Lover Beware

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Lover Beware Page 7

by Christine Feehan


  “You want me to make a move on you?”

  Sarah laughed, tugged at his hand, dragging him into the store. “Of course I do.”

  “Well, this is a hell of a time to tell me.”

  Inez was at the store window with three of her customers, staring at Sarah and Damon with their mouths open. Damon scowled at them. “Is it fly-catching season?”

  Sarah squeezed his hand tightly in warning. All the while she was smiling serenely. “Inez! We just dropped in for a quick minute. Kate and Hannah and Abigail are in town for a few days and they can’t wait to see you! Joley and Elle and Libby send their love and told me to tell you they hope to get back soon.” Her voice was bright and cheerful, dispelling an air of gloom in the store. “You do know Damon, of course.”

  Inez nodded, her hawklike gaze narrowing in shock on their linked hands. Her throat worked convulsively. “Yes, of course I do. I didn’t know you two were intimate friends.”

  Damon glared at her, daring the woman to imply anything else. Sarah simply laughed. “I snagged him the minute I saw him, Inez. You always told me to settle down with a good man and, well…here he is.”

  “I never guessed, and Mr. Wilder didn’t say a single word,” Inez said.

  Damon forced a smile under the subtle pressure of Sarah’s grip. Her nails were biting into his hand. “Call me Damon, Inez. I never managed to catch you alone.” It was the best excuse he could come up with and sound plausible. It must have worked because Inez beamed at him, bestowing on him a smile she reserved for her closest friends. In spite of himself, Damon could feel a tiny glow of pleasure at the acceptance.

  “How is everything lately?” Sarah asked before Damon could warn her it was a bad idea to get Inez started.

  “Honestly, Sarah, Donna over at the gift shop is a lovely woman but she just doesn’t understand the importance of recycling. Just this morning I saw her dump her papers right in with plastic. I’ve sorted for her many times and showed her the easiest way to go about it but she just can’t get the hang of it. Be a dear and do something about it, won’t you?”

  Damon’s mouth nearly fell open at the request. What did Inez want Sarah to do? Separate the woman’s garbage for her?

  “No problem, Inez. I’ll go over there now. Damon and I are hoping some of our friends will help us with a small problem. There are some strangers who have been in town, probably for a week or two—three men. We’d like to know their whereabouts, their movements, that sort of thing. Unfortunately we don’t have a clear description but one of them has a facial injury, most likely around his jaw. I’m hoping another might have gotten bitten by a tick.” She paused, a wicked little grin playing around the corners of her mouth. “Maybe a lot of ticks.”

  “What have they done?” Inez asked, lowering her voice as if she’d joined a conspiracy.

  “They tried to break into Damon’s house. Jonas has all the information we could give him. He was going to check the hospital and clinic.” She’d turned over the tranquilizer gun to him, too. “If someone spots them, or mentions them to you, would you mind giving me a call? And maybe it would be good to call Jonas, too.”

  “Now, dear, you know I don’t believe in sticking my nose into anyone’s business, but if you really need me to help you, I’ll be more than happy to oblige,” Inez said. “There are always so many tourists but we should be able to spot a man with something wrong with his jaw.”

  Sarah leaned over to kiss Inez affectionately. “You’re such a good friend, Inez. I don’t know what we’d all do without you.” She turned to look at the three customers. “Irene, I hope you don’t mind me bringing Damon when I call on you and Drew this afternoon.” She wanted to assess Drew’s condition before she brought her sisters over and raised Irene’s hopes further. “We just want to visit with him a few minutes,” she added hastily. “We won’t tire him.”

  Irene’s expression brightened considerably. “Thank you, Sarah; of course you can bring anyone you want with you. I told Drew you might be dropping by and he was so excited. He’ll love the company. He rarely sees even his friends anymore.”

  “Good, I can’t wait to see him again. Now don’t go to any trouble, Irene. Last time I came to visit, you had an entire luncheon waiting.” Sarah rubbed Damon’s arm. “Irene is such a wonderful cook.”

  “Oh, she is,” Inez agreed readily. “Her baked goods are always the first to go at every fundraiser.”

  Irene broke into a smile, looking pleased.

  The warmth in Damon’s heart rushed to his belly, heated his blood. Sarah spread sunshine. That had to be her secret. Wherever she went, she just spread goodwill to others because she genuinely cared about them. It wasn’t that she was being merely tolerant; she liked her neighbors with all their idiosyncrasies. He couldn’t help the strange feeling of pride sweeping through him. How had he gotten so lucky?

  Damon pushed his sunglasses onto his nose as they meandered across the street. He saw they were heading toward the colorful gift shop. “Are you really going to sort some woman’s garbage, Sarah?”

  “Of course not, I’m just popping in to say hello. Maybe our intruders will buy a memento of their stay or possibly a gift for someone. You never know, we may as well cover all the bases,” Sarah replied blithely.

  Damon laughed. “Sarah, honey, I hardly think kidnappers are going to take the time to buy a memento of their stay. I could be wrong, but it seems rather unlikely.”

  Sarah simply grinned at him. She took his breath away with her smile. She should have always been in his life. By his side. All those years working, never thinking about anything else, and Sarah had been somewhere in the world. If he had met her earlier, he might have retired sooner and…

  “Do you have any idea how perfectly tempting your mouth is, Damon?” Sarah interrupted his thoughts, her voice matter-of-fact, intensely interested.

  “Sarah! Sarah Drake! Yoo-hoo!” A tall woman of Amazonian proportions and extraordinary skin waved wildly, intercepting them. An older man, obviously her father, and a teenage boy followed her at a much more sedate pace.

  The clouds, gathering ominously over the sea, so far away only minutes earlier, moved inward at a rapid rate. The wind howled, blowing in from the sea, carrying something dark and dangerous with it. Icy fingers touched Sarah’s face, almost a caress of delight…or challenge. She watched Damon’s face, his body, as he accepted the weight, a settling of his shoulders, small lines appearing near his mouth. He didn’t appear to notice, already far too familiar with his grim companion.

  She moved closer to Damon, a purely protective gesture as the two men approached them in the wake of the woman. The welcoming smile faded from Sarah’s face. A shadow moved on the walkway, slithering along the ground, a wide dark net casting for prey. “Patsy, it’s been a long time.” But she was looking at the older man. “Mr. Granger. How nice to see you again. And Pete, I’m so glad we ran into you. I’m visiting Drew soon. I’ll be able to tell him I saw you. I’ll bet he’ll be happy to hear from you.”

  Pete Granger scuffed the toe of his boot on the sidewalk. “I should go see him. It’s been awhile. I didn’t know what to say.”

  Sarah placed her hand on his shoulder. Damon could see she was worried. “You’ll find the right thing to say to him. That’s what friendship is, Pete, to be there in good and bad times. The good is easy, the bad, well”—she shrugged—“that’s a bit more difficult. But you’ve always been incredibly tough and Drew’s best friend. I know you’ll be there for him.”

  Pete nodded his head. “Tell him I’ll be over this evening.”

  Sarah smiled her approval. “I think that’s a great idea, Pete.” She touched the elder Granger with gentle fingers. “How did your visit to the cardiologist go?”

  “Why, Sarah,” Patsy answered, “Dad doesn’t have a cardiologist. There’s nothing wrong with his heart.”

  “Really? It never hurts to be safe, Mr. Granger. Checkups are always so annoying but ultimately necessary. Patsy, do you remember
that cardiologist my mother went to when we were in our first year of college? In San Francisco?”

  Patsy exchanged a long look with her father. “I do remember, Sarah. Maybe we could get him in next month when things settle down at the shop.”

  “These things are always better if you insist on taking care of them immediately,” Sarah prompted. “This is Damon Wilder, a friend of mine. Have you three met yet?”

  Damon was simply astonished. Pete was going to go visit his very ill friend and Mr. Granger was going to see a cardiologist, all at Sarah’s suggestion. He looked closer at the older man. He couldn’t see that Granger looked sick. What had Sarah seen that he hadn’t? There was no doubt in his mind that the cardiologist was going to find something wrong with Mr. Granger’s heart.

  Sarah asked the three of them to keep an eye out for strangers with bruises on their face or jaw and the trio agreed before hurrying away.

  “How do you do that?” Damon asked, intrigued. She was doing something, knew things she shouldn’t know.

  “Do what?” Sarah asked. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”

  Damon studied her face there on the street with the sunlight shining down on them. He couldn’t stop looking at her, couldn’t stop wanting her. Couldn’t believe she was real. “You see something beyond the human eye, Sarah, something science can’t explain. I believe in science, yet I can’t find an explanation for what you do.”

  Damon was looking at her with so much hunger, so much stark desire in his expression, Sarah’s heart melted on the spot and her body went up in flames. “It’s a Drake legacy. A gift.” Wherever she had been going was gone out of her head. She couldn’t think of anything but Damon and the need on his face, the hunger in his eyes. Her fingers tangled in the front of his shirt, right outside the gift shop in plain sight of the interested townspeople.

  “The Drake gate prophecy forgot to mention the intensity of the physical attraction,” she murmured.

  A man could drown in her eyes, be lost forever. His hands tightened possessively, brought her closer to him, right up against his body. Every cell reacted instantly. Whips of lightning danced in his bloodstream while tongues of fire licked his skin, at the simple touch of her fully clothed body. What was going to happen when she was naked, completely bare beneath him? “I might not survive,” he whispered.

  “Would we care?” Sarah asked. She couldn’t look away from him, couldn’t stop staring into his eyes. She wanted him. Ached for him. Wanted to be alone with him. It didn’t matter where, just that they were alone.

  “You can’t look at me like that,” Damon said. “I’m going up in flames and I’m too damned old to be acting like a teenager.”

  “No, you’re not,” Sarah denied. “By all means, I don’t mind at all.” She half-turned toward the street, still in his arms. “I think Inez is falling out of her window. Poor thing, she’s bound to lose her eyesight if she keeps this up. I should have suggested she get a new pair of glasses. I’ll let Abigail suggest it. You have to be careful with Inez because she’s so sensitive.”

  It was the way Sarah said it, so absolutely sincere, that tugged at his heartstrings. “I never could get along with people. Ever. Not even in college. Everyone always annoyed me. I preferred books and my lab to talking with a human being,” he admitted, wanting her to understand the difference she’d made. He was actually beginning to care about Inez and that was plain damned scary. He was finding the townspeople interesting after seeing them through her eyes.

  “Let’s go back to my house,” he suggested. “Didn’t you say there could be bugs in that security system you installed?”

  “I’m certain I need to check it over,” Sarah agreed, “but I do have to make this one stop first. I promised Inez.”

  Chapter 8

  THE SMALL GIFT shop was cheerful and bright. Celtic music played softly. New Age books and crystals of all colors occupied one side of the store while fairies and dragons and mythical creatures reigned supreme on the other. Damon had been prepared for clutter after the comments on the shop owner’s lack of recycling education, but the store was spotless.

  “I think Donna knows her recycling stuff,” Damon whispered against Sarah’s ear. “She probably brushed up after she saw Inez peering at her through the store window with her lips pursed and her hands on her hips.” His teeth nibbled for just a moment, sending a tremor through her. “Let’s get out of here while we have the chance.”

  Sarah shook her head. “I have an especially strong feeling we should talk with Donna today.” She was frowning slightly, a puzzled expression on her face.

  Damon felt something twist and settle around his heart. Knowledge blossomed. Belief. He was a man of logic and books, yet he knew Sarah was different. He knew she was magic. Mysterious Sarah was back home and with her, some undefined power that couldn’t be ignored. He felt it now for himself, after having been in her presence. It was very real, something he couldn’t explain but knew was there, deep inside of her.

  His knowledge made it much easier to accept the amazing intensity of the chemistry between them. More than that, it helped him to believe in the powerful emotions already surfacing for her. How did one fall in love at first sight? He’d always scoffed at the idea, yet Sarah was wrapped securely around his heart and he had known her for only a few days.

  “If you feel we should talk to Donna, then by all means, let’s find the woman,” he agreed readily. She had changed him for all time. He was different inside and he preferred the man he was becoming to the man he had been. If he spent too much time thinking about it, his feelings made no sense, but he didn’t want to think about it. He simply accepted it, embraced the opportunity destiny had given him.

  Sarah called out, moving through the store with the natural grace Damon had come to associate with her. “Donna’s daughter went to school with Joley. Donna is a sweetheart, Damon—have you met her?” She peeked around the bead-curtained doorway leading to the back of the store.

  “I’ve seen her,” Damon said, “in Inez’s store. She and Inez like to exchange sarcasm.”

  “They’ve been friends for years. When Inez was sick a few years ago, Donna moved into Inez’s house and cared for her, ran her own gift shop and the grocery store. They just like to grouse at one another, but it’s all in fun. The back screen is open. That’s strange. Donoa has a phobia about insects. She never leaves doors open.” There was concern in her voice.

  Damon followed Sarah through the beaded curtain, noting the neatly stacked paper tied with cord and the barrel of plastic labeled with inch-high letters. “I’d have to say Donna knows more about recycling than most people.”

  “Of course she does.” Sarah’s tone was vague, as if she wasn’t paying much attention. “She just likes to give Inez something to say.”

  “You mean she does it on purpose?” Damon wanted to laugh but Sarah’s behavior was making him uneasy. They stepped out of the shop onto a back porch.

  The wind rushed them, coming at them from the sea. Coming from the direction of the cliff house. Sarah raised her face to the wind, closed her eyes for a moment. Damon watched her face, watched her body. There was a complete stillness about her. She was there with him physically, but he had the impression her spirit was riding on the wind. That mentally she was with her sisters in the cliff house.

  The wind chilled him, raised goose bumps on his arms, sent a shiver of alarm down his back. Something was wrong. Sarah knew something was wrong and he knew it now as well.

  Sarah opened her eyes and looked at him with apprehension. “Donna.” She whispered the name.

  The wind whipped leaves from the trees and whirled them in small eddies of chaos and confusion. Sarah watched the whirling mass of leaves intently. Her fingers closed around his wrist. “I don’t think she’s far but we have to hurry. Call the sheriff’s office. Tell them to send an ambulance and to send a car over. I think one of your kidnappers did decide to shop at Donna’s.”

  She started aw
ay from him, toward the small house that sat behind the gift shop. It was overgrown with masses of flowers and bushes, a virtual refuge in the middle of town. “Wait a minute!” Damon hesitated, torn between making the phone call and following Sarah. “What if someone’s still there, and what if the sheriff thinks I’m a nut?”

  “Someone is still there and just say I said hurry.” Sarah flung the words back over her shoulder. She was moving fast, yet silently, lithely, so graceful she reminded him of a stalking animal.

  Damon swore under his breath and hurried back inside the store. Inez was standing just inside the beaded curtain. Her face was very pale. “What is it?” she demanded, her hand fluttering to her heart.

  “Sarah said to call the sheriff and tell them to hurry. She also said to call an ambulance. Would you do that so I can make certain nothing happens to Sarah?” Damon spoke gently, afraid the older woman might collapse.

  Inez lifted her chin. “You go, I’ll have a dozen cops here immediately.”

  Damon breathed a sigh of relief and hurried after Sarah. She was already out of his sight, lost behind the rioting explosion of flowers. He silently cursed his bum leg. He could go anywhere if he went slowly enough but he couldn’t run and even walking fast was dangerous. His leg would simply give out.

  His heart was pounding so hard in his chest he feared it would explode. Sarah in danger was terrifying. He had thought there was nothing left for him, yet she had come into his life at his darkest hour and brought hope and light. Laughter and compassion. She was even teaching him to appreciate Inez. Damon swore again, pressing his luck, using his cane to hold back the bushes while he tried to rush over the cobblestones Donna had so painstakingly used to build the pathway between her house and her shop.

  A soft hiss to his left gave Sarah’s position away. She was inching her way toward the door of Donna’s house, using several large rhododendrons as cover. Her hand signal was clear: she wanted him to crouch low and stay where he was. A humiliating thought. Sarah racing to the rescue while he hid in the bushes. The worst of it was, he could see that she was a professional. She moved like one, and she had produced a gun from somewhere. It fit into her hand as if she were so familiar with it, the gun was a part of her.

 

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