Luc Ruelle blinked at the gun. I gasped and shifted the weapon away. This was why I didn't like to use them. More often than not, the wrong person got shot.
"Guns are dangerous," he said solemnly.
"Damn straight."
"Curse word."
My lips tightened. "Sorry."
He shrugged. "Heard it before."
I bet he had.
"Just not from a lady."
He still hadn't, but I wasn't going to point that out.
"What are you doing here?" I craned my neck. "Did your dad bring you?"
I heard the hope in my voice and wanted to curse again. If Adam had brought Luc, then maybe he'd changed his mind about me seeing the boy. And if Adam had changed his mind about that, then -
What?
He'd buy me an engagement ring, fix up the mansion, we'd move in and start playing Ozzie and Harriet?
Doubtful.
At any rate, I needed a reference a little more up-to-date. Was there an example of a happily married couple on TV these days? For the life of me, I couldn't think of one.
"My dad doesn't know I'm here."
"Uh-oh," I said before I could stop myself.
Luc shrugged and drew his toe across the floor in an "aw shucks" gesture. Only then did I realize he was barefoot On closer examination, his shirt was inside out and his shorts weren't zipped.
"Were you in a big hurry to leave?" I asked.
"Huh?" He stared at me with innocent Adam-eyes.
"Your... um - " I waved vaguely. "Barn door."
He glanced down, then presented me with his back. "I forgot to X-Y-Z."
The sound of the zipper being zipped punctuated his words.
"What's X-Y-Z?"
"Examine your zipper. Dun."
As I said, I knew nothing about kids, particularly male ones, having never been one myself. I felt pretty "duh" all around.
"I should call your dad," I said.
"No phone."
"No phone?"
He shrugged. "Don't need one."
Everyone needs a phone. Don't they?
Luc wandered around the mansion, glancing at my stuff, peering into corners, then staring upstairs.
He saw me watching him and shrugged. "Never been here."
I frowned. This was the family home - despite its disarray. Why hadn't Adam brought him?
I hate that place, I wish it would rot, but de damn thing never will.
Oh, yeah.
"I cut through the swamp," Luc said. "Wasn't far."
"Do you walk around the swamp a lot?"
"Uh-huh."
I wasn't sure that was such a good idea He was so little, the things out there so big. Or at least they'd seemed big while chasing me.
"Did you see anything... strange?" I asked.
"No."
Well, that was informative.
"Did you see anything?'
"Trees, gators, water, snakes. Critters."
"What kind of critters?"
He shrugged. "I didn't really see any. Just heard 'em scratchin' around."
"Maybe you shouldn't go in the swamp for a while."
His face creased into a mulish expression that resembled a dried-apple doll. "I've been playing in the swamp since I could walk."
"And your dad doesn't care?"
"He says I need to know how to survive there. Someday I might have to."
What a bizarre thing to say to a child.
The two of us stared at each other. I smiled a trifle uneasily. What was I going to do with him until Adam showed up?
He would show up. Wouldn't he?
I'd wait a half an hour; then I'd take Luc back myself and head into town as I'd planned.
"Are you... hungry?"
"Always."
I smiled. "I've got crackers."
He made a face. "That's not food."
"Cookies?"
"OK."
I dug out the package, handed it over.
"How many can I have?" he asked.
"Go nuts."
Which was probably the wrong thing to say to a kid, but he wasn't my kid, and Adam had made it clear he never would be. If Luc went home on a sugar high, well, that was no more than the man deserved. What kind of father allowed a child to roam the swamp?
What did I know about it? Maybe down here, or anywhere for that matter, a four-year-old was plenty old to swamp-wander.
I eyed Luc's size, then thought of his speech, his behavior. Maybe he was older than four. Regardless, he wasn't twenty-four. Which is how old I thought he should be before he went into the swamp alone again.
"How old are you?" I asked.
"How old are you?"
"It isn't polite to ask a woman her age."
"How come? Don't you know?"
God, he was cute.
"I'm thirty."