her fingertips stilled on the side of her face, stopping at the trail of dried blood.
Luke frowned. âThereâs a bathroom next to the supply closet.â
Dana nodded, then watched him leave the room. His ability to read her thoughts was unnerving and comforting at the same time. She secured a pillow on either side of the baby and watched him for a moment as he slept. With a chubby cheek pressed against the mattress and his lips puckered into a sweet cherubâs smile, he looked like an angel. She stroked his cheek with her index finger. He was completely at peace, completely oblivious to the fact that he was alone.
Alone. God, she hated that word. The baby might not have her for long, but he had her for now. He wouldnât be alone. She would see to that.
Dana walked quickly to the bathroom, closing the door behind her. She pulled the overhead chain that lit a bare bulb and stared at the stranger in the mirror. Old-fashioned vanity assaulted her. It was wrong to be embarrassed by her appearance, given the fact that another woman had lost her life, but she couldnât help but be mortified. It hadnât occurred to her that she looked like hell. After all, Luke had looked like a model in some outdoorsmanâs catalog, right down to the armload of firewood and his perfectly disheveled hair.
She sighed, running her fingers through her hair. It was hopelessly tangled, twigs and briars sticking out from it like a pincushion. A swollen gash was visible at her hairline, a trail of dried blood pointing to the source. She was pale as a ghost, and dark circles rimmed her eyes.
A roll of yellowed paper towels sat next to the sink, and Dana pulled one away and dampened it, gently dabbing at the dried blood until it was gone. She tugged all the visible twigs from her hair and finger combed it into submission. She stared at her unkempt image for a moment then closed her eyes, sending up a silent prayer of thanks that sheâd lived through the incident. That the baby had lived.
And that Luke Sutherlin had found them.
Dana opened her eyes and searched her reflection. Sheâd grown accustomed to seeing her own image over the years, from nightly broadcasts to countless ad campaigns. The consummate professional. But she didnât know the frightened, shaken woman who now peered back at her. Which image had Luke seen when he looked at her?
Dana shivered, recalling the heat in Lukeâs gaze as heâd watched her change clothes. Heâd seen neither image, she realized. Heâd seen something she hadnât felt in a long time, resurrected it with one heated glance. Heâd seen her simply as a woman.
She switched off the light without another glance in the mirror and stepped into the hall. It was strange, unnerving to walk through the cabin in the light of day. When she made her way to the kitchen, she had to resist the urge to crouch, to shrink from the daylight that poured through the window above the kitchen sink. Only a few feet of wall separated the den and kitchen, and she could hear Luke stacking the firewood in the next room. But she couldnât force herself to join him. The few steps that separated them meant walking toward the front of the cabin, toward the windows. The direction the gunshots had last come from.
Dana decided she preferred the kitchen. Its solitary window was high and small. Safe. She mentally admonished herself. For her sanityâs sake, she had to stop viewing every structure as a means of protection, every door a means ofescape. Luke said they were safe and she believed him. Dana took a steadying breath and glanced around the room. An old table crowded the tiny kitchen, its laminate top warped with age. On it were several dusty cans of food. Dana lifted one, turning it to read the label. Green beans. She checked another. Pears.
âDefinitely a better breakfast choice.â
The sound of Lukeâs voice was startling yet comforting with its deep timbre.
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