“What do you want?” Sara asked, trying to be polite when she felt like screaming at the woman.
“What we all want, dear,” the other woman laughed. “To have Jared for keeps. But that won’t happen. If he wasn’t so financially secure, he might be less attractive,” she added.
“I know very little about Mr. Cameron,” Sara said stiffly. “And I don’t think you should talk about him that way. You’re supposed to be his lawyer.”
“His lawyer, his lover, it’s all the same,” came the bored reply. “Tell him I called.”
She hung up.
Sara felt sick at her stomach. Surely the horrible woman wasn’t right? Jared didn’t seem like a heartless seducer. But what did she really know about him? Next to nothing. Could he be a ladykiller? Sara felt insecure. She was still very young. She hadn’t dated very much and she’d never had to extricate herself from a dangerously intimate situation. She knew instinctively that Jared was experienced. She’d given in to his hard kisses at once. What if he really put on the pressure? Could she save herself in time?
The thought worried her.
She was still gnawing on it when Jared opened the door and came into her bedroom with a large laundry hamper.
Her eyebrows arched. “You brought my dirty clothes back with you?” she exclaimed, aghast.
He glowered at her. “Tony’s got your clothes. I brought your cat.”
Her heart skipped. He had to be kidding! She sat up on the side of the bed and looked down into the basket. There was old Morris, curled up asleep and purring for all he was worth, on one of her old hand-crocheted afghans.
She looked up at Jared curiously.
“He didn’t touch his supper last night. He wouldn’t eat today, either. Tony thinks he’s worried about you. So we brought him home with us.” Gently he lifted the battle-scarred old marmalade tomcat out of the basket and placed him on the bed with Sara.
Morris opened one green eye, butted his head against Sara affectionately, and went right back to sleep.
“Tony’s bringing the litter box. We can put it in your bathroom,” Jared said disgustedly.
She cuddled Morris while he was in the mood. “He didn’t try to bite you …? Oh!”
He displayed a hand liberally covered with colorful plastic bandages.
“I’m really sorry,” she began.
“I had an old hunting dog I was fond of,” he said gruffly. “He died last month at the age of fourteen years.” He shrugged. “They’re like family.”
She managed a tiny smile. “Yes.”
He heard Tony coming down the hall. “I hope we got the right things.”
Tony came in grinning and put down a suitcase on the chest at the foot of Sara’s bed. “Here’s your stuff. I’ll bring the litter box when I come back. He’s nice, your cat.”
“Well, of course you’d think he was nice,” Jared muttered. “He didn’t sink his fangs into you!”
“He’s got good taste,” Tony defended himself.
“Good taste the devil, he knows that you’ve eaten cats!” Jared shot back. “He was probably afraid you’d serve him up for lunch if he bit you!”
Tony, noting Sara’s expression, scowled. “It was only one cat,” he pointed out. “And we were all starving. It was a very old and very tough cat. Nobody liked it,” he added, trying to hit the right note.
Sara was all eyes. “Where were you?” she asked, aghast.
“Somewhere in Malaysia,” Tony said easily. “Mostly we ate snakes, but sometimes you got no choice, especially when the snakes can outrun you.” He noted Sara’s expression and stopped while he was ahead. “I’ll just go get that litter box.”
“You’d never be able to eat a snake he cooked,” Jared muttered when Tony was in the hall. “He can’t make anything if it doesn’t go well with tomato sauce.”
“I heard that!” Tony called back. “And snakes go great with tomato sauce!”
Sara smiled despite the rough time Jared had given her. He and Tony were a great act together. But she sensed undercurrents. And she thought both men were wearing masks, figuratively speaking. She wondered what they hid.
She finished her dinner and Jared still hadn’t said another word.
“This was very nice,” she said when she finished her last sip of milk and was pushing the rolling cart away from the bed. “Thanks.” She eased back onto the bed, grimacing as the stitches pulled, and drew old Morris close to her. “He doesn’t move much these days,” she said as she stroked the purring old tomcat. “I’ve never been sure how old he is. I don’t think I want to know.” She looked up at Jared. “I would have told you that he doesn’t like being picked up, if I’d known you planned to bring him over here.”
“Well, the minute Tony picked him up he started purring.”
She hid a smile. “I’ll bet animals follow Tony around.”
He thought of a few women he and Tony had come across in their travels. “It isn’t just animals,” he said thoughtfully.
She stroked Morris again. “Your lawyer called.”
He hesitated. “Max?”
She nodded.
“What did she want?”
She was weighing honesty against peace on earth. Peace on earth won. “She just wanted to tell you something. She said she’d call back.”
He frowned. “Was that all she said?” he asked with visible suspicion. “No comments about your presence here?”
The blush gave her away.
“I thought so,” he said. “She’s good at what she does, but she bores easily and she likes new experiences. She can’t resist setting her cap at every presentable male client who comes along. She’s already gone through three husbands and several lovers.”
Including you? she wondered, but she didn’t dare say it out loud.
He watched her stroking the cat and it reminded him, for some reason, of his grandmother. “My father’s mother loved cats,” he recalled. “She had six at one time. Then they began to get old and pass on. The last one she had was a yellow tabby, sort of like Morris. When she died, he stopped eating. We tried everything. Nothing worked. He settled down in the sun without moving and died three days later.”
“And they say animals don’t feel emotion,” she murmured absently.
“Everything feels. Even plants.”
She looked up, grinning. “Did you see that show where they put plants in little greenhouses …”
“… They yelled and praised one group, ignored another group and played classical and rock music to two other groups,” he continued, his green eyes twinkling.
“And the plants that grew biggest were the ones bombarded with hard rock.”
He chuckled. “If I thought that would work on hay, I’d have loudspeakers set up in the fields.” He shook his head. ‘First we had drought for a year in Oklahoma, now we’re having floods. The weather is no friend to the rancher this year, either.”
“Our dry fields could sure use some of your floods,” she agreed.
The conversation ended. He was tired and half out of