“I’ll be damned,” Hawk murmured as he pulled out a handful of clams. “You’re quite a teacher, Angel.”
She looked up into his dark features and smiled almost shyly.
“Clamming is easy to teach,” she said.
After that, Hawk and Angel dug clams in a companionable silence that reminded her of the time she and Hawk had spent before the fishhook has gone into her back. She was aware of him, definitely, but not afraid.
Angel was aware of the hook wound, too. It was more tender today than yesterday or the day before. She had meant to have Derry check her back, but every time she had thought of it, he had been immersed in formulas as long as his cast. She had tried cleaning the wounds herself and had given up in disgust. It would take a contortionist to effectively treat that particular place.
In time, Hawk and Angel pursued the ebbing tide to a line of bedrock where no clams lived. She stood and stretched, wincing slightly as the motion pulled against the sore spot near her shoulder blade. Automatically she put the pain out of her mind as she had learned to do when she forced herself to walk again.
As Carlson had taught her with great clarity, what can’t be cured must be endured.
“That should do it,” Angel said, lifting the clam bucket. “Twenty for you and twenty for me.”
“What if I don’t like clams?” asked Hawk, his tone amused rather than worried.
Angel licked her lips with delicate greed.
“I’ll think of something,” she promised.
One of Hawk’s black eyebrows lifted in silent skepticism.
“They’re not very big,” Angel said reasonably.
Hawk’s strong hand wrapped around the bucket handle, lifting it from her grasp. Under her watchful blue-green eyes, Hawk rinsed the clams, scrubbed them with a stiff brush, then rinsed them again. He filled the bucket with clams and saltwater and turned to Angel.
“Now what?” he asked.
“Put the bucket in the shade and let nature take its course. We,” she said triumphantly, “are going crabbing.”
Angel went over to the grass, retrieved the crab trap and a chunk of bacon, and returned to Hawk.
“This is a littler trickier than clamming,” she said.
“Crabs are faster?” suggested Hawk dryly.
She smiled. “Much.”
With that, Angel led Hawk to a shelf of rock that slanted out into the bay. The shelf ended in a deep green shaft of water. Deftly Angel wired the hunk of bacon to the bottom of the trap and lowered the metal mesh into the water. The trap itself consisted of little more than concentric mesh rings of graduated sizes, rather than a blunt funnel.
“Now,” she said, “the crabs get a whiff of bacon and come running.”
“There’s no top on that thing,” Hawk pointed out. “What keeps the little beasties from getting out the same way they got in?”
“That’s the tricky part,” Angel admitted. “You have to be faster than they are.”
The trap hit bottom, invisible beneath the green sea.
Angel counted beneath her breath. When she got to one hundred, she began to pull up the trap up hand over hand, hauling as fast as she could.
Just as she pulled the mesh above the surface, a crab flipped over the edge and back into the sea.
“Damn!” Angel said. “He was keeper size.”
Hawk watched the crab disappear. “I like crab.”
“So do I. Good thing they’re stupid. Sooner or later, he’ll be back for more.”
Hawk watched while Angel repeatedly lowered the mesh, counted beneath her breath, raised it quickly, and looked with varying degrees of disappointment at the contents of the trap. The crabs were either too small or of the wrong kind.
After twenty minutes, Angel and the bait were looking equally frayed.
“May I?” Hawk asked, holding out a hand for the trap.
Without a word Angel handed over the bright yellow rope. She peeled off her sweater and tied it around her neck. Sun reflected off the rocks and water, heating the air. Despite the wind beyond the bay, it was warm within the sheltering cliffs.
Hawk lowered the trap, counted, then pulled. The basket came up empty, not so much as one tiny crab.
He looked at Angel.
“I forgot to tell you,” she said, blowing wisps of hair off her hot forehead. “You have to pull straight up. If the basket tips over – ”
“The crabs get away,” finished Hawk.
After a few more tries, Hawk got the feel of it. Angel sat on the slanting shelf and watched him work. His powerful arms brought up the basket so quickly that whatever lay inside was all but flattened.
Hawk seemed tireless, raising and lowering the trap with the same ease after twenty tries as after two. Angel put her head on her knees and memorized the male grace and power of his body, designing a stained glass panel in her mind, the man and the rock and the sea.
Then Angel realized that Hawk had snagged a huge crab and was casually reaching in to take it out of the trap.
“No!” Angel said.
She lunged for Hawk’s wrist, yanking his fingers out of the mesh before he could get to the crab. And vice- versa.
Startled, Hawk looked from the slender hand wrapped around his wrist to the blue-green eyes only inches from his.
“Those pincers can hurt,” Angel explained.
Cautiously she approached the large crab from the rear, slid her thumb underneath and her fingers on top, and lifted the crab out of the trap. The crab was a male, more than eight inches across the shell. Its pincers waved and clicked angrily.
Hawk looked at the thick claws and realized that once again Angel had put herself between him and possible injury.
“First the hook, now the crab,” Hawk said softly. “Thanks. For both.”
His fingers touched Angel’s cheek for an instant. His hands were cool from the ocean and Angel’s cheeks were flushed with sun. The contrast only increased the sensual impact of his touch.
Angel stared at Hawk for a moment, too surprised to move. Then she turned her head away.
“I should have warned you about the crab,” she said, her voice even.
Hawk’s hand returned to the cold yellow rope.
“How many crabs do we need?” he asked.
“This should do it.”
Hawk gave Angel a sideways look.
“I suppose I can always swap my clams for your half of the crab,” he said.
“Not a chance,” she said quickly.
The corner of Hawk’s mouth lifted as bent over and lowered the trap into the sea again. While he counted, he watched Angel walk across the narrow beach and drop the crab into the clam bucket.
The faded jeans Angel wore fitted softly, firmly, to every curve of her hips and legs. Her hair had been gathered at the nape of her neck, but time and exertion had loosened the clip. Bright wisps burned around her face and across the gray sweater. She walked confidently despite the uneven surface and the rubber beach sandals snapping at her heels with each step.
Watching her grace, Hawk found it hard to believe that Angel had ever been broken, in agony, doomed but for Derry’s strength pulling her from the twisted wreckage of her life, her dreams.
Distantly Hawk realized that his hands were aching from the force with which he was holding the yellow rope. The thought of Angel lying in helpless agony was unbearable to him. He had known too many women that had no truth.
He had come too close to never knowing a woman who had no lies.
“Are you giving the crabs a free lunch?” asked Angel lightly, coming back to stand beside him.