Blind Instinct (2 page)

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Authors: Fiona Brand

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BOOK: Blind Instinct
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“Can you remember what the book is?”

She shook her head.

So, okay, not too detailed. He didn't know whether that was a blessing or not. But like it or not, the “memories,” if that was what they were, had already changed Sara, and he was very much afraid that they were here to stay.

Abruptly his mind was clear. He had tried
Dolinski's method for long enough and it wasn't easing the situation. In fact, he was certain the “bridging” tactic was making the dreams more acute. From now on he was going to do this his way. He would teach her a technique he had learned during his years of active service in the Gulf. The technique was straight-down-the-line-simple. He was going to teach Sara how to forget.

Two

Shreveport, eleven years later

   

S
ara Fischer hooked her handbag over her shoulder, dried her hands and paused at the nightclub's washroom counter to check her makeup and her hair.

She frowned at a face that was faintly exotic and sophisticated, and subtly
not
her, courtesy of the makeover her mother had given her as an eighteenth birthday gift.

Mae Fischer adored shopping, lunching and parties. The fact that Sara would rather take long solitary walks or bury her head in a book was incomprehensible to her mother. The harder Mae worked to break Sara out of what she called “her
shell,” the more Sara resisted. They were mother and daughter and they loved one another, but they were like chalk and cheese. Sara was far more comfortable with her father's company and his quiet acceptance of the way she was.

She made her way back to the table she occupied with her cousin Steve, his latest girlfriend, Cherie and Marc Bayard, Steve's best friend, who was back from Baton Rouge for the weekend. Steve and Cherie were absent from the table, which meant they were part of the raucous, gyrating crowd on the dance floor, leaving her alone with Bayard—alone as anyone could be in a nightclub packed to capacity.

Bayard got to his feet, towering over her as he pulled out her chair. A familiar tension locked her jaw as she sat down. She had known Bayard for years, although they didn't often cross paths now. He was two years older, from an old and extremely wealthy “cotton” family.

A law student at LSU, and on the college football team, by definition, he was popular. The fact that he was also tall and dark, with the signature Bayard good looks—dark eyes, chiseled cheekbones and tough jaw—and that she'd had a crush on him since he had moved next door
when she was seven, didn't make him any easier to be with. Steve's idea of a blind date as a birthday gift couldn't have gone more horribly wrong.

“Would you like to dance?”

Her cheeks burned with embarrassment. She was certain Bayard had a steady girlfriend and that he should be with her rather than here on a mercy date. “To be honest, I'd like to go home.”

“Stay here a minute, I'll tell Steve we're leaving.”

“No,
wait
. I can get a cab.”

But he had already gone. Seconds later he was back. Looping the strap of her bag over her shoulder, she rose to her feet. His fingers slid through hers, the contact unexpected and faintly shocking as he pulled her through the crowd. When they stepped outside, he didn't relinquish his hold. Instead of heading for the parking garage, he pulled her in the direction of the river. “Let's walk for a few minutes. I need to clear my head.”

A cold breeze straight off the water sifted through her hair and sent a damp chill sliding over her skin. Mist swirled, curling up and over the bank to lie in drifts across the road, muting the syncopated flash of casino lights.

“Cold?” Seconds later, his leather jacket dropped around her shoulders.

A small shudder at the transition from cold to blazing warmth went through her. The old saying,
Someone is walking over my grave
, ran through her mind.

She pulled the lapels of the jacket together, both relieved and irrationally disappointed that Bayard was no longer holding her hand. That presupposed that she had
wanted
him to hold her hand, and there was no way she was going there. She wasn't big on setting herself up for a fall.

She'd had boyfriends, although no one she had wanted to get too up-close-and-personal with. Her mother worried that she was emotionally cold. Sara had another theory. When it came to men and relationships, she was naturally reserved, but she wasn't without feelings. She
liked
the men she dated; she just didn't love them. The people she did love—the members of her family—she loved fiercely and without reserve. One day she would fall in love and that would be it; she would have chosen her mate. Until that moment happened, if she couldn't drum up any enthusiasm for her dates, she wasn't going to worry about it.

Bayard slowed, then came to a halt on a small footbridge that led into a picnic area. When she stopped beside him, his long fingers curled into
the lapels of the jacket. His dark eyes fastened on hers as he pulled her loosely against him. “If you don't want this, just say so.”

As his head dipped, her stomach lurched. A kiss: she had not seen that coming.

She stared at his mouth and panic hit. If he kissed her they would cross a line, and she wasn't sure she wanted to go there. As frustrating as her crush on Bayard was, at least it was controllable, and safe. “Did Steve put you up to this?”

A high-pitched scream jerked his head around. He said something short and succinct. “Wait here.”

Two youths—one with long, greasy blond hair, an iron bar held in a two-handed grip, the other shorter, with dark hair, holding a knife—had backed two young women up against a park bench.

Bayard grabbed the one with the iron bar, knocked the bar out of his hand and flung him to the ground. The guy with the knife wheeled, spitting abuse. The two young women scrabbled for their purses, which had fallen to the ground, and ran toward a lighted parking lot.

Sara watched, heart in her mouth, as the knife wove through the air. Another figure darted out of the cover of a clump of trees. Adrenaline pumped, Bayard was easily strong enough to take
on two attackers, but not three, and the knife tilted the odds against him.

Without thinking, she darted forward, letting the jacket slide from her shoulders, and grabbed the iron bar. Bayard spun, his gaze locked with hers for a split second. A blow from the blond guy, who had pushed to his feet, caught him on the jaw, rocking his head back. The knife arced and for a dizzying moment time seemed to stop. Emotion roared through her. The iron bar chopped down on the knife-wielding thug's arm, the shock of the blow numbing her fingers. The bar spun away. Fingers closed in her hair, jerking her sideways. A split second later, her attacker was on the ground. Bayard had laid him out with one well-timed punch.

The short, dark guy had disappeared. The third youth, a carbon copy of the greasy blond, jerked his friend to his feet. Within seconds they had melted into the trees.

Bayard picked up the knife and tossed it into a nearby trash can, his dark eyes glittering. “You should have stayed out of it. You could have been hurt.”

“What I did worked out.” She massaged her
scalp, which was stinging. Her head felt weird, throbbing and heavy.

“You
are
hurt.”

She glanced down, saw the dark stain on her side, and registered that she was bleeding.

Bayard dragged the flimsy silk top up. Reaction shivered through her as he probed the cut across her midriff. Now that she knew it was there, the stinging pain made her eyes water.

“It's long, but it's just a scratch. You won't need stitches, but you'll probably end up with a scar.” He shrugged out of his shirt, and folded it into a pad. “Is your tetanus shot up to date?”

“I had one last year when I cut my foot swimming in the river.”

The sweet scent of blood filled her nostrils. Bayard's warmth swamped her as he tied the makeshift bandage around her waist. Her eyes squeezed shut as the pressure in her head tightened another notch.

Icy water flowing. Rank upon rank of dark pines
.

Cavanaugh…bandaging the deepest cuts. Then
they were moving, skirting tracts of open land
that glowed, stark and bare beneath the moon.
Cavanaugh babying her along, his arm around
her waist
—

Not Cavanaugh…
Bayard
.

Her eyes popped open again. She stared at Bayard, the moment of recognition shocking in its intensity.

Bayard frowned. “Who?”

It registered that she must have said the name, Cavanaugh, out loud. She blinked, shaking off the weird, shifting sense of déjà vu, the clinging tendrils of that dreamworld.

“Damn. Steve said you weren't dating.”

His hands closed on her hips, his mouth brushed hers, clung, and the memories evaporated in a raw surge of heat.

Sound burst from her throat, smothered and urgent. Her fingers dug into the smooth pliant muscle of his shoulders. Her breasts were flattened against his chest. She could feel the firm shape of his arousal pressing into her belly. One hand gripped her nape, the other cupped her bottom, uncomplicatedly carnal. He hauled her hard against him, and the concept that she was emotionally cold and incapable of feeling passion dissolved in a white-hot flash.

Her arms closed convulsively around his neck. A split second later she was off the ground, her feet dangling, the short skirt pushed up around
her hips. A short, sharp shock went through her as she felt Bayard, hot and heavy, between her legs. The constraints of his jeans and her panties aside, if he got any closer they would be making love.

His mouth lifted, sank again, taking her under. She gasped for air, breathing in his heat, his scent. She felt as if she was drowning,
dying
…

Cold, pure air, burned her lungs. Harsh light
bounced off towering peaks. Numbing pain, like
a vise crushing her chest
.

A detonation, echoing
…

Shock spasmed through her. She jerked free, stumbling back a step. Bayard's fingers closed around her arms. If he hadn't grabbed her, she would have fallen.

“What's wrong? What is it? Was I hurting you?”

“No.”

Yes
.

She had
died
.

Her heart was pounding. On an intellectual level, she knew that if she had memories of a previous life, then of course she had to have died. How else could she be here now? But in all the time she had dreamed and remembered shadowy,
insubstantial fragments of that past life she had never remembered the moment of her death.

Nausea rose at the back of her throat. She pushed free, needing the distance. With shaky fingers she smoothed her skirt down around her thighs. Her mouth felt swollen. She could still taste Bayard; her body was throbbing. But the emotion was somehow entwined with the memory of her death.

She couldn't say, “I remember you, but not from here, now.”

The phenomenon had stopped, years ago, when she was twelve.

The year Bayard had gone away to boarding
school
.

Comprehension hit. The answer so simple she wondered she hadn't seen it before. The dreams had started when she was seven. The year the Bayard family had moved into the big house next door. In that first year, Steve, who lived less than a mile away, and Marc had become inseparable, and Marc Bayard had become a part of the Fischer family.
Until he had turned twelve and
gone away to boarding school in Baton Rouge
.

Ever since then she had been
normal
. The memories, the visits to specialists, had become a
part of her past. She had almost forgotten them, and she had needed to forget.

Now, Bayard had walked back into her life and suddenly she was remembering again. And more sharply, more distinctly.

She dragged her gaze from Bayard's jaw and the memory of that hot, crazy kiss. His face was shuttered; he probably thought she was insane. She had lost count of the number of times she had considered the possibility herself. There was no way he wouldn't have heard at least the basic details of her illness. Living in such close proximity, it was a cast-iron certainty that Mae Fischer had shared her worries with Mariel Bayard.


Sara
—” Bayard reached for her hand.

She evaded his grip on the pretext that she needed to retrieve his jacket. She bent and picked up the buttery soft leather, wincing as the cut throbbed. “You'd better have your jacket back.”

She pressed her hand to her side where blood was leaking through the makeshift bandage.

Bayard draped the leather jacket over her shoulders. “You need it more than I do.”

The fleeting pressure of his touch, his clean masculine scent enfolding her, was a reminder of
what they had been doing just minutes ago, and how close she had come to more. A part of her still craved him, which was doubly crazy. She stepped away, pointedly avoiding any further contact.

His gaze was remote. “It's all right, I won't touch you.”

That's right, don't touch me. Don't come
within a mile of me
.

It had taken her years to recover from the dreams, the horror that had pushed through into her life. She still had trouble with the night, and sleeping.

She wanted Bayard, but she couldn't allow him near her again. She couldn't afford him.

The trip home was awkward. The evening was mild, but she couldn't get warm despite the jacket and the heater switched on. Half an hour later, Bayard dropped her back at her house. He waited until she made it to the porch and stepped inside the front hall before reversing and heading down the drive.

Cavanaugh
.

The stark moment of recognition shivered through her again.

She had remembered Bayard. That fact alone was stunning. If someone from that previous life
was going to be in her life now, why wasn't it someone like her parents or Steve?

She watched until the sweep of Bayard's headlights disappeared. She didn't know anyone by the name of Cavanaugh, although she was sure that if she checked the phone book, she would find a long list. Not that she was going to do that. As far as she was concerned the past was the past and it could stay there; she didn't want it in either her present or her future.

She was Sara Fischer in this life, but in the Second World War she knew with flat certainty that she had been someone else—an English spy called Sara Weiss. Beyond that basic recall, and the blurred memories of dreams, she didn't have many concrete details. By the age of eight, annoyed by the disruptive effect of Dr. Dolinsky's tactics, her father had taught her what he had termed “applied amnesia.” In effect, how to dismiss and forget the dreams. For several weeks every time she woke from a dream, her father had instantly distracted her by reading her chapters of a novel until she fell asleep. By the time they had worked their way through the full set of a popular series of children's mysteries, she had learned the knack of not thinking about the dreams. Without
the strong link created by repeatedly recalling the dreams, or talking about them, they had literally dissolved so that, if she thought of them at all, all she remembered was that she had dreamed, not the content.

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