Chapter Two #2

He was dreaming. Part of his mind recognized it as a dream, but his stomach muscles still fisted, and his pulse rate increased.

He was alone in an angry black sea, fighting to make his arms and legs swim through the rising waves.

They dragged at him, pulling him under into that blind, airless world.

His lungs strained. His own heartbeat roared in his head.

His disorientation was complete—black sea below, black sky above.

There was a hideous throbbing in his temple, a terrifying numbness in his limbs.

He sank, floating down, fathoms deep. Then she was there, her red hair flowing around her, twining around lovely white breasts, down a slender torso.

Her eyes were a soft, mystical green. She spoke his name, and there was a laugh in her voice—and an invitation in the laugh.

Slowly, gracefully as a dancer, she held out her arms to him, folding him in.

He tasted salt and sex on her lips as she closed them over his.

With a groan, he came regretfully awake.

There was pain now, ripe and throbbing in his shoulder, sharp and horrible in his head.

His thought patterns skidded away from him.

Concentrating, he worked his way above the pain, focusing first on a high, coffered ceiling laced with cracks.

He shifted a little, acutely aware that every muscle in his body hurt.

The room was enormous—or perhaps it seemed so because it was so scantily furnished.

But what furnishings. There was a huge antique armoire with intricately carved doors.

The single chair was undoubtedly Louis Quinze, and the dusty nightstand Hepplewhite.

The mattress he lay on sagged, but the footboard was Georgian.

Struggling up to brace on his elbows, he saw Lilah standing in the open terrace doors.

The breeze was fluttering those long cables of hair.

He swallowed. At least he knew she wasn’t a mermaid.

She had legs. Lord, she had legs—right up to her eyes.

She wore flowered shorts, a plain blue T-shirt and a smile.

“So, you’re awake.” She came to him and, competent as a mother, laid a hand on his brow. His tongue dried up. “No fever. You’re lucky.”

“Yeah.”

Her smile widened. “Hungry?”

There was definitely a hole in the pit of his stomach. “Yeah.” He wondered if he’d ever be able to get more than one word out around her. At the moment he was lecturing himself for having imagined her naked when she’d risked her life to save his. “Your name’s Lilah.”

“That’s right.” She walked over to fetch the tray. “I wasn’t sure you’d remember anything from last night.”

Pain capered through him so that he gritted his teeth against it and struggled to keep his voice even. “I remember five beautiful women. I thought I was in heaven.”

She laughed and, setting the tray at the foot of the bed, came to rearrange his pillows. “My three sisters and my aunt. Here, can you sit up a little?”

When her hand slid down his back to brace him, he realized he was naked. Completely. “Ah...”

“Don’t worry, I won’t peek. Yet.” She laughed again, leaving him flustered. “Your clothes were drenched—I think the shirt’s a lost cause. Relax,” she told him as she set the tray on his lap. “My brother-in-law and future brother-in-law got you into bed.”

“Oh.” It looked as though he was back to single syllables.

“Try the tea,” she suggested. “You probably swallowed a gallon of seawater, so I’ll bet your throat’s raw.” She saw the intense concentration in his eyes and the nagging pain behind it. “Headache?”

“Vicious.”

“I’ll be back.” She left him, trailing some potently exotic scent in her wake.

Max used the time alone to build back what little strength he had.

He hated being weak—a leftover obsession from childhood when he’d been puny and asthmatic.

His father had given up in disgust on building his only and disappointing son into a football star.

Though he knew it was illogical, sickness brought back unhappy memories of childhood.

Because he’d always considered his mind stronger than his body, he used it now to block the pain.

Moments later, she was back with an aspirin and witch hazel. “Take a couple of these. After you eat, I can drive you in to the hospital.”

“Hospital?”

“You might want to have a doctor take a look.”

“No.” He swallowed the pills. “I don’t think so.”

“Up to you.” She sat on the bed to study him, one leg lazily swinging to some inner tune.

Never in his life had he been so sexually aware of a woman—of the texture of her skin, the subtle tones of it, the shape of her body, her eyes, her mouth.

The assault on his senses left him uneasy and baffled.

He’d nearly drowned, he reminded himself.

Now all he could think about was getting his hands on the woman who’d saved him. Saved his life, he remembered.

“I haven’t even thanked you.”

“I figured you’d get around to it. Try those eggs before they get any colder. You need food.”

Obediently he scooped some up. “Can you tell me what happened?”

“From the time I came into it.” Relaxed, she brushed her hair behind her shoulder and settled more comfortably on the bed. “I drove down to the beach. Impulse,” she said with a lazy movement of her shoulders. “I’d been watching the storm build from the tower.”

“The tower?”

“Here, in the house,” she explained. “I got the urge to go down, watch it roll in from sea. Then I saw you.” In a careless gesture, she brushed the hair back from his brow. “You were in trouble, so I went in. We sort of pulled each other to shore.”

“I remember. You kissed me.”

Her lips curved. “I figured we both deserved it.” She touched a gentle hand to the bruise spreading on his shoulder. “You hit the rocks. What were you doing out there?”

“I...” He closed his eyes to try to clear his fuzzy brain. The effort had sweat pearling on his brow. “I’m not sure.”

“Okay, why don’t we start with your name?”

“My name?” He opened his eyes to give her a blank look. “Don’t you know?”

“We didn’t have the chance to introduce ourselves formally. Lilah Calhoun,” she said, and offered a hand.

“Quartermain.” He accepted her hand, relieved that much was clear. “Maxwell Quartermain.”

“Drink some more tea, Max. Ginseng’s good for you.” Taking the witch hazel, she began to rub it gently over the bruise. “What do you do?”

“I’m, ah, a history professor at Cornell.” Her fingers eased the ache in his shoulder and cajoled him into relaxing.

“Tell me about Maxwell Quartermain.” She wanted to take his mind off the pain, to see him relax into sleep again. “Where are you from?”

“I grew up in Indiana...” Her fingers slid up to his neck to unknot muscles.

“Farm boy?”

“No.” He sighed as the tension eased and made her smile. “My parents ran a market. I used to help out after school and over the summer.”

“Did you like it?”

His eyes were growing heavy. “It was all right. It gave me plenty of time to study. Annoyed my father—always had my face in a book. He didn’t understand. I skipped a couple grades and got into Cornell.”

“Scholarship?” she assumed.

“Hmm. Got my doctorate.” The words were slurred and weighty. “Do you know how much man accomplished between 1870 and 1970?”

“Amazing.”

“Absolutely.” He was nearly asleep, coaxed into comfort by her quiet voice and gentle hands. “I’d like to have been alive in 1910.”

“Maybe you were.” She smiled, amused and charmed. “Take a nap, Max.”

When he awakened again, he was alone. But he had a dozen throbbing aches to keep him company. He noted that she had left the aspirin and a carafe of water beside the bed, and gratefully swallowed pills.

When that small chore exhausted him, he leaned back to catch his breath.

The sunlight was bright, streaming through the open terrace doors with fresh sea air.

He’d lost his sense of time, and though it was tempting just to lie back and shut his eyes again, he needed to take back some sort of control.

Maybe she’d read his mind, he thought as he saw his pants and someone else’s shirt neatly folded at the foot of the bed.

He rose creakily, like an old man with brittle bones and aching muscles.

His body sang a melody of pain as he picked up the clothes and peeked through a side door.

He eyed the claw-footed tub and chrome shower works with pleasure.

The pipes thudded when he turned on the spray, and so did his muscles as the water beat against his skin. But ten minutes later, he felt almost alive.

It wasn’t easy to dry off—even that simple task had his limbs singing. Not sure the news would be good, he wiped the mist from the mirror to study his face.

Beneath the stubble of beard, his skin was white and drawn.

Flowering out from the bandage at his temple was a purpling bruise.

He already knew there were plenty more blooming on his body.

As a result of salt water, his eyes were a patriotic red, white and blue.

Though he’d never considered himself a vain man—his looks had always struck him as dead average—he turned away from the mirror.

Wincing and groaning and swearing under his breath, he struggled into the clothes.

The shirt fit fairly well. Better, in fact, than many of his own. Shopping intimidated him—rather salesclerks intimidated him with their bright, impatient smiles. Most of the time Max shopped out of catalogues and took what came.

Glancing down at his bare feet, Max admitted that he’d have to go shopping for shoes—and soon.

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