Mean Streak

“What about Mr. Charbonneau? Is he a doctor, too?”

 

“Mr. Surrey.”

 

“Pardon?”

 

“My husband’s name is Jeff Surrey. When we married I was already Dr. Charbonneau. For professional reasons, it seemed best not to change my name.”

 

He didn’t remark on that, but his eyebrows came together in a half-frown. “What does he do for a living?”

 

“He’s a money manager. Investments. Futures.”

 

“Like for rich people?”

 

“I suppose some of his clients are well-to-do.”

 

“You don’t know?”

 

“He doesn’t discuss his clients’ money matters with me.”

 

“Right. He wouldn’t.”

 

She bit off another corner of the cracker. “What about you?”

 

“What about me?”

 

“What do you do?”

 

He looked across at her and, with all seriousness, said, “Live.”

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 3

 

 

 

Live.

 

He wasn’t being glib, and Emory sensed that he didn’t intend to elaborate. He held her gaze for a moment, then set his spoon in his empty bowl and pushed back his chair. He carried his utensils to the sink. Returning to the table, he politely asked if she wanted any more crackers.

 

“No, but I’ll keep the Coke.”

 

While he set about washing dishes, she excused herself. Treading carefully to keep the walls in place and the floor from undulating, she made her way into the bathroom. The space heater was the old-fashioned kind like her great-grandmother had had. Live blue flames burned against blackened ceramic grates.

 

She used the toilet, washed her face and hands, and rinsed her mouth out with a dab of toothpaste squeezed from the tube she found in the medicine cabinet above the sink. Also in the cabinet were a bottle of peroxide, a razor and can of shaving cream, a box of Band-Aids, a jar of multivitamins, and a hairbrush.

 

The shower stall was made of tin. The wire rack hanging from the shower head contained only a bar of soap and a bottle of shampoo. She longed to wash the blood out of her hair but didn’t for fear of reopening the cut on her scalp. The goose egg beneath it hadn’t gotten any larger, but any pressure she applied caused blow darts of pain.

 

She couldn’t resist peeking into the small cupboard. On the shelving inside it, folded towels and washcloths were neatly stacked. It also stored rolls of toilet tissue, bars of soap, and cleaning supplies.

 

Out of the ordinary were the boxes of bullets.

 

They were on the highest shelf, labeled according to caliber. She had to stand on tiptoe to lift one down. She raised the lid. In the glow of the light fixture above the sink, the shells looked large, long, and lethal.

 

She quickly closed the box and replaced it exactly as she’d found it, wondering where he kept the guns that corresponded to his arsenal of ammunition.

 

She left the bathroom to find the main room dark except for the flickering light of the fireplace and the fixture above the kitchen sink. He was folding a dishcloth over the rim of it. Hearing her, he turned his head, speaking to her over his shoulder.

 

“I figured you’d want to turn in early.”

 

She glanced toward the bed, where the covers, which she’d left rumpled, had been straightened and, on one side, folded back at a precise ninety-degree angle. The bloody pillowcase had been replaced with a clean one.

 

“I’ll sleep in the recliner.”

 

“You’ll sleep in the bed.” He yanked on a string to extinguish the light above the sink.

 

The action had a finality to it that strongly suggested arguing over the sleeping arrangements would be futile. Emory sat down on the edge of the bed. She’d been in her running tights all day. Her jogging bra felt uncomfortably tight. But there was no way in hell she’d be removing so much as a single thread, and he was in for a fight if he intended to take her clothes off.

 

Her breath caught when he started toward the bed, but after setting the bottle of analgesics and the can of Coke on the nightstand, he walked past and went into the bathroom, returning within seconds with the bottle of peroxide and an applicator formed of folded toilet paper squares.

 

“I don’t have any cotton or gauze,” he said as he poured the solution onto the toilet paper. He set down the bottle and leaned toward her.

 

“I’ll do that.”

 

“You can’t see it. If you start feeling around, you might reopen the cut.”

 

She knew that to be true, so she lowered her hands.

 

“Turn your head…” He nudged her chin with the back of his hand. She complied and sat there, strained and nervous, while he dabbed at the wound.

 

“Does that hurt?”

 

“A little.” It hurt a lot, but she couldn’t think of a proper way to complain without sounding critical of his technique. In fact it was hard to think of anything with him standing so close, bending over her. The proximity of her face to his middle was unsettling, and she didn’t breathe until he said “There” and stepped away.

 

“I hate to dirty another pillowcase.”

 

“Blood washes out. Most of the time.” He picked up the pill bottle and shook two into his palm, then extended his hand to her. “They’ll help with the headache.”

 

“I’ll wait to take them. See how I do.”

 

He looked prepared to argue but returned the tablets to the bottle and replaced it on the nightstand. “They’re there if you change your mind. Let me know if you need anything else.”

 

“Thank you. I will. But I’m sure I’ll be fine.”

 

“Maybe I should wake you up at intervals. Just to make sure you’re all right, to make sure that I can wake you up.”

 

“That’s a good idea. But rather than disturb you, I’ll set alarms on my wristwatch.”

 

Mouth set with disapproval, he said, “Suit yourself,” and turned away.

 

She lay down and pulled the covers to her chin. Although she closed her eyes, her ears were on high alert as she listened to him moving about the room, adding logs to the grate, scooting the fire screen back into place.

 

Blood washes out. Most of the time. Spoken like someone who had experience with that dilemma.

 

She shuddered to think how exposed she was. She couldn’t even stand alone for more than a couple of minutes. If she had to protect herself, what would she do?

 

While in college she’d taken a self-defense class, but that had been a long time ago. All she recalled of it now was not to think of the assailant as a whole, but to focus on individual parts of him that were vulnerable to counterattack. Eyes, nose, ears, testicles. She feared that rule wouldn’t apply to a man who appeared as solid as a redwood.

 

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