Connor wasn’t sure she would be back all that soon. “You can drive my car, Krista?”
“Sure.” The girl, only a year or two younger than Savannah, shot him a look. “Is she going to be okay?”
“She better be.” Connor eased into the car, still holding the now barely conscious Savannah.
For the second night in a row he held her in his lap in the back seat of his car. Only tonight, she lay limp. She wasn’t the fiery, vital woman who’d ravished him. Who’d been so determined to take what she’d wanted from him. And giving him so much in doing so. He wanted that Savannah back.
“Stay with me Sugar,” he cuddled her closer. “Come on, Sugar. Stay awake.”
He gritted his teeth, stopping himself from screaming at Krista to drive faster. But she was driving them fast enough, just this side of safely. She’d grown up in Summerhill, knew the road as well as he did. Knew that at this moment it was safer for her to drive than him.
Besides, he wasn’t giving up this burden.
Connor wriggled his hand into his jeans pocket and retrieved his phone.
Austin answered immediately. All Connor’s staff did. No matter what time he called.
“Doc, I need a house call. Meet me outside my suite. Get there now.” He rang off and cuddled her closer.
He hated her limpness. Her pallor.
“Go round the back,” he said as the Lodge came into view.
It was a testament to the discretion of his night porter that he held the door with an utterly impassive face. Connor made a mental note to promote him sometime.
“Follow me,” he barked at Krista.
Connor wound slowly up the back stairs to his suite. She needed privacy. So did he. So he wasn’t walking through the front door, not when there were still customers in the bar and restaurant. When there were still skiers coming down from night-skiing.
Austin, this season’s resident doctor, was waiting just by his door. His eyebrows shot up as he saw Connor’s burden. “What happened to her?”
“Roofied.”
Austin looked even more shocked. “Symptoms?”
“Slurry speech, flushed, uncoordinated. Which is very unusual. Said she didn’t feel well. Since then she’s been in and out of consciousness.” He looked down at her and damn if his heart didn’t squeeze again, sending power hurtling along his veins. He’d just climbed a kabillion stairs carrying her, but still felt amped and strong enough to climb another fucking four dozen, just to get her to the damn doctor.
Her eyelids fluttered.
“We need to get her inside,” he growled.
“Want me to take her while you—”
“No.” He hoisted her higher and punched at the keypad with his still bandaged index finger. It took two goes before he heard the click. He barged in backwards, swivelling to then stalk into the spare bedroom. “Come on. Both of you.” He didn’t look to see if they’d followed, he was too busy looking at how dark Savannah’s lashes were against her whitened face.
“Are you going to put her down so I can examine her?” Austin asked, unusually warily.
“What?” Connor’s arms instinctively tightened. “Oh. Sure. Of course.”
Carefully he placed Savannah on the edge of the bed and stepped back only just enough to let Austin past.
The doctor checked her over with annoyingly slow thoroughness.
“You haven’t been partying tonight?” Connor suddenly barked at Austin.
“No, I’m aware of my obligations,” Austin said mildly, not looking up from his examination of Savannah. “I’m on call most of the time. Therefore I don’t drink. Most of the time. And I haven’t tonight.”
“Good.” Connor fisted his hands and folded his arms across his chest, watching the doctor’s every move. He knew he could trust him. Austin was a good guy.
“Breathing’s good. Heartbeat’s strong and regular.” Austin sent him a troubled look. “But I don’t like that we don’t know what we’re dealing with.”
“I know.” Connor replied grimly. “Some drug.”
“Stupefying,” Austin nodded. “Could be one of several. Where the hell was she?”
“In the middle of St Clair’s.”
Austin looked puzzled. “With a million people present?”
“I don’t think they wanted to attack her, just humiliate her.”
Puzzlement turned to disgust. “You called the sheriff?”
“About to.” No way in hell were those assholes not getting caught. And punished.
“I’m going to put her on a drip. Make sure she’s hydrated. Flush out her system.”
“You can do that here.” Connor didn’t want her leaving his sight. “You’ll stay with her, right?”
“Of course.”
“You okay to stay the night with her as well?” He turned to Krista.
“You want me to?” Krista fidgeted with the car key.
Connor glared at her. “If you were drugged and couldn’t remember anything that had happened to you, wouldn’t you want some reassurance from someone that you weren’t hurt? Weren’t touched or humiliated in any way? I’m not having her doubt it, even for a second.” He turned and looked at the woman lying motionless on the bed. “She’s not being left alone with any one person until she’s fully alert again.”
Not even him.
Austin nodded. “Good. I just need to go get a couple of supplies. I’ll be five minutes, tops.”
“Great,” Connor stepped closer, taking the space that Austin left. He glanced over at Krista. “Can you take off her boots and loosen her clothing, but don’t undress her any more than that.”
“Absolutely,” Krista hurried forward.
Only then did Connor step away from the bed and turn slightly away. He pulled out his phone again and called the sheriff.
Ten minutes later Austin was back and quietly making notes at the small desk under the bank of windows. Connor sat in the chair nearest the bed, aware of Krista on the other side shooting him curious glances now and then.
“I wasn’t aware you knew her,” she finally said.
He didn’t answer. He just watched Savannah, lying too still. That fire that had caught his eye that first time he’d seen her was lacking. That spark and strength. And sweetness. He so got off on that combination. And he wanted all of it back in her eyes—that sparkling intelligence and challenge.
“Sheriff’s waiting, Connor.” Austin interrupted his thoughts.
He stood. But hesitated.
“Don’t worry,” Krista spoke. “I’ve got her.”
He met the girl’s eyes. Saw she meant it. Realized for the first time that she was upset too. Savannah was more than her workmate? She was her friend.
“Thanks,” he muttered, his voice croaking out on him. “I’ll be back as soon as I can.”
Chapter Five
Worst. Headache. Ever.
Savannah’s eyes wouldn’t open. Good. She wanted to go back to sleep anyway. Anything to escape the totally crappy feeling swirling in her stomach and the ringing-and-thumping combo in her head.
What on earth had she done last night?
Her eyelids popped open. She stared at the wall. It was the palest blue, which meant it definitely wasn’t the wall in her bedroom in her undersized apartment. She blinked a couple of times
, taking in the beautifully framed series of photographs, hanging in a perfect line along the wall. Definitely not her place. This was… somewhere else altogether.
Where?
Her pulse thundered in her ears. She winced, then froze. Because her pulse wasn’t the only rhythm ricocheting around her head. There was the sound of breathing too. Not her quickening breathing, but some one else’s deep, regular breathing.
Holy shit. She wasn’t alone in this big bed?
What the hell had she done last night? And with whom?
But thinking hurt and all she could come up with was a confusing jumble of scenes. She remembered the bar being busy, noisy. Krista and Luca being as kissy as always. The usual crowd clamoring for more cocktails. The jerks irritatingly obnoxious… All the images swirled in her head. Damn she felt seasick. But then they merged into the one picture.
Passionate blue eyes. Ultra short hair. Strong, strong arms. She remembered a sensation of weightlessness.
No. He couldn’t have been there, right? And if he had, if by some weird happening she’d come home with him… With one hand she carefully peeked under the covering down at herself—it seemed she was still wearing her shirt and black skirt from the bar. Yeah, she’d thought so. And if she had come home with him, wouldn’t she be naked? Unless they’d done it clothed again? How could she not remember?
Very slowly she turned her head, hoping not to wake him, hoping not to hurt her head more, hoping she’d at least recognize the person she was lying next to. That it was him.
But she wasn’t lying next to anyone. The other occupant in the room was curled up in a gorgeously comfortable looking armchair. And Savannah totally recognized that sprawl of dark blond hair.
“Krista?” she screeched, her voice total sandpaper.
“You’re awake.” Krista jerked upright. “Wow. Thank God. Great. You’re okay?”
“Uh… I think so…” She read the concern in Krista’s eyes. “Am I?” She licked her hideously dry lips. “Should I be? What happened?”
Krista unfolded herself from the chair. Savannah watched her wince as she straightened up. Why was her colleague clad top to toe in such obviously straight-from-the-packaging Summerhill sportswear?