Banksia Bay. Marion Lennox
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Her knees felt wobbly.
What was she doing? She was standing in the sun and lusting after Raff Finn. The man who’d destroyed her life …
She needed to get a grip, and fast.
‘You’re saying Kleppy dug all the way out of my garden?’ she snapped, trying to sound disbelieving. She was disbelieving.
‘You’re implying I might have helped?’ Raff said, still with that twinkle. ‘You think I might have hiked round there and loaned him a spade?’
‘No, I …’ Of course not. ‘But the fence sits hard on the ground. He’d have had to go deep.’
‘He’s a very determined dog. I did warn you, Abigail.’
‘Why don’t you just call me ma’am and be done with it,’ she snapped. ‘What am I supposed to do now?’
‘Apologise.’
‘To you?’
He grinned at that and his whole face lit up. She’d hardly seen that grin. Not since … Not since …
No. Avoid that grin at all costs.
‘I can’t imagine you apologising to me,’ he said. ‘But you might try Mrs Fryer. I imagine she’s apoplectic by now. She rang an hour ago to say her dog had been stolen from outside the draper’s. I did think we were looking at dog-napping—she’d definitely pay a ransom—but we have witnesses saying the napper was seen making a getaway. It seems Kleppy decided to go find another bra and found something better.’
She closed her eyes. This was not good, on so many levels.
‘You caught him?’
‘I didn’t have to catch him,’ he said, and his smile deepened, a slow, smouldering smile that had the power to heat as much as the sun. ‘I found the two of them on your front step.’
‘On my …’
‘He seems to think of your place as home already. Home of Abby. Home of Kleppy. Or maybe he was just bringing this magnificent gift to you.’
Oh, Kleppy.
She stared at her scruffy, kleptomaniac, mud-covered dog in Raff’s arms. He stared back, gazing straight at her, quivering with hope. With happiness. A dog fulfilled.
Why did her eyes suddenly fill?
‘Why … why didn’t you just take Fluffy back to Mrs Fryer?’ she managed, trying not to sniff. She had a dog.
‘Watch this.’ He set Kleppy down and tugged the diamanté lead, trying to dislodge it from Kleppy’s teeth.
Kleppy held on as if his life depended on it.
Raff tugged again.
Kleppy growled and gripped and glanced across at Abby—and his appeal was unmistakable. Come and help. This guy’s trying to steal your property.
Her property.
Raff released him. The little dog turned towards her, his whole body quivering in delight. She stooped and held out her hand and he dropped the lead into it.
Oh, my …
She was having trouble making herself speak. She was having trouble making herself think. This disreputable mutt had laid claim to her.
She should be horrified.
She loved it.
‘You could have just taken Fluffy off the other end of the lead,’ she managed.
‘Hey, your dog growled at me,’ Raff said. ‘You heard him. He could have taken my hand off.’
‘He was wagging his tail at the same time.’
‘I’m not one to take chances,’ Raff said. ‘I might be armed but I’m not a fast draw. Too big a risk.’
She looked up at him, big and brawny and absurdly incongruous. Cop with gun. He’d shoot to kill?
‘You don’t have capsicum spray?’ she managed.
‘Lady, you think this vicious mutt could be subdued by capsicum spray?’
She ran her fingers down the vicious mutt’s spine. He arched and preened and waggled his tail in pleasure.
The fluff ball moved in for a back scratch as well.
She giggled.
‘Abigail …’ It was Philip, striding down the steps, looking furious.
Philip. Dignity. She scrambled to her feet and the dogs looked devastated at losing her.
‘I’m just settling the dogs down,’ she managed. ‘Before Raff takes them away.’
‘Before we take them away,’ Raff said. He motioned to his patrol car.
‘You can cope with this yourself, Finn,’ Philip snapped.
‘No,’ Raff said, humour fading. He lifted Kleppy in one arm and Fluff Ball in the other. ‘You cope with getting Wallace off,’ he told Philip. ‘Abigail copes with the dogs.’
‘I need …’
‘You’re getting as little help as I can manage to get that low life off the hook,’ Raff snapped. ‘Abigail, come with me.’
She went. Raff was not giving her a choice, and she knew Mrs Fryer would be furious.
Behind her, Philip was furious but right now that seemed the lesser of two evils.
She sat in the front of Raff’s patrol car with two dogs on her knee and she tried to stare straight ahead; to think serious thoughts. She still wanted to giggle.
‘Kleppy should be in the back,’ Raff said gravely. ‘A known criminal.’
‘You’ve accused me of being an accessory. Why don’t you toss me in the back as well?’
‘I like you up front,’ he said. ‘You do my image good.’
‘I need dark glasses,’ she said, glowering. ‘Carted round town in a police car.’
‘You will keep a kleptomaniac dog. It might well push you over to the dark side. Spoil that good-girl reputation. Send you into the shadowy side, like me.’
Her bubble of laughter faded at that. He’d spoken lightly, but there was truth behind his