The Abducted Heart (Sweetly Contemporary Collection)

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The Abducted Heart (Sweetly Contemporary Collection) Page 1

by Blake, Jennifer




  This is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogues are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system — except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews — without the written permission of publisher or author, except where permitted by law.

  Copyright © 1978 and 2012 by Patricia Maxwell

  First Signet Edition: 1978

  First E-Reads Edition: 1999

  Steel Magnolia Press Digital Edition: 2012

  Cover Design by LFD Designs For Authors

  One

  It was going to be one of those days; Anne Matthews discovered that early. To begin with, she overslept. The small alarm clock that had been one of her presents when she left the family cottage of the Children’s Home three years before had stopped during the night, ticking its last at half-past the witching hour. There was no time to sigh over it. She was late for work. Then in her haste to dress she snagged a run in her last pair of panty hose. A quick dab of clear nail polish prevented it from running further, and in any case it was hidden by the tongue of the sensible shoes she wore in her job as a caterer’s assistant, but it left her feeling harried and unkempt.

  Neatness was important to her. There had been little of that commodity in the orphanage cottage shared with seven other foster brothers and sisters. Vaguely she could remember a quieter, more ordered time before her parents were killed when a bridge had collapsed, plunging their car into a flooded river in Louisiana. She could remember also the feeling of security she had known then, though she could not consciously bring to mind the faces of her parents or where and how they had lived. Still, those memories were enough to make her determined to use the secretarial skills she had been taught to reestablish that atmosphere around her. Toward that end, she adopted an air of calm efficiency.

  She wore her shoulder-length hair in a smooth pageboy not because the style gave her hair the sheen of tawny silk, but because it was easy to keep under control. Because it saved time, she used the bare minimum of makeup, disregarding the dramatic potential of enormous eyes of a velvet brown softness fringed with thick, dark lashes. The clothes she bought herself were practical and easily cared for as became her no-nonsense image. It was not her fault that their severity did not suit the warm impulsiveness of her smile or the secretive, almost dreamy look that touched her delicate features in repose.

  The morning did not improve once she left the small apartment she shared with a roommate, Judy Kramer. Judy, a secretary in a nice, dull office building nothing at all like Metcalf Caterers Inc., had the long weekend off. She had flown to New Orleans with her parents, leaving behind the small red Toyota, a present from her parents when she left home, for Anne to use. The only catch was that Judy had used it the afternoon before to run the dozens of small errands necessary before she could pack for her trip, and she had neglected to put gas in it. Walking ten blocks to the nearest gas station with the chill wind of December penetrating her lightweight suit jacket, whipping her hair, and blowing fine Texas sand from the streets into her face did not improve Anne’s temper.

  Metcalf Caterers was not the largest catering firm in Dallas, but it was growing, and in the five years it had been in existence had built up a select clientele. Anne had been with the husband-and-wife team, Joe and Iva, for three of those years. Starting as secretary-receptionist, she had gradually become much more than that. She turned her hand to anything from marketing to serving at tables. She could blend a sauce, decorate a cake, arrange a centerpiece, or balance the books with equal ease, and as Iva Metcalf told her with a wry grin, look as if she were enjoying it. Usually she did just that, but there were days...

  “Where have you been?” Iva exclaimed in pained accents as Anne came through the glass doors of the reception room at last.

  “You will never believe what I have been through this morning...” Anne began.

  Iva shook her close-cropped red head. “Don’t bet on it. This telephone hasn’t stopped ringing since I got here. Mrs. Burson, the woman who has the luncheon today, called to inform us that of the twelve guests she will be entertaining, one is allergic to tomatoes, one to eggs, and one can’t abide the sight of mushrooms. She just thought we might like to know. Mrs. Otley, whose daughter is to marry the oil millionaire this evening, wants an oil derrick as an arch over the bride and groom on top of the cake she ordered, and Señor Ramón Carlos Castillo’s secretary called to inform us that the señor has canceled his dinner party planned for tonight at his hotel suite. He is flying back to Mexico City late this evening because of illness in the family — it’s his grandmother — and he would like a simple dinner delivered to his private jet at the airport before seven o’clock. He doesn’t want anything elaborate since he will be traveling alone, without his usual steward, private secretary, and half-dozen flunkeys, just something he can heat and serve himself; a trout Marguery, fresh asparagus, fresh pears — out of season, of course — and a bottle of chilled white wine.”

  “Good grief,” Anne said faintly.

  “Exactly so.”

  Turning to hang up her shoulder bag and coat in the closet, Anne asked, “Don’t these people ever eat anything simple, like a ham sandwich?”

  “If they did, we would be out of business,” Iva replied. “Anyway, men like Señor Castillo can afford the best. Why shouldn’t they have it?”

  “It seems such a waste, all that time and trouble for one man when he could have solved the whole thing by buying himself a loaf of bread and a package of sandwich meat.”

  “You mean have his chauffeur stop for it on the way to the airport? Your trouble, Anne dear, is you don’t think big enough.”

  “No doubt you’re right,” Anne agreed with a wry grimace. “What do we tackle first?”

  “If you will see to Mrs. Otley’s oil derrick, I’ll start the search for the señor’s trout and pears. We must pamper our largest account. Keep your head down as you go into the kitchens though. Tony is not in the best of humors after having to rearrange his menus, and he’s threatening to quit again, of course. If you can manage to work your usual magic at calming him down, I will be eternally grateful.”

  Tony was their chef, and as such, a man to be placated at all costs. A French Creole from Louisiana, he had learned his art in some of the great kitchens of France. Returning to his native New Orleans with the title of cordon-bleu, he had worked for ten years in one of the most famous restaurants in that city. He had left to start a small restaurant of his own, but the venture had not been a success. One reason was his insistence on quality; only the best was good enough to go into his culinary creations, and not enough people were willing to pay the cost. Another reason was his temper. He was apt to take anything the diners left on their plates as a personal affront to his skill, and it was not unknown for him to charge out of the kitchen and demand what was wrong with a particular dish. To have anyone question or change his menus also raised his ire, and Anne was not surprised, when she passed through the doors that led to the chrome and white-enamel kitchens of the catering service, to find him chopping shallots with vicious precision and casting them into a skillet with all the muttered maledictions of a sorcerer brewing poison. Buttoning herself into the orange nylon cover-up she wore while in the kitchen, she summoned a smile and set herself to the task of soothing Tony.

  She found time in t
he middle of the morning for a cup of coffee and a sweet roll, but she had to eat standing up. Finally the luncheon menu of baked red snapper in a brown oyster sauce, broccoli au gratin, Metcalf’s special home-baked French loaves, and French chocolate silk pie was complete. It was Iva and her husband Joe’s job to transport it to the home of Mrs. Burson, where her kitchen staff would serve it. But eleven o’clock came and went with no Iva. Then, just as Anne was sliding into the front seat of the van, Iva’s station wagon came wheeling into the parking lot. She stepped out on the run, threw a package wrapped with butcher paper and a couple of brown paper bags into Anne’s arms. “Paint it with black spray paint,” she called, scrambling into the van, and then she was gone.

  The butcher wrap contained three nice trout. In the bags were three flesh ripe pears with just a blush of pink on their tender green skins, and a white plastic replica of an off derrick.

  Sprayed black, the derrick looked hideous towering over the poor little bride and groom dolls on top of a cake four layers tall. Painting it silver instead was slightly better, but Anne still thought, as she helped settle it into the van late that afternoon, that the best thing to be done with it was teat it off and toss it in the trash can. Cases of champagne, cans of nuts and mints, the ingredients for the firm’s secret recipe bridal punch, and an assortment of hors d’oeuvres packed in white cardboard boxes had already been loaded. It was with a distinct feeling of relief that Anne watched Joe and Iva pull out of the parking lot with that assignment. Now all that was left was the señor’s supper, and this temple day would be over. The weekend would be hers, two whole days to loaf, read, wash her hair, and recover from this ordeal.

  The trout Marguery sat cooling, filling the air with an aroma so delectable it was all Anne could do not to sit down and devour it; the asparagus, exquisitely tender, had been anointed with butter; the French loaves were wrapped in their heavy linen napkin; the pears nestled in a nest of tissue in a small woven basket; and the wine, a dry Chablis, sat cooling in its disposable plastic cooler. Tony, his duty done, threw down his chef’s hat and went home, and his two helpers, after clearing the kitchen and putting the dishes away, were not long in following him.

  By a quarter after six Anne was growing anxious. The meal was due on board the plane at seven o’clock sharp. It would not do to disappoint their best customer. Anne had never met him personally, but from comments Iva had made from time to time, she thought Señor Castillo would not be the kind of man to easily forgive those who had failed him.

  The jangle of the telephone cut across her thoughts. With a quiver of apprehension along her nerves, she reached for it. At the sound of Iva’s voice, she let out the breath she had caught in a sigh of purest relief. It was short-lived.

  “Anne, I hate to tell you, but Joe and I are hung up over here. There’s been a five-car pileup on the Interstate and the traffic is so snarled up we won’t be able to move for hours.”

  “Where are you calling from?” Anne asked, aware of the noise of a car’s engine in the background.

  “There was a nice man three or four cars ahead of us with a phone in his car and he patched the call through for me. I don’t know what I would have done without him; it must be miles to the nearest public phone. But never mind about that. It looks like you are going to have to run Señor Castillo’s dinner out to the airport. You do have your roommate’s car, don’t you? Good. I’m going to call ahead and clear the way with the airport officials for you. According to what the secretary said on the phone this morning, there is only one thing to remember, and that’s to be sure everything is put away when you leave; that is, don’t leave anything lying about loose that might slide around or fall during takeoff.”

  “Yes, but where—”

  “I have no idea,” Iva replied cheerfully before Anne could complete her question. “Joe and I have always put the food in the hands of the señor’s steward, but apparently the man was given the weekend off and couldn’t get back to Dallas in time for this unscheduled flight. Don’t worry about it. You’ll find where everything goes. It can’t be too difficult; an airplane galley is just a small kitchen and you ought to know your way around one of those if anybody does!”

  “It can’t be too difficult—” That was Iva’s opinion, Anne thought with something like bitterness. In the first place, Anne had never been on a plane in her life, much less a private jet, and the sight of that great silver monster sitting on the runway in the dusk with its lights blinking and its jets screaming was enough to bring her heart into her throat. She had never walked up to an entrance ramp barred by an armed guard either. She wished that she had thought to keep on her orange jacket with Metcalf’s printed on the pocket. She had left it behind in the kitchen by force of habit, since she did not intend to return there before going on home.

  She was half-afraid the guard would demand some form of identification, which could be a problem. She had locked her shoulder bag, a large, cumbersome affair of fringe and burlap, in the car, to leave her hands free. The only thing of value in it was her driver’s license and a gas credit card. Because Joe and Iva had not returned, she had not been paid for this week.

  Her fears did not materialize. Seeing the laden tray in her hands, the guard gave her a nod and a smile as she were not unexpected. Touching his cap, he stepped aside, motioning her aboard without attempting to speak over the noise of the jets.

  Just inside the plane was a small section fitted with seats much like a commercial jet, but since Iva had said the galley was in the rear, Anne moved along the aisle between the seats past a shelf arranged with the latest magazines and a small alcove where wraps could be put away. Pushing with her tray through a pair of heavy drapes in maroon and black brocade, she stepped into the main body of the plane. For an instant, she stood still, surveying the large cabin that stretched before her. Short drapes of brocade were looped back from the small windows. A carpet of thick, lustrous maroon velvet covered the floor. At intervals down one side of its expanse sat round walnut tables flanked by deep, comfortable chairs of black leather. On the other side was a long walnut desk fitted with a built-in phone and dictating machine, and with a walnut and leather chair behind it. The remaining space was taken up by an extra-wide settee which at that moment was made up as a bed with a pillow and sheets in heavy ivory linen, monogrammed in black.

  Lifting an eyebrow in token of her amazement, Anne continued through the cabin to a small metal door half-concealed by more drapes at the far end of the plane.

  The noise of the jets warming up for flight was nerve-shattering in this section, especially when the cabin door swung to behind her. Anne would have liked very much to plunk the tray down and leave, but remembering her instructions, she began to look for a place to secure the contents. The wine fitted very nicely into the refrigerator unit with its cooler intact. There was a food container with a snap-down lid that held the hot entree and vegetable, and after a few minutes of searching, she found a bread box that pulled out of the wall. Giving herself a mental pat on the back, she was just turning to go when she noticed several cardboard cases stacked on the floor. Close examination showed them to be small glass bottles of grape juice. What a Mexican millionaire could possibly want with four cases of grape juice posed something of a mystery, but it had obviously been delivered by someone who assumed the steward would be there to put it away. There would be quite a mess to clean up if those bottles were to break in flight. It couldn’t take more than a moment to put them out of harm’s way.

  Or could it? Every cabinet she opened seemed to be filled already with china and crystal in neat restraining racks, and with foodstuff in cans and boxes and plastic bags. Those drawers and cabinets that were not being used for normal purposes were filled with papers, bound account books, and boxes of letterhead, pens, and recording tapes. She was just about to give up and let the señor attend to his own grape juice when she found an empty shelf. It was above her head however, and it would take a great deal of effort to lift the cases up onto i
t, especially with the restraining ledge in place. It would be much easier, she thought, if she had something to stand on. In a cubbyhole between the refrigerator and the bank of cabinets that served as a pantry was a postage stamp of a table with a lightweight straight-backed chair on each side. The chairs, she found, were fastened to the floor, but a moment’s study enabled her to decipher the simple locking mechanism. As she swung the chair where she needed it, she found herself hoping rather grimly that Señor Castillo appreciated the extra trouble that Metcalf’s was willing to go to for his sake. Then she laughed at herself as she realized that the señor would probably never learn of it.

  She was just settling the last case of juice when something in the shrieking roar of the jets caught at her attention. The sound had changed, gradually increasing. A vibration ran through the plane, setting the dishes in the cabinets around her to clinking with a soft regularity. And then as she stood in frozen stillness, she felt it. They were moving!

  Panic galvanized her muscles. She dropped the juice case into place, slammed the cabinet door, and turned away. If she called out, it was doubtful anyone would hear her. She had to make her way as quickly as possible to the pilot’s cabin. No, wait. If they were taking off, the señor must have boarded the plane. He would be in the main cabin just beyond the door.

  Consternation flooded over her as she touched one hand to the cabinet front and started to step down from the chair. In that instant a surge of power gripped the plane and the floor tilted, slanting upward. The movement threw Anne off balance. She clutched wildly at a cabinet door handle as she felt herself falling, but her fingers would not hold. The top of the small table flashed across her vision, and the corner of it caught her squarely on the temple. Blinding pain struck deep into her brain and a soft darkness came up from the floor to catch her.

  It might have been only a moment or two, it might have been half an hour, before Anne opened her eyes. For a dazed instant she could not understand why she was lying wedged between a table and refrigerator or why her head was throbbing with a furious pain allied to a steady humming noise. Remembering was not pleasant.

 

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