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Chapter Four

Belle had seen some tough customers in her day, but this guy topped the list. Figuring him to be in his late thirties and about six-nine or so, she’d guess his weight at around three hundred pounds. But he wasn’t fat, just big. Huge. Think Shaq on steroids. He had arms and legs like tree trunks and shoulders wider than a bus grill. He wore jeans and a wind-breaker with enough fabric to make a hang glider. His head was shaved, and a scar curved from the corner of one dark eye to the edge of his grim mouth. She grew very, very still, watching him.

Then the other door opened, and Skye got out, followed closely by Gus.

Gabe smiled at the man. “Hello, there, Napoleon. How’s it going?”

“Fine, Mr. Burrell. Just fine. Good to have you back.”

“Good to be back. Belle, this is Napoleon Jones, Skye’s assistant.”

The assistant nodded toward Belle. She nodded back.

Tiger came running from the house and practically leapt into Napoleon’s arms. The big man laughed, a deep rich sound, and held the wiggling little dog gently against him as Tiger licked his face.

“How you doing, little guy,” Napoleon said, scratching Tiger’s head as the dog licked some more.

“Belle,” Skye said, “I see that Mother already has you posing for her.” Skye peeked over Flora’s shoulder at the sketches. “Wow. That’s really something, isn’t it? Mother can see things that no one else does, but I think she’s captured you beautifully.”

“These are just quick sketches,” Flora said. “The painting will be better. I’ll start on it tomorrow. Shall we go in for lunch? I imagine that Maria has things ready.”

Once inside at the table, Belle was shocked to see it laden with so much food. Enormous platters of meat and bowls of vegetables, along with salads and a tureen of soup, covered the huge table and sideboard. It looked more like a church potluck dinner than a simple lunch. She wondered about the waste since she and Skye and Flora had only soup and green salad.

She needn’t have wondered. Napoleon packed it away like no one she’d ever seen—and with four brothers and their friends, she’d seen some world-class eaters in her day.

When Belle finished, she said to Flora, “If you’ll excuse me, I’ll go upstairs and freshen up for our errand.”

“What errand?” Gabe asked.

“Your mother and I are driving into town.”

“I need to stop by the gallery, and I need to pick up a few things from Daisy’s,” Flora said.

“Are you sure that you’re up to the trip?” Gabe asked.

“I think so. If I get tired, I can wait in the car.”

“I’ll drive you,” he said.

Flora winked at Belle. “That means he’ll go along and supervise your activity level.”

“I’m fully capable of supervising my own activity level.” Belle’s words came out a bit sharper than she’d intended, but she’d never taken to being monitored.

Skye snorted, then hid it behind a cough.

Gabe chuckled. “Of course you are. It’s just that I’ve cleared my desk so that I have a couple of free hours, and I was hoping to take you for a drive around the village.”

“That only takes five minutes,” Skye said.

“True,” Gabe said. “We’ll circle the square twice.”

“Don’t forget that cereal,” Suki said. “And it wouldn’t hurt to pick up another quart of honey.”

Napoleon didn’t say a word. He merely ate. Ralph had kept pace with him for a few minutes, but he’d soon dropped out of the race.

GABE LOADED two paper-wrapped paintings into the back of his Lexus. He and Flora tried to insist that Belle ride up front with him, but she declined and climbed into the backseat instead, leaving a frustrated Flora to settle for the passenger seat.

Belle had a sneaking feeling that Flora was eager to play matchmaker. It wouldn’t work. She wasn’t interested in being matched with anyone—not even gorgeous Gabe.

They drove down the hill’s long, curving road until they came to a gatehouse. Belle was surprised to see that it was manned by a guard.

Gabe smiled and nodded. “Roscoe.”

Roscoe, a burly guy who looked like an ex-Marine, nodded back, then peered inside the car before he punched the gate open.

As they drove through, Belle said, “I’m surprised to see a guard on duty.”

“We get a lot of folks who don’t realize that ours is a private road,” Gabe said. “And don’t try to hop the fence. It’s electrified to keep our critters in and others out.”

“Electrified?” Belle said. “That seems a bit excessive.”

He chuckled. “You don’t know the deer around here. They can be very determined, and Suki has a fit if they get in her pea patch and herb garden.”

“Suki grows wonderful herbs,” Flora said. “And she’ll be planting her garden soon. Nobody grows vegetables like Suki. Of course Ralph helps her with the heavy work, tilling and such.”

“With all the limestone, I thought it might be too rocky around here for vegetable gardens,” Belle said.

“It takes some doing, but there are areas where the soil has been enriched,” Gabe said. “We even have a couple of vineyards around.”

“Gabriel is a partner in one of them, aren’t you, dear?” Flora said.

Belle allowed herself to be drawn into a conversation about local crops and wine, but she still thought it was odd to have an electrified fence and a guard at the gate. But then, she’d never lived on what could only be called an estate. In East Texas where she’d grown up, cattle guards and barbed wire served the purpose.

“This is Ranch Road Twelve,” Gabe said. “If you go west and hang a right at Dripping Springs, you’ll get to Austin.

This way takes us through Wimberley. Keep going and you’ll reach San Marcos. From there you can go north to Austin or south to San Antonio.”

“That’s our only major grocery store,” Flora said, pointing to a large building on a rise. “And there’s the visitor’s center.”

“And this is Cypress Creek,” Gabe said as they crossed a bridge that spanned a picturesque stream tumbling over a rocky ledge in a rush through town. “It joins the Blanco River just south of here.”

“Blanco,” Belle said. “I remember going to Blanco on a field trip when I was in junior high. Aren’t there some dinosaur tracks there?”

“Yep,” Gabe said, smiling. “In the next county. And this is the square. Except that it isn’t exactly square.” He pulled to a stop in front of a row of shops with wooden storefronts.

Belle glanced around at the colorful array of buildings. “Where’s the courthouse?”

“In San Marcos.”

“Pardon?”

“The courthouse for Hayes County is in San Marcos, the county seat,” Gabe said.

“When you said ‘square,’ I assumed that you meant courthouse square. Like our square in Naconiche.”

“No courthouse here,” Gabe said. “We don’t even have a jail.”

“What do you do with the bad guys?” Belle asked.

Gabe smiled. “We don’t have many bad guys, but the few assorted lawbreakers get carted off to the calaboose in San Marcos.”

“No police force?”

“Nope,” he said. “The county sheriff and his deputies handle things pretty well.”

“We frown on crime,” Flora said. “This is the Firefly, the gallery that handles my work.” She pointed to a shop painted a sun-weathered blue. “And Daisy’s Health Food is just beyond it.”

Gabe retrieved the paintings from the trunk while Belle and Flora got out and went inside the gallery.

When the bell over the door jingled, a tall, slender man, with more hair on his chin than on his head, turned from his customers. His face brightened. “Flora! Dear heart. Your timing is perfect.” He rushed over to envelop Flora in a hug, trailing a scent that reminded Belle of sweet potato pie and mint tea. “Where on earth have you been, darlin’? And who is this gorgeous lady with you?”

“This gorgeous lady is Belle Outlaw, our houseguest. Belle, this is Mason Perdue, the owner of the Firefly.”

“Mr. Perdue.” Belle offered her hand.

He grasped her hand in both of his and bowed slightly. “Mason will do. My late fahtha was Mr. Perdue. Are you an artist, Belle?”

“I’m afraid not.”

The bell jingled again, and Gabe came inside carrying the two paintings. “Where shall I put these, Mason?”

“By my desk for now if you don’t mind, Gabe. Belle, may I steal Flora away for a moment? These very nice people from San Antonio have stopped by and are absolutely enamored by her portraits. They’d like to discuss a commission with her.”

“Mason,” Flora whispered, “I wish you wouldn’t put me on the spot like this. You know how I feel about it.”

“Double your price, darlin’,” Mason whispered back. “They’re loaded, and I need to pay my light bill. Things have been slow this month.”

Flora rolled her eyes and shrugged. “Excuse me, Belle.”

“No problem. I’ll look around.”

“I’ll give you the guided tour,” Gabe said.

Amused, Belle asked, “Think I might get lost?” The gallery was no more than twenty feet square.

Gabe grinned. “You might lose yourself among all these bluebonnets.”

Belle soon discovered what he meant. About half the paintings were landscapes, and most of those were of fields of wild-flowers, primarily bluebonnets. But these weren’t poor attempts by somebody’s grandmother or a weekend hobbyist. They were beautifully done by a variety of artists.

“Are these local artists?” she asked.

“Most of them, I think,” Gabe said.

“Why so many bluebonnets?”

“Tourists, my dear,” Mason said from behind them. “They gobble them up—even the bad ones at the place down the street. By the end of wildflower season, we won’t have a one left. I’ve tried to get Flora to paint more bluebonnets, but, alas, one is all she’ll do for now. This is hers.” He hung one of the canvases Gabe had brought in an empty spot on her left.

Belle moved toward it and stopped dead still. It took her breath away.

“You can almost see the unicorns frolicking in the mists, can’t you?” Mason asked.

Unicorns? No. But she could almost see fairies dancing in the flower fields. “It’s…spectacular.” And the price discreetly displayed on a card in the corner was spectacular, too. It was well beyond her means—especially now that she didn’t have a job.

“I’ll wager that it’s gone by the weekend,” Mason said. He sighed. “God, what I wouldn’t give to be able to paint like that.”

“You don’t paint?” Belle asked.

“Compared to Flora, I merely dabble. I’m mediocre at best.”

“But an excellent teacher,” Gabe said.

Mason sighed. “You know what they say. Those who can, do. Those who can’t, teach.”

“Oh, I don’t know about that,” Belle said. “My oldest brother was an outstanding cop, and now he’s an excellent criminal justice teacher. I suspect that you’re a very good artist.”

“Good, I suppose, but not great. Look at these portraits of Flora’s.”

They walked along the display beside Flora’s landscape, and Belle stopped again to draw a deep breath. Spectacular didn’t begin to describe the three large paintings displayed there. A surreal quality radiated from the canvases, captivating her. Besides her own few pitiful attempts at sketching and watercolor, Belle didn’t know a great deal about art, but she recognized brilliance.

These were brilliant.

Beyond brilliant.

The first was of Napoleon, Skye’s assistant. His features were carved into a huge oak tree and into the craggy mountain behind it. Strength and endurance fairly shouted from the powerful painting, yet doves and a lamb rested among the tree branches and flowers grew at its base. Seeing the painting, Belle’s feelings about Napoleon subtly shifted. Rather than thinking of him as mean-looking, she saw him as powerful and fierce, but gentle and protective at the same time.

The second portrait was Mason and, while it was very different, it was no less awesome. On canvas, Mason became a wizard with a display of colored light circles illuminating the background. Each circle contained a different symbol, some Belle recognized, some she didn’t. A pied-piper sprightliness seemed to draw her to the twinkle in his eyes.

“Did she capture you?” Belle asked Mason.

“Absolutely. I’m astounded every time I look at it. Something stirs deep inside me.”

The third painting was of a little girl, a blond fairy clad in wispy drapes of moonbeams, lying prone beside a glade’s misty pool and surrounded by every type of animal from tigers to bunnies. The creatures seemed enamored of the fairy child, whose finger trailed in the water and spread ripples over the still surface.

A feeling of familiarity tugged at her, but Belle couldn’t name the subject. “Who?”

“Skye,” Gabe said. “She was about four or five.”

“No wonder she became a vet,” Belle said. “Wow.”

“Wow, indeed,” Mason said.

Feeling both energized and a bit drained, Belle moved on to look at the other paintings. None compared to Flora’s.

By the time they’d completed the perimeter, Flora had finished with her conversation, and they went next door to the health food store.

“Are you feeling tired?” Gabe asked.

“Not at all,” Belle said.

Flora introduced Belle to Daisy, the owner of the health food store. Daisy’s name suited her perfectly. A short, no-nonsense person, the owner was a trifle plump with an open, smiling face and a headful of white ringlets. While Flora bought cereal and honey, Belle looked among the shelves for a few things.

“What are you looking for?” Gabe asked.

“Something to replace all the good stuff killed off by the antibiotics that I took in the hospital. And I need to detoxify.”

“Sounds painful.”

Belle laughed. “Not really.”

Daisy joined them, offering help. When Belle related her needs, Daisy said, “I know just the thing.” She grabbed a couple of bottles from the shelf, bustled to a rounder of pamphlets and pulled several. “These tell you everything you need to know. And I’d suggest some of our yogurt as well. It’s made just down the road, and it’s excellent. Delivered this morning.” She retrieved two containers from the cooler. “Are you going to be with us long?”

“I hope not,” Belle said.

Daisy and Flora both lifted eyebrows.

“Is that a reflection of our hospitality?” Gabe said, clearly amused.

“Oh, no. That came out wrong. The hospitality is first-rate, but I’m only here to get back on my feet after an illness. I’m hoping I’ll be stronger in a few days.”

“Or a few weeks,” Gabe said.

“Wimberley has a special healing power,” Daisy said.

“You’ll be back up to snuff in no time. Why, just look at me. When I came here, the doctors said I had less than a year to live.”

“I’m so sorry,” Belle said.

“Don’t be,” Daisy replied with a grin. “That was fourteen years ago. I’m fit as a fiddle—except for my middle.” She laughed at her own joke and rang up their purchases. “The ice-cream shop next door is my downfall.”

“My mother owns an ice-cream shop in my home town,” Belle told her. “I love the stuff, too. Banana nut sends me into ecstasy.”

“I’ll have to remember that,” Gabe murmured beside her ear.

A sudden flush warmed her, and Belle glanced quickly at Flora and Daisy, but they hadn’t heard. “Down, boy.”

Gabe laughed. “Yes, ma’am. And for the record, chocolate does it for me. Want to stop in for a scoop? Or two?”

“Not today. I’m fading fast.”

“Damn! Sorry I didn’t pick up on that,” he said, scowling. “Let me get you to the car.”

From his fierce expression, Belle was afraid that he’d throw her over his shoulder and take off. “Take it easy, Gabe. I’m okay. Just getting a bit tired. I’ve gotten too used to my afternoon nap.”

“You’re pale as a ghost. I’ve let you do too much too soon.”

“I’m fine, Gabe. Honestly.”

He ignored her protests, grabbed the bags of merchandise and steered her out the door, leaving his mother to trail after them. He refused to listen to her objections and installed her in the front seat and began buckling her seat belt.

She slapped his hands. “I can do that!”

“Feeling out of sorts, are we?”

She bit back a snotty reply. She felt six years old again, and she didn’t like it.

Belle had thought her brothers overly protective, but Gabe could hold his own with any of them. Her brothers’ over-bearing behavior had always rankled, but after years of hissing and spitting on her part, they’d finally learned to back off and keep their mouths shut. Most of the time. She hated coddling. She was tougher than a two-dollar steak, and she didn’t need to be carried around on a silk pillow. The sooner Gabe Burrell figured that out, the better things would be.

Chapter Five

He’d done it again, Gabe thought. Belle couldn’t have made it any plainer that he’d scored high on her irritation factor. “Sorry,” he said. “I promised Sam that I’d look out for you, and I don’t want that guy on my case.”

“Better him than me. I’m twice as mean as Sam on his worst day.”

He laughed. “I can’t believe that.”

She smiled, and his heart did a little flip. “Believe it. I really do appreciate your concern and your attentiveness, Gabe, but I don’t respond well to mollycoddling.”

“I’ll try to remember that, but I’m a natural born mollycoddler. Be patient with me, Miss Belle.” He tried his best to look pitiful.

She didn’t look as if she bought his act. She rolled her eyes and snorted in the same way his sister did when he tried to talk his way around her.

“Want some ice cream?” he asked, nodding toward the shop down the way.

“Don’t tempt me. I’ll wait until another day.”

“Maybe we can stop by after your doctor’s appointment tomorrow.”

“What doctor’s appointment?”

“Oh, I forgot to mention that I called this morning and got an appointment for you.”

Her eyebrow lifted. “Oh, really?”

“Now, don’t go getting in an uproar again, Miss Belle. The hospital faxed information to a doctor here as terms of your dismissal. You’re supposed to see her until you’re fully recovered. Kaye Hamilton is my sister’s internist, and I thought you might like her. We don’t have a big selection in town, but we have some excellent doctors practicing here. I thought it would be easier than trying to drive to Austin or San Marcos. Okay?”

“Sure. I don’t want to be difficult.”

“Be difficult if you like,” Flora said as she climbed in the car and caught the tail end of the conversation. “I love being difficult.”

“Artists are allowed,” Belle said. “Flora, you’re a genius. I didn’t realize how truly gifted you are. I’m impressed with your work.”

Flora beamed. “Why, thank you, my dear.”

“As much as I tried to convince myself otherwise, I simply wasn’t cut out for law enforcement. After all those years of preparation, I hated my job, hated the politics and dreaded going to work. Maybe I’m simply the rebel of the family, but I’ve always wanted to do something creative like paint or sculpt or write.”

“Then do it,” Flora said.

“I wouldn’t know how to begin.”

“How did you learn to read and write?”

“I went to school.”

“You can learn the basics of painting or sculpting or writing the same way. There are dozens of teachers around here. Why, I could probably give you a lesson when we get home.”

“After her nap,” Gabe said.

Belle shot him a sharp look, and he pulled an imaginary zipper across his mouth. She laughed, and he winked at her before he backed out and headed home.

ALTHOUGH IT PAINED HER to admit it, Belle really did need a nap. She’d planned to rest for a half hour or so, but when she awoke, it was almost time for dinner.

Going downstairs a few minutes later, she found the family assembled in the den. “I’m so sorry to be such a sleepyhead,” Belle said. “I simply died.”

“You’re supposed to be resting and recuperating,” Gabe said. “No need for an apology.”

“But I missed my art lesson.”

Flora dismissed the concern with a flutter of her hand. “There’ll be plenty of time for lessons. Would you like some wine?”

“I’d better stick with juice, or I may nod off in the mashed potatoes.”

Skye chuckled as she poured a glass of apple juice from a carafe on the bar. “How did you enjoy the nickel tour of our fair city?”

Belle sipped from the glass Skye handed her. “I didn’t get to see that much of it. I ran out of steam first, but I look forward to exploring all the shops and galleries. It’s a very picturesque little town.”

“We get a lot of tourists,” Skye said, “and it has grown a bit in the past few years.”

Suki soon called everyone to dinner, and after they ate, they watched a new Sandra Bullock DVD that Gabe had rented. When the movie was over, the group scattered, leaving only Belle and Gabe in the den.

“Is the house alarm set?” Belle asked.

“Yes, but I can turn it off. What do you need?”

“I just wanted to sit outside for a while and do some star-gazing.”

He picked up a throw from the sofa and held out his hand. “Come on. I need some stargazing myself.”

She took the hand he offered. It was warm and strong.

Gabe punched numbers into a keypad near the front door, then led her outside to the front steps, past the overhang of the porch. The night air felt cool and crisp against her face, but pleasantly so.

“This way,” he said, guiding her away from the house to an outcrop of large limestone boulders. He spread the throw over the tallest rock and helped her up. “I give you the Wimberley sky.” He looked up and made a wide arc with his hand.

A pale half moon and millions of brilliant stars studded the sky. With no clouds to obscure the display, the result was breathtaking.

“It’s beautiful,” she said, stretching out on her back and gazing upward. “You know, Colorado is supposed to have the most fantastic skies, but, to me, nothing can compete with Texas.”

“Yep.” He was quiet for a moment, then started to sing, “The stars at night…”

She joined in with, “Are big and bright…”

They laughed and clapped and belted out a rousing chorus of “Deep in the Heart of Texas.” They pieced together and sang another couple of verses, laughing and clapping louder as they went.

Belle was in the midst of a slightly naughty verse from her college days when a spotlight suddenly hit them. The words froze in her throat, and she bolted upright. A car door opened and, blinded by the light, she heard the unmistakable sound of a shotgun jacking a shell.

“Hold it, Dick,” Gabe said, sitting up. “It’s me.”

The spotlight went off. “Oh, sorry, Mr. Burrell. From the noise, I thought coyotes must have gotten in.”

Belle shoved her fist over her mouth to hold in the snort of laughter about to explode.

“Nope, we’re singing.”

“Oh. Sorry, sir. Real sorry I interrupted. I’ll be getting along. Go right on with your singing. ’Night, sir. ’Night, ma’am.”

Her eyes hadn’t adjusted after the spotlight, so she couldn’t see Dick, but she suspected that he was tugging on the brim of his hat and kicking himself in the butt.

“Good night, Dick,” Gabe said.

“Good night, Dick,” she echoed.

When the car drove away, she lay back and exploded into gales of laughter. Gabe lay back beside her, chuckling.

“Coyotes? Coyotes?” She laughed again.

“I didn’t think we were that bad.”

“Trust me. We were.”

He rolled to his side and looked down at her. “I love to hear you laugh.”

A little shiver stole over her. “You do?”

“Uh-huh. You cold?”

“Just a bit.” She’d lied. Her shiver had nothing to do with being cold.

He drew the throw around her, tucking it between them and drawing her closer to him. “That better?”

“Not really,” she said, thinking he’d move and they could go inside.

“Funny, but you feel warm to me.” His mouth had moved very close to hers.

She meant to spout something snappy and sassy, but her brain shut down and her hormones started acting up.

Finally she managed to whisper, “This isn’t a good idea.”

“Are you sure?”

“Pretty sure.”

Gabe sighed and rolled over to his back. “It felt like an excellent idea.”

He was right, she thought as her gaze scanned the starry sky. It had felt like an excellent idea. But kissing him would have been a dumb move. Technically, she was still married, but that wasn’t what stopped her. The marriage was over except for a formal piece of paper. Her emotions had taken a beating with Matt, and she wasn’t ready to deal with any sort of romantic entanglement—not even a temporary one. Her heart felt battered and raw, although the laughter had helped.

She manufactured a big yawn.

“Tired?”

She nodded.

“We’d better go inside.”

Belle sat up. “Thanks for inviting me to your observatory.”

“Anytime.” He stood and held out his hand to her.

It felt warm. And wonderful.

She sighed. The timing was lousy.

Inside, they said good night at the foot of the stairs.

“Want some hot chocolate?” Gabe asked.

Actually, that sounded good, but she said, “I think I’ll pass tonight, but thanks.” She went upstairs, and when she got to her door, she turned and looked toward the foyer. Gabe was standing there watching her. She gave a little flutter of her fingers and went inside.

DAMN, GABE THOUGHT, mentally kicking himself as he reset the alarm. He’d rushed her. What had happened to the patience that he prided himself on? Maybe their silliness had done it. He couldn’t imagine Lisa sitting on a cold rock and singing at the top of her lungs. Off-key. She would have thought it juvenile. But then Lisa had been overly concerned with appearances and rather shallow, he realized.

His and Belle’s shared laughter had done him a world of good. His step felt lighter as he made his rounds checking the house, and he found himself humming “Deep in the Heart of Texas” as he went to his home office to finish some paperwork.

Shadow, a smoky gray cat of unknown origin, lay curled in his chair.

“Sorry, fellow, but you’re going to have to vacate.” He picked up the cat and put him on the floor. “Where’s your running buddy?”

Shadow merely meowed and looked grumpy at being disturbed. With a flick of his tail, he stalked to his second-favorite spot and jumped up onto a club chair in the corner.

PROPPED UP IN BED, Belle read the last few chapters of a really spooky Stephen King novel, then flicked off the light. The story would have given a lesser person the willies, but she was good at separating fact from fiction. She wasn’t given to being fearful of things that went bump in the night—especially in this place. She’d gotten a look at the alarm system, and it was top-of-the-line.

Punching her pillow, Belle turned on her side and closed her eyes, but her brain was too active to sleep. A thousand thoughts flitted through her mind. Gabe and the near kiss. Guilt over not calling her family. She’d do that tomorrow. The sound of Gabe’s laughter. That damned psychopathic character of King’s. What was she going to do for a living? Where was she going to settle? What would Gabe’s mouth have felt like? His body had felt too good as he stretched out next to—

Shaking away the mishmash in her head, Belle flopped on her back and went through a series of mental exercises to quiet her mind. Those exercises had been a godsend in highly charged times over the past few years.

Soon she could feel herself quiet and settle and drift into the first stage of sleep. A misty image of Gabe seemed to wait for her….

Something bumped her thighs, and Belle came alert. It moved slowly, stealthily over her belly and breasts. What? What moved?

When a damp, warm breath hit her face, her eyes flew open. She found herself staring into a pair of glowing eyes, and her heart almost stopped. Jumping from the bed, she went one way, and the creature yowled, skittered and went the other.

When she flicked on the lamp, a Siamese cat crouched on top of the chest. Her heart rate slowed, and she laughed. “Sorry, sweetie, but you startled me. Who are you?”

The cat didn’t move. It stayed crouched, eyes darting, waiting.

Belle moved toward the Siamese, and it scrambled, sprang from the chest, and ran into the sitting room. She followed.

She couldn’t see it anywhere. She peered under the couch, and two blue eyes peered back at her.

“Did you get trapped in here, kitty?” She scratched on the carpet and patted it.

The cat didn’t move a whisker.

“Are you shy? I’ll let you out.” Belle went to the door of the suite and opened it wide. “Here, kitty, kitty.”

The cat still didn’t move.

“Okay, have it your way. I’m going to bed.” She left the door ajar and went back into the bedroom.

Wide awake now, Belle tried her relaxation exercises again.

They didn’t work.

She was hungry. All she could think of was ice cream. Banana nut. Butter pecan. Strawberry. Chocolate. Pistachio. Even vanilla would do. Vanilla with hot fudge drizzled over it.

Was there any in the fridge downstairs?

She was a guest here. Guests didn’t go rummaging around in the freezer in the middle of the night. She turned over.

Rocky road. Pralines and cream. Peach. Peppermint. Cookie dough. Chunky Monkey. Cherry Garcia. She’d even settle for orange sherbet.

Muttering accusations about her IQ, Belle threw back the covers, grabbed her robe and stole down the stairs. She hoped there weren’t motion detectors in the kitchen or an alarm on the refrigerator.

Nothing started ringing, so she supposed she was safe. Night-lights lit her way, so she didn’t turn on any overheads.

The freezer compartment of the fridge yielded only vegetables, ice, two bags of peaches, three bags of strawberries and toaster waffles. The waffles surprised her. She figured the family for a from-scratch-waffles type.

With the amount of cooking that went on in that household, there was bound to be a bigger freezer somewhere. She poked her head in the large pantry off the kitchen.

Bingo. Not one, but two humongous freezers. One held mostly meat and vegetables. The other held a variety of items.

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Metin
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