy’s gaze leaped to J.D.’s. Had he remembered? Was that his real name? But J.D.’s smile was bland and his eyes focused on Warner.
“I’m going to try and drive my SUV into town,” Warner said. “You two want to ride along?”
Christy nodded. “That would be great. J.D. had a little accident yesterday. I’d like Dr. Mayes to take a look at it.”
“Come on then.”
As they drove to town through streets filled with debris and still knee-deep in water, Warner unabashedly quizzed J.D.
about himself.
“Where are you from, son?”
Christy cringed. Warner had always reminded her of a jovial Santa Claus, but today she wished he weren’t so outgoing and interested in others.
J.D., however, fielded the question with ease. “Houston.”
“Nice place for you young folks, but too chaotic for Ellie and me. We like the quiet life here. Haven’t been back to Houston but a couple of times since we retired here three years ago, and that was for doctor’s appointments. Under protest.” He glanced at J.D. “What kind of work do you do?”
“Consulting. Human relations.”
“Teach those CEOs to be more compassionate, eh?”
J.D. smiled. “Something like that.”
Christy’s eyes widened at his glib answers. Either J.D. was an accomplished liar who’d been feeding her a line about having amnesia these past two days, or he’d regained his memory. She tried to send him a what’s-going-on? message with her eyes, but he avoided her gaze and continued the conversation.
“How’d you two meet?” Warner asked as he turned onto San Sebastian’s main street.
“At a party,” Christy said.
“At the gym,” J.D. replied at the same time.
Christy’s cheeks heated as she met Warner’s startled gaze. “Which?” he asked.
“Party,” Christy repeated, then forced a chuckle. “We’d seen each other at the gym, but we didn’t really meet until that party. Remember, hon?” She turned and patted J.D.’s hand. “J.D. has such a bad memory for, um, details like that.”
“Terrible memory,” he agreed, and added, “Really all I remember of that evening is Christy. She bowled me over. You could say I fell at her feet.”
“Yeah, you could,” Christy muttered. She let out a breath of relief when Warner pulled the SUV into a parking space.
“Well, here you are,” Warner said. “I need to pick up a few things for Ellie. Why don’t you two meet me at the hardware store around the corner in, say, three hours?”
“Fine.” Christy could hardly wait to escape from his curious gaze. She tugged J.D. across the street toward the small medical building where Dr. Mayes practiced. She stopped in front of the door. “You remembered everyth—”
Stranger in Her Arms Page 5