The shriek of the bolt being drawn in the cell block door
shattered the sultry afternoon silence.
Lilah jerked her head up. For a second, she remained
frozen. Then she scrambled upright, scooted to the far
edge of the thin mat that served as her bed and pressed
herself back against the rough concrete wall. She braced
herself as the door at the end of the corridor crashed
open.
Against a dim spill of light, a pair of jail guards
staggered into sight. A man hung limply between them. His
head lolled. His feet trailed in the dust. As the guards
dragged him forward, Lilah stared at tanned, muscular
arms, the hard biceps stretching the sleeves of a faded
olive T-shirt. At inky hair that gleamed even in the murky
illumination. At the trickle of blood beading at the edge
of a determined mouth.
With a long-suffering grunt, the jailers hoisted their
burden a little higher. The prisoner's head tilted
sideways, allowing her a quick view of a straight blade of
a nose and the strong clean line of a cheekbone.
All of which abruptly seemed familiar.
Her heart leapt even as her mind reeled. No. It can't be.
What would the love of her reckless youth, the masculine
yardstick against whom she'd once measured all others, the
man who at times still invaded her sleep and hijacked her
dreams — what would he be doing here, in the farthest
reaches of the Caribbean, in remote San Timoteo, at one of
El Presidente's private jails?
Her mind must've snapped. It was the only explanation that
made sense, Lilah decided. She'd tried to be brave, to
hold on and be strong, but finally she'd lost it. What's
worse, she was hallucinating.
And yet....
The guards dumped the newcomer onto the adjoining cell's
concrete floor. One of them lingered long enough to give
their newest captive a vicious kick to the ribs, then
exited, slamming first the cell door and then the corridor
door behind him.
Every nerve in Lilah's body screamed for action. Yet the
harsh lessons of the past month had reinforced her innate
sense of caution. Ignoring the pounding of her heart, she
forced herself to stay where she was, to wait for the
sounds of the bolt slamming home and her captors'
footsteps receding. Then, unable to remain still another
instant, she launched herself off the bed and across the
cell.
She reached the unyielding metal bars, her gaze locked on
her fellow prisoner's face as she slid to her knees. Her
pulse thrummed wildly in her ears as she studied the
straight eyebrows, the strong chin and the killer
cheekbones.
This close, there could be no doubt. The years may have
added width to his shoulders, heft to his muscles, a few
character lines to his handsome face, but it was him.
Dominic Devlin Steele.
Stunned, she tried to think. What on earth could he be
doing here? Was it sheer coincidence? An incredible twist
of fate?
That hardly seemed probable. Yet the only other
explanation was that he was here deliberately, and the
only person likely to orchestrate that would be her
grandmother. Try as she might, Lilah couldn't imagine a
world where Abigail Anson Clarke Cantrell Trayburne
Sommers's path would cross Dominic Steele's.
Much less why he'd agree to put himself in harm's way for
her.
Then she realized none of it mattered. After a month of
fear, loneliness and growing desperation, it was simply
wonderful to see a familiar face. Even his.
Especially his.
She reached through the bars. "Dominic? It's me. Lilah.
Lilah Cantrell." Fingers trembling, she touched her hand
to his cheek.
On some marginal level, she registered that his skin was
reassuringly warm. That the faint prickle of his beard
against her palm tickled. And that nearly a decade had
done nothing to dim the hot little thrill of pleasure that
touching him brought her.
But mostly her focus was all on the fact that he was far,
far too still. "I can't believe it's really you. That
you're here, of all places. The thing is, you need to wake
up. Wake up and talk to me. Or at least stop being so
still. Please?"
He didn't stir. Biting her bottom lip, she tried to decide
what to do now, only to have panic flood her when she
realized she didn't have a clue. Her fright gave birth to
a lump in her throat and the next thing she knew, she had
to press her lips together to muffle a sudden sob.
Her weakness shamed her. So what if seeing some-one —
anything — familiar emphasized how demoralizing the past
month's incarceration had been? So what if she'd begun to
lose hope that she'd ever see home again? Or that, as hard
as she'd tried to convince herself it didn't matter, she'd
started to wonder whether she'd even be missed?
She was a Cantrell. Ever since she could remember she'd
been warned against the dangers of self-indulgence, the
perils of losing control.
More to the point, you aren't the one lying bruised and
unconscious on a dirty floor. She should be focused on how
to aid Dominic, not kneeling and wringing her hands like a
vapid heroine in a B movie. She could just imagine what
Gran would say. "For heaven's sake, child!" the familiar,
autocratic voice declared impatiently in her head. "Quit
your sniveling and at least try to live up to your family
name!"
Like a dash of cold water, imagining her grandmother's
disdain steadied her. Swallowing hard, Lilah took a deep
breath to force back the tidal wave of emotion that had so
nearly swamped her. To her relief, the tightness in her
throat eased and her hands quit shaking. Heartened, she
wasted no time turning her attention back to Dominic.
First things first, she decided. She'd do her best to see
if she could pinpoint where he was injured; then she'd
worry about what to do about it.
She set about examining him. Careful to keep her touch as
light as a kiss of sunlight, she skimmed her fingertips
over those areas of his head and face that she could reach
through the bars, checking for knots or blood or anything
else that seemed out of place. Next came his neck and
throat. Then she cautiously probed the side of him nearest
to her, checking each rib, the long valley of his spine,
the solid curves of arm and shoulder.
Nothing. Except for the heart-stopping discovery that he
was all taut skin and steely muscle, exactly the way she
remembered, she remained as clueless as she'd been minutes
earlier about his possible injuries.
She fought the return of despair. "Come on, Nicky," she
whispered, her old pet name for him inadvertently slipping
off her tongue as she rubbed the skin-warmed cotton of his
shirt beneath her fingertips. "Quit playing around. I need
you. I really, really need you. Wake up. Please please
please wake up —"
"Jeez, Li. Chill."
"Oh!" Her gaze jerked to Dominic's face and she found
herself staring into a pair of familiar grass-green eyes.
"You're awake!"
"Yeah." He remained motionless, simply staring at her for
several long seconds. Then he gingerly lifted his head an
inch off the ground, gave it a slight, tentative shake and
winced. "Lucky me." He squeezed his eyes shut again, as if
even the cell's shadowy light was more than he could
tolerate.
Lilah felt a fresh stab of alarm. What if he had a
concussion or a skull fracture? Or — she recalled the boot
to the side he'd taken and shuddered — broken ribs or a
fractured spleen? Heaven help them both, he could have
internal bleeding and not even know it. Her throat dry,
she swallowed. "Where does it hurt?"
"Where doesn't it?" he muttered. "Still —" he lifted an
admonishing finger " — I've survived worse, so don't go
getting your panties in a twist, okay?" With a resigned-
sounding sigh, he opened his eyes, raised himself up on
his elbow and reached out to lay one large, warm hand over
hers where it clutched the bars. "Trust me. I'm all right.
I just need a minute."
Trust me. The words washed over her, an echo from their
past. How many times had he said just that, after daring
her to do something dangerous, forbidden, but oh so
tantalizing? How many times had she gazed into those
fabulous eyes and lost a battle with temptation?
How many times had his touch made her brain fog while her
body had come alive with desire?
Enough to remember him forever.
He released her hand unexpectedly to roll onto his side,
breaking her wild thoughts. Grimacing, he flexed his jaw
and touched an exploratory fingertip to his cut lip. He
scrubbed the blood away with the back of his hand. Then,
in one lithe move, he climbed to his feet.
Frozen in place, fighting to appear calm, she watched him
take stock. His big muscular body bunched and flexed as he
swiveled his head, rolled his shoulders, bounced lightly
to test thighs, calves and knees. He rubbed briefly at a
spot above his left pectoral and then sent her a pleased
look. "Good news, princess. I think I'm gonna live."
Princess. The intimate nickname, uttered in that casual,
coolly amused tone of voice, felt like a slap to the face.
Suddenly aware that she was still kneeling at his feet
like some obedient harem girl, she scrambled up.
Oblivious to her, he took a slow look around, making a
complete revolution as he took note of the solitary barred
window set high in the far wall, the worn, wafer-thin
woven pads atop the concrete slab ledges that passed for
beds, the grate-covered holes that comprised the Third
World bathroom facilities.
He gave a soundless whistle. "Man. You really must've
pissed off the wrong person. I've seen prisons more
cheerful than this." His gaze swung back to her. For a
second, something almost dangerous gleamed in his eyes and
then his teeth flashed white, destroying that
impression. "Wait. My mistake. This is a prison."
He was making a joke. A joke. Here she'd been terrified
out of her wits, afraid he might be irreparably injured,
utterly overcome at seeing him again — and he was poking
fun at their surroundings.
She stiffened. Humiliation warred with indignation, and
indignation won. Not that she intended to let on. No way
would she risk what little dignity she still possessed by
letting on that he could still get to her.
Besides, she had bigger fish to fry, since his little
inventory of his working body parts, coupled with his
critique of the accommodations, had given her time to
think.
"Your being here isn't a coincidence, is it?" she said,
recalling his first words to her and his utter lack of
surprise at her presence in a desolate jail cell in an
obscure little island country a million miles from
home. "As a matter of fact," she went on, ignoring his
penetrating eyes to glance pointedly at the bruise
starting to darken one strong cheekbone and the lip still
oozing blood, "you deliberately did something to get
yourself thrown in here because you knew this was where I
was being held."