temporary crate, and she was content to be left in the basket for a couple of hours here and there. She seemed to consider it her space. He fashioned a ball out of a pair of his socks and hoped that it could work as both a pacifier—since it carried his scent—and as a toy.
He knew Mrs. Cole didn’t quite approve of the entire set up and couldn’t figure out why. But her reticence and his extreme awareness of their employer/employee status, prevented him from asking.
Mrs. Cole had been right about the blackout lasting for more than a few hours. They were still using the generator now—three days after the massive storm had blown the transformer box. Nobody could come out to fix the box because the bridge had washed out. And according to George, who was in daily contact with Miles, it was scheduled to be repaired “sometime before the weekend”, which was of no help at all, since it was currently Monday.
Miles could now see why Mrs. Cole was so damned precious over his use of electricity. She entered rooms, moments after he exited them, to turn off the lights, or the television, or whatever the hell else he had thoughtlessly left running. It was unnerving how rapidly she seemed to materialize to do those things, before fading right back into the woodwork as if she’d never been there.
It was like living with a disapproving ghost, and his curiosity about her grew every day. He had never again caught her with her hair down, or dressed in anything other than her regular, boring apparel of skirt and blouse, combined with those sensible, ugly black brogues. The shoes seemed too heavy and chunky for her slender legs.
Not that he’d noticed her legs…much. Well, his eyes were always drawn to the ugly shoes and just naturally followed the length of her shapely calves to the hemline of her skirt. He only sometimes allowed himself to recall how they looked even farther up, past the knees, to those firm, beautifully toned thighs and…
He shook his head and muttered a curse, drawing Stormy’s concerned gaze to his.
He was developing a serious case of cabin fever. His mind was restless and venturing into dangerous, no-go zones.
“Let’s go for a walk, girl. See if we can find your mum.”
It was the best thing to do. He wasn’t a huge reader and had pretty much blasted through his audiobooks already. Television was out of the question as Mrs. Cole had allocated precisely three hours for television watching in a bid to conserve electricity. He was saving those hours for later. When he had asked her how many hours she had, she had told him that she rarely watched TV. Which he found hard to believe. What the hell else was there to do out here?
Stormy was a sharp little girl, and they’d been on enough limited outings in the short time that he’d had her for her to recognize the word “walk”. He took her out every four hours for toilet breaks, relishing the opportunity to stretch his legs. It was cold and rained intermittently, and it probably wasn’t good for either of them, but both he and the pup enjoyed their forays out into the vast garden.
Today, wasn’t as blustery as the last few days had been, and Miles wanted to walk along the lakeshore and take the opportunity to search for Stormy’s mother.
The house had a private beach about a mile long. During summer, his siblings and their friends made good use of both the beach as well as Miles’s forty-five-foot sloop that remained moored year-round at their private jetty. He figured he could easily walk up and down the flat, sandy stretch of beach without getting too winded.
“Mrs. Cole?” he called, before entering the kitchen. She didn’t like being startled— he had picked up on that pretty quickly. As a result, he had taken to announcing his presence before intruding upon any areas he deemed her domain. And the kitchen was very much Mrs. Cole’s territory.
She looked flushed and flustered when he walked into the room a moment later, and his eyes narrowed. She was standing by the sink, patting her pristine hair, a dull red flush darkening her cheeks, and she couldn’t quite meet his eyes.
Something was up with her.
Miles assessed her appearance, wondering what could have caused such an uncharacteristic reaction in his usually unruffled housekeeper. A quick scan around the spacious, bright room solved the mystery almost immediately.
A pot