bigger. Considering her tiny size right now, it was a miracle she had survived out in this weather for so long.
“I wonder if her mother and siblings are out there,” Charity mused. She hoped that if they were out there, they had found some decent shelter to weather this storm.
Miles—damn it! She was just going to consider him as such in the privacy of her thoughts—looked horrified at the notion and took a step toward the back door. Recognizing his intention, she stepped in front of him and shook her head.
“If they were out there, we would have heard them by now. More than likely, this little one—”
“Stormy,” he interrupted her, and she blinked, not sure why he was stating the obvious.
“Yes. Because of the stormy weather, they’ve probably found shelter and she got separated from—”
“No…her name is Stormy.”
“You named her?” She couldn’t disguise the dismay in her voice. He was going to find it incredibly hard parting with the dog if he’d named her already.
“She needs a name and I wasn’t going to call her ‘Dog’ or ‘Hey You’…I thought Stormy was apt.”
“But—”
“Do we have anything to feed her?”
“I don’t keep a supply of dog food in the pantry, no.”
“No need for facetiousness, Mrs. Cole. I meant chicken or fish…something we can steam with some veggies. I remember reading somewhere that unsalted steamed chicken and rice would be the easiest on a sick pup’s little tummy.”
Tummy? Seriously?
“I’ll prepare enough chicken and rice for the next few days.”
“She’ll need to eat three to four times a day.”
“You seem to know a great deal about this, do you have a dog in London?”
“Stormy’s my first dog.”
“You’re keeping her?”
“I don’t see why I shouldn’t. I’ll get her shots up-to-date…make sure she’s healthy, and I’m certain she’ll be well enough to travel long before I’m cleared to work again.”
The dog—Stormy—gave Charity a haughty look. Oh, she knew she’d just landed in the lap of luxury. Skin and bones, a little mangy and probably still sporting more than her fair share of ticks, she was already carrying herself like a princess.
And Miles… damned if he didn’t look completely besotted with the mutt.
“I’ll take care of her food. I doubt she’s house-trained so we’re going to have to keep her confined to a bathroom or something.”
“I’ll sort something out. No need to concern yourself, Mrs. Cole.”
Hard not to worry. If he changed his mind about Stormy, Charity knew she’d be the one left as the dog’s primary caregiver. Miles seemed in love with the pup now, but who knew if that would last?
She ran her damp palms down the front of her skirt and nodded.
“Very well, sir.” He winced at the word. “Let me know what you’ll need for her and I’ll do my best to procure it.”
“I know that, Mrs. Cole. Now, what’s to eat? I’m starving.”
Stormy was a quiet, undemanding dog, and Miles worried that she may be sicker than she looked. But until he could get the hell out of this house, there was no way to know. Her appetite seemed fine, but she slept a lot and stuck close by his side. He was beginning to think he should have named her Velcro instead.
His impulsive decision to keep her had been out of character for him. Usually he would have handed the pup over to Mrs. Cole with the instruction that she took care of it and kept it out of sight until they could pass the responsibility on to the SPCA. But one look at the pathetic scrap of a dog, so clearly ill and malnourished, and he had felt an immediate affinity toward it.
And now here she was; lying on the couch next to him despite his housekeeper’s critical glares whenever she spotted the dog on the furniture. The pup was wearing one of Mrs. Cole’s socks—a much better fit for her—and her head was resting on her tiny front paws while she stared up at him in devotion. Her ears were lopsided, one up and one down, giving her a rakish appearance, and her limpid black eyes were ridiculously expressive, especially with their dark “eyebrows”.
According to the Internet research he had managed to do during his extremely limited allotted “Wi-Fi time”, puppies her age were balls of mischievous energy. But Stormy spent her days sleeping and shadowing his every move.
He decided to crate train her and found a small, wicker shopping basket that she couldn’t climb out of to use for that purpose. It worked well as a