WHAT theâ!
In the process of stepping out of her own front doorway, Tazzy came to an abrupt halt, instead staring down wide-eyed at the tiny kitten that sat in a basket on the doorstep.
Where on earth had it come from? More to the point, what was it doing here?
Well, one thing was for certain, it hadnât arrived here of its own volition; a stray kitten did not come complete with basket, bowl, and sachets of food. Or with a red ribbon tied in a neat bow about its tiny neck!
Tazzy bent down to look at the ball of grey fluff, suddenly finding herself the focus of startled blue eyes as it became aware of her presence.
âHey, itâs okay,â she soothed as the tiny thing leapt to its feet in surprise, holding out her handâfor it to either lick or scratch, depending on whether it saw her as friend or foe.
While it made up its mind, Tazzy took the opportunity to glance up and down the street. As expected, at seven-thirty in the morning, it was totally deserted. The lights were on in several of the houses, but all the cars were still in the driveways. Only Tazzy, it seemed, with her innate sense of responsibility, left the house at seven-thirty in the morning in order to be at her desk by eight-fifteen. There was certainly no one visible who could possibly have delivered the kitten to her doorstep.
She gave a start of surprise herself as she felt the moist rasp of a minute tongue on the back of her hand, the kitten jumping back too at this sudden movement.
âWe could go on like this all morning.â She laughed, reaching out to pick the kitten up, absolutely enchanted by the way the little ball of fur, its face looking at her so trustingly, fitted neatly into the palm of her hand.
But even as Tazzy acknowledged that she noticed the small white card attached to the red ribbon. âTo Anastasia. With loveâ, the card read.
How very peculiar. No one ever called her by her full name of Anastasia, in fact most people werenât even aware that was her actual name. And why on earth would someone give her a kitten, with or without love? Christmas had been and gone, and her birthday wasnât until August.
Not that it mattered why someone had thought she would appreciate having a pet, she simply couldnât keep the kitten. She was Personal Assistant to Ross Valentine, a computer software troubleshooter of unparalleled skill. His business took him all over the world, and Tazzy usually accompanied Ross on those trips, which didnât allow for attachments of any kind.
Talking of which, what was she going to do with the kitten today while she was at work?
The frown deepened between clear green eyes. She might not be able to keep it, but she couldnât just leave the poor little thing out here in the cold, either; it might wander off and get itself lost, or worseârun over. And she certainly couldnât take it with herâshe could already imagine the look of surprise on Rossâs face if she were to arrive at his house, their place of work as well as Rossâs home, with the kitten in tow!
She really didnât have any choice; she would just have to make it comfortable in the kitchen until she returned later, when she could turn her mind to finding somewhereâor someoneâwho would take the kitten off her hands.
âIâm sorry, but thatâs just the way it is,â she told the kitten ruefully as it continued to look up at her with those trusting blue eyes.
It took her a few minutes to take off the bow, to make the kitchen safe and put out food for the tiny creature, by which time, she realized agitatedly, she was going to be late into work this morning.
The traffic, usually minimal at that early hour, was already starting to build up by the time she finally got on the road, Tazzyâs tension building along with it.
Consequently, she was not her usual calm, collected self when she finally made it into her office at eight-thirty. Her agitation deepened as she found Ross Valentine already standing beside her desk, a pile of her carefully logged files in his hand, files Tazzy knew from experience would no longer be in any sort of order. Served her right for being late, she inwardly remonstrated with herself.
Being a computer expert, Ross had pooh-poohed the fact that she kept everything on paper as well as on disk, but as her system had saved him work on several occasions when his computer had crashed, he had stopped mentioning how antiquated her own system was.
Ross raised dark brows now over eyes the colour of sherry. âDare I say that youâre looking less than your usual unflustered self this morning, Miss Darling?â he mocked, those brows shooting up even further as Tazzy, her cheeks flushed, scowled at him in reply. âPerhaps not,â he muttered under his breath.