“Harmony,” she warned herself.
She dropped to her knees, her fingers going to the unconscious man’s corded neck to feel for a pulse. His skin was tanned, perfectly smooth. Midnight black hair curled long and loose around his neck. Taking a closer look, she saw he appeared flushed, as if he were sunburned or had stood too close to a fire. More likely, he’d collapsed after a night of carousing. He was going to be pretty embarrassed once he realized he’d left wherever he’d been hanging out without his clothes.
Bubba growled, low and deep. “Shush, boy,” Harmony soothed. “It’s okay. I know martial arts, and you have sharp teeth. If he turns out to be the town serial killer/rapist, we’ll team up and put him away. Until then, Bubba, you behave.”
Harmony pressed her fingers to the man’s neck. There . . . she felt a heartbeat . . . slow, distant, almost forlorn. It was if he’d grown tired of living.
She sat up straight. Gosh, that was a weird thought. Tired of living? Where did that come from? If anyone was a mind reader, it was her great-grandmother Eudora, who was said to be a “seer.” But as a child growing up in the Faithfull clan, the mere mention of Eudora’s psychic talents would have earned Harmony the threat of having her mouth washed out with soap, if not the real thing. Yet, as Harmony studied the stranger’s face, the resignation there, the weariness, she could almost believe it true that he was ready to surrender.
Well, she’d fix that. No one was giving up the ghost on her watch, especially not dressed in his birthday suit and crushing her best zinnias!
“Hello? Sir? Are you okay?” Bubba’s brown eyes were wary and huge as Harmony tapped the man on the shoulder. “Come on, up and at ’em. You can’t sleep here all day. People will talk.”
Not even an eyelash twitched. She took hold of his solid shoulder and shoved. “Okay, Sleeping Beauty, time to rise and shine. I’ll even brew you a pot of coffee to help things along. I make a mean pot of java, too.”
No response, not even a snore. He was dead to the world. As a last resort, she switched to her air-force- officer voice. “Wake up, soldier!
The man cracked open one eye, and then the other. At first she thought she saw a red glow, but it seemed to be a trick of the sun, because his eyes were beautiful, reminding her of the mellow gold of good scotch, the kind her father would reverently pour out in a glass once each week, late on Sunday night. “Now that God’s work is done, Harmony,” he used to tell her.
“Hell’s bells.” Sleeping Beauty frowned, squinting as if the bright sunshine hurt his eyes.
“It lives,” she teased.
He peered at the Garden of Eden sign, his parched lips forming whispered words. “I’m dead.”
“You’re not dead. Not even close.”
He turned toward her voice and his confused eyes filled with curiosity, maybe even wonder. “But . . . ye are an angel.”
“Thanks for the compliment, but no. I’m a flesh-and-blood woman.”
His head fell back to the dirt with a soft thud. “Dragon offal . . . goblin scum, he is.” His accent was strong, a cross between a Scots burr and a bad Captain Hook parody. “The bastard did it, he really did, and now I’m here. Aye, and mortal, too. Mortal in Mysteria.”
“Is that kind of like sleepless in Seattle?”
Groaning at her joke, he flung his arms wide and rolled onto his back.
Anywhere.
She gave him a thorough inspection. After all, it was her citizen’s responsibility. Her pastor’s duty.
He was built . . . incredibly, amazingly,
Something drew her eyes back to his face, where she discovered he was watching her with something close to amusement. “You seem, uh, to be all in one piece,” she quickly explained.
He flashed a blinding grin. “You like what you see, then.”
She stopped her blush before the heat of it could reach her cheeks. She’d grown up with four brothers, two older, two younger. Like heck, she’d let the fact that a man was sprawled naked in her garden in all his admittedly very magnificent glory distract her.
“As a matter of fact, I don’t like what I see.” Was that the hurt of a wounded ego that flashed in his eyes? Certainly it was surprise. “I don’t care for the sight of a man facedown drunk in my flowers on a Sunday morning— butt naked. But considering that I just got done praying for a sign, I suppose I shouldn’t complain, because I didn’t spell out the specifications!”
She tugged off the butter yellow sweater she’d been wearing over a matching shell and thrust it at him. “Here, put this on.”
Sinew and muscle corded his arm from wrist to shoulder as he peered curiously at the sweater dangling from his fingers. It looked tiny grasped in his hand. Clearly, he didn’t know what do to with the thing.
She waved her hand. “Cover up.”
He pushed upright, clods of dry dirt sprinkling down as he sat up. Tight, defined stomach muscles brought new meaning to six-pack abs. She almost sobbed with relief when he spread the sweater over his private parts.
“I am not drunk,” he argued.
True, his eyes were clear, not bloodshot, as he swept his gaze around the garden, lawn, and church. And he was in top physical form, too, gifted with the well-hewn body of an NFL running back—powerfully muscled, without a linebacker’s bulk. Carving a body like that took time. Alcoholism didn’t lend itself to keeping regular workouts.
“What happened to you?” She folded her arms over her chest. “It usually doesn’t rain naked men. At least not in the six months since I’ve lived here. Unless it’s a seasonal thing.”
His lips twitched, his gold-brown eyes sparkling, as he sized her up in an approving way. “If it is seasonal, lass, then we had better take shelter.”
“Clothes first. Where’d you leave them?” she asked as calmly as she could as he didn’t seem to care that he wore none.
He glanced around. “They took everything. Left me with nothing.”
“You were robbed?”
“Aye, you could say that.” His expression grew bleak all over again. “Robbed and abandoned.”
“Oh, no. I don’t like hearing that. Everyone’s so nice around here, law-abiding folks. I can’t see anyone doing something like this. It makes me sick to find out it may be otherwise.”
“Nay, lass. They were not from here. They were from . . . the south. Aye, that’s it.”
“Oh, you mean Colorado Springs?”
He shook his head.
“Pueblo?”
“Nay. Far, far to the south. Farther south than you have ever been, lass.”
Mexico, she thought, nodding. “That’s okay. We’ll get them. Just because they skipped out over the border doesn’t mean they’re home free. You can use my phone to call Jeanie—Jeanie Tortellini,” she added at his blank look. “She’s our town sheriff. And a good one, too. She’ll file a report.”
He frowned. “Nay. No reports. Will do no good.”
“If you don’t let her know, the thugs who did this to you will do it to someone else next time they cross the border.”
Tiredly but firmly, he said no. “’Tis over. ’Tis done.”
“Wow,” she said in a quiet voice. “Just wow.”
He glanced at her strangely. “Wow?”
“You were robbed, beaten, stripped, and unceremoniously dumped in a pastor’s flower bed. You have every