Читать книгу Truly Daddy - Cara Colter - Страница 10
ОглавлениеChapter Two
Toni had woken up when the car stopped. There was no momentary sense of confusion. She knew precisely where she was and how she had come to be there. Not geographically, of course, though she could tell from the unmarred blackness in the vehicle they were no longer in Vancouver.
The absence of light and sound told her that.
Danger tingled in the air.
She pulled the blanket over her face, as if that would help her. She was trembling so much he would probably feel the vibration.
It occurred to her she no longer had anything to be grateful for.
She was in danger.
She hurt all over.
And she had to go to the bathroom.
She heard him fling himself into the back seat, and a split second later, he had yanked back the blanket. She found herself staring into the most amazing blue eyes she had ever seen.
She had been planning to scream, but somehow it just died in her throat. Even the small knife in his hand didn’t seem to be invoking terror.
He was gorgeous. Blazing blue eyes. A dark shock of jet-black hair, a face made more handsome by the curves and hollows of the night shadows, the shadowing of his own whiskers.
He was not plump.
Or balding.
He looked exactly the way he sounded. And smelted. Sexy.
And ferociously angry.
He pulled her onto the seat beside him, and she could feel the strength in his hands, see the breadth of his shoulders underneath a faded jean jacket.
This is the man I’m going to marry.
It was the most ridiculous thought she had ever had.
She didn’t know where she was. She didn’t know who he was. Her career had just started, really.
Madame Yeltsy had been very clear about her expectations when she’d made Toni a buyer. “You have to want success more than anything. You have to be prepared to sacrifice everything. Love, husband, children. You have a more important role—to bring joy to thousands of women by making fabulous fashions available to them.”
“I don’t suppose you’re a nanny, are you?”
His voice, deep and sensual, chased the voice of Madame Yeltsy right out of her head. Toni noticed there was a glimmer of humor around the edges of the words that didn’t show in the piercing blue of his eyes.
A nanny? Of course. Presumably, from the evidence of the car seat, the blanket and the bear, he had a child. And it followed, a wife. He might as well have kept that knife out because it felt like it had plunged straight into her heart.
It was that ring, she decided, that was making her think such foolish thoughts.
The shopkeeper had said it brought luck or happiness or some such thing. A husband. Babies.
Those thoughts, followed so closely by terror, had all jumbled up in her mind. She had probably been dreaming confused dreams when this man had leaped commando-style over the back of his seat and exposed her.
He did look like a commando, she decided. A strong man, completely in control, used to being in authority.
It was very difficult to imagine him with a wife and a baby. He looked like the kind of man who walked alone. Like the cowboy who rode off into the sunset at the end of the story. Rugged. Independeat.
Which was exactly the kind of woman she was. Well, maybe not the rugged part, but certainly independent. A husband wasn’t part of her immediate plans. And babies...babies were a far-off someday on her list.
She loved her work. She’d started as a clerk in Madame Yeltsy’s smallest store when she was just seventeen.
And she loved dating, too, when she had the odd evening off. Movies. Dancing. Dinners. The thrill of meeting new people. She had just never been in love. She was beginning to suspect it was the fabric of fairy tales, that women more imaginative than she was were able to convince themselves that that ordinary guy in the suit and spectacles was really Prince Charming.
This was no Prince Charming sitting under the dome light glowering at her. And yet she had the strangest feeling. That she was about to learn a good deal about love.
She had a sudden urge to take that ring out of her purse and hurl it into the night before it ruined everything.
He reached over her and opened the rear door of the car. She slid out. How far from Vancouver were they? It was very cold out. Snow was mounded by the sides of the road. Huge trees loomed all around them, and beyond that mountains towered, one shade darker than the night.
He held open the front passenger door of the vehicle, and she knew she had no option but to get back in. She was already shivering. He went around to his side and got in. His mouth was set in a grim line, though he turned up the heat for her.
They passed a sign that welcomed them to Eliza. “Population what?” she asked him incredulously.
“Twenty-two,” he answered. “Twenty-three with Angelica.”
The firm, uncompromising set of his mouth discouraged her from asking who Angelica was.
He pulled through the whole town in about fifteen seconds. She saw an old general store and a service station, both closed. Golden light from several regal-looking old houses washed out across snowy yards. The town could have easily posed for Christmas cards. She wished for her camera.
Several seconds later, he turned the car up a dark lane lined with snow-laden trees.
“Christmas trees,” she couldn’t help saying.
He snorted. “Fir trees don’t grow this high up. Spruce. Lodgepole pine. Balsam.”
She slid him a look. If she was ever in a plane crash over the wilderness, he was the one she wanted with her.
The lane forked, and headlights glanced off a large tin Quonset building before illuminating a little log cabin. It stood on a rock foundation, pretty as a picture, with the snow surrounding it, drifting off the roof, capping the rock chimney. The covered porch held a rocking chair—no, two rocking chairs—one big and one small, and a neat pile of chopped wood.
It, too, would have made a beautiful photograph if it wasn’t so wrapped in darkness.
“Go in,” he said. “The door’s not locked. Bathroom’s on the right.”
She shot up the shoveled stone-lined pathway to the house. No little wife waiting to give him a kiss? Where was the baby?
It was very cold out, but despite that, she paused just for one moment, stooped and touched the snow. It was deliciously cold, and she scooped a handful and tasted it cautiously. It tingled in the most marvelous way, then turned to nothing on her tongue.
She became aware he was watching her over the open trunk of the car, and her behavior in the snow embarrassed her. She hurried up the few steps, across the porch and into the house. She groped for a switch and found it to the right of the door.
She had entered directly into the living room, and once again she itched for her camera. Hardwood floors and log walls gleamed golden. A river-rock fireplace dominated the cozy room.
Signs of a child were everywhere. A tub full of toys, a big rubber ball, a floppy dog with one button eye, a hamper full of clothes that needed folding.
But no sign of a woman. The furniture was placed at military angles. There were no curtains on the windows, no lace doilies, no pictures on the walls, none of those little things that spoke of a woman’s touch.
“He has a wife,” she told herself firmly.
She found the bathroom easily enough and again couldn’t help but notice a lack of feminine influence. No rug, no tank cover, no frilly shower curtain with matching priscillas at the window.
One toothbrush. No, two toothbrushes. One big and black and masculine. The other small and pink with a picture of the Tasmanian Devil dancing on the handle.
He was divorced. Obviously. Maybe his kid came to visit him on weekends.
She would have loved to take a quick snoop through the medicine cabinet, but she had given up that brand of voyeurism at a party where the hosts had filled up their bathroom cabinet with marbles. To this day, she was grateful that she hadn’t been the one to set off that particular avalanche.
“In here,” he called when she came out of the bathroom.
She followed his voice back into the living room and through a rounded archway into the dining room and the kitchen adjoining it. It was a small area, the hardwood floors and log walls again giving an illusion of coziness where there really was none.
No tablecloth over a scarred oak table. No tea cozy over a plain white pot. No oven mitts with pictures of cows hanging above a sparkling clean oven. No turnip and carrot magnets on the fridge.
Again the word “military” entered her mind. The room was spotless, and everything precisely in its place. The potential was incredible.
“This is a lovely home,” she said, noticing the French panes on the windows.
“Sit,” he ordered her.
He was feeding logs into a small black stove. He had left his jean jacket somewhere and was wearing a short-sleeved sport shirt that showed beautiful arm muscles that rippled effortlessly with each piece of wood he added to the fire.
“Is this how you heat?” she asked in amazement.
He looked at her as if she was from another world.
She was.
“Primitive,” she murmured under her breath. Watching the muscles play under his shirt as he hefted another log into the fire, she felt a pretty primitive feeling of her own.
“Well?” he said when he was done. He sat back on his haunches and folded strong arms over the hard wall of his chest.
She took a deep breath and started by introducing herself and telling him where she was from and how she had come to be in Vancouver. She told him all about Martin Ying and then her chancing upon the little jewelry shop.
She liked the way he listened, his head cocked slightly toward her, his eyes narrowing in all the right places, stopping her every now and then and asking a quick question that showed keen intelligence and good observation skills.
You like the way he listens. Oh, brother, she chided herself.
He closed the door of the stove and she could hear the fire crackling. He moved to the sink and filled a kettle.
And all the time she felt his focus never shift from her.
At the end of her narrative, she rummaged through her bag. For an awful moment, she thought the ring, which could prove her story, was gone. But there it was right at the bottom.
She set it on the table and then, as an afterthought, one of her business cards, too.
He came over and picked up the ring, turned it over in his hand. Strong hands, short, well-manicured nails.
Sexy hands. What about this man wasn’t breathtakingly sexy?
“Anyway,” she said, beginning to feel as awkward as a teenager in braces on her first date, “I’ve troubled you quite enough. I’ll just hop on a bus and be out of your hair. I don’t suppose there’s a plane leaving here, is there?”
“I’m calling the police.”
“There’s really no point involving yourself. I can call them when I get back to my hotel.”
She was suddenly overwhelmed by a feeling that she had to get out of this place. That the whole fabric of her life that she’d been weaving had just been wrenched from her control and if she did not grab it back now it would be too late.
She had experienced something like this only once before. She’d been seventeen. And the doctor had looked at her with sad eyes and given his head a small shake. Her mother dead, life as she’d known it was over.
She stood up abruptly. “The bus station?”
“I’m making coffee. Sit down.”
The kettle whistled.
“I don’t drink coffee.”
‘Hot chocolate, then.”
“I’m leaving.”
“No, you’re not.”
That last was said coolly, as a colonel to a buck private. She was not used to being addressed like this. When it came to men, she was accustomed to being the one with the upper hand.
“I don’t think you can stop me, really, Mr.—”
“Boyd. Garret.”
“Mr. Boyd. As I was saying—”
“I can’t stop you. That’s what you were saying.”
His eyes had narrowed to slits. He looked dangerous and strong. Everything about him said he could stop her in an instant
“If you’ll just show me in which direction the bus station is—”
“It’s probably ten degrees below zero outside right now. You’re not exactly dressed for a hike to the bus station.” His eyes rested meaningfully on the short hem of her skirt, drifted down her leg like a touch, then rested on her flimsy shoes.
She resisted the urge to tug the skirt down and tried to hide her toes. “Call me a cab, then.”
He sighed. “You said you left him your card. In exchange for the ring.”
“Yes, but—”
“And that you left the name of your hotel and your room number on it.”
“Well, still—”
“You might find a very nasty surprise waiting for you back at that hotel. Or even back in San Diego. I think you’d better talk to the police.”
She sank back onto her chair. He was right. She hated that. When other people were right.
She watched him move to the shrieking kettle and unplug it, scooping up a telephone receiver with his other hand. He dialed a phone number—she didn’t even know that kind of phone existed anymore—and spoke quietly into it for a minute.
He came back to the table, the steaming kettle in one hand, two pottery mugs in the other. He set them down, along with pouches of gourmet hot chocolate.
“Constable Frey will be here soon. Twenty minutes to half an hour.”
That was soon? “He’s not riding his horse, is he?”
He shot her a look that branded her unbelievably stupid.
“Royal Canadian Mounted Police,” she shot back at him. She’d seen postcards of Canada’s colorful police all over Vancouver. Always dressed in beautiful, flaming red jackets with Yogi Bear kind of hats, and always - on horseback.
“They drive cars these days. Except for ceremonial purposes. Hot chocolate?” he asked. “This one’s good.”
He showed her a packet labeled white chocolate and hazelnut.
She nodded numbly and the steaming cup was set before her. Don’t ask, she commanded herself. Toni, don’t you dare ask
“Where’s your wife?” she asked.
“I’m not married.”
Not married. If she was not mistaken, that ring, sitting in the middle of his solid oak kitchen table, had started winking like a neon sign.
His voice held absolutely no invitation.
She took a sip of the hot chocolate and nearly closed her eyes with pure pleasure. A man who could make this, not married?
Toni, she told herself, it came out of a pouch. “This is delicious,” she murmured.
“My favorite flavor.”
Already something in common! Don’t ask, she commanded herself again. Toni, don’t you dare ask.
“Divorced?” she asked, looking up at him over the rim of her cup.
He looked annoyed. “I’ve never been married.”
By the tone of his voice, he never planned to be, either.
Toni, I absolutely forbid you to ask him about the baby.
“The baby?” she asked.
Fleeting sadness passed through his eyes before they were hooded from her. “My niece. Who would kill you with a look for calling her a baby. A long story,” he said curtly. “I’m just going to turn on the TV. I’ve got to catch the weather forecast for the next few days.”
He didn’t want to talk to her! Another reaction she was not at all accustomed to.
He had a small TV mounted tastefully in a cabinet above his table. Not long after he’d turned it on, a knock came at the door. He got up and stretched. He had a great-looking body, put together like a man who worked hard and physically.
Don’t ask him what he does for a living, she told herself. And this time she didn’t. She could see the weariness in him.
He went to the door, and a moment later, Toni heard another male voice.
“Hey, where’s my angel?”
“Still at Candy’s. And she’s been a devil for the past few days. I don’t suppose you know anything about French braids, do you?”
It seemed incongruous that the stern, quiet man who had just shared this table with her was now discussing French braids with such deadly seriousness. She wanted to laugh but suppressed the urge.
“Sure,” the other voice said. “It’s a kind of bread.”
“Sorry I asked.”
“What did the doc say about her being so little?”
“It’s normal. She’s small for her age now, but it will probably all average out in the end”
“That’s what I thought. So, what’s going on?”
Toni could hear them moving toward her now. She suddenly felt rumpled and confused and like she was going to burst into tears at any moment.
Garret came back in the room trailed by a tall, young policeman who would have seemed gorgeous at any other time. But his blond good looks now paled beside the dark electricity of Garret Boyd.
“You’re not in red!” she protested, noting his rather drab uniform.
He laughed. “Where’d you say she was from, Garret?”
“She says San Diego.”
As if everything she said was open to question. She glared at Garret. He didn’t seem to notice.
“That explains it.” The policeman was open and friendly, and unless she was mistaken, at least a little bit flirtatious. He sat down across from her, Garret got him a hot chocolate, and she told the whole story again. “And this is the ring he gave you?” Constable Frey asked at the end of the interview.
She picked it up. “It is. He said it would bring great happiness.” She deliberately left out the husband and baby part “Had. So far, it’s brought me nothing but grief.”
As if in confirmation, the sound on the television seemed to jump out.
“And just to recap tonight’s top story,” the anchor said, “an art exhibit on loan to Canada from China was stolen en route to the museum in the early hours of the morning. Several pieces of missing jewelry are considered priceless, including this ring.”
A still photograph of the ring that was in her hand appeared on the television screen. Three pairs of eyes moved from her hand to the screen and back again. She looked at both their faces, first Constable Frey’s and then Garret Boyd’s.
There was no doubt abut it. They thought she was a thief!
She wanted to cry, but she had been in business too long to give in to the impulse. Instead, she made her face into a mask of indifference and sipped her chocolate.
“I’m going to make a few calls,” Constable Frey said, taking the ring and leaping to his feet.
Garret shot him a dirty look. Great, his expression said. Abandoned with an hysterical international jewel thief.
“I am not hysterical,” she insisted.
He said nothing.
“And I am not a thief.”
“I didn’t say you were hysterical or a thief.”
“I saw the look on your face.”
“Lady, I’m tired, okay? International jewel thievery aside, the most important thing on my mind is finding a sitter for Angelica so when twelve people descend on me less than one day from now to learn about search and rescue, I can devote myself to them.”
“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to disrupt your life.”
Search and rescue. He found lost people in these foreboding mountains. He taught other people how to do it Every now and then, all too rarely, she’d meet someone ideally suited to his or her job. And he was one of those people. She wondered if she was and then felt annoyed with herself. Her job was her whole life. Of course she was suited to it.
“Not your fault,” he said gruffly.
Constable Frey rejoined them. “Things aren’t good,” he said.
She sighed. “Okay. Arrest me, then. Get me out of this poor man’s hair. I’m disrupting his search for a baby-sitter.”
I’m thanking about husbands and babies and whether I’m suited for my job. Get me out of here. Fast.
“The man who runs that jewelry store you were in today has been reported missing by his mother.”
“Oh, no!” Her hand flew to her mouth in genuine horror.
“And your hotel room has been virtually dismantled.”
“Is anything missing?” she asked.
He looked at her shrewdly. “Such as?”
“I have a camera. I saved two years to buy it—oh, never mind. How ridiculous to worry about my camera when that poor man is missing.”
“I’ll ask about the camera next time I call. Meantime, how would you feel about lying low for a while? Here.”
“Here?” she cried in unison with Garret.
“Somebody’s looking for you. The question is who? By now, they probably know more about you than your own mother. If these people are sophisticated, and it seems they are, the first time you use your credit card, they’ve got you.”
“But they’ll stop looking once it’s been made public the ring has been found. Won’t they?”
“This ring,” the constable said softly, “might be all that’s keeping that jewelry store owner alive.”
“Good grief!”
“Seems to me, the way you left town is almost providential. You vanished into thin air. You can’t be traced. Nobody is ever going to look for you in Eliza. Ever.”
She was gaping at him. So was Garret.
“There only appeared to be three or four houses in Eliza,” she pointed out. “You weren’t like, um, going to take me into protective custody or something, were you?”
“Nah. Garret’s got a spare room.”
Garret said something very rude.
“And,” Constable Frey added with a sweet smile, “he desperately needs a sitter for a few days.”
Toni said something very rude. “I don’t know anything about babies!”
“Neither did he a few months ago.”
“Angelica hates being called a baby. She’s sensitive about her size.” Garret said this absently, looking at her differently now that she might have some value to him.
He tried out a boyish grin on her. If he’d been handsome before, he was incredibly so when he put a little effort into it.
She gave him a look that could have curled steel rods.
“Ten minutes ago, you thought I was an international jewel thief and now you want me to look after your ba—child?”
“I never said I thought you were a thief.”
“I never thought you were a thief,” Constable Prey said with surprise.
“You don’t know anything about me,” she persisted desperately.
“You don’t have a criminal record,” Constable Frey offered helpfully. “I ran it.”
“Thank you very much,” she snapped.
“I’ll help you, and you help me. Just for a few days.” Garret’s voice was as smooth and sensual as silk.
“Do I really have a choice?”
“Not really,” both men informed her.
“I don’t have anything to wear.”
“My stuff will fit you.”
“That’s what I was afraid of.”
“I’ll go get Angelface,” Constable Frey said. “Let you two get to know each other.” He wagged his eyebrows fiendishly.
“Oh, brother,” Toni muttered.
“Ditto,” Garret said.
They both stared stubbornly at the flickering TV screen.
A few minutes later the door burst open. Constable Frey ducked so he wouldn’t knock off the passenger who rode high on his shoulders.
Even before Toni saw the girl, the whole room seemed to brighten.
When she looked up, her breath caught.
The child looked around three or four and was absolutely beautiful, the spitting image of her uncle, only in a more delicate form. Dark, tumbling hair, huge sapphire blue eyes.
She stopped midsentence when she saw Toni. “Down,” she commanded royally.
She crossed the room with a hop and a skip and then solemnly gazed at Toni before her whole face lit up with a smile.
“Hello, Auntie,” she said.
“What?” Garret asked. “What did you say?”
“I said hello,” the little girl said with a careless shrug.
“Didn’t you say ‘Hello again’? Do you know this lady?”
Angelica looked at her with mischief dancing in her eyes.
And Toni had the oddest sensation of indeed knowing this child. And of something deeper and more breathtaking, something like stepping off the edge of a cliff.
Looking into those wonderful shining eyes, she fell hopelessly in love.
Why had the little girl called her “Auntie”? And why had Garret heard something different?
“I thought she said ‘Hello, angel.’” Constable Frey said.
“What did you say, Angelica?” her uncle asked.
“I just said hello,” she replied easily. “That’s all. It’s snowing out,” she said with pleasure. “I have a new toboggan. Will you go with me tomorrow?”
A chubby hand crept into Toni’s.
“A toboggan?” Toni said uncertainly. “Like a snow sled?”
Angelica nodded vigorously. “I like to go really fast,” she warned.
Suddenly, Toni, who had never seen real live snow before tonight, wanted nothing more than to go really fast down a hill with this little girl.
Suddenly, this whole adventure seemed tinged with magic.
Four days here did not seem like prison but like something else entirely. Fate. Destiny guiding her back to something that had always been and always would be.
She looked into those shining blue eyes and then glanced at Garret’s, the same shade but his tinged with darker mystery, sternness, a hint of sexuality.
She shivered.
Hello again...