Read Nikki and the Lone Wolf Online
Authors: Marion Lennox
She was stronger than he thought. She grabbed his other hand and held, hard, waiting for him to steady.
âSâ¦sorry.' For a moment he thought he might throw up. He concentrated for a bit and decided no, he might keep his dignity.
âLet me help you to the house.'
âDog first,' he said.
âYou first.'
âThe dog's standing up to his hocks in the water, howling. I'm not even whinging. I'm prioritizing.' He made to haul his hands away but she still held.
He stopped pulling and let her hold.
Two reasons. One, he was still unsteady.
Two, it feltâ¦not bad at all.
He worked with women. A good proportion of his fishing crews were female. They mostly smelled of, yeah, well, of fish. After a while, no matter how much washing, you didn't get the smell out.
Nikkita smelled of something citrussy and tangy and outright heady. It didn't make the dizziness worse, though. In truth it helped. He stood still, breathing in the scent of her, while the night settled around him.
She didn't speak. She simply held.
Two minutes. Three. She wasn't a talker, then. She'd figured
he needed time to make the ground solid and she was giving it to him. It was the first decent thing he'd seen of her.
Maybe there were more decent things.
Her hands felt good. They were small hands for a tall woman. Softâ¦
Yeah, well, of course they'd be soft. For the last ten years any woman he'd ever gone out with was a local, one of the fishing crews, women who worked hard for a living. The only woman he'd ever gone out with who had soft handsâ¦
Yeah. Lisbette. He'd married her.
So much for soft hands.
âI'm right now,' he said, finally, as another howl split the night. âDog.'
âPlease let me take you home first.'
âAre you good with dogs?'
âUmâ¦no.'
âThen we both do the dog,' he said. âSure, I'm unsteady, so you do what I tell you. Exactly what I tell you. After the poker, it's the least you can do.'
Â
Was she out of her mind?
She was acting under orders.
Gabe was sitting in the shadows, watching, as she approached the dog with her hands full of steak. Upwind, according to Gabe's directions, so he could smell the meat.
The dog was huge. Soaking wet, its coat was clinging to its skinny frame, so it looked almost like a small black horse.
Talk gently, Gabe had said. Soft, unthreatening.
So⦠âHey, Horse, it's okay,' she told him. âCome out of the water and have some steak. Gabe's gone to a lot of trouble to get it for you. The least you can do is eat it.'
Take one small step after another, Gabe had told her. Stop at the first hint of nervousness. Let the dog figure for himself that you're not a threat.
âCome on, boy. Hey, Horse, it's okay. It's fine. Come and tell me what your real name is.'
What was she doing, standing in the shallows with her hands full of raw meat? She'd tugged off her shoes but her jeans were soaked. To no avail. The dog was backing away, still twenty feet from her.
His coat was ragged, long and dripping. Fur was matted over his eyes.
He wasn't coming near.
If Gabe wasn't in the shadows watching she might have set the meat down on the sand and retreated.
But her landlord was expecting her to do this. He'd do it himself, only, despite what he told her, the thump on the head was making him nauseous. She knew it. He wasn't letting her call for help but she knew it went against the grain to let her approach the dog. Especially when she was so bad at it.
âHere, Horse. Hereâ¦'
A wave, bigger than the rest, came sideways instead of forward. It slapped into another wave, crested, hit her fair across the chest.
She yelped. She couldn't help herself.
The dog backed fast into the waves.
âIt's okay,' she called and forgot to lower her voice.
The dog cast her a terrified glance and backed some more. The next wave knocked him sideways. He regained his footing and ran, like the horse he resembled. Along the line of the surf, away, around the bed in the headland and out of sight.
Â
âIt's okay.'
It wasn't, but she hadn't expected him to say it. She'd expected him to yell.
She'd coshed him. She'd scared the dog away.
A little voice at the back of her mind was saying,
At least the howling's stopped.
NYP
, the same little voice in the back of her head whispered. Not your problem. She could forget the dog.
Only⦠He'd looked tragic. Horseâ¦
Gabe was sitting where the sand gave way to the grassy verge before the bush began. At least he looked okay. At least he was still conscious.
âYou did the best you could.'
For a city girl.
It wasn't said. It didn't have to be said.
âMaybe he's gone home.'
âDoes he look to you like he has a home?' He flicked his cellphone from his top pocket and punched in numbers. Then he glanced at her, sighed, and hit loudspeaker so she could hear who he was talking to.
A male voice. Authoritive. âBanksia Bay Police,' the voice said.
âRaff?' Gabe's voice still wasn't completely steady and the policeman at the end of the line obviously heard it. Maybe he was used to people with unsteady voices calling. He also recognised the caller.
âGabe? What's up?' She heard concern.
âNo problem. Or not a major one. A stray dog.'
âAnother one.' The policeman sighed.
âWhat are you talking about?' Gabe demanded.
âHenrietta's Animal Welfare van was involved in an accident a few days back,' the policeman explained. âWe have stray dogs all over town. Describe this one.'
âBig, black and malnourished,' Gabe said. He was watching Nikki as he spoke. Nikki was trying to get the sand from between her toes before she put her shoes on. It wasn't working.
She was soaking. She sat and the sand stuck to her. Ugh.
She was also unashamedly listening.
âLike Great Dane big?'
âYeah, but he's shaggy,' Gabe said. âI'd guess Wolfhound with a few other breeds mixed in as well. And I don't have him.
He was down the beach below the house. We tried to catch him with a lump of steak but he's headed round the headland to your side of town.'
âWe?' Raff said.
âYeah,' Gabe said dryly. âMy tenant's been helpful.'
âBut the two of you can't catch him.'
âNo,' Gabe said, and Nikki thought miserably that he sounded as if he could have done it if he was by himself. Maybe he could, but at least he didn't say so.
âI'll check from the headland in the morning,' Raff was saying. âYou okay? You sound odd.'
âNothing I can't handle. If he comes backâ¦you want me to take him to the shelter?'
âYou might as well take him straight to the vet's,' Raff said. âHe was on his way there to be put down. If he's the one I think he is, someone threw him off a boat a couple of weeks back. We found him on the beach, starving. He's well past cute pup stage. He's huge and shabby. Old scars and not a lot of loveliness. He looks like he's been kicked and neglected. No one will rehouse a dog like that, so Henrietta made the decision to get him put down. But if he doesn't come back to your beach it's not your worry, mate. Thanks for letting me know. 'Night.'
â'Night.'
Gabe repocketed his phone.
Nikki flicked more sand away.
A starving dog. Kicked and neglected. Thrown from a boat. She hadn't even managed to give him a meal, and now he was lost again.
Plus a landlord who was still sounding shaken because she'd thumped him.
Was there a scale for feeling bad? Bad, terrible, appalling.
âLeave the steak just above the high tide mark,' Gabe said, his voice gentle. âIt's not your fault.'
âNice of you to say so.'
âYeah, well, the bang on the head was your fault,' he con
ceded, and he even managed a wry smile. âBut there's nothing more we can do for the dog. He's gone. If he smelled the steak he might come back, but he won't come near if he smells us. We've done all we can. Moving on, I need an aspirin. Do you have those toes sand-free yet?'
âIâ¦yes.' No. She was crusted in sand but she stood up and prepared to move on.
She glanced along the beach, half hoping the dog would lope back.
Why would he?
âRaff'll find him,' Gabe said.
âHe's the local cop?'
âYes.'
âHe won't look tonight?'
âThere's no hope of finding him tonight. The beach around the headland is inaccessible at high tide. We'll find him tomorrow.'
âYou'll look, too?'
âI'm leaving at dawn,' he said. âI have fish to catch, but you're welcome to look all you want. Now, if you want to stay here you're also welcome, but I need my bed.'
Â
She followed him up the track, feeling desolate. But Gabe must be feeling worse than she was. Maybe he was walking slowly to cater for her lack of sensible shoes, but she didn't think so. Once he stumbled and she put out a hand. He steadied, looked down at her hand and shook his head. And winced again.
âI hit you hard,' she muttered.
âWomen aren't what they used to be,' he said. âWhatever happened to a nice, tidy slap across the cheek? That's what they do in movies.'
âI'll remember it next time.'
âThere won't be a next time,' he said, and she thought uh-oh, was her tenancy on the line?
âI'm not about to evict you,' he said wearily, and she
flinched. Beside being clumsy and stupid, was she also transparent?
âI didn't thinkâ¦'
âThat I was about to evict you for hitting me? Good.'
âThank you,' she said feebly and he went on concentrating on putting one foot in front of the other.
He didn't stop until they reached the house. The lights were still on. He stood back to let her precede him into the porch. Instead of going straight into her side of the house, she paused.
Under the porch-light he lookedâ¦ill. Yes, he still looked large, dark and dangerous, but he also looked pale under the weathering, and the thin trickle of blood was at the centre of a bruise that promised to be ugly.
He staggered a bit. She reached out instinctively but he grabbed the veranda post. Steadied.
She could have killed him. He looked soâ¦soâ¦
Male?
There was a sensible thought.
âYou could have me arrested,' she managed. âI'm so sorry.'
âBut you weren't planning to hit the dog.' It wasn't a question.
âNâ¦no.'
âThat's why I won't have you arrested. You meant well.'
âYou need to see a doctor.'
âI need to go to bed.'
âBut what if it's terrible?' she said before she could stop herself. âI've read about head wounds. People get hit on the head and go to bed and never wake up. You should get your pupils looked at. If one's bigger than the otherâ¦or is it if one doesn't move? I don't know, but I do know that you should get yourself checked. Please, can I drive you to the hospital?'
âNo.' Flat. Inflexible. Non negotiable.
âWhy not?'
âI've spent my life on boats. Believe it or not, I've been thumped a lot worse than this. I'm fine.'
âYou should be checked.'
âYou want to look at my pupils?'
âI wouldn't know what to look for. But if you go to bed now⦠It could be dangerous. Pleaseâ¦'
He was too close, she thought. He was too big. He smelled of the sea. But maybe it wasn't just the sea. He smelled of diesel oil, and fish, and salt, and other incredibly masculine smells she'd never smelled before.
The only man she'd been this close to in the last few years was Jon. Jon of the sleek business suits, of expensive aftershave, of cool, sleek, corporate style.
Compared to Jon, Gabe was another species. They both might be guys at the core, but externally Gabe had been left behind in the cave. Or at sea.
Beside Gabe she felt small and insignificant and stupid. And he made her feelâ¦vulnerable? Maybe, but something more. Exposed. It was a feeling she couldn't explain and she didn't want to explain. All she knew was that she didn't want to be beside him one moment longer, but she was still worried about him. That worry wouldn't be ignored.
âYou should be checked every couple of hours,' she said, doggedly now. Once upon a time, well before Jon, she'd dated a medical student. She knew this much.
âI'm fine.' He was getting irritated. âIn eight hours I'll be out at sea. I need to go to bed now. Goodnight.'
âAt least let me check.'
âCheck what?'
âCheck you. All night.'
He stilled. They were far too close. The porch was far too small. Exposed? It was a dumb thought, but that was definitely how he made her feel. His face was lined, worn, craggy. He couldn't be much over thirty, she thought, but he looked as if life had been hard.
It could get harder if she didn't check him. If he was to dieâ¦
âWhat are you talking about?' he demanded.
âI need to check you every two hours,' she said miserably, knowing her conscience would let her off with nothing less. âI'll come in and make sure you're conscious.'
âI won't be conscious. I'll be asleep.'
âThen I'll wake you and you can tell me your name and what day it is and then you can go back to sleep.'
âI won't know which day it is.'
âThen tell me how much you dislike the tenant next door,' she said, starting to feel desperate. âFor worrying. But I need to do this.' Deep breath. âIt's two-hour checks or I'll phone your friend, the cop, and I tell him how badly I hit you. I wouldn't be the least bit surprised if he's the kind of guy who'll be up here with sirens blazing making you see sense.'