She snapped, ‘Don’t call me that.’
‘I thought it was your name,’ he countered.
‘It is. I just don’t like it.’ Deborah belonged to the girl Dee used to be. She was someone else now. ‘You haven’t answered my question. Why did you come looking for me?’
‘To give you these.’ He went into his jacket for his wallet and took out the other halves of the notes from yesterday. ‘I thought you might need it.’
Dee took them and muttered a grudging, ‘Thanks.’
‘I wanted to check you were all right, too,’ he added.
‘Never better.’ Dee grimaced as she struggled to her feet, and started limping back towards the flats.
‘I can see that.’ He caught her elbow and would have given her support, but she shrugged off his hand.
She made it as far as an abandoned oil drum, then perched on it for a rest.
He nodded towards her leg. ‘Want me to take a look at that?’
‘Why? What can you do?’ Dee didn’t want his concern.
‘I’m a doctor, remember?’
Actually she hadn’t. She still thought of him as male model material. Too handsome for words.
‘So you say.’ Dee had her doubts and didn’t want him treating her anyway. ‘You just don’t happen to be my doctor.’
‘No problem. I’ve got a mobile on me. Do you think your doctor will come on a house call?’ He glanced round him at the derelict flats and urban wasteland.
‘Very funny.’ Dee understood the point. She didn’t have a GP anyway.
‘If you can’t walk, I’ll carry you,’ he offered matter-of-factly.
‘I’d rather die,’ Dee muttered, not quite under her breath.
‘Fair enough.’ He began to walk away.
Dee watched in disbelief. ‘You’re not going to leave me here, are you?’
He turned, hands in pockets, and gave her a mocking look. ‘What happened to “I’d rather die”!’
Dee could have thrown something at him, only she had nothing at hand. She made it to her feet instead, and hobbled a step or two.
He grunted his impatience before he came striding back and literally swept Dee off her feet. It was so unexpected, her heart missed a beat. Then missed another as she was compelled to lock her arms round his neck. Her hands brushed against the warmth of his skin while he moved with an easy strength. Unfamiliar feelings stirred inside her, and she tried to detach herself from this acute physical awareness of him.
‘Stop squirming,’ he instructed briskly as he picked his way past the debris of dumped rubbish and made for the road rather than her maisonette.
‘Where are we going?’ demanded Dee, alerted by the change of direction.
‘There’s a derelict bus shelter,’ he informed her. ‘You can sit there while I fetch the car.’
Car? What car? He’d said his car was in Scotland.
Could it all be a lie? His being a doctor, needing a wife, being willing to pay ten thousand pounds? The more Dee thought about it, the crazier it seemed.
He could be a liar, a thief, a madman, but the curious thing was, she still wasn’t scared of him. In fact, as he dumped her in the graffitied bus shelter and wordlessly walked away, she was more scared that he wouldn’t return.
By the time a car appeared and caught her in its headlights, she was very jumpy.
She was relieved when Baxter Ross emerged from behind the driver’s wheel. He might be a stranger but there was something reassuringly normal about him.
He put an arm to her waist and helped her limp to the car. She leaned on the bonnet and observed a car-hire sticker on the windscreen. So maybe he wasn’t a liar.
He opened the passenger door, saying, ‘I’ll drive you to the nearest Casualty to check the damage.’
Dee already knew what was wrong; she had damaged the tendon again. ‘I’ll go tomorrow.’
He made a noise, impatient rather than sympathetic. ‘Don’t be silly. You won’t get there under your own steam.’
‘I have to go back to the maisonette,’ she insisted.
He followed her worried glance to the block of flats. ‘If it’s a boyfriend, then he can’t be up to much,’ he dismissed. ‘Not if he lets you go on midnight rambles in this neighbourhood.’
‘It’s a dog!’ she retorted abruptly. ‘You’ve met him, remember?’
‘Yes, of course, Henry.’ He surprised her by recalling her dog’s name.
‘I can’t leave him,’ she explained in more even tones. ‘He’ll be frightened on his own.’
‘Get in.’ He nodded towards the passenger seat. ‘I’ll go fetch the mutt.’
He was so offhand, it was impossible to imagine him as a threat. He started to walk away.
She called after him, ‘Be careful. Henry might be a bit nervy.’
‘Nervy—right.’ He cast her a look over his shoulder. ‘As in likely to bite first and ask questions later?’
‘Possibly,’ Dee admitted.
‘Well, thanks for the warning, at least.’ He carried on walking.
Dee watched him go, a tall, lean figure with a fluid stride. Nothing seemed to throw him.
It was Dee who felt reaction set in, shivering in the cool night air at her lack of jacket, and she climbed into the passenger seat to wait for him.
She soon heard barking, and rolled down the window a fraction. She worried about the dog initially, but as the barking became louder and fiercer her concern switched to Baxter Ross. She might not like him much, but he was trying to help her when he could easily have walked away.
The barking continued, interspersed with the sound of wood being smashed, then there was silence. Dee sat in the car, holding her breath interminably, before they suddenly appeared.
The dog padded alongside the man. It seemed that Henry had decided Baxter Ross was more friend than foe. He wagged his tail, glad to see Dee but not unduly worried.
Dee watched in the mirror as Baxter Ross removed the parcel shelf at the back of the car and folded down the rear seats to create a large boot, pushing his own luggage nearer the front. He helped a stiff Henry into it and also stowed away her flute case and rucksack. Why had he brought those?
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