Page 4 of Reclaimed
âWho are you? What are you?â
His gaze hardened. The hunter look returned to his face, and a shiver crept over her spine. Her mind shrieked at her, warning her of danger.
âYou are mine, remember it always,â he whispered. He tore his gaze from hers and looked behind her head and cursed under his breath. He kissed her hardârushedâand turned from her and ran.
Only the sound of her speeding heart and the eerie purple moon kept her company.
***
The next week was filled with writing her current romance novel and decorating, and she didnât leave her house. Until today, anyway. It was Friday, and sheâd decided to take a trip into town for some shopping. Checking off the last item on her list, she groaned when her stomach growled. Time for a dinner break.
She, of course, knew where to go.
She parked in front of the tavern where sheâd seen him in the flesh and hopped out of the car with bated breath. Would he be there? She absentmindedly threw a bill into the jar in front of the homeless manâsleeping, againâand entered the dimly lit room. She searched, but only the flickering light hanging over the middle of the room met her eyes. Disappointment crept over her even as she searched the room once more. As if heâd appear from behind the door and yell, âBoo!â To make it worse, no dreams had come all week, and she yearned to see him, to see if he actually existed. This was ridiculous in itself, because of course he didnât.
Duh.
When lingering over her dinner didnât make him magically appear, she left the tavern heavy-hearted. Each footstep she took seemed harder than the last. She paused and considered the alleyway heâd appeared in the other day.
Could he be in there?
âLooking for him, miss?â
She jumped at the gravelly voice behind her, whirling to see who spoke. It was the homeless manâaware for once. Awake, he positively terrified her. Intelligence swam in his eyes, and that was all she could make out of him. The rest of his face was buried under hair and dirt.
She hesitated. âIâm sorry? Looking for who?â
âThe tall bloke who came here last time you were, miss.â
âI thought you were sleeping.â Nonchalantly, she rested her hand on the mace hanging off her keychainâand found it missingâ¦again.
His eyes followed her small movement. âI just see things, I do. And I saw him leave, and he watched you leave.â
âSo he was there,â she said. âI thought I saw him in the alley!â
âYes, miss. But right as soon as he saw you, he scattered like the rats that live thereâalways trying to steal my food, they are.â He shook his head and grumbled something too quietly for Sabrina to make out.
âAre you always here?â she asked.
âI live here, maâam. Keep an eye on the place to make sure the wrong sort doesnât get in.â His chest puffed out in pride. She refrained from pointing out most establishments deemed him the wrong sort. She knew heâd take offense at the remark and had no desire to hurt his feelings.
âWell, obviously you do an excellent job. Have you seen the man here again, recently?â
âOh yes, he came here today. Looked real out-of-sorts, he did. Hiding in the shadows, searching for something. Methinks he seeks you.â His tone of voice held a sly tone to it, as if he were in on a secret she wasnât.
She shivered and glanced toward the alley. âIs he here, now?â She searched the shadows, but sensed no movement.
âNo, he left a few hours ago. Youâre safe with old Zeke here.â
She fought down the apprehension creeping up her spine and smiled at Zeke. âWell, Iâm going home. Keep an eye out for troublemakers, okay?â
âYes, maâam. Thatâs my job. Thanks for the money.â He tipped his battered hat at her. His hair stuck out in several threadbare spots where the fabric had worn away. âYou are the perfect woman. Looks and a warm heart.â
She blushed, embarrassed by the praise. âDonât mention it, Zeke.â She waved and got into the car to drive home, feeling curiously empty despite the full meal sheâd ingested. Sheâd obviously gone insane. Why did this man haunt her so? Sure, he was ungodly hotâbut did he have to consume her both night and day? Ugh, time for some good TV.
An hour later, she sat absorbed in the gripping drama of a team of police searching for a killer before they lost one of their own. A thud outside her door caused her to lurch to her feet and gasp.