‘Are you OK? Are you OK? Oh, God.’ She struggled to breathe. ‘Are you OK?’
‘I’m OK.’
It was a man and he was back to standing. Very tall in fact and definitely still alive because his eyes were open—and an incredibly vibrant blue—and he was breathing. Which was more than she was managing at the moment.
Horrified, she shook her head, unable to believe what had just happened. ‘I didn’t see you.’
‘The pedestrian light was green,’ he said dryly.
‘You just appeared out of nowhere. ’ Surely she should have seen him earlier? He was over six feet. Hell, if she’d missed him, had there been anyone else? Was there someone stuck under her car right now? She bent and looked under the wheels.
‘Your car is fine.’
‘I don’t care about that,’ she said as she frantically searched. ‘Was there just you? I didn’t hit anyone else?’
She craned her neck to look up at him again.
‘Just me.’
‘Oh, thank God. I mean…’ She gulped, her heart galloping faster. ‘…you’re really OK?’
‘Really OK. ’ He actually laughed. ‘Look, you want to move your car? You’re holding up the traffic.’
Dazed, she turned and looked at the line of cars behind hers. But most were now moving into the next lane to get around her. So that was OK. Besides, what did a little delayed traffic matter? This was an accident scene. She turned back to him. ‘Are you sure you’re OK?’ Her voice rose to a pitch usually only dogs could hear.
He pointed to the footpath. ‘Let’s talk there.’
Numbly she took a few steps, but stopped sharply, appalled when she saw him walk. ‘Oh, no, you’re limping. Why are you limping? Where did I get you? Where does it hurt?’
‘No, it’s just my knee, it’s—’
‘Your knee?’ Her voice rose another three octaves. ‘That’s where I got you? Oh, let me check. ’ She dropped to her haunches, reaching out to lift the hem of the long grey shorts he was wearing so she could inspect the damage. She half expected to see screeds of blood coursing down his shin. But there weren’t. Instead she was confronted with tanned, muscular calves. Her hand hovered, but the next second he’d stepped out of reach.
‘It’s fine. ’ His large hand encircled her upper arm and gently tugged her upwards.
Reluctantly she stood. ‘Are you sure?’ Had she knocked him right over? She didn’t even know. She shuddered as she relived that thudding sound. She’d never had a car accident. Never ever. And now she’d run someone over. ‘You don’t need a doctor? Please let me take you to the doctor. I think I should take you to a doctor.’
‘I don’t need a doctor,’ he said firmly. ‘But you’ve gone even paler.’
Her stomach heaved more violently as the reality sank in. She slapped her hand to her mouth. ‘I could have killed you.’
‘You could have. But you didn’t.’
She could have killed a child, though. Worst-case scenarios flooded her mind—if it had been a toddler walking next to its mother, or a woman with a pram… It was only luck that had made it a six-foot-however-many-inches giant of a man. And even then she’d hurt him. She stared up at him, her eyes blurring, puffing more than when she ran up the thousand stairs to get to her office on the top floor of the building. She’d hurt him…
Both his hands settled on her shoulders. Firmly. ‘It’s OK. It was nothing. ’ He smiled and nodded his head as he emphasised each word.
She swallowed. He really was OK? His grip on her was certainly strong and vital and brought her thoughts to a complete halt.
‘You were in a hurry to get somewhere?’ he asked.
‘What? Yes.’ She glanced at her watch and his hands dropped. ‘Oh. No.’ Way too late now.
‘Where?’
‘It doesn’t matter. It absolutely doesn’t matter. ’ And it didn’t. ‘Let me take you wherever you were going. ’ She turned and opened the passenger door and pushed him to get in. ‘I’m so sorry I hit you. And you’re limping—can I take you to a doctor?’
‘No.’
But she wasn’t listening. Instead she pushed him harder, wanting him to get into her car, determined to take him, just to make sure. But it was like trying to move a mountain—impossible. And this mountain wasn’t cold, it was warm and broad and very, very solid. Not to mention broad—had she registered that already? She slid her palms wider across the inviting breadth, felt the solidness go even more taut—the powerful muscles suddenly snapped with energy.
His flinch brought her back to reality. OMG she had her hands all over his chest.
‘Sorry. ’ Totally flustered she looked up, her gaze instantly caught and locked by his. His eyes were brilliant sky-blue and his smile shone like the brightest sun. Reality vanished again as in a heartbeat she was lost in the gleaming warm intensity. Heavenly blue, most definitely heavenly. She couldn’t blink, couldn’t breathe, couldn’t think of anything but summer warmth and fun and absolute dreaminess…
She blinked. This was insane. She’d almost run him over—what was she doing staring at him as if she’d never seen a man before?
Well, she hadn’t, at least not one as built as this. Not ever. The only men she saw were those at work and they were all either weedy or obese. Sure, it was a stereotype, but in Kelsi’s world it was actually true—computer geek guys were not gorgeous.
This man before her was most definitely not a computer geek. He had to spend serious hours outside to get both a tan like that and muscles like those, not to mention the sun-lightened streaks at the front of his dark brown hair. Hair that hung over his forehead in a casual style begging to be brushed back by her itchy fingers.
He was all utterly natural gorgeousness. But perhaps not, perhaps it was her contacts making him seem so vibrant. What colour tint had she put in today? She couldn’t remember. Had one of them slipped? She blinked again. Tried to marshal her far-flung-on-the-breeze thoughts.
‘Tell you what, why don’t I drive you?’ The question was asked so gently she wasn’t sure if he’d actually said it or if she was dreaming.
‘Pardon?’ She shivered.
His hand lifted to her shoulder again, his thumb stroked her skin, a slow sweep and what she thought he’d just said fled from her head. She shivered again—but she certainly wasn’t cold.
‘I’m going to drive,’ he said very slowly.
He was what? All she knew was that he was smiling and the world was technicolor.
‘Come on.’
He seemed to be trying to calm her down. She didn’t need calming down—she was fine, right? But she was moving, being guided into her own passenger seat by the warm, firm hand on her lower back.
She sat.
‘Um. ’ No point arguing now. He’d shut the door and was walking to the driver’s side. She winced as she saw his limp again. This was crazy—she needed to get a grip on herself and apologise once more. She needed to be helping him, not the other way round.
As soon as he got in she asked him, ‘Are you sure you’re OK to drive?’
There was a half-laugh in reply. It was a nice laugh—low and very, very amused. ‘What’s your name?’
Kelsi stared at him, the echo of the laugh reverberating through the small space.