She rolled onto her back, biting her lip as her sore back connected with the bed. She touched the crook of her neck and found a small, square bandage.
It was all real. It had really happened. Had the bastard kidnapped her? Since she wasn't home, it was as good an assumption as any.
After listening for several minutes, she decided she was alone in the room. She felt like if she hadn't been there would have been a reaction anyway when she rolled over. Still, she thought it was better to err on the side of caution, and she scanned the room as far as she could see before she finally sat up.
To her relief, she saw that she really was alone.
The room was devoid of furniture save for the wrought iron bed. Directly opposite it stood two windows with heavy brocaded drapes. On the wall that housed the headboard of the bed were two doors. The right bedroom wall held another door, and on the wall opposite to that was a fireplace with a built-in mantel. The fire within it was the only light in the room.
It was an old room, evidenced by the hardwood floors and authentic plaster walls and ceiling. She had to be inside a Victorian era house, perhaps one even older.
From the twelve foot ceiling, a bare bulb hung from a chain in the center of the room, dangling a pull cord.
Old wiring too.
Maggie got up and pulled the cord. Light spilled down, weak, leaving the edges of the room still dim.
Seeing that her assessment of the room was accurate, Maggie decided to check the door closest to her.
It wasn't locked. She wasn't certain whether that was a good thing or a bad thing. It might mean nothing threatening at all. It could mean that whoever had brought her had only done so to help her.
On the other hand, it seemed to her that most anyone who might have found her would've taken her to a hospital. But how likely was it that her attacker would have taken her anywhere, much less patched her up?
After several minutes of indecision, she finally decided to err once again on the side of caution. Turning away from the door, she moved as quietly as possible to the first window. When she pulled the drapes back, she discovered that the window had been boarded over tighter than a nun's butt. Light squeezed through the minute cracks where putty had separated from the wood.
Maggie squinted painfully at the bright pinpricks, her heart skipping several beats as she let the curtains fall back in place. As much as she would've liked to believe that there was an unthreatening explanation for it, it seemed that she had to accept that she'd been imprisoned in the room. Unwilling to accept that assessment when she had already tested the door and found it unlocked, she decided to check the other window. It too was boarded up.
The unlocked door was either a trap, or the person who had left it unlocked had made certain that the rest of the building was secure. Regardless, she wasn't about to just sit and wait for whoever had taken her prisoner to come in and do whatever he wanted to her.
Maggie searched the room for anything she could use as a weapon. To her surprise, she found several objects that would make surprisingly good weapons. There were a pair of brass candlesticks on top of the mantel and near the fire, a poker leaned against the wall. Deciding she liked the looks of the poker best, because she really didn't want to have to get close enough to hit him with the candlestick, she took the poker and moved toward the door again.
Pressing her ear against the panel, she held her rasping breath, trying to listen above the rampaging rhythm of her heart. After listening intently for some time, she finally decided to open the door and have a look.
Turning the knob very slowly, she peered into the room—and discovered it was a bathroom.
"Shit! Shit, shit, shit!” she whispered. She looked around the bedroom. There were two other doors.
She was betting one of them was a god damned closet.
The narrow one had to be the closet.
Tiptoeing across the room, she pressed her ear to the other door. Still tremendously unsettled by her first wrong guess, Maggie only listened at that door for a few moments. Slowly, she turned the knob.
It was locked.
"Shit!"
"If you'll tell me what you're looking for, perhaps I can help."
The deep male voice directly behind her nearly gave Maggie heart failure. Acting purely on instinct, she whirled, swinging the poker for all she was worth—and buried it into the wall on her other side. Plaster burst from the impact like snow.
Stunned, she merely stared at the poker for several moments, wondering how she could have possibly missed him. That thought made her look around quickly.
He was lounging very casually against the bedpost.
Maggie gaped at him.
Even if she'd been blind, she would've sensed the danger surrounding him. Lethal practically oozed from his pores. It was hard to explain with certainty why she felt it, but he looked like the last person in the world to play good Samaritan.
He wore a black, peasant-style shirt open to the middle of his chest—the opening revealing a pale olive expanse of sculpted pectorals free of hair except for the thin beginnings of a happy trail that disappeared beneath the fabric before she could follow it. Leather pants hugged every inch of his legs and groin, showing off his package like prime rib in the meat department. He wore ass kicking boots, laced up to the knee with overlay buckles meant for tearing the hide off anyone dumb enough to brush against them.
He had an odd ensemble going on. Part tortured poet, part bad ass biker—all succulent man.
Leather tended to lend itself to a “bad” image, but this guy went way beyond that. Inky black hair framed his face, falling around his shoulders in thick tendrils almost indistinguishable from his clothing. His face was the most arresting part of him, however, and what set her heart to pounding uncontrollably.
It wasn't the square jaw or high cheekbones that were testament to high testosterone. It wasn't the wickedly black eyebrows arched sardonically as she continued to stare at him. It was his eyes. They were the eyes of a predator—so dark a gray they could easily be mistaken for black, and with the smallest tilt to them, making them appear as exotic as an Egyptian painting. They were intensely scrutinizing without seeming to be, lazy and hooded, like a cat just before striking.
Calling him dangerous would be an understatement.
"How did you do that?” she gasped when her brain finally seized on the warning and began functioning again.
"Which ‘that’ are you referring to?” he asked, throwing her off balance. He didn't act in the least threatened by her weapon.
She stared at him. She'd been thinking about the fact that he'd managed to move so quickly out of the way when she'd swung at his head. The remark, however, reminded her that she'd thoroughly checked the room.
"How did you get in the room?"
"I walked."
Maggie gritted her teeth and jerked the poker out of the wall. “Look, I don't know who you are, and I don't know what you had in mind when you brought me here, but I'd like to leave now."
He shrugged. “Unfortunately, I can't allow that. You've been bitten."
Her eyes widened. “You son of a bitch! You're the one that attacked me, aren't you?"
He smiled faintly. “Not I."
She wanted to wipe that smug look off his face with the poker, but she didn't want to get that close to him. If he was the one who had attacked her, he had thrown her around as if she was some shrimpy ninety pound weakling. “Why is it that I don't believe you?"
Again, he shrugged, as if it was a matter of indifference to him one way or the other.
She studied him for several moments when he didn't respond. “You can't keep me a prisoner here."