Zella slid the piece of paper with her notes across the table toward Trevor. “I started making a list, but then I realized that you’d have to have a prescription for those things. Either that or your character would have to break into the pharmacy. So that wouldn’t work. Then I thought of arsenic, but a person would get very sick before he died, so it’s not subtle enough for what you need. I thought antifreeze would be better, but it can take up to twenty-four hours to die from that, too. The fastest way to poison someone legally would be good old-fashioned carbon monoxide.”
He broke out into a grin. “Legally? Isn’t that an oxymoron?”
“You know what I mean.”
He had the nerve to laugh. While he did, Zella reached forward to grab the last grape out of the plastic bowl between them on the picnic table. “You snooze, you lose,” she said as she popped it into her mouth.
Trevor sighed and covered his stomach with his hands. “That’s fine with me. I ate way too much. I meant to make just a light picnic lunch, but I couldn’t decide what to bring and ended up packing more than we needed.”
Yet, judging from all the empty bowls and containers, they’d managed to eat almost everything. She thought that having a picnic lunch at Cougar Mountain Regional Wildland Park was a great idea, although it certainly hadn’t been what she’d expected. She’d expected to do takeout.
Trevor stood. “I’m sorry, but I just can’t sit any longer. Would you like to take a walk on one of the trails instead of going back? Unless you have other plans.”
The only thing she had to do was go home and face more questions from her mother about the new man she’d been seeing and when she was planning on marrying him. While it warmed her heart to see both Cindy and Annie happily married, she still wasn’t sure she believed in happily-ever-afters. Not only did she live with the example of her mother’s first failed marriage looming in front of her every day, two of her workmates at the pharmacy were on the brink of divorce.
She truly hoped for the best for both Cindy and Annie and that they really had found true love at first sight, as unrealistic and impractical as that may be. For herself, she wasn’t going to take the chance of following in her mother’s footsteps with falling in love too fast and then falling out of love just as fast. When she met the man of her dreams, first they would be friends. Then if they were still together they could get engaged after three or more years, and then they’d stay engaged for a year before they got married, ensuring they weren’t rushing into a lifelong commitment they would both later regret.
Zella looked up at Trevor, waiting patiently for her while she stood there staring at the trees, lost in her own little world.
He smiled, bringing out the most adorable little crinkles in the corners of his eyes. “Welcome back. You looked lost in thought for a while.”
The heat she felt in her cheeks had nothing to do with the warm Indian summer day. “Sorry. I’d love to go for a walk. A nice long walk.” Maybe until midnight, when she could sneak into bed without having to talk her mother.
She helped Trevor scoop the empty containers into the cooler and load everything into his car, and then they headed for the entrance to the Coal Creek Trail. As they entered the path, Zella removed her sunglasses and hung them on the neckline of her T-shirt. Despite the bright sunshine, Trevor wasn’t wearing sunglasses, even though most people had been.
He turned to her. “This isn’t a five-minute walk in the park. Are you sure you want to go for a hike? I shouldn’t have sprung it on you without warning.”
Zella nodded. “I love this kind of stuff. I haven’t been on a good hike for a long time. This actually reminds me of the last time I was out this way on my mountain bike.”
Trevor’s eyes widened. “Mountain bike? I’ve always wanted to do the Snoqualmie Valley Trail, but my friends thought I was crazy.”
“It is kind of a crazy trail. It’s about thirty miles. It’s not a casual ride.”
“You’ve done it?”
Zella shook her head. “No. I’d like to one day, though.”
She almost thought he was going to ask if she wanted to partner with him to do the ride, but he’d stopped talking. Not that she minded. In fact, as much as she enjoyed the quiet sounds of nature as they walked, Zella also appreciated the comfortable silence of being with someone who didn’t need to fill every second of airtime with talking.
After about a mile, Trevor broke out into a grin.
Zella looked around them but didn’t see anything out of the ordinary. “Is something funny? Am I missing something?”
He stopped walking and shook his head. “No, nothing like that. I hadn’t thought about it before we got here, but I’ve got a scene coming up where my antagonist chases my primary female character through the woods. As I’m walking, I’m getting a mental picture what it would be like.”
Zella couldn’t help it. She rolled her eyes. “That’s so B-movie. You wouldn’t really do that, would you?”
“I wouldn’t have her trip or anything. Besides, she escapes. I haven’t figured out how yet, but she escapes without being hurt. No close calls. She’s just scared but smart about it. She doesn’t look back; she doesn’t trip; she just hightails it out safely. But since she’s so fast, she doesn’t see the guy who was chasing her.” He rested his fists on his hips and looked around them. “I have an idea. How about if I chase you through here, and then I can get a better idea of what I’m writing about. Kinda like research. If this were a movie, they’d call it method acting.”
Zella waved one finger in the air in front of his face. “Not a chance. I have a better idea. If you’re having your character fleeing for her life, then I should chase you.”
She waited, expecting to be chastised, but instead his face lit up. “That’s a great idea. Think you could catch me if you really tried?” He looked down her legs then down to her sneakers.
“Maybe. I’ll count to five to give you a head start, but you’d better run for your life.” Zella pulled a pen out of her back pocket and held it up like a knife, ready to stab him.” ‘Cause I’m gonna kill you, missy.”
A rush of power surged through her. Of all the men she’d dated, she’d always been a bit taller, a bit leggier, and on the track, for those who had the ego to race her, a bit faster. She had a feeling that of the women Trevor dated, he probably didn’t come across many who nearly equaled him in height, and therefore, probably speed. It had been a few years since she’d played on the basketball team in school, but back then, she’d been the fastest on the girls’ team and a worthy opponent for the boys.
Trevor opened his eyes as wide as saucers and covered his mouth with his hands. “Eek!” he screamed like a girlie-girl, which, at his size, was utterly ridiculous. He raised his hands in the air. “Don’t hurt me!” he squeaked, in what was probably his best imitation of a distressed heroine, spun around, and bolted off.
Zella counted quickly to five and took off after him.
For an alleged damsel in distress, he ran pretty fast.
The air burned in her lungs, but she pushed herself hard and was actually catching up on him.
She wondered if he heard her because he lowered his shoulders and increased his speed marginally.
Then, just like a dumb blond in a cheap movie, he ran off the path, into the trees.
Like the classic evil villain, Zella called out, “You cannot escape!” and followed.
With the change in terrain from the well-traveled path, she lost a little momentum, but so did he. Trevor now had to crash and push through the overhanging branches, which, at his height, greatly impeded his speed. He raised both his arms to shield his face as he ran. And with Trevor clearing the path before her, Zella started to catch up.
She wondered if he heard her closing in because he turned back toward the cleared path. If she were a real bad guy, she supposed this should have made her even angrier, so she roared her anger and tried to run faster.
A few yards ahead of her, Trevor almost made it to the clearing, but his foot caught in a root, his arms flew up in the air, and down he went.
Unlike the movies, there was no slow motion. He covered his face with his arms a split second before he hit the ground with a resounding thump so hard she could hear the air expel from his lungs.
Once he hit the ground, he didn’t move.
He hadn’t done it on purpose.
“Trevor! Are you hurt? Can you speak?” Zella dropped to her knees and pressed her hands to the center of his back. She could see and feel the fast expansion of his chest with his heavy breathing from the exertion of the run. When he didn’t reply, she grabbed his shoulders and tried to roll him over. She could barely move him.
In a flash of movement, his arms came free. He grabbed her shoulders, and before she knew what happened, she was on her back. Above her, Trevor pinned her to the ground with her wrists pressed into the dirt above her shoulders.
A scratch, smeared with dripping blood, marred his cheek.
“Are you okay?” she asked.
He blinked then shook his head. “The stars are starting to clear. I’ll be fine. You make a really bad villain. You were supposed to stab me, not check to see if I was breathing.”
“But you’re hurt.” Even though he had her pinned to the ground, if she really were a bad guy, she should probably be considering how to get him off and regain her advantage. He was probably still unsteady enough that if she tried, she could knock him off, or if she used what she learned in her self-defense class, do some serious injury to him with her knee.
His expression softened, his gaze dropped to her mouth, and he froze.
Zella thought her heart stopped beating then picked up even faster.
Just as his head started to lower, he stiffened, sucked in a deep breath, rolled off her, and stood. She didn’t think it was her imagination that his hand shook just a little bit as he extended it to her to pull her to her feet.
She accepted his help and stood.
He wiped the blood off his cheek with the corner of his T-shirt and stuffed the hem back into his waistline. “That was a little embarrassing, but I think I learned something. I probably have a little more empathy for all those women being chased through the woods by the evil zombie. It’s actually harder than I thought, and it was pretty stupid to go off the path.”
Zella reached up to brush the scratch on his cheek. “I hope you don’t get a scar. We’d better find someplace to wash that up.”
“Yeah. It probably doesn’t look too good either. This might sound like a stretch, but once we finish the trail, we’re about twenty-five minutes away from the aquarium. I’m sure they have a nice washroom with good antibacterial soap, and we can take a break and see all the exhibits. “
Zella nibbled her bottom lip. It hadn’t been long ago that her mother had tried to send her to the aquarium with a blind date, and she’d narrowly escaped. Yet now with Trevor, she actually wanted to go.
She smiled. “Sure. That sounds like fun. I even have my camera in my purse. I’ll try to catch your good side, but no promises.”
He grinned, reached forward, gripped her hand, and twined his fingers with hers.
As they walked, he kept her hand wrapped in his. She tried to tug her hand out, but he tightened his grip then patted their joined hands with his free one.
“What are you doing?” she asked.
“Practicing holding hands with my girlfriend. You gave me some help with my story, so now I’m going to help with yours. Once we get to the aquarium, we can call it a date.”
“A date? But—”
He smiled, making him so handsome her breath caught. “No buts. Call it research. Now let’s go be romantic.”