Lover Beware
with career prospects, long nails, strappy high heels, and a burgeoning ulcer. Country life, to put it mildly, had been a revelation, but after the initial shock—and that first broken nail—she’d taken to it like a duck to water. She’d found her peaceful oasis, even if at the moment the illusion of safety was evaporating as fast as the water that flowed through her property.
She hadn’t known the Dillons, but whether she’d known them or not didn’t matter, the crime had been ugly—doubly shocking for a small town where the main topics of conversation tended to be the price of beef and wool, and how badly they needed rain to lift the dropping water table. Like everyone else in Tayler’s Creek, she was edgy and alarmed, and ready to jump at any shadow.
Jess barked, breaking the tension that still held Jane rigid. Letting out a breath and feeling faintly ridiculous for overreacting, she stepped outside, bracing herself against the hammer blow of heat and blinking at the hot glare as she skimmed the drive and the semicircle of farm buildings. She hadn’t expected to see a vehicle, and there wasn’t one.
Berating herself as, if not paranoid, then definitely neurotic, she did a circuit of the buildings, studying the ground, as if she could somehow discern the shape of a footprint in dirt that was packed as hard as iron, or spy a broken stem in the bleached, matlike covering of Kikuyu grass that sprang back, tough and resilient, beneath her sneaker-clad feet.
As she checked the stockyards and the slatted dimness of the shearing shed, it occurred to her that if there had been anyone at all on her property, there was a simple explanation as to who it could have been—her nearest neighbour.
Her heart stuttered in her chest, and her stomach did a nervy little somersault at the prospect of coming face-to-face with Michael Rider, an instant freeze-frame forming in her mind: dark eyes, taut cheekbones, tanned olive skin, black hair that flowed to broad shoulders.
Michael Rider existed in the category that any sane woman would label as dark and dangerous. The fact that he was her neighbour didn’t make him any more reassuring. In any city he would stand out; in the small town of Tayler’s Creek, he was as exotic and barbaric as a jungle cat in suburbia.
She’d been avoiding him for the past three days, ever since she’d seen the lights on at his house and realized that he was back after yet another six-month absence. Although, if Rider had called, she was certain he would have made his presence known. She couldn’t imagine him doing anything as under-handed as sneaking, despite the fact that he was a special forces soldier and probably trained to sneak.
When she was satisfied no one was hiding, crouched ready to spring, in any of the outbuildings, she shook her head in amused exasperation and strolled through the line of shrubs that screened the barn from the house, riffling slim, tanned fingers through her dark bangs and lifting the thick plait that lay against the back of her neck, allowing air to cool the over-heated skin at her nape.
Checking her watch, she noted it was an hour short of lunchtime, but already the sky was hazy, the heat intense; the heavy, somnolent silence broken only by the sawing of crickets, as if every living creature, aside from the legions of glossy black insects, had gone into temporary hibernation. Even the breeze had died, so that the sun blazed down unchecked, sucking up moisture and leaching all the rich colour from the landscape; the distant, wavering heat shimmer lending the hills a sere, arid cast, when just weeks ago they’d been green and lush with early summer growth and an overabundance of rain.
Jess barked again, and Jane postponed the idea of a glass of lemonade, frosted with condensation and tinkling with ice cubes, and walked around the side of the house. She saw Jess in the far paddock—where she’d been, no doubt, hunting rabbits—standing stock-still, staring into the dark rim of the bush that flowed over a good deal of Jane’s land.
The cold unease she’d felt in the barn returned, amplified. Just because there hadn’t been a vehicle, didn’t mean that someone hadn’t walked through her place—unlikely as that event might be.
She called Jess, and the small black and tan huntaway trotted toward her, hackles up. Jane dropped her hand to the dog’s head, soothing the rough fur.
She hooked her fingers through Jess’s collar. “What is it,
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