Page 8 of Mean Streak
âSit before you fall.â
Gratefully she sank into one of the chairs. He brought her a plastic bottle of hand sanitizer, which she used liberally, then blotted her hands on a paper towel she tore off the roll standing in the center of the table.
Without any ado or hesitation, he took the blood-stained paper towel from her and placed it in a trash bin, then went to the sink and washed his own hands with hot water and liquid soap. He opened a can of Coke, brought it and a bottle of over-the-counter analgesic pills to the table, along with a sleeve of saltine crackers and a stick of butter still in the wrapper. At the stove, he ladled a portion of stew into a ceramic bowl.
He sat down across from her, tore a paper towel from the roll and placed it in his lap, then picked up his spoon. âI hate eating in front of you.â
âPlease.â
; He spooned up a bite and noticed her looking at the contents of the bowl. âProbably not what youâre used to.â
âAny other time it would look good. Beef stew is a favorite of mine.â
âItâs venison.â
She looked up at the stag head mounted on the wall above the fireplace.
He could smile after all. He did so, saying, âNot that particular deer. He was here when I moved in.â
âMoved in? This is your permanent residence? I thoughtââ She surveyed the rustic room and its limited comforts and hoped that she wasnât about to insult him. âI thought this was a getaway, like a hunting cabin. A place you use seasonally.â
âNo.â
âHow long have you been here?â
With elbows on the table, he bent over his bowl, addressing it rather than her as he mumbled, âSix months or so.â
âSix months. Without even a telephone? What would you do in an emergency?â
âI donât know. I havenât had one yet.â
He opened the packet of crackers, took out two, and spread them with butter. He ate one alone and dropped the other into his bowl of stew, breaking it up with his spoon before taking another bite.
She watched him with unabashed curiosity and apprehension. Heâd placed a paper towel in his lap as though it were a linen napkin, but he ate with his elbows on the table. He served his butter from the wrapper and had crumbled a cracker into his stew, but he blotted his mouth after every bite.
He lived in an outdated log cabin, but he didnât look like a mountain man. Particularly. He had a scruff, but it wasnât more than a day or two old. He wore a black-and-red-checked flannel shirt tucked into faded blue jeans, but the garments were clean. His hair was dark brown, collar length in back, longer than most men his age typically wore. It was laced with strands of gray at his temples.
That frosting would make another man look distinguished. It only made him look older than he probably was. Late thirties, possibly. But it was a lived-in face with a webbing of creases around his eyes, furrows at the corners of his lips, and a watchful wariness behind his eyes, which were a startling aquamarine. The cool color contrasted with his suntanned, wind-scoured face.
He was an odd mix. He lived ruggedly, without even a telephone or TV, but he wasnât uncouth, and he was well-spoken. Open shelves affixed to the log walls held dozens of books, some hardcover, others paperback, all tidily arranged.
The whole place was neat, she noted. But there wasnât a single photograph in the room, no knickknacks or memorabilia, nothing that hinted of his past, or, for that matter, his present.
She didnât trust his casual manner, nor his explanation of why he hadnât taken her to a medical facility as soon as he found her. Calling nine-one-one would have been even more practical. If heâd wanted to.
A man didnât simply pick up an unconscious and bleeding woman and cart her to his remote and neighborless mountain cabin without a reason, and she couldnât think of one that didnât involve criminality or depravity or both.
He hadnât touched her in any untoward way, but maybe he was a psychopath who drew the line at assaulting his victims while they were unconscious. Maybe he preferred them awake, aware, and responsive to his torment.
Shakily, she asked, âAre we in North Carolina?â
âYes.â
âI ask because some of the trails in the park stretch over into Tennessee.â
She remembered parking in a designated area, doing her stretches, clipping on her fanny pack. She remembered hitting her stride, and she recalled the stillness of the woods on either side of the trail and how the cold air had become thinner as she gained altitude. But she had no memory of falling and striking her head hard enough to cause a concussion.