A Year And A Day. Inglath Cooper

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A Year And A Day - Inglath  Cooper


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to her shame, she was crying now. She’d vowed she wouldn’t cry anymore. Crying was weak. Gave him what he wanted.

      He kicked her then, a hard fierce punt to her left thigh. She kept her arms wrapped around her knees, her head between her legs, praying for the end of it. I can live through this. One more time. Oh God, Oh God, Oh God, please make him stop. Please don’t make me leave my son alone.

      Pleeeassse.

      The word echoed once through her throbbing head, and then nothing.

      CHAPTER THREE

      THE CONFETTI had barely settled to the floor when Nicholas thanked the Websters for their hospitality and then ducked out.

      He waited while the valet got his car, then pulled out of the driveway a little too fast in an attempt to accelerate past his preoccupation with Audrey Colby.

      Two miles down West Paces Ferry, he let up on the gas, one elbow on the windowsill. What was it about her that had him so rattled? Her desire to be left alone could not have been more clear. And yet out on that terrace, he hadn’t been able to make himself walk away. He still felt as if everything inside him had been altered by the few words of conversation they’d had, shaken up to the point that all the pieces of who he had been didn’t fit back in their old places.

      It was the look in her eyes. A look he’d seen too many times in the eyes of people who had lost a loved one to a senseless crime. A glimpse into the soul of someone who’s been broken.

      But Audrey Colby? He didn’t think so.

      He ran a hand over his face. Told himself to leave it alone.

      As of tonight, by his own proclamation, he had started over with a career he could accept. No more crusades. No more families looking to him for justice. No more trying to fix in himself what could never be fixed.

      Audrey Colby was married to one of the wealthiest men in Georgia. Probably had a life most women would sign up for in a heartbeat.

      His problem? He needed to quit imagining that the whole world needed his help.

      He turned into his driveway and hit the remote for the garage door.

      Something darted out in front of him, seeking cover under the hedge of boxwoods separating his driveway from his neighbor’s.

      A light above the garage illuminated the center of the driveway, but the bushes were shadowed, making it difficult to see anything.

      He rolled down his window, then cut the engine. A soft whimper drifted from under the boxwoods.

      Nicholas got out, walked over to the hedge and dropped to his knees. Two unblinking eyes stared back at him.

      Black as the night sky, the dog wasn’t wearing a collar. It inched backward, making another whimpering sound.

      Nicholas sighed. He just wanted to go to bed. Sleep for at least a dozen hours. He lifted the lower branches of the bush. “Hey,” he said. “Are you hurt? Come on out. Let me take a look.”

      But the dog wasn’t budging.

      Food. He needed a lure. The only thing he had in the car was chewing gum. He grabbed his keys from the ignition and let himself into the house, heading for the kitchen. It looked like a mini shrine to pizza takeout. Four empty boxes sat on the table. One sink was stacked high with coffee cups.

      On Mondays, a cleaning service came in and got rid of the boxes, washed all the cups. It was a little like living in a hotel. A place to eat and sleep. Temporary.

      He found a loaf of bread in the pantry and removed a couple of slices from the bag. He went back outside, dropped to his knees again, moisture seeping through his tuxedo pants. He held the bread out, tried some coaxing words. The dog sniffed, but didn’t move. Nicholas waved the bread around. No interest. He sat for a minute or so, tried again. Still not budging.

      Finally, he stood. What else could he do? Drag the dog out from under the bush? He’d tried. He could go with a clear conscience. “Okay. I give up. I’m going in.”

      But no sooner had he stepped away than the food won out. The dog crawled forward far enough to reach the bread, and gobbled it up in a single bite.

      Medium-sized, it appeared no more than three inches wide at its thickest point. In the light, he could see white markings on its legs and chest. The dog’s coat was matted in places, dull by malnutrition or maybe parasites. It looked up at him, instantly shrinking to a crouching position. Nicholas’s stomach turned. He dropped to his knees again. “It’s not like that. I just wanted to make sure you were all right.”

      The dog scooted away from him, then jumped up and trotted off toward the street.

      Headlights flashed from the intersection at the corner. The dog sent an anxious glance over its shoulder. The car was almost in front of them now. Nicholas sprinted after the dog and lunged. The dog dropped flat, looking as if it wanted to melt into the driveway.

      “Hey, it’s okay. I just didn’t want you to get on the road.” He reached out to rub the dog’s head. The animal quivered.

      A clinic a few miles away stayed open all night. He could drop the dog off there, and they could figure out what to do with it.

      He picked the animal up, carried it to the car, placed it in the passenger seat and eased the door closed.

      He reached the clinic within five minutes, grateful to see lights on when he pulled into a parking space. He got out and jogged to the front door. A small plaque gave instructions to ring the bell. Someone would be right with him.

      Thirty seconds later, a young woman appeared. “May I help you?”

      “Yeah. I have a dog outside. It’s hurt,” he said.

      “Do you need help bringing it in?”

      “No. I’ll be right back.” He walked to the car and carefully opened the door. In the front seat, the dog had tucked itself nose to tail. He rubbed its back once, then picked it up as gently as possible. It whimpered again. “Sorry,” he said.

      The young woman held the door for him and then led him to a waiting area and through a set of double doors into a large examining room. “I’m Dr. Filmore, the vet on call tonight.”

      “Nicholas Wakefield.”

      The walls were lined with large cages in which a few dogs were sleeping. A dark-brown cocker spaniel raised its head and whined.

      “It’s all right, Bo,” Dr. Filmore said. “You can go back to sleep. On the table here,” she directed to Nicholas.

      He placed the dog on the stainless tabletop as gently as he could. “I found it outside my house.”

      The vet dipped her head, then looked back up. “She.”

      “What?”

      “The dog is a she.”

      “Oh,” Nicholas said, nodding.

      “She’s starving for one thing.” The vet was young, but she spoke to the dog in a soft, reassuring voice and ran her hands over her in a way that suggested she knew what she was doing. “I think her left hind leg is broken. It feels like she has a couple of busted ribs, as well. We’ll have to get some radiographs.”

      “Could she have been hit by a car?”

      “Maybe. More likely kicked from the way she’s acting,” the doctor said, her voice flat as a Kansas plain.

      A sick feeling settled in Nicholas’s stomach. “You see this often?”

      “Too often.”

      He didn’t know what to say. What kind of person would kick a helpless dog? “Doesn’t it get to you?” he asked.

      She sighed. “Yeah. It does. But the only alternative is to quit.”

      He’d once said the same


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