Gift of Gold
herself and her talent. Laura was right. I have been on the verge of going crazy, but I’ve seen the light in time. I’ll start paying more attention to her stressed-out lawyers and stockbrokers and doctors.” She whipped around and started up the path toward her cabin.
“Dammit, just who the hell do you think you are?” Jonas had her before she’d gone a yard, his hand closing forcefully around her shoulder. He yanked her back around to face him. He knew his words were dangerously soft but he doubted if she realized the significance of that. She had never seen him lose his temper.
“Let me go, Jonas.”
He ignored the imperious command. “So you think I’ve got a few problems lady? Well, let me tell you something, I’m not the only one. Take a good look at yourself. You’re turning into a shrewish little spinster because you won’t look twice at any male who doesn’t live up to your high standards of sober, respectable, responsible manhood. No wonder you haven’t got a lover, let alone a husband. What man in his right mind would want to get slashed to ribbons by that sharp tongue of yours? What man who wasn’t a complete wimp would want to listen to you tell him how to run his life? Who gave you the right to sit in judgment on the male of the species? You know next to nothing about me and yet you’ve got the nerve to stand there and lecture me on what I’ve done with my life.
Who gave you that right?
”
He felt her flinch under the onslaught of his anger. Her eyes were huge and wary in the shadows. Jonas could feel her straining to escape the grip of his hand.
“Let me go, Jonas.”
With a muttered oath, Jonas released her. Verity turned and fled to her cottage.
Jonas stood watching her, his hands clenched at his sides. He was almost shaking with the force of the anger and frustration sweeping through him. This woman was going to drive him over the edge.
He sensed the soft vibrations of the earring in his pocket and instinctively reached for it. The instant his fingers closed around the gold circlet he began to calm down.
When he had set out on the quest to find Verity he had not expected to find himself at the mercy of this sharp-tongued wench.
And he hadn’t expected to run into an ice-blooded artist who knew something about his past, either.
Life was full of surprises.
Chapter Four
The faint rasp of metal on metal brought Jonas out of a light sleep two hours later.
He came fully awake in the darkness, not moving while he focused on the sound. He had heard similar sounds before. Five years of surviving waterfront dives, back alleys, and lodgings that frequently fell short of Hilton standards had taught him exactly what that slight, scraping noise was.
Someone was trying the lock on the front door of the cabin.
Jonas flashed briefly on the remote possibility that the red-haired tyrant next door had come to apologize for abusing him earlier that evening. But the fantasy did not last long. Jonas had not survived the past few years by being anything other than extremely pragmatic.
The slight rasping sound came again. Jonas gathered himself quietly in the darkness and rolled out from under the old wool blankets. He stifled a groan of protest as his feet silently hit the cold floor. He really was going to have to do something about the heating system one of these days.
As the doorknob stopped twisting, Jonas forgot about the cabin’s heating problems. He heard the scrape of a shoe on the front step and then silence. Whoever was trying to get into the cabin had obviously given up on the door and was probably searching for an open window.
Jonas reached into the worn duffel bag that had contained all his worldly possessions the day he arrived in Sequence Springs. The bag was empty now except for the sheathed knife that resided in its inside pocket. Jonas’s hand closed around the handle of the blade just as the window made a squeak of protest. Jonas made another note to fix the broken lock on that window. A handyperson’s job was never done.
The intruder was not going out of his way to maintain silence. Either he was very inept or he thought the cabin was empty.
Jonas padded softly to the wall beside the window. He was in position as the wooden frame began to squeak slowly upward. The large outline of a man, his face invisible in the darkness, hovered outside for a moment.
When the window was fully raised, the intruder threw one leg over the sill and grunted. He was in
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