Stopping by Murat’s bedroom, I knock on the door.
“Evet?” he calls out.
I let myself in. Murat turns down the volume on his TV. “Something wrong?”
I shake my head. “You’ve been guarding Lara since she got here. What do you think of her?”
His eyebrows draw together. “Boss?”
“Do you get along with her?”
He shrugs. “She’s a good person. Hard-working, as well.” One of his eyebrows darts into his hairline, then he rambles, “I just think she’s a nice person. There are no feelings. Nothing like that.”
I let out a sigh. “Relax. I just want to know if you get along with her, seeing as she has Nisa and my grandmother in love with her.”
“Lara is always respectful. I have no reason to dislike her.”
Nodding, I open the door again. “I’ll let you rest.”
When I leave the room, I start to think the problem lies with me. If everyone in my household gets along with Lara and practically embraces her as part of the family, maybe I should ease down on the suspicion and give the woman a chance.
She’s given me no reason not to trust her since she started working for me.
Then why did Mazur want to know whether she’s alive?
While thoughts of Lara and Mazur fill my mind, I shower and prepare for bed. When I’m dressed in a pair of sweatpants, I stand in front of the window and stare out over the yard, the outdoor lights illuminating the garden my grandmother loves so much.
My thoughts turn to the fever Lara had when I made her get in bed.
Is she sick because of the worry I’m causing her?
Again the guilt creeps to the surface.
I let out a disgruntled sigh, then decide to check on her before I turn in for the night. Walking into my closet, I grab a white t-shirt and pull it over my head.
Barefoot, I take the stairs down to the ground floor, and not wanting to wake Lara, I slowly push her bedroom door open. The bedside lamp is still on, giving me a clear view of her sweat-drenched face and hair. Her lashes lift, and with feverish eyes, she stares at me, looking like a lost puppy.
Fuck.
I step inside and shut the door behind me. I don’t even make it halfway to the bed before Lara tries to get out from under the covers. “I’m sorry,” she starts pleading as if I’m holding a gun to her head, then she drops to the carpet, hacking up half a lung from a tight cough that sounds painful as fuck.
I dart forward, and slip my arms beneath her. Picking her up, I place her back on the bed. “You’re fucking sick,” I state the obvious, sounding like I’m about to rain hell-fire down on her.
“I can work,” she protests weakly. “I can still work.”
The beating organ in my chest that’s been threatening to soften with compassion and guilt gives up the fight and aches for this woman. Even feverish and clearly sick, she’ll probably clean the whole fucking house if I give her half a chance.
‘It’s not right for someone to live in so much fear,’ I remember Nisa’s words.
“I can work,” she mumbles half deliriously.
I pull the covers over her trembling body, and sitting down on the side of the bed, I place my hand over her forehead.
She’s burning up something fierce.
“I can…” her breath hitches in her throat, then she’s overwhelmed by another painful coughing fit that shakes her entire body.
I quickly pull her up until she’s convulsing against my chest and pat her back, hoping it will help loosen the tightness in her lungs.
When the coughing fit passes, Lara slumps against me, wheezing as she sucks in deep breaths.
I’m tempted to wake Nisa so she can watch over Lara but decide against it. If Lara doesn’t get better before morning, Nisa will need to take care of her.
I help Lara lie back down, saying, “I’m going to get more medicine. Don’t you dare get out of this bed while I’m gone.”
“I’m sorry,” she whimpers, her face contorting as if she might cry, but no tears fall.
Picking up the tray I used earlier, I hurry out of the room. I get a bowl of boiling water from the kitchen, putting in a couple of eucalyptus oil drops. Nisa makes us inhale it whenever we’re sick, and it always helps.
I also grab cold medicine and a bottle of water from the fridge, not wanting Lara to dehydrate from the fever.
When I walk back into the room, the woman looks sick as fuck, and I wonder if it won’t be better to take her to the emergency room.
It’s probably just the flu. Don’t fucking overreact.
I pull the table closer to the bed and set everything down. Reaching for Lara’s shoulders, I help her sit up and pull her closer. “Position your face over the bowl and take a couple of deep breaths.”