Home > The Ring The Spaniard Gave Her(7)

The Ring The Spaniard Gave Her(7)
Author: Lynne Graham

   ‘It would have to be you,’ a woman’s voice pronounced in a tone of loathing. ‘Just my luck.’

   Startled when he had believed himself utterly alone, Ruy swung round and glanced up in sheer disbelief at the woman swinging her boot-clad legs on the edge of a tumbledown wooden structure that he had not even known existed in his woods. A tree house, he realised, or at least the remains of one, something he had craved as a child but had never been allowed to have.

   ‘Is this the part where I say, “Rapunzel... Rapunzel...let down your hair”?’

   ‘You’re not my prince!’ Suzy hurled at him accusingly, not in the mood for a fairy-tale allusion. ‘But you can still get me down from this blasted tree!’

   ‘Sí, Your Highness,’ Ruy countered with appreciation at such rudeness and the novelty of it. ‘The use of the word please might be sensible in the circumstances.’

   ‘You’ve got smartass written all over you!’ Suzy raged down at him incredulously.

   ‘I’m stuck... I’m freezing and it’s snowing. So, please, please, please!’

   Ruy stared up at her, dark-as-pitch eyes narrowing in disbelief and flaring gold as he registered the veil fluttering into view behind her fall of copper spiral curls. ‘Are you wearing a wedding dress?’ he almost whispered.

   ‘Are you going to help me get down from here? Or are you planning to keep on asking me stupid questions until I’m a frozen corpse?’ Suzy snarled, her tongue stumbling round the words and slurring the syllables.

   Involuntarily, Ruy grinned. ‘You’re not that far from the ground. Jump down and I’ll catch you,’ he told her.

   ‘And you’re smiling at seeing me in this condition!’ Suzy framed, almost incandescent with fury at such stupidity while she wondered why she could no longer speak properly. ‘Don’t you recognise an emergency?’

   All that passion fired her eyes to green-glass brilliance in her pale little face. His fingers itching for a stick of charcoal and a blank page, he studied her with the fierce enchantment of a born artist and walked beneath the tree house. ‘Just push yourself over the edge and fall,’ he instructed.

   ‘I’m scared of heights, you dummy!’ Suzy launched.

   ‘So close your eyes and trust me,’ Ruy advised without sympathy, ‘while you’re telling me how you got over my fence.’

   ‘Your fence...should’ve guessed. I climbed a tree and jumped down.’

   ‘I thought you were too scared of heights,’ Ruy pointed out, since she had yet to move an inch.

   ‘I was running on adrenalin just then,’ she mumbled shakily, and he regretted mentioning the height because he had already noticed the shivering and the slurring of her speech and the pale colour of her lips and he suspected she was suffering from hypothermia.

   ‘You’ve left him at the altar...haven’t you?’ Ruy gathered harshly, keen to distract her because she was shaking so badly without seeming to be aware of it that he was beginning to appreciate that she could also be deep in some kind of shock.

   She nodded her head jerkily in silence.

   ‘Not a very kind thing to do,’ Ruy dared.

   ‘How dare you?’ Suzy shot as hotly at him as he had hoped, and she slid off the edge of the platform and down into his arms.

   Ruy staggered as he caught her because of the force of her fall but she was a slight weight, a small, curvy shape that smelled of oranges and sunshine. Weird, he thought, abstractedly drinking in the scent of her hair, liking it in some even weirder way. ‘I just wanted you down from the tree as fast as possible,’ he murmured soothingly as he tried to put her down again. ‘Winding you up seems to work a treat.’

   Her legs buckled and he told her to lean against him while he removed his coat and wrapped it round her before lifting her again.

   ‘I don’t know why you wind me up so much...well, actually I do,’ Suzy muttered jaggedly, from the depths of his giant warmly lined jacket. ‘If you hadn’t been in the bar last night talking to me, it wouldn’t have happened...but maybe I’m lucky it happened because I had no idea he would do what he did, so maybe I should be thanking you instead of thinking it was all your fault because he thought you were flirting with me.’

   ‘How was it my fault? And what did happen?’ Ruy pressed, strong arms closed firmly round her and making her feel oddly safe for the first time after long hours of agonising while she had lain sleepless throughout the night.

   ‘Nothing...nothing happened,’ she muttered, struggling to concentrate.

   In the stark harshness of the spring light, Ruy looked down at her and registered the bruise on her cheekbone and the reddening and hint of swelling round her little nose. ‘He hit you? That’s why you left him standing?’ he demanded rawly.

   ‘Let’s not talk about it. And then he arrived early at the church... I saw him from the window,’ she admitted unevenly. ‘He came over to the flat and Dad was out and I just panicked because I couldn’t face him again. I knew he would pile on the pressure and make threats. He knew what he had done, and he wanted to make sure I would go through with the wedding. He’ll be in a towering rage with me now and I didn’t want to risk that confrontation.’

   ‘Cabrón!’ Ruy bit out the insult in Spanish, settling her carefully into the passenger seat of his vehicle and tugging out his phone to ring his sister for advice; as a GP, she was generally home at weekends. He spoke to her in French because Cecile’s mother had been French, and he didn’t want to take the chance that Suzy might understand what he was saying. Cecile was shocked and told him what to do best for Suzy while promising to call round to check her over.

   ‘Shouldn’t we be contacting the police to report the assault?’ Ruy prompted as he turned the car.

   ‘No...no!’ From the depths of his coat, Suzy shot him a look of pure horror. ‘It would only make Percy more vindictive and I can’t afford to do that.’

   ‘We’ll see,’ Ruy said lightly, although he had no intention of standing back while the abuser got off scot-free because he had literally terrorised his victim into such fear that she couldn’t currently see the situation as it was. He wanted more information but knew it was unfair to press her when she was in a weakened state of confusion. He was also experiencing an extremely strong urge to protect her from further harm.

   ‘He has a lot of power,’ she mumbled thickly. ‘You can’t afford to antagonise people like that.’

   Ruy was outraged by the depth of her fear of a small-time local businessman. It was the strangest feeling. He could not recall ever being so angry about anything that did not directly affect him. After all, he did not get involved in other people’s problems. On the one occasion when he had abandoned that rule years earlier the situation had blown up in his face when, by trying to help, he had simply done more damage, or so it had seemed. But Suzy was different, he told himself soothingly, because he had no personal or sexual interest in her. She wasn’t his type, absolutely not his type. Ruy was drawn to quietly spoken brunettes, not short, curvy redheads with sharp tongues.

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