In Plain Sight. Margot Dalton
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“Well, I guess that’s what I am,” she said aloud, almost jumping at the sound of her voice in the quiet house.
Moving cautiously, she ventured to the door of the room and peered down the hallway. She could faintly recall the man saying something about having children in the house, and the need for her to stay out of sight in the bedroom.
But nobody appeared to be home at the moment. The place was silent except for birdsong drifting through the open windows, and the distant sound of the river.
Isabel walked slowly into the messy bathroom, recalling her blissful soak in that tub and later the man standing beside her to cut and blow-dry her hair.
She went into the kitchen and found a pot of coffee on a sideboard. The room appeared to have been hastily abandoned, with dishes stacked carelessly on the counter and in the sink. Evidence of children was everywhere. A smeared high chair sat at the table next to a couple of cartoon mugs with lids and straws, and toys littered the floor all the way into the living room and out to the porch.
Isabel poured herself a cup of coffee and added some cream from the fridge, but gave up looking through the disorganized cabinets for sugar. Instead, she toasted two slices of bread and ate them hungrily.
But by the time she’d devoured a banana and most of the remaining grapes, she was starting to feel guilty. Clearly the people who lived in this house didn’t have a lot of money, yet she was gobbling all their food and had no way of paying for it.
With sudden alarm she rushed back to the bedroom, moving so quickly that her head began to throb with pain again. On the floor near the window she found her jogging pants and shirt. They’d been washed and dried but were both ragged, stained with blood. Under the clothes were her bra and panties, also clean but tattered, along with the still damp leather cross-trainers.
Isabel’s heart sank. She lifted the right shoe and shook it, but she already knew the locker key was no longer there.
“I have the key,” a voice said behind her. “I put it away for you.”
Braced to flee, she turned to face the man. But this wasn’t the hairy, half-naked giant she dimly remembered from the night before. This was a tall, youngish man with light brown hair and green eyes, broad-shoulders and a strong, calm face.
“How are you feeling?” he asked.
Isabel stood with the shoe in her hand, at a loss for words.
“Here,” he said, opening a wooden box on the dresser. “This is the key I found in your shoe.”
He held it out to her. She accepted the key, then merely clutched it in helpless silence.
“How about if I put it back?” he suggested gently. “It’ll be right here in this box.”
She nodded and gave him the key. His hands were big and square, with callused palms and surprisingly long fingers.
Nice hands, Isabel thought, remembering how they’d trimmed her hair and bandaged her arm with such gentleness.
“Thank you,” she whispered. “Thank you so much for helping me.”
He was watching her intently. “I didn’t have much choice, did I?”
“You could have thrown me out,” she said. “Lots of people would have.”
“That’s not the way we treat folks here in the country.” He moved to the door. “Care to join me?” he asked over his shoulder. “I haven’t had a chance to eat breakfast yet.”
“But aren’t your children…” Isabel began nervously.
“I took them over to my uncle’s place for a few days. None of them have any idea you’re here.”
She followed him to the kitchen and sank into a chair at the table while he poured her another cup of coffee. “Cream and sugar?” he asked.
She nodded and he fetched the cream jug from the fridge, then opened a little ceramic canister shaped like a tomato, handing it to her along with a spoon.
“So that’s where the sugar is. I didn’t think of looking in there,” she told him, trying to smile.
He didn’t smile back, just popped a couple of slices of bread into the toaster and brought some butter and jam to the table.
“Did you take another pill?” he asked. “Let me see that arm.”
She held it up for him to examine.
“The rest of your arm’s not as red and swollen today,” he said, holding her wrist. “How does it feel under the bandage?”
“It doesn’t hurt as much, but it’s getting pretty itchy.”
“Well, that’s supposed to be a sign of healing. I’ll change the bandage after we eat, and put some more salve on it.”
Isabel watched him, marveling at his calm, capable manner. He acted as if there was nothing unusual about a wild-eyed woman breaking into his house and trying to steal his food, then being dumped in his bathtub, sleeping in his bed…
His bed!
For the first time she remembered him lying beside her in the darkness of the night, holding himself away from her, his body so hard and muscular when she brushed against him that it was almost like sleeping next to a block of wood.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered, feeling tears of shame stinging her eyelids. “I’ve been such a huge bother to you.”
His toast popped up. “Want some?” he asked. When she declined, he buttered both slices, then fixed his green eyes on her face. “What are you running away from?”
Isabel stared into the depths of her coffee mug. “I’m afraid to tell you,” she said at last. “I don’t want anybody to know who I am.”
“I already do know. There was a picture and an article about you in the paper last night.”
She tensed. “What did it say?”
“It said you were Isabel Delgado, an heiress from San Antonio, and that your car went into the Claro on Friday night, but your body hasn’t been recovered yet.”
Isabel felt sick with fear. “My picture was there, too?”
“I recognized you right away.”
“Oh, no!” She gripped the mug tightly. “I was hoping they wouldn’t do that.”
“I guess it’s pretty big news when a rich girl goes missing. So what are you hiding from, Isabel?”
She glanced nervously around the silent kitchen. “Please don’t call me that!”
“There’s nobody around,” he said. “My nearest neighbor is about a mile downriver.”
“Is this farm anywhere close to where the McKinneys