The Man with the Locked Away Heart
MELANIE MILBURNE
TJingilly Creek isn't used to strangers – especially tall, dark, utterly hot city cops! There's definitely chemistry between the mysterious Marc Di Angelo and local doctor Gemma Kendall, but he seems determined to ignore it. Gemma can see the flicker behind Marc's steely gaze…Can she release his tightly guarded emotions before he leaves town for good…?
The Man with
the Locked Away
Heart
Melanie Milburne
www.millsandboon.co.uk (http://www.millsandboon.co.uk)
Table of Contents
Cover (#uba2f5005-133a-5e2f-afd0-1d3ab2356c64)
Title Page (#u96e184f4-d446-537c-9a97-a2f5668f7b43)
About the Author (#u623b8f06-ca63-5edb-97f3-e7da656ed418)
Dedication (#u54dd3f8b-7a86-5ca8-a09a-5a11bfeadfb0)
Chapter One (#udc72ece3-ea86-5181-b79c-41aa8b3a31ef)
Chapter Two (#u3e0f2f5c-a491-5eae-a014-3a28b3125509)
Chapter Three (#ua6bf6c65-0b9f-5e77-ba8a-11a1a506d0cf)
Chapter Four (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter Five (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter Six (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter Seven (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter Eight (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter Nine (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter Ten (#litres_trial_promo)
Epilogue (#litres_trial_promo)
Copyright (#litres_trial_promo)
About the Author
MELANIE MILBURNE says: ‘One of the greatest joys of being a writer is the process of falling in love with the characters and then watching as they fall in love with each other. I am an absolutely hopeless romantic. I fell in love with my husband on our second date, and we even had a secret engagement—so you see it must have been destined for me to be a Harlequin Mills & Boon® author! The other great joy of being a romance writer is hearing from readers. You can hear all about the other things I do when I’m not writing, and even drop me a line at: www.melaniemilburne.com.au (http://www.melaniemilburne.com.au)’
Dedication
To my brother Edgar John Luke.
Ed, you have been an amazing brother and a real believer in me right from the start.
This one is for you with much love. XXX
CHAPTER ONE
‘THERE’S someone here to see you, Gemma,’ Narelles, the receptionist at the clinic, informed her as she popped her head around the consulting-room door.
Gemma looked up from the patient notes she was filling in before she left for the day. ‘Not another lastminute patient?’ she asked, trying to ignore the sinking feeling in her stomach. She had been working twelve hours straight and could think of nothing better than driving back to Huntingdon Lodge to catch up on some much-needed sleep.
‘No,’ Narelle said, and cupping her hand around her mouth in a conspiratorial manner added in a stage whisper. ‘It’s a police sergeant.’
Gemma straightened her slumped shoulders like a puppet suddenly pulled up by strings. ‘A sergeant?’ she asked. ‘Why? What’s happened?’
Narelle’s eyes danced. ‘He’s the new cop. You know, the one we’ve been waiting for to replace Jack Chugg? He’s in the waiting room. I guess he just wants to make himself known to you. Do you want me to hang around while he’s here?’
Gemma pushed out from the desk and got to her feet. ‘No, you go on home, Narelle. Ruby and Ben will be missing you. You’ve already stayed way past your usual time. I didn’t realise Nick Goglin’s transfer to Brisbane would take so long.’
‘You think he’s going to make it?’ Narelle asked with a concerned frown.
Gemma hiked her shoulders up and down. ‘Who knows? With head injuries it’s always hard to predict the outcome. The neuro team in Brisbane will let us know as soon as he is assessed. All we can do at this stage is hope and pray he comes out of the coma with all his faculties intact.’
‘Yes, well, all of Jingilly Creek is behind him, and of course Meg and the kids,’ Narelle said. Her hand dropped from where it was holding the door ajar. ‘I’ll send your visitor in on my way out. Have a good one, Gemma.’
‘Thanks,’ she said as she quickly straightened the files on her desk. ‘You too.’
Gemma heard firm footsteps moving along the corridor and then there was a brief hard knock on the consulting-room door a moment or two later.
‘Come in,’ she said, fixing a pleasant but professional smile on her face.
As soon as the door opened she felt her eyes widen involuntarily and her smile falter. For some reason she had been expecting a slightly overweight, close-to-retirement-age cop, someone who would take up the remote Outback post until they finally hung up their badge for good. She had pictured in her mind’s eye a mid-height man with a balding pate and a belly that overhung his belt, similar to the recently retired Jack Chugg. She hadn’t for a moment conjured up a tall, broad-shouldered, slim-hipped, dark-haired, gorgeous-looking man in his early to mid-thirties with a body that looked as if it would look even better without the covering of the blue denim jeans and white casual shirt he was wearing.
‘Dr Kendall?’ He moved across the floor to her desk in a couple of strides—most people took at least three or four—and held out his hand. ‘I am Sergeant Marc Di Angelo.’
Gemma put her hand in his and immediately felt as if he had zapped her with a Taser gun. Electric jolts travelled from her palm along the length of her arm. And even more shocking, disturbing and totally inexplicably, her heart gave a funny leap and skip and trip movement behind the wall of her chest. ‘Um—hi,’ she said, feeling her professional front peeling away like shedding skin as she met his dark-as-espresso, coffee-brown eyes.
‘I’m sorry to disturb you at the end of the day,’ he said. ‘But I have not long arrived in town and thought I should drop by and introduce myself.’
‘Um … would you like to sit down?’ she asked, waving a hand towards one of the two chairs she had positioned beside her desk so as not to intimidate her patients. Now she wished she had the barrier of her desk between the sergeant’s long legs and hers. It seemed far too intimate a distance when he sat down soon after she had taken her own chair. If he moved his legs even a fraction, they would touch hers. He had powerful-looking legs, long and strong with well-developed muscles. She tried not to look at his quadriceps as they bunched beneath the fabric of his jeans but her gaze felt drawn to them as if pulled by some invisible force. She quickly fixed her gaze on his and her heart did another funny little stop-start. His eyes were so dark she felt compelled to stare at him. They were so dark and secretive, mysterious, closed off, locked down, as if he had seen too much and was not prepared to let anyone else catch even a glimpse of what it had done to him. ‘Welcome to Jingilly Creek,’ she said, working extra-hard at keeping her professional poise on track. ‘I hope you enjoy your time here.’
His gaze was unwavering on hers and his expression—like just about all of the cops snthe had met in the past on business—was completely and utterly unreadable. ‘From what I have seen so far, it is certainly going to be a change from the city,’ he said.
In spite of his casual attire, Gemma could see the slick city cut to his jeans and shirt and the totally urban look he had in terms of grooming. The thick dark locks of his wavy hair were controlled by some sort of hair product, and his lean, fashionably unshaven jaw hinted at the potent male hormones surging around his body. She wondered why he of all people had taken such a remote post. She wondered too if he had brought anyone with him, a wife or girlfriend perhaps. She sidestepped her thoughts, annoyed at herself for even thinking about it. His private life had nothing to do with her. ‘Yes, well, it’s generally pretty quiet out here,’ she said. ‘But we have our moments.’
‘How long have you been in town, Dr Kendall?’ he asked, leaning back in his chair slightly, as if settling in for the rest of the evening.
Gemma shifted in her seat, her eyes flicking to those impossibly long, strong legs before returning to his dark, inscrutable eyes. ‘I’ve been here three years,’ she said. ‘I came up from Melbourne. I wanted to do my bit for the Outback. There’s a shortage of doctors in regional areas. It’s obviously much the same for your people. We’ve been waiting for a replacement for Sergeant Chugg for nearly six months.’
He gave a slow nod. ‘And what keeps you here, Dr Kendall?’ he asked. ‘It seems to me to be a rough, lonely sort of place for a young single woman.’
Gemma frowned at him. ‘How do you know I’m single?’
His eyes went to her tightly knotted hands in her lap before coming back to hers. Was that a hint of mockery she could see in his darker-than-dark gaze? ‘You’re not wearing a ring,’ he said.
‘So?’ she said, shifting again in her chair but in an affronted, agitated manner this time. Did she look as desperate and dateless as she sometimes felt? It had taken her the best part of her first year out here to put her heartbreak behind her. She was over it now. Well and truly over it. Or was there something about her appearance that shrieked lonely single woman? She knew she wasn’t wearing any make-up to speak of and her blond hair was in need of new highlights, not to mention her roots, and she didn’t even want to think about how badly her eyebrows needed a pluck. She would have done it last night but she had fallen asleep in front of the television. ‘I might choose not to wear jewellery when at work,’ she said. ‘A lot of doctors don’t.’
An upward movement of his top lip suggested it was about as close to a smile as he was used to giving. ‘Point taken,’ he said.
The ensuing silence was intimidating but, then, Gemma wondered if he had intended it to be. He was obviously assessing her, summing her up for his mental database. Most cops did it. They were trained to read people, to decode even the most subtle body language and subtext of speech. She suspected he was a master at it. She sat it out as determinedly as she could. She crossed her arms and her legs, a lightning strike of sensation rushing through her when her ankle accidentally brushed against one of his. She thought she saw a flash of primal male interest in his gaze but he just as quickly went back to deadpan.
‘You currently live at a property called Huntingdon Lodge,’ he said. ‘Is that correct?’
‘For someone who’s only been in town a matter of minutes, you seem to have done your research, Sergeant Di Angelo,’ Gemma said with an arch look.
He gave a lift of one shoulder, a careless, casual movement she knew instinctively was a guise. ‘In a town this small I don’t think it will take me long to get to know everything there is to know about everyone.’
He said it as if that was his goal and Gemma could well believe he would achieve it if he set his mind to it. There was a steely determination to his personality. She could see it in the chiselled strength of his jaw, the Roman nose and in the firm, intractable line of his unsmiling mouth. Here was a man used to getting his own way in every facet of his life, she thought. The hint of arrogance in his persona, the aloof, brooding set to his features and his unmistakable attractiveness was a powerful and deadly combination she would have to take care to guard against.
‘I’ve lived there since I came up from Melbourne,’ she said. ‘Gladys Rickards was a patient of mine. She ran the homestead as a boarding house and farm-stay property after her husband died. I ended up staying on with her rather than finding my own place. She was lonely and liked the company. We became very good friends. I guess that’s really one of the reasons I’ve stayed on for as long as I have in Jingilly Creek. I didn’t want to leave Gladys. She became rather dependent on me towards the end.’
His gaze was still locked on hers. ‘Mrs Rickards died not long ago, correct?’
Gemma shifted a little in her chair, her hands untying and then reknotting in her lap. She felt uncomfortable that he knew all that about her already. What else did he know? ‘Yes. It was very sad,’ she said. ‘She was one of the mainstays of this community, everyone loved her. She will be greatly missed.’ She let out a sigh and added, ‘It’s been just over a month and I still can’t quite believe she’s no longer there when I go home.’
The same brow lifted up, slightly higher this time, interest and intrigue there in that single movement. ‘What did she die of, exactly?’ he asked.
Gemma felt another frown pull at her forehead. ‘She was eighty-nine years old, Sergeant. She had a long history of kidney problem ssociated with her type two diabetes. She went into renal failure and at her request died at home.’
Dark, bottomless eyes, steady, watchful, assessing. ‘You were with her?’ he asked.
The question seemed loaded with something she found disturbing. She felt her back come up at what he seemed to be implying. ‘Sergeant Di Angelo, I have been with a number of patients when they die out here,’ she said. ‘Jingilly Creek is a long way from dialysis and transplant facilities, any facilities, in fact. Even if those were options Gladys could have had, she chose to die at home. She felt she had lived a long and productive life. She wanted no further intervention. I felt it was a privilege to have taken care of her. She had been extremely kind to me when I first arrived in town.’
‘She must have thought very highly of you,’ he said, still watching her with the gaze of a hawk. ‘Huntingdon Lodge is now yours, is it not?’
Gemma sent her tongue out over her lips again. Who on earth had he been speaking to? Ray Grant, the only other cop in town, hadn’t even mentioned the arrival of the new sergeant and she had been with him just an hour ago at Nick Goglin’s place. The only thing he had mentioned, and that had been at least a couple of weeks ago, had been that he was still waiting to see if the guy in mind was going to take up the position so he could have some much-needed time off. ‘Look, Sergeant Di Angelo, I am not sure what you are suggesting, but I had no idea Gladys had written her will that way. It came as a complete surprise to me. I had not expected her to do anything like that. It was certainly never something we discussed.’
‘How did her family feel about her bequeathing everything to you?’ he asked, still with that cop-like gaze fixed on hers.
‘Gladys and her husband Jim lost their only son forty years ago,’ she said, trying not to fidget under his unnerving scrutiny. ‘There are nieces and nephews and second cousins and so on, but no one who visited or kept in touch regularly.’
‘So you were the lucky one to inherit all of her considerable assets.’ It was neither a statement nor a question but more leaning towards an accusation, Gemma thought.
‘Huntingdon Lodge is like a lot of old properties around here—quite rundown,’ she said. ‘It needs much more money than it produces in order to keep things going.’
‘What have you decided to do with it?’ he asked. ‘Keep it or sell it?’
‘I—I haven’t quite decided,’ she answered, which wasn’t exactly the truth. As much as Gemma loved Jingilly Creek and caring for the locals, Huntingdon Lodge, although beautiful and with masses of potential, really needed someone with a farming background to run it properly. But for the first time since her mother had died she had a place to call home. But selling up and leaving so soon after inheriting the property could easily be misinterpreted by the locals. She had decided to make the best of it until enough time passed to make other plans.
‘No immediate plans to head back to the big smoke?’ he asked.
Gemma pursed her lips before she responded. He was watching her with that steady cop-gaze, quietly reading her every word and movement to see if they were in sync. ‘I am not sure what these questions have to do with your appointment here, Sergeant. I should warn you that if you subject every person you meet in Jingilly Creek to the same inquisition you have given me, you might find your stay here is not as pleasant or productive as you might have wished.’
He gave her his brief version of a smile but it didn’t involve his eyes. ‘I’ll risk it,’ he said as he rose to his feet. ‘Thank you for your time.’
Gemma stood up but her legs didn’t feel as steady as she would have liked. The consulting room seemed to have shrunk considerably as it accommodated the sergeant’s tall, authoritative presence. She could even catch a hint of his lemony aftershave and late-in-the-day honest male sweat. It wasn’t unpleasant, certainly not as unpleasant as that of some of her hard-working, hard-drinking, hard-smoking patients.
Marc Di Angelo smelt of a man in his prime: sexy, virile and dangerously potent. ‘How long are you planning on staying at this post?’ she asked out of a politeness she didn’t really feel.
‘I am not sure at this stage,’ he answered. ‘It depends.’
‘So, you’re like doing a locum or something?’
His eyes gave nothing away. ‘Something like that.’
‘Have you had a chance to meet the other officer?’ she asked. ‘I was out on a call with Ray Grant earlier but he should be back at the station by now. He didn’t mention he was expecting you today.’
‘I spoke to him by phone a short time ago to let him know I was here,’ he said. ‘I’ll head back there now to introduce myself in person.’ He reached into the breast pocket of his jacket and handed her a card. ‘My contact details in case I’m not at the station any time.’
Gemma took the card, which was still warm from being so close to his body. She put it on her desk, and faced him again. ‘Where are you staying while you’re here?’ she asked, not just out of forced or fabricated politeness this time. Accommodation was limited in Jingilly Creek and he didn’t seem the type to rough it at the local pub.
‘The department has booked me in at the hotel for the time being,’ he said. ‘I believe it’s called The Drover’s Retreat.’
‘Yes, well, it was a long time since it was anything like a retreat,’ she said with a wry expression. ‘You’ll get a bed, a shared bathroom and a cold beer and bangers and mash, but that’s about it.’
‘Do you have somewhere else you could recommend?’ he asked.
Gemma hesitated. Sharing Huntingdon Lodge with Marc Di Angelo was not something she was going to put her hand up for even if she was keen to get some regular boarders in to meet the cost of the repairs Rob Foster was helping her with. ‘Um … well, there’s not much around here. You’d have to go to Minnigarra for a motel but that’s over a hundred kilometres away.’
He looked at her for an infinitesimal pause. ‘So you’re not currently taking in lodgers?’
Gemma knew her face was pink but there was nothing she could do about it. ‘Um … I’m in the middle of repairs and renovations at present.’ It sounded like the fob-off it was and the look in his dark eyes confirmed he recognised it as such.
‘I’ll give the local place a go before I make other arrangements,’ he said. ‘Thank you again for your time.’
Gemma let out the breath she had been unconsciously holding once he left the clinic building. She had a feeling this was not going to be the last time she was going to be cross-examined by the determined and rather delicious-looking sergeant.
The drive out to Huntingdon Lodge, especially close to sundown, never failed to inspire Gemma. The sky was a brilliant backdrop of orange and yellow against the red dust of the open plains. It hadn’t rained for months but the last showers had been enough to fill the tanks and rivers for the first time in a decade. The pastoral area surrounding Jingilly Creek was still struggling to get back on its feet after such a difficult time but the locals were hopeful of another solid rain before winter arrived.
The long driveway to the stately old Victorian-style mansion was lined by old poplar trees, whose just-starting-to-turn leaves rattled like bottle caps in the evening breeze. A flock of corellas and sulphurcrested cockatoos called shrilly from the red river gums down by the river running through the property. It was a picturesque setting and yet Gemma felt a rush of loneliness when her gaze went to the empty rocking chair on the veranda.
Flossie, Gladys’s old Border collie, came limping down the steps to greet her. Gemma crouched down and hugged the old girl around the neck. ‘Hiya, Floss,’ she said. ‘I miss her too.’
The dog gave her a melting look and followed her into the house. Gemma fed the dog, and then, after a quick refreshing shower, she poured herself a cool drink and went back out to sit on the veranda to enjoy the last of the sunset. A couple of kangaroos were grazing in the house paddock, increasingly brave now that Flossie’s eyesight and sense of smell and speed were not what they had once been.
A thin curl of dust rose from the road in the distance but Gemma couldn’t make out if it was a neighbour or a tourist. Jingilly Creek hadn’t exactly been a tourist destination since a bypass to the town had been built in the eighties, but very occasionally a visitor would find their way to the isolated community if they headed inland off the main highway. Gladys would always give them a warm country welcome, fill them with a good hearty meal and offer them a bed for a night or two. Gemma had enjoyed watching her landlady entertain ‘city folk’, as Gladys had called them. Gemma had reminded her that she too was a city girl, but Gladys had always insisted there just had to be country blood in Gemma’s veins because she fitted in so well in the community. Gemma suspected Gladys had known how much she longed to fit in anywhere after so many years of feeling adrift. The Jingilly Creek community had become like an extended family to her. She felt loved and appreciated and valued and yet just lately it wasn’t quite enough.
Within minutes another curl of dust appeared but this time, instead of continuing down the road, the car creating the plume turned into Huntingdon Lodge. Gemma got off the wrought-iron seat—she couldn’t quite bring herself to sit in Gladys’s chair—and held onto the veranda post as the gunmetal-grey car rumbled over the cattle grid. It continued on up the serpentine drive until it finally came to a halt in front of the grand old house with a spray of gravel as the brakes were applied.
She felt her chest give a little flutter when the tall figure unfolded himself from the car, and her hand around the post tightened. He had undone a couple more of the buttons on his shirt, revealing just enough of his tanned chest to make her breath hitch in her throat. She suddenly was aware of her femininity in a way she hadn’t been in years. She couldn’t think of a time when she had met a more attractive-looking man. She used to think her ex-fiancé had cornered the market in good looks but Marc Di Angelo took it to a whole new level. ‘Good evening, Sergeant,’ she said as he crunched across the gravel towards the veranda. ‘Taking in the sights, are we?’
His dark gaze ran over her pink T-shirt with ‘Princess lives here’ written across her braless breasts before slowly coming back to her eyes.
Too slowly.
Deliberately slowly, Gemma thought. She felt something in the air between them, something heavy and pulsing. She didn’t want to think about just what it was.
‘This part of the Outback is certainly worth a second look,’ he said with a ghost of a smile playing about his sensually contoured mouth.
Gemma wondered how many female mouths had enjoyed being kissed by those sinfully sculpted lips. Her eyes surreptitiously went to his left hand and saw it was ringless. She wasn’t sure why her belly did a little flip turn. Maybe she had spent too much time in the bush alone. ‘What can I do for you, Sergeant Di Angelo?’ she asked in a deliberately cool tone.
By this time his right foot was on the bottom step of the veranda and his right hand was holding the railing. Flossie lumbered over, with her tail going from side to side, and he bent down and gave her a gentle ruffle of her ears, and the dog—shame on her—sighed as if in ecstasy. Gemma could see the muscles and sinews of his tanned arms liberally dusted with dark masculine hair that went all the way to the backs of his long fingers. His olive skin, along with his name, hinted at his Italian heritage, so too did the way he accented certain words, which suggested he spoke Italian fluently, although from his perfect colloquial English he was most certainly Australian born.
‘Apparently there’s no room at the inn, so to speak,’ he said.
She frowned. ‘That’s ridiculous. Ron always has rooms free. He’s always complaining how he hasn’t had full occupancy for years.’
‘Not this time,’ he said. ‘He told me I should ask you for a bed as you now own a guest house.’
Gemma’s heart flipped like a pancake. ‘Um … I’m not quite set up for guests.’ She faltered. She waved a hand vaguely towards the house behind her. ‘I’m still stripping the paintwork and refurbishing the place. As you can see, it’s very rundown.’
His gaze moved past hers to take in the house. ‘It looks fine to me.’ His eyes met hers again. ‘I’m prepared to pay my way. I can even help you with some jobs about the place in my spare time. I’m good with my hands.’
I just bet you are, Gemma thought with another furtive glance at his broad spanned hands. ‘Um … well, then, I guess you can stay.’ Not that I have much choice, she thought. She decided she was going to give Ron Curtis a piece of her mind next time she called in at the pub, and a very big piece at that.
She let the post go and brushed her damp palms down the sides of her faded trackpants. ‘It’s probably not what you’re used to. I mean, it’s a basic bed and breakfast and I can do an evening meal when I’m not out on a call or out on the plane with the Flying Doctor service.’
‘You sound like you work long hours, Dr Kendall,’ he said.
‘I do, but, then, that’s the Outback for you,’ she said. ‘I’m the only doctor this side of Minnigarra and the one there is semi-retired. The nearest hospital is Roma. All the serious stuff gets sent to Brisbane.’
‘Do you have anyone else staying with you at present?’ he asked.
‘Er—no,’ she said, suddenly wishing she had a house full of guests to dilute his disturbingly masculine presence.
He stepped back down from the veranda. ‘I’ll get my things from the car,’ he said.
Gemma pushed her hand through her still-damp hair. Good grief, why hadn’t she blown it dry and done her eyebrows while she’d had the chance? Had she even put on deodorant? And when was the last time she had shaved her legs, for pity’s sake? That was the trouble with being single for so long. You stopped making the effort because there was no one worth making the effort for.
She watched as Marc Di Angelo popped the boot of his car, his biceps bulging as he lifted out a gym bag, a smaller suitcase and a laptop. He hooked one of his fingers through the neck loop on a leather jacket and draped it over his shoulder as he came back to the steps leading to the house.
She stepped aside to make room for him as he came up the stairs of the veranda. ‘Welcome to Huntingdon Lodge, Sergeant Di Angelo,’ she said, hoping Gladys wasn’t turning in her grave at the insincerity in her tone.
Marc Di Angelo’s dark brown eyes glinted with something indefinable. ‘Thank you, Dr Kendall. I am looking forward to seeing what fringe benefits the bush has to offer.’
CHAPTER TWO
GEMMA showed him into one of the guest rooms, the one that was the most presentable and coincidentally the one furthest away from her room. His little comment about fringe benefits had made her awareness of him heighten. She felt the magnetic pull of his presence, the allure of his aloof, unknowable personality—a heady mix for a girl who hadn’t had a date in close to four years.
She pointed out the main bathroom further along the hall on the second storey. ‘Although we had fairly decent rain a few months ago, it’s best to keep showers short,’ she said. ‘You never know out here when the next rain is going to fall. The meteorologists don’t always get it right.’
‘I am well used to water restrictions,’ he said. ‘Although I’ve lived in Brisbane for the last couple of years, I originally came from Melbourne.’
‘Oh, really?’ she said. ‘What part did you come from?’
‘I grew up in the outer suburbs,’ he said. ‘My parents ran a restaurant in Dandenong.’
‘Were you stationed in the suburbs?’ she asked.
‘No, I was based in the city,’ he said. ‘Homicide.’
There was something about the way he said that word that made Gemma’s skin prickle. ‘So, what brought you up to Brisbane?’ she asked.
‘I wanted a change of scene. A new challenge. A new climate.’
‘Yes, well, Brisbane and Queensland in general will certainly give you that, compared to Melbourne,’ she said.
‘Do you miss your family, living so far away?’ he asked.
Gemma thought of her father with his new wife and young family. He had remarried within four months of her mother’s death in an accident. She still hadn’t quite forgiven him for it. Her comfortable childhood home had been completely renovated and extended into an unrecognisable showpiece that had been featured in several home magazines. It was as if her stepmother had wanted every trace of Gemma’s mother eradicated. Gemma’s childhood bedroom had been knocked down to make room for a third bathroom no one ever used. ‘No, not really,’ she said. ‘We pretty much live our own lives. If you’ll excuse me, I’ll make a start on dinner while you settle in. There are fresh towels in the bathroom if you’d like to freshen up before we eat.’
Gemma darted back to her bedroom and changed into jeans and a cotton shirt, this time with a push-up bra underneath. She ran a brush through her hair before pulling it back into a ponytail rather than leaving it hanging limply around her shoulders. She put on some deodorant and some perfume. She plucked out a few strays from her eyebrows and then gave her lips a quick swipe with some lip gloss. She could hear the shower going in the guest bathroom and tried not to imagine Marc Di Angelo standing naked under the spray of water.
She gave herself a vigorous mental shake. He might be gorgeous-looking but he was a cop. Most cops had control and power issues as far as she was concerned. Sure, they did a good job and there was certainly honour in protecting others at the risk of your own life, but she was not going to even think about getting involved in any way with a guy from the force. Besides, he was there as a professional and so was she. How would she appear to the locals if she launched into a red-hot affair with the first man who came striding into town? Desperate and dateless, that’s how. She was already tired of the broad hints about her approaching thirtieth birthday and her single status. It seemed every patient thought it their mission to get her hitched before she hit the big three-oh. So far the candidates presented to her had done nothing for her. But Sergeant Marc Di Angelo was something else again, even if he was too attractive, too arrogant and too controlling for her liking.
She was in the kitchen, watching over the chicken pilaf she was cooking, when Marc Di Angelo came in. He had changed out of his shirt and was now wearing his blue denim jeans with a black T-shirt that clung to his perfectly formed biceps and pectoral muscles like a second skin. His abdomen was so flat she instantly sucked in hers. ‘Dinner’s not quite ready,’ she said. ‘Would you like a drink? I have wine, beer or soft drink and fruit juice.’
‘What are you having?’ he asked.
She gave the pilaf a good grind of black pepper. ‘I had a mineral water just before you arrived,’ she said. ‘I was thinking about having a glass of wine.’
‘Are you on call?’
Gemma met his gaze as she put the pepper grinder down on the bench. ‘I am always on call. That’s the way it is out here. I am the only doctor in a radius of about two hundred kilometres.’
‘Must be tough, not being able to let your hair down occasionally,’ he said.
She shifted her gaze from the piercing intensity of his. ‘I’m not much of a party girl in any case,’ she said. ‘I’ve seen the damage binge drinking does to young people. Lives can be changed in an instant and they can’t always be changed back.’
‘We see a lot of that in the city,’ he said. ‘I’m not a big drinker but I will join in you a single glass of wine.’
She chanced another glance at him. ‘So you’re not currently on duty, Sergeant?’
He gave her a quick movement of his lips that again was not quite a smile. ‘Not at the moment. I came a week early just to get a feel for the place.’
‘First time in the bush?’ she asked.
His dark eyes glinted. ‘Does it show?’
‘A bit,’ she said. ‘But, then, I can’t talk. It took me weeks to get used to everything. Time is slower out here. No one rushes unless they have to. It was frustrating at first but after a while you get used to it. Would you prefer red or white wine?’
‘Red if you have it, but white is fine if not.’
‘I’ll … er … get some from the cellar,’ she said, putting her wooden spoon down with a little thud.
‘You have a cellar?’
‘It’s not mine—I mean, I didn’t have it put in or anything,’ Gemma explained. ‘It’s been here since the house was first built. In a climate as hot as this, it’s too warm upstairs to keep good wines.’
‘Mind if I come with you?’ he asked.
Gemma would have refused his offer, except she absolutely loathed going down to the cellar. Gladys had always gone down there in the past, and then, when she had not been well enough to do so, Rob Foster, the handyman-cum-gardener, had always brought wine up for Gemma on the rare occasions she’d wanted it. The dark dank atmosphere of the cellar made her flesh crawl. It hadn’t helped that on the first and only occasion she had gone down there alone a mouse had scuttled across the earthen floor right in front of her feet.
‘Sure, why not?’ she said, carefully disguising her relief. ‘I might need your help in any case to lift up the trapdoor. It’s over here at the back of the kitchen.’
Sergeant Di Angelo took over the opening of the trapdoor, lifting it as if it was a sheet of cardboard instead of solid timber with iron hinges. Gemma found the light switch and then she hesitated.
‘Is something wrong?’ he asked after a moment.
‘Um—no,’ she said, taking a deep breath and fixing her gaze on the sandstone steps.
‘I’m happy to go first,’ he offered. ‘There might be spiders down there.’
Gemma felt her pride take a dive. ‘Actually, that would be great,’ she said with a tremulous smile. ‘I’m not all that fond of spiders.’
She stood at the top of the steps as he went down and then once he’d given the all-clear she followed, but she stayed on the last step. ‘I think the red stuff is over here,’ she said, pointing vaguely to the left-hand side of the cellar.
Marc Di Angelo looked at her. ‘Are you claustrophobic?’
Gemma rubbed her upper arms with her crossed-over hands. ‘A bit, I guess.’
‘You go back up,’ he said. ‘I’ll get the bottle of wine. Is there any one in particular I should or shouldn’t take?’
‘No, just whatever,’ she said, scooting back up the steps and hovering at the top. ‘I don’t think there’s any Grange Hermitage or Hill of Grace down there.’
‘You never know,’ he said dryly, and bent at the waist to check out the labels as he pulled out various bottles.
Gemma couldn’t stop looking at the way his jeans hugged his taut behind, or the way the muscles of his arms were so well formed. She was used to seeing wellused muscles out here in the Outback. The men were all toned from hard work on the land, but something about Marc Di Angelo’s body made her feminine senses switch into overload. He was so damned attractive. Those eyes of his, so dark, like rich chocolate, and those lips of his, so sensual, and that strong, uncompromising jaw that gave him that don’t-mess-with-me air.
Her insides did a funny little dance as he came back up the steps, carrying a bottle of wine. ‘Here you go,’ he said, handing her the bottle. ‘I’ll put the trapdoor back down.’
She watched as he closed the trapdoor, again lifting it as if it was a diet wafer before shooting home the bolt. ‘So,’ she said with an overly bright smile as she clutched the wine against her middle, ‘no spiders?’
‘None that I could see,’ he said, dusting his hands off on his thighs.
She bit her lip. ‘Um—you’ve got dust on your forehead.’
He wiped the back of his hand across his forehead. ‘Gone?’
She shook her head. ‘No, it’s still there.’ She balanced the wine with one hand as she pointed with the other to just above his left eyebrow. ‘There.’
He gave his face another wipe but he somehow still missed the mark. ‘All gone?’
Gemma felt his eyes lock on hers. The space between them was suddenly no space at all. He was standing so close she could see the darker circle of his black pupils in those incredibly brown eyes. She could even see the pinpoints of stubble on his jaw, the way it outlined every masculine contour of his face—his forceful chin, his firm upper lip, his fuller lower lip and the slopes and indentation of his lean cheeks. She could smell his cleanly showered smell. She could smell man and citrus rolled into one, fresh and sharp and dangerously tempting. Her breath hitched to a halt in her chest. Her mouth went dry. Her heart started to hammer and her legs felt strangely unsupportive.
‘Here,’ he said, and handed her a clean and folded handkerchief from his pocket. ‘You do it.’
Gemma swallowed as her fingers curled around the fabric. Still clutching the wine to her chest, she lifted her other hand and wiped at the smear of dust on his forehead. Touching him, even through fabric, was like touching a live wire. She felt the kickback right up her arm. He must have felt something too for she saw his nostrils flare like those of a stallion and her heart gave another little stumble. ‘I—I think that’s it,’ she said, in a voice that sounded like she was about fifteen years old.
‘Thanks,’ he said, stuffing the handkerchief into his back pocket.
Why doesn’t he move? Gemma thought. She had nowhere to go; she was practically up against the wall in any case.
‘Is there anything I can do to help with dinner?’ he asked.
She suddenly remembered the simmering pilaf she had left unattended. ‘Oh, my gosh,’ she said, and thrust the wine at him. ‘You open this while I check on the chicken. There’s a corkscrew in the second drawer.’
‘This one’s a screw top,’ Marc said.
‘Oh, right.’ She gave him a flustered sort of look as she lifted the lid on the dish she was making.
The smell of chicken and rice and Moroccan spices filled the air and Marc felt his stomach rumble in anticipation. The salad sandwich and instant coffee he had picked up at a roadhouse three hundred kilometres out of Jingilly Creek seemed like a long time ago.
But then his whole life seemed a long time ago.
That’s how he saw things now: before and after. He was stuck in the after and there was no way he could replay his decisions and stay in the before, even though everything in him wished he could. A stint in the country was supposed to reset his focus. Get him back on track. Make him feel the buzz he’d once felt when going to work.
Make him forget.
The trouble was he didn’t want to forget. The continuing nightmares about Simon bleeding to death in front of him were his punishment and he took it like a man. Simon’s wife Julie’s devastated face was another main feature during his dark, sleepless nights. And then there was his godson Sam, little innocent Sam who still didn’t quite grasp that his father was never coming home. Marc dreaded the day when Sam would find out what had happened the day his father had died. How would the boy look on him then?
Forgetting was not his goal and neither was forgiving himself. That just wasn’t going to happen in this lifetime. But distracting himself was something he needed to do. And this place looked about as far away as any place could be from his previous life as a city cop.
As soon as he had driven into this Outback town he had felt as if he had been in a time warp. The place looked like something out of an old movie, with its general store with its tall jars of old-fashioned sweets in the windows and its faded ice-cream cone advertisements on the walls outside. The one and only service station had a similar appearance, although its worn sign was well out of date with its petrol prices. He knew exactly why there had been a sudden shortage of rooms. Places as small as this soon got talking. A hot-shot sergeant from the city was not a welcome guest in a local watering-hole—bad for business. Everyone would think they would be nabbed for drink-driving or causing a disturbance or affray. No wonder Ron Curtis had sent him straight out to Gemma Kendall.
Not that she was all that welcoming either. She had grudgingly let him stay but it was pretty clear she was uneasy about it. Her recent inheritance had had his alarm bells ringing as soon as he had heard about it via the woman at the general store when he’d enquired about local accommodation options. It all seemed above board. No one in town suspected anything untoward, but Marc hadn’t been a cop for thirteen years without having seen just about everything there was to see in terms of human greed.
Gemma Kendall was a cute little blonde who had supposedly come out here to do her bit for the bush, but she had just collected a windfall that by anyone’s standards was a little unusual. Sure, this place was as she had said, a little rundown, but with a coat or two of paint and a few quick repairs it would fetch a fine price on the currently overblown property market. How had she done it? How had she got an old lady to rewrite her will in the last days of her life, leaving everything to her? Gemma Kendall was one smart cookie, that was for sure. Her innocent façade was convincing, a little too convincing, he thought as he watched her stir her delicious-smelling dish.
‘So, what do you do out here in your spare time?’ he asked after he had poured them both a glass of rich red wine.
She took a tentative sip before answering. ‘I haven’t had much spare time until recently,’ she said. ‘I’m usually pretty busy with the clinic and station visits, but then Gladys needed me almost full time by the end. Narelle—that’s the community nurse-cum receptionist you met this afternoon at the clinic—helped when she could. She’s a widow with two kids. Her husband died four years ago. She juggles their property and her parttime work with me. Her mother helps but it’s not easy for her.’
Marc took a small sip of the wine, which was surprisingly good. ‘What happened to her husband?’
‘Car accident,’ she said, adjusting the heat setting on the cooker. ‘He rolled his ute out on a back road. There was no doctor here at that point. He might have lived if there had been.’
‘I suppose that’s the problem with outlying areas,’ he said. ‘Time and distance are always against you.’
‘Yes, that’s true,’ she said as she set out two plates and cutlery on the large kitchen table. ‘We had another accident earlier today. A local farmer, Nick Goglin, came off his all-terrain bike. He’s in a coma with head and probable spinal injuries. His wife and kids will be devastated if he doesn’t make it. There’s no way Meg will be able to run that cattle property on her own.’
‘It’s certainly a tough life out here,’ Marc said, ‘which makes me wonder why you’ve stuck it out for so long.’
Her grey-blue eyes met his across the table. ‘Three years isn’t all that long, Sergeant.’
He gave an assenting gesture with his mouth. ‘Maybe not.’ He picked up his fork once she had done the same. ‘This smells great. Do you enjoy cooking?’
‘Very much,’ she said. ‘What about you? Did your parents insist you work in the family’s restaurant from a young age?’
Marc picked up his wine and gave it a swirl in the glass. ‘I spent a lot of time learning the ropes. There was certainly some expectation I would take on the business but my heart wasn’t in it. My younger sister and her husband run the restaurant now.’
‘Your parents are retired?’ she asked.
‘Yes, they travel a lot now,’ he said. ‘I have another sister who lives in Sicily. She’s married with a couple of kids. My parents love spending time over there with them.’
She leaned her elbows on the table as she cradled her wine in both hands. ‘So, what about you, Sergeant?’ she asked. ‘Is there a Mrs Di Angelo or Mrs Di Angelo-to-be back in Brisbane, waiting for you to come home?’
Marc held her gaze for a fraction longer than necessary. ‘No rings.’ He held up his left hand. ‘No wife, no fiancée, no current girlfriend.’
Her grey-blue eyes rounded slightly. ‘You are either very hard to please or hell to be around.’
His mouth twisted wryly because both were true to some degree. Even his sisters had told him bluntly he wasn’t a nice person to be around any more. As to dating … well, he could certainly do with the sex, but he could no longer handle the expectation of commitment that so often went with it. He was a drifter, not a stayer. If you stayed too long, you got emotionally involved and that was the last thing he wanted. Not professionally and certainly not personally. ‘What about you?’ he asked. ‘Is there a man in your life at present?’
She put her wineglass down, a delicate shade of pink tingeing her cheeks. ‘Not currently,’ she said.
‘Too hard to please or too hard to be around?’ he asked, his eyes gleaming.
‘Too far away,’ she said with a rueful expression. ‘This place doesn’t offer the greatest dating opportunities. The men out here tend to marry young, while most women my age have three or four kids by now. I’m not interested in being involved with someone just for the sake of it. Anyone can do that. I want more for my life. I want to feel connected intellectually as well as physically and emotionally.’
Marc leant back in his chair. ‘So you’re a romantic, Dr Kendall?’
Her eyes challenged his. ‘Is that a crime?’ she asked.
He leaned forward and picked up his wineglass again, frowning as he looked at the red liquid. ‘No, of course not,’ he said. ‘It’s just that sort of package doesn’t come around all that often.’ He sat back and met her eyes. ‘You might be waiting for a long time for someone to come along who ticks all those boxes for you.’
‘Better to have five years with the right one than twenty-five with the wrong one,’ she said.
Marc felt a hammer blow of guilt hit him in the chest. Simon and Julie had been married five years. He had been their best man. He remembered the day so clearly. He had forgotten the rings and had had to get a colleague to bring them to the church in a squad car. Everyone had laughed, thinking it had been a set-up. So many memories. So many images of happy times he had shared with them both. Marc still remembered the day Simon told him he was going to be a father. He had been so proud and excited about building a family with Julie. There had been photos of Sam and Julie plastered all over Simon’s desk at the station. Their anniversary had been the week before Simon had been killed. Marc had taken all of that away from them: their future; their hopes and dreams; their happiness.
The silence was measured by the sound of the large wall clock ticking near the pantry.
‘What about you, Sergeant?’ Gemma asked. ‘Do you want to settle down one day?’
His eyes met hers but this time it looked like a light had gone off inside, leaving them like an empty, dark room. ‘I am Australian born but, as you have probably guessed, I have a strong Italian background. Family is supposed to be important to us Italians, but I must be an aberration as I don’t see myself settling down.’
Gemma pursed her lips. ‘So you’re a bit of a playboy, then, are you?’
He gave her that sexy not-quite-a-smile again, the glinting light back on in his eyes. ‘I always make an effort to leave no casualties in the love stakes.’
‘Have you ever been in love?’ Oh, God, why did I just ask that? Gemma thought with a cringe of embarrassment. She took a quick sip of wine so she could bury her head in the glass.
‘No, not unless you count the time I fell for my kindergarten teacher, Miss Moffat,’ he said. ‘I didn’t miss a single day of my first year at school. My mother was very disappointed it didn’t last. I had to be bribed to go most days, right up until I left high school.’
‘School is often an issue for boys,’ Gemma said. ‘A lot of the boys out here drop out. It’s sad to see the waste of potential.’
‘What sort of social problems do you have out here?’ Marc asked.
Gemma toyed with the last of her food, pushing it around with her fork as she thought of the heartbreaking situations she had handled in the short time she had been in town. ‘The usual stuff,’ she said, ‘drinking and violence and vandalism. It’s a real problem with the indigenous youth. They’re caught between two worlds. They don’t really fit in either one at times. Some make it, like Ray Grant, for instance, but others don’t. But it’s much the same for the whites. The youth around here are bored as there is simply nothing for them to do if they don’t work on the land. I try not to be overwhelmed by it but sometimes it’s hard not to get involved. Clinical distance works a lot better in the city when you don’t see past the name on the patient information sheet. Out here you know the patient personally and their parents, and the brothers and sisters. They’re not just patients. Most of them become your friends.’
‘You sound like you really care about your patients.’
‘I do,’ she said. ‘Being a doctor in a small community is a huge responsibility. People depend on you in so many ways. But that’s what I like about the job. You get to make a difference now and again. It’s very rewarding when that happens.’
Gemma realised she had poured her heart out much more than she would normally do to a person she had only met just hours ago. It made her feel a little uncomfortable. He had much more information on her than she had on him. ‘What do you love most about being a cop?’ she asked.
‘The long hours, the crappy pay, the criminals and the cold coffee,’ he said.
She gave him a droll look. ‘Very-funny.’
His mouth tilted slightly. ‘Did I mention the endless paperwork?’
‘You didn’t need to,’ she said. ‘It’s the same in my profession.’
He put his knife and fork together on the plate in the correct I-am-finished position. ‘Serving the public in law enforcement is always a challenge,’ he said, his gaze momentarily focused on the wine in his glass. The light went off again. A shadow drifted over his expression, like a cloud over the face of the moon, but then he blinked and the shadow disappeared as he picked up his glass to add, ‘You can’t fix everything that needs to be fixed. You can’t solve every case that needs to be solved.’
Gemma fiddled with the stem of her wineglass. ‘So why Jingilly Creek?’ she asked. ‘Why not some resort town on the coast or somewhere more densely populated?’
His chocolate-brown eyes met hers, but apart from a tiny tensing movement in his jaw his expression remained unreadable. ‘I felt like I needed a complete change,’ he said. ‘It seemed as good a place as any.’
‘Did you throw a dart at a map?’ she asked.
That brought a flicker of a smile to his mouth, softening his features for a moment. ‘Just about.’
Gemma wondered if there was much more to his move out here than he was letting on. He had an air of mystery about him; an aloofness she suspected went much further than him simply being a cop. ‘So you’ll be the one in charge now at the station?’ she asked.
‘Yes,’ he said. ‘Constable Grant can now resume his regular duties.’
Gemma wondered how the new broom was going to fit in the broom cupboard down at the small station. In remote areas more junior officers often had to take on more senior positions due to the chronic shortage of staff. There would most certainly be an adjustment period. Jack Chugg had been strict but fair with the locals before he’d retired. Ray Grant had a much more laid-back approach, especially when dealing with other local indigenous people with whom he had blood ties. It would be interesting to see if Marc Di Angelo adopted the same live-and-let-live approach that Ray did. ‘You might have to feel your way a bit,’ she said. ‘Ray’s been used to handling things his way.’
‘I’m here to do a job,’ Marc said. ‘Not win a popularity contest.’
Gemma studied his expression for a moment. ‘It would be nice to do both, though, don’t you think?’
He gave her a cynical look as he leaned back in his chair. ‘Maybe I should take some lessons from you, Dr Kendall, on how to charm the locals,’ he said. ‘Who knows what bonuses might be out here for me to collect?’
Gemma set her mouth and began to rise to gather up their plates. Marc’s hand came down over her wrist and held it to the table. The smile fell away from her mouth, her heart picking up its pace until she could hear it instead of the ticking clock. She felt the slow burn of his touch in his long strong fingers, so dark and masculine against the soft creamy texture of her skin.
‘No,’ he said. ‘Let me clear away. You cooked. It’s only fair that I get to do the dishes.’
She slipped her hand out from under his, her face so hot she felt like she had stuck it in the oven on full fan-forced heat. ‘Th-thanks,’ she said. ‘I’ll make some coffee. I don’t have any dessert. I mean, nothing I’ve made especially. I have fruit and yogurt, if you’d like?’
‘Coffee is fine,’ he said.
Gemma let out the breath she was holding as she opened the fridge to get out the ground coffee. The kitchen suddenly seemed far too small with Marc Di Angelo standing at the sink with his wrists submerged in hot, soapy water.
The domestic scene made her feel as if she had stepped over a boundary way too soon. It was intimate and yet he was a perfect stranger. She was sharing this big old house with a man she didn’t know and yet for some reason she didn’t feel frightened, or at least not in a physically threatened sense. She did feel on edge but that had more to do with her reaction to him: his touch, for instance. What was that all about? Why had her heart started to race like a greyhound when his fingers had pressed down over her wrist? His dark brown gaze had locked her just as firmly in place, those bottomless eyes that saw so much and gave away so little.
She made a business of preparing the coffee when in reality she would normally had settled for a teaspoon of instant. But Italians loved their coffee, right? She breathed in the fragrant aroma as the percolator did its job, her mind wandering as she thought about how long the sexy sergeant would be in town.
In her house.
Sharing the kitchen, the living spaces, the cutlery and crockery, his lips resting on the rim of the same cup she might have used the day before, his lips closing over a fork she had put in her mouth previously. It had never felt like this when Gladys had had guests staying before. The middle-aged couple from Toowoomba, for instance. They had stayed for two weeks and not once had Gemma thought about the towels that had wrapped around their bodies in the bathroom, or the water that had cascaded over them in the shower, or the sheets that had covered them while they’d slept.
The mere thought of Marc Di Angelo in the shower had sent her pulses soaring and this was only the first day. What would it be like in the morning? Would she hear him shaving, or perhaps singing or humming to himself, or was he one of those grumpy types who didn’t properly wake up until ten in the morning or until a double shot of caffeine hit his system?
‘Where do you want these put?’ Marc asked, jolting her out of her reverie.
‘Oh …’ Gemma said, flustered again and unable to disguise it in time. ‘Um … the cutlery goes in that top drawer over there and those plates in the cupboard above.’
She watched as he reached up and stacked the plates, his arms so tanned, so strong, so arrantly male. She swallowed when he turned his head and locked gazes with her. ‘Is something wrong?’ he asked with a quizzical look.
She shook her head, running her tongue out over her lips. ‘Um, no, not at all,’ she said. ‘I was just thinking how I have to stand on tiptoe to get into that cupboard.’
His hand closed the cupboard while his gaze remained centred on hers. ‘You seem a little uptight, Dr Kendall.’
‘That’s ridiculous,’ she said, folding her arms across her middle but just as quickly unfolding them as she realised how her body language was contradicting her denial. ‘Why would I be uptight? This is a guest house. You are a guest.’
‘Maybe you should call me Marc as we’re going to be living together,’ he said.
Gemma felt her cheeks heat up again. Did he have to make it sound so intimate? Had he done that deliberately, knowing it would unsettle her? It worried her that he was seeing so much more than she wanted him to see. Those eyes of his were so penetrating and dark, his expression so level and composed, while she was sure she was giving off all sorts of clues to her discomfiture. ‘Marc, then,’ she said, forcing a stiff smile to her lips.
‘Am I your first house guest since you inherited the property?’ he asked leaning his hip against the counter.
Gemma reached for the coffee cups, embarrassed at how she betrayed herself yet again by allowing them to rattle against each other as she put them on the bench. ‘Yes, the first since Gladys died, that is. We had a run of guests a few weeks before she went downhill. The rains we had in the spring brought a few extra tourists our way to see the wildflowers.’
‘Do you mind if I call you Gemma?’
Hearing her name on his lips sent a shower of sparks down her spine. It was like a rolling runaway firecracker bumping against each and every vertebra. ‘Um … of course not,’ she said. ‘No one stands on ceremony in Jingilly Creek.’ She picked up the tray she had put the coffee and cups on. ‘Would you like to have this outside on the veranda? It’s probably nice and cool out there now, or at least cooler than inside.’
‘Sure, sounds good,’ he said, and took the tray from her.
Gemma stepped back, her fingers burning where his had brushed against hers in the handover. She told herself to get a grip, but it didn’t really work. Her eyes kept going to the taut shape of his buttocks as if drawn by a magnet as he walked out to the veranda.
He set the tray down on the table between the two wrought-iron chairs, politely waiting until she sat down before he did so. The sound of Flossie’s toenails clipclipping along the floorboards as she came out to join them was the only sound in the still night air.
The night sky was dark as ink, thousands of stars peeping through the velvet-blanket canopy. An owl hooted from one of the sheds and a vixen gave her distinct bark in the distance as she signalled for a mate. Flossie pricked up her ears but then gave a long drawn-out too-tired-for-all-that-now sigh, and rested her greying head back down on her paws.
Gemma shifted forward on her chair. ‘How do you have your coffee?’ she asked.
‘Just black, thanks.’
She poured it for him and handed it over with a wry smile. ‘Sorry I haven’t got any doughnuts.’
The light coming from inside the house was soft but it was enough to see the glint of amusement reflected in his gaze. ‘Not all cops live on coffee and doughnuts,’ he said.
She sat back in her chair, carefully balancing her coffee cup in her hands. ‘It’s a tough job,’ she said after taking a sip. ‘It must be awfully stressful and heart wrenching at times.’
He paused before he spoke, and again she saw that fleeting shadow pass across his gaze before it shifted from hers. ‘Yes, it is but no one forced me to do it. I chose it. And I will stick with it unless it becomes obvious there is nothing left for me to achieve.’
Gemma gave her coffee an unnecessary stir. His statement seemed to be underlined with implacability. There was a steely determination in his character she found both attractive and a little unnerving. She couldn’t think of a single person she had met before who was quite so determined, quite so focused and quite so disturbingly, dangerously attractive. She could imagine him working on a case, uncovering information that others would surely miss. His sharp intellect and his ability to read people and situations would make him a formidable opponent for any criminal deluded enough to think they could outsmart him.
The owl hooted again, the swish of its wings as it flew past the veranda on its way to the shearing shed sounding exaggerated in the stillness of the night.
‘This seems a rather quiet appointment for someone who has worked in a busy city homicide department,’ Gemma said. ‘We haven’t had any murders out here for decades.’
He took another leisurely sip of his coffee before he spoke. ‘I am sure I’ll find plenty to do to pass the time.’
The sound of the phone ringing indoors brought Gemma to her feet. ‘Excuse me,’ she said. ‘I’d better get that. I’m waiting for news of Nick Goglin’s progress.’
Marc put his cup down, stood up and walked to the edge of the veranda. Leaning on the railing, he looked up at the twinkling stars of the Milky Way. At the funeral he had heard one of Simon’s relatives tell his little boy Sam that his daddy would always be watching out for him up there in the night sky, no matter where he went. ‘Which one are you, mate?’ Marc asked, but of course there was no answer.
CHAPTER THREE
‘GEMMA.’ One of the volunteer ambulance officers, Malcolm Gard, was on the other end of the line. ‘We’ve just got news of a roll-over out on the Bracken Hill Road. A passing motorist called it in. We’re on our way now but it might be best if you meet us out there. It sounds bad.’
‘I’m on my way,’ she said, and hung up the phone.
Marc came in from the veranda with his mobile phone up to his ear. ‘Right, I’ll go with Dr Kendall,’ he said, and hung up.
Gemma snatched up her doctor’s bag and mobile phone, which she had been recharging on the kitchen bench. ‘Was that Ray?’ she asked.
‘Yes, he’ll meet us out there,’ he said. ‘Would you like me to drive?’
‘No, I’d better drive. I know the road better than you do,’ she said. ‘Flossie, come in, girl.’
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