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Kitabı oku: «Running Scared», sayfa 3

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And now she was going to pay the price.

Again.

She frowned, hurrying back down the hall, silently saying goodbye to the house she’d scrimped and saved to purchase, the dream she’d built in her head.

She pulled open the front door, stepping out onto the porch, the cold wind bathing her hot cheeks and drying the tears that burned behind her eyes. Ice had accumulated on the front porch, and the yard and driveway sparkled with it. Tall pine trees bent beneath the howling wind, and ice fell from their heavy boughs, hitting the ground with a hushed shattering that was so beautiful, so achingly perfect that Maggie paused, wanting to take it all in, preserve the memory so that she would never forget what was possible if she put her mind and heart into it.

A sharp crack split the air as something exploded near Maggie’s feet. Wood flew up and out, digging into her shins, flying into her face. She screamed, falling backward.

Another crack. Another explosion.

Pain.

Blood. Dripping down her arm. Dripping onto the rotted wooden floorboards of the porch.

She screamed again, scrambling back as a figure appeared in the darkness beyond the porch. A hundred yards away. Coming fast.

Get up! Get. Up.

The world in slow motion as she turned, fell into the hallway, kicked the door shut. Hands slipping as she turned the lock. Pulled the bolt. Blood smeared on the door.

Go. Go, go, go.

She ran up the stairs, expecting the door to explode behind her. Expecting a bullet to slam into her back, bring her to her knees.

Her cell phone slipped out of her hands as she pulled it from her pocket, and she scooped it up again. She tried desperately to dial 911, her hand trembling too much. Fingers hitting the wrong buttons.

Please, God. Please!

A loud bang had her screaming again, lunging for the bedroom door, slamming it shut, turning the old-fashioned skeleton key as the 9-1-1 operator answered.

Another bang as Maggie shouted her address, shouted that an intruder was in her house.

And then silence, deep and ominous and filled with warning.

“Ma’am? Are you still there? Can you hear me?”

“Yes,” Maggie responded, backing away from the bedroom door, her heart thudding a hard, painful beat.

Was he in the house? Creeping up the stairs? Standing outside the door?

“Police are in route. Are you in a safe place?”

“No.”

“Can you get to one?”

“No.”

Was that the loose floorboard on the landing creaking? Was that a whisper of fabric, a sigh of breath?

“Do you have a weapon?”

“No,” she barely managed to whisper, as she glanced around the room, trying to find something she could use to defend herself.

“The police are almost there. Stay on the phone with me, okay? Okay?”

But Maggie couldn’t respond, didn’t dare speak or move or breathe. Someone was outside the door. Someone who tapped softly on the thick wood, wiggled the handle as the sound of sirens drifted into the room.

Maggie backed up, moving toward the window, dizzy with fear, sick with it. Waiting for help to come, for the door to explode. For Derrick to appear. Black eyes and hair and snarling lips. Coming to do exactly what he promised he would when Maggie had walked out of his life.

But she wasn’t the woman she’d been all those years ago. She’d changed. Grown stronger, more determined, and she wasn’t going to wait around for whoever was on the other side of the door to break in and finish what he’d started.

She yanked open the window, eyeing the ground as sirens screamed up her driveway. Voices shouted. A gunshot split the air.

And then there was silence filled with nothing but wind and ice and the terrible beat of Maggie’s heart.

FOUR

Kane hovered in the doorway of the hotel suite’s only bedroom, watching as Eli climbed into bed. He wanted to cross the threshold and tuck his son in as he had so many times when Eli was little, but the dark look Eli shot in his direction froze him in place.

Give him time.

It was what Kane’s mother and father had said. What his sister had said. What the experts had said. It wasn’t what Kane’s heart said. It said fix everything now. Swoop in and take control like he’d done when he’d worked as an attorney. But reconnecting with Eli was going to be a lot more difficult than bringing a case to trial had ever been.

At least he’d finally gotten the kid to bathe and get ready for bed. That had been a battle Kane hadn’t expected to fight with a child Eli’s age. Only seeing the panic in Eli’s eyes when sleep had been mentioned had kept Kane from insisting that his son go to bed at a reasonable time.

Now, at nearly one in the morning, Eli’s excitement and adrenaline seemed to have worn off, and his pale face and the dark circles beneath his eyes hinted at an exhaustion that went far beyond simple lack of sleep.

“Do you want a drink of water?” Kane asked, the question as lame and useless as he felt.

“No. Thank you.” Eli turned onto his side so that his back was to Kane, his red hair just showing over the blanket he’d pulled up around his shoulders.

That was Kane’s cue to walk away. He knew it but couldn’t quite get his feet to move.

“What time does Mom and Dad’s plane arrive tomorrow?” his sister Jenna asked, and Kane forced himself to turn away from his son and face her.

The look of sympathy on her face let him know just how pitiful he looked—a father who couldn’t even offer his son a kiss goodnight. “Ten.”

“Do they want me to pick them up at the airport?”

“No, they’re renting a car.” Kane moved across the room, grabbing the cup of coffee he’d left on a corner table. It was cold and bitter, but he downed it anyway, his throat parched from too many emotions and the strain of holding them in.

“Keep drinking coffee and you’ll never get to sleep.” Jenna rose from the couch, stretched to her full five-foot height. Short red hair spiked around a pale, pretty face. She looked exhausted.

“I’m too hyped up to sleep.”

“Maybe so, but we’ve been up since yesterday morning. It’s time to crash. Tomorrow is another day, after all, and I’m sure we’ll have plenty that needs doing.” She ran a hand over her hair and smiled. Of Kane’s three sisters, Jenna was the only one still single and childless, and she’d been quick to volunteer to hop on a plane and fly to Spokane, Washington, with him. It had been Jenna who’d booked a hotel room. Jenna who’d thought to rent the SUV. Jenna who had been the calm in the storm of Kane’s emotions, but two years fighting leukemia had taken a lot out of her, and it showed in her hollow cheeks and dark-rimmed eyes.

He crossed the room and pulled her into a gentle hug. She’d always been athletic and strong, a gymnast who’d pushed her body to the limit and who’d attended college on a full athletic scholarship. Now she was frail, her body too thin and delicate. “I’m sorry.”

“For what?” She returned the hug and stepped back, looking up into his eyes.

“For not thinking about how difficult this trip would be on you.”

“On me? What about you? You’re the one who’s just found his son again.” She frowned, and Kane knew she would never admit that the cancer had robbed her of her strength, never admit that was the reason she was tired. She was strong, tough and independent, and the last thing she would ever accept was pity.

“True, but I’m still hopped up on adrenaline, and there’s no way I can sleep. You take the other double bed in the bedroom. I’ll take the pull-out in here.”

“I’m sure you want to be in the room with Eli,” she responded, crossing to the small refrigerator and pulling out a bottle of water.

True, but he wasn’t sure his son wanted him there.

He didn’t say that, just poured more coffee from a half-full pot and shook his head. “I’ll only be a few yards away from him, and you can get some sleep while I do some work. I’ve got a half-dozen clients I left hanging when I flew out of New York, and I need to let them know their cases are still being handled.”

“All right, but if you want to boot me out of bed later, just wake me up.” She smiled wanly, and for the first time since they’d gotten on the plane the previous day, Kane really looked at his sister. Her skin wasn’t just pale, it was parchment white, her freckles standing out in stark contrast. Her clothes hung off her narrow frame.

“Are you okay, Jen?”

“Besides being exhausted? Yes.”

“I mean really okay.”

“You mean is the cancer back. I went to the doctor two weeks ago for a three-month check, and my numbers all look great, so stop worrying.”

“Did the doctor say anything else besides that your numbers look good?”

“No, and even if he had, now wouldn’t be the time to discuss it. You have your son back, Kane. You’ve got what you’ve been dreaming of for years. That’s all you should be thinking about.”

“I have what I’ve been dreaming of, but that doesn’t mean I can’t worry about you. So, what, exactly, did the doctor say?”

“Nothing except come back in three months. Just like every checkup. Now, stop worrying.”

A sharp knock at the door stopped Kane from asking more questions. He frowned, crossing the room quickly and peering out the peephole. Up until now, the press had been respectful, waiting outside the hotel and asking questions when he emerged or calling to see if he’d be willing to give an interview, but he didn’t expect that to last forever. “Yes?”

“Mr. Dougherty, it’s Deputy Rick Lesnever, Spokane County Sheriff’s department.”

“Do you have ID?” Kane asked, opening the door and nodding as the deputy flashed his badge. “It’s a little late for a visit isn’t it, Deputy?”

“We’ve had an incident, and the sheriff wanted me to come ask you a few questions.” The deputy was young, maybe mid-twenties, and he looked nervous, his gaze jumping from Kane to Jenna and back again.

“Incident?” Kane asked, stepping aside and letting the man in.

“Maggie Tennyson said you were out at her place a little after nine tonight.”

“That’s right.”

“She was attacked a couple hours later.”

“Attacked by whom?” Kane asked, his mind racing back to the moment he’d met Maggie. She’d been nervous, edgy and scared, but he’d chalked that up to being approached by a stranger on a dark, deserted road. What he hadn’t been able to explain was her need to stay anonymous, her obvious concern that someone would know Kane and Eli had been to visit her.

He’d wondered what she was hiding, but he hadn’t pushed for answers.

He should have.

“We don’t know. We’re hoping that you might be able to help shed some light on that.”

“You don’t think my brother had something to do with it?!” Jenna exclaimed, her eyes flashing with irritation.

“Mr. Dougherty isn’t a suspect, but we’re hoping that he may have seen something—”

“What’s going on? Is Ms. Tennyson okay?” Eli peered out of the bedroom, his hair mussed. Barely four feet tall and probably less than fifty pounds, Eli looked younger than nine, but his eyes were old and filled with anxiety.

“She should be fine,” the deputy responded, smiling kindly at Eli. “We just wanted to ask your father a few questions.”

“But you said she was attacked. That means someone hurt her.” Eli stepped out of the room, his pajamas hanging loosely on his thin frame.

“Maybe you and the deputy should discuss this somewhere else,” Jenna suggested, shooting a look in Eli’s direction.

She was right, of course. Discussing what had happened to Eli’s favorite teacher while he was listening wasn’t a good idea, but leaving Eli seemed like an even worse one to Kane.

He knew it was irrational, knew that Eli would be fine with Jenna for however long it took to answer Deputy Lesnever’s questions, but knowing it in his head and believing it with his heart were two different things. “Why don’t you go back in the bedroom, Eli? I’ll come in after the deputy and I are done talking and let you know what’s going on.”

“She’s not okay. If she was okay, you wouldn’t make me go away while you talk.”

“Of course she’s okay. Deputy Lesnever wouldn’t lie, would you, Deputy?” Jenna said, moving close to Eli and putting an arm around his shoulders.

“No, I wouldn’t. She’s fine. The doctors are keeping her in the hospital overnight for observation, but she’ll probably be going home tomorrow.”

“She’s in the hospital? But you said she was all right!” Eli’s voice rose an octave, and he shrugged away from Jenna’s arm.

“She is, but—”

“I really think you should discuss this somewhere else,” Jenna said again, and this time Kane knew he had to listen. Eli had been through enough. He didn’t need to hear details about what had happened to Maggie.

“How about we step out in the hall?”

“I’d rather not stand in a public area. We can discuss things in my patrol car.”

Kane hesitated, then nodded. He couldn’t be near Eli 24/7 no matter how much he wanted to. Normalcy had to be established. Routine. If Kane hovered, he might do more damage to his already-damaged child.

“Will you go see Ms. Tennyson?” Eli asked.

“I don’t think—”

“Please, Daddy. I just want to know for sure that she’s all right.” Daddy?

The word brought Kane back five years to the morning of Eli’s disappearance. He’d kissed his son goodbye before heading to the office, smiling when his son shouted, “I love you, Daddy!” as Kane closed the apartment door and left him with the nanny.

He hadn’t heard the word again until now, and hearing it filled him with a bittersweet mixture of joy and sorrow.

“I can’t leave you here alone, Eli.”

“He won’t be alone, Kane. I’m here, and I promise this is where we’ll both stay. No going anywhere except to bed. Right, Eli?” Jenna offered, and Eli nodded his agreement. Kane hesitated, his thoughts going back to the old farmhouse and the woman who owned it. Maggie Tennyson had done what no one else had dared. She’d listened to Eli, dug for answer and found them. Now she was in the hospital, and Kane knew he couldn’t ignore the fact any more than he could ignore his son’s impassioned plea.

“Okay. I’ll go, but you have to mind your aunt while I’m gone. No wandering around outside. Okay?”

Eli nodded, his desire to communicate with Kane gone now that he’d achieved his goal.

Had he spent the past five years as silently as he’d spent the past day? Or had he formed a connection with his kidnapper, spent afternoons after school chatting and weekends hanging out and discussing plans for the new week?

Wondering how Eli had spent the past five years would torture Kane if he let it. He couldn’t let it. He stepped over and hugged Eli, his heart aching as Eli stiffened in his arms. “Goodnight, buddy. I love you.”

Eli didn’t respond, just turned and walked back into the bedroom.

Kane bit back a sigh, and met Jenna’s eyes. “I won’t be long.”

“Take your time. We’ll be fine while you’re gone.”

“Thanks. Get some sleep. Okay.” He dropped a kiss on Jenna’s cheek and followed the deputy out into the hall.

“Sorry to drag you away from your son like this, Mr. Dougherty.”

“Call me Kane, and don’t worry about it. I’m happy to help with the investigation any way I can, though I’m not sure there’s much I can tell you.”

“Whatever you remember from when you were out at the house will be just fine.”

They walked out into the icy storm, crossed the parking lot to the deputy’s cruiser and climbed in. If there were reporters hanging around, Kane didn’t see any, but, then, even the most diehard reporters were probably tucked away in their hotel rooms sleeping at this hour of the morning.

Kane waited impatiently as the deputy pulled out a notebook and tried two different pens before finally finding one that worked. “Okay, I’m set. Did you see anything or anyone while you were at Maggie’s place?”

“Just the tow truck driver.”

“Tow truck driver?”

“He was dropping off Maggie’s car. It had slid off the road and into a ditch.”

“Did you get the name of the driver?”

“Maggie mentioned the name Adam, but I’m not sure that was him.”

“Was he still there when you left?”

“No, and he never even spoke to Maggie. Just left the car and took off.”

“And you saw no one else?”

“No. There wasn’t a car on the road on my way back here. It’s not a good night to be out.”

“It isn’t, but that didn’t stop you and someone else from getting to Maggie’s place.”

“You said she was attacked. What happened?”

“She was shot.”

“Shot?” It wasn’t an attack then. It was an attempted murder. Imagining Maggie lying in her house wounded and scared, made him want to find the shooter and teach him a lesson he wouldn’t soon forget.

“Yeah. She was lucky, though. The bullet went through the fleshy part of her shoulder, and the doc says she’ll make a full recovery.”

“Did she see the guy who did it?”

“I’m afraid not.”

“Does she have any idea who it might be?”

“I’m not at liberty to say.” Which meant Maggie had an idea, but the deputy didn’t plan to share it.

That was fine. Kane was more than willing to ask Maggie the same question.

“Which hospital was she taken to?”

“Spokane Valley. It’s a thirty-minute drive, though, so you may want to wait until tomorrow to visit her.”

“I told Eli I’d check on her, and that’s what I plan to do.”

“Why don’t I escort you over there then? I’m heading in that direction anyway.”

“Thanks. I’m sorry I couldn’t be of more help.”

“If you think of anything else, give the sheriff’s office a call.”

“I will.” Kane got out of the cruiser and hurried to his rental, his mind spinning with possibilities. Maggie had seemed nervous and scared when they’d met. That, combined with the deputy’s refusal to answer Kane’s question about whether or not she’d had any idea who’d shot her, indicated that there was something more going on than a random attack.

Had the attack happened because of what she’d done for Kane and Eli?

She’d made it very clear she didn’t want her picture in the news, and it had been. Kane had seen her in a photo that had flashed across the television screen while Eli was getting ready for bed.

Had that been what led to the attack?

Kane didn’t know, but he planned to find out. Maggie might not want his help, but he owed it to her, and he’d do whatever it took to make sure she stayed safe.

FIVE

Maggie hated hospitals. The scents, the sounds, the hushed anticipation that always seemed to hang in the air. People suffered in hospitals. They died there. She’d watched her grandmother breathe her last breath on a sterile hospital gurney. She’d sat beside her mother’s hospital bed one too many times after she’d overdosed on drugs and been rushed to the emergency room. Four years ago, Maggie had followed an ambulance as it brought her mother’s nearly lifeless body to the hospital for one last futile attempt to resuscitate. She’d promised herself then that she wouldn’t follow in her mother’s footsteps. She’d given up drugs, given up alcohol, given up the hard-partying lifestyle that had led her to Derrick.

That had been the beginning of the end of their relationship.

But it hadn’t been over.

Maggie had known too much about Derrick’s business. Not the car dealership that he claimed made him millions, but the illicit drug trade that he’d been part of. He hadn’t planned on letting her walk away from their relationship. She’d known it as surely as she’d known that going to the police with information about Derrick’s drug connections would be futile. She’d tried anyway, hoping that what she knew would put Derrick away for the rest of his life. He hadn’t even been put away for a day, and he’d vowed to repay her for her betrayal. She’d known he meant it, and she’d run, hoping that putting distance between them would keep her safe.

And now she was pacing a sterile hospital room, trying desperately to believe that the person who’d shot her hadn’t been sent by Derrick.

She shuddered, glancing at the closed door and wishing there was a lock she could turn to keep danger out.

But there isn’t, so do the smart thing and leave. She turned quickly, swaying from a combination of blood loss and pain medication. She was fuzzy-headed, but not so fuzzy-headed that she didn’t know what staying in the hospital room made her—a sitting duck.

Her duffel bag was lying on the chair where a kind nurse had left it, and Maggie scrounged through it, pulling out a pair of gray corduroy pants and a white three-button sweater that she thought she could wiggle into, shoulder bandages and all.

It didn’t take long to change from the hospital gown into street clothes, and Maggie managed to scrape her hair into a ponytail and shove her feet into sneakers with barely a twinge from her gunshot wound. Maybe adrenaline deadened pain, or maybe the pain meds she’d been given really were doing their job. Either way, Maggie planned to find a way out of town before the effects wore off.

She grabbed the duffel, checked to make sure her wallet was inside and left the room, her stomach sick with the reality of what she was doing. Soon she’d be leaving everything behind. Her friends. Her church. Her job. Eli.

How would he feel when he found she was gone?

The question followed her as she stepped into the corridor and walked to the nurses’ station. A twenty-something nurse smiled as Maggie approached. “Can I help you?”

“I’m Maggie Tennyson. Room 509. I’ve decided not to stay the night. Can you let my doctor know?”

“You can’t leave.” She looked appalled, her deep-brown eyes wide with concern.

“Yes. I can.”

“Dr. Stevenson wanted to run another blood panel before you leave. If you wait in your room, I’ll see if we can do that now rather than tomorrow morning.”

“I can’t wait. Thank you, though.”

“But—”

“I appreciate the wonderful care I’ve had while I was here, but I really do think I’ll be more comfortable at home.” Maggie smiled and turned away, hurrying to the elevator across from the nurses’ station, slamming her finger on the button, half afraid security personnel would swoop in and force her back to the room.

The door opened, and she stepped in, pushing the button for the lobby and feeling like a criminal escaping the scene of a crime. Would someone be waiting below to escort her back up?

Of course not. It was a free country, after all. She hadn’t committed a crime, and there was no reason why she couldn’t go where she wanted when she wanted.

She straightened her shoulders, stepped off the elevator and straight into a warm, hard chest. She stumbled back, nearly falling as she struggled to regain her balance.

“Careful.” Hands cupped her upper arms, holding her in place, and she looked up into the calm, handsome face of Kane Dougherty.

“Kane! What are you doing here?”

“I could ask you the same question. Last I heard, you’d been admitted and were staying the night.” He studied her face, his eyes deep emerald, his dark hair wet from rain and melting ice.

Maggie’s breath caught, the slow tumble of her stomach, the quick throb of her pulse, surprising her. She could not be attracted to Kane. She would not be. She’d learned her lesson about love a long time ago. She didn’t plan to forget it.

“Who did you hear that from? I haven’t even called Edith, yet.”

“A deputy came to see me. He said you’d been shot.”

“Barely.”

“I didn’t realize that was possible.” He cocked his head to the side, the angle of his jaw, the shape of his eyes, the intent, solemn look on his face reminding her of Eli. But Kane was no boy. He was a full-grown, good-looking, trouble-causing man.

She didn’t need to know him to know that.

There hadn’t been a man in Maggie’s life who hadn’t caused more trouble than he was worth.

“Didn’t realize what was possible?”

“To be barely shot. I figure a person either is shot or she isn’t.” He offered a quick smile.

“The doctor says I’ll heal completely. And, really, it barely hurts.”

“Maybe not, but you look pale. Are you sure you should be leaving the hospital?”

“I’ll recuperate better at home in my own bed.” Or in a hotel room where no one could find her. Not Kane. Not the police. Not Derrick.

She started to cross the lobby, but Kane put a hand on her arm, his fingers warm and compelling through her cardigan. “You’re running from something, Maggie. What is it?”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“Of course you do. You were running when I found you walking along the road, and you’re running now. Who’s after you?”

“Why does someone have to be after me? Why can’t I just be a woman who wants a little time alone?” she asked, refusing to let herself be pulled into offering excuses. She didn’t owe Kane any.

“Because you were scared when we met, and you’re scared now. And because someone shot you a couple of hours after your photo was in the news. That isn’t coincidence, is it, Maggie? You were hiding from someone, and now he’s found you.”

Shocked, she didn’t know what to say. She didn’t know if she should admit the truth or keep trying to hide it.

Finally, she did the only thing she could.

“Look, Kane, you and Eli have enough to deal with. You don’t need to add my troubles into the mix. Go back to the hotel, go back to your son and stop worrying about me.”

“That’s not possible. What you did for me and for Eli makes you family, and I never turn my back on family.”

“You’re wrong. I’m not family. I’m just a stranger who happened to touch your lives for a little while. In a few days, you’ll forget I even exist.” She tugged away from his hand, walked to the automatic doors and stepped out into the freezing rain, her chest hot and tight with emotions she didn’t want to feel.

There had been so many times in her life when she’d longed to hear someone say what Kane had. So many times when all she’d wanted was to be part of a loving family.

“Do you have a ride?” He walked up behind her but didn’t touch her again, didn’t ask why she was running, where she was going, didn’t mention family.

“No. I guess I wasn’t thinking very far ahead.”

“Then I guess it’s good I’m here. Where are you heading?”

The bus station, the airport, the train station. Anywhere but Deer Park.

“I don’t know.” Her voice broke, and Maggie pressed her lips together. No way was she going to break down in front of Kane.

“Then take the night to think about it. Get a little sleep, talk to the sheriff again, figure out what all your options are. If you still think you need to run, then do it. But do it smart, not scared.” He spoke quietly, not trying to change her mind, simply trying to make her see what she should have before. Running when she was exhausted, hurt and mentally spent wasn’t smart, and being smart was the only thing that was going to keep her alive.

“You’re right. I need to make some plans.”

“If you want help doing it, I’m here.” Fabric rustled, and a warm coat settled on Maggie’s shoulders. It smelled of icy rain and of Kane, and she didn’t know whether she should burrow into it or take it off.

“You’re going to freeze,” she said as Kane stepped in front of her and tugged the coat closed. His knuckles brushed her collar bone, and Maggie shivered in response.

“Based on the way you’re shivering, I think you need the coat more than I do.” Hospital lights spilled onto his hair and face, casting shadows and deepening the hard angles of his jaw and cheekbones. He looked mysterious and compelling. A hero come to life, offering his coat and his protection. At that moment, Maggie wanted to believe she could accept them and not regret it later.

“Kane—”

“Come on. Let’s get in the car before we both turn to icicles.” He led her through the quiet parking garage, his hand on her wrist, his touch light and gentle. He was the kind of guy she’d once dreamed of meeting, the kind who would offer a coat or a ride or a smile.

All she’d met were guys who’d offered nothing but lies and who’d known nothing about family, sacrifice or love.

She shivered again, pulling the coat even closer, allowing herself to enjoy its warmth for just that moment. Tomorrow would be a new day. She’d have to make decisions, act on them, but for tonight, she’d simply pretend that she really was Maggie Tennyson—student, teacher’s aide, law-abiding citizen. A woman without a past, without mistakes that haunted her.

“Here we are.” Kane opened the door to the SUV, waited while Maggie got inside and then rounded the car to join her. “Are we headed to your country house or to your apartment?”

Maggie hesitated. There was no way she wanted to return to her house, but she didn’t want to bring danger to Edith, either. “I’m not sure.”

“Your house is isolated. I’d hate to think of you out there by yourself.”

“And I’d hate for the guy who shot me to show up on Edith’s doorstep.”

“How about I call the sheriff and see if he’s willing to have a patrol car stationed outside her house for the night? If he can’t, you can always stay at the hotel with me and my family.”

“And give the reporters something to speculate about? I’d rather take my chances at my place.”

“Really?”

“No.” She sighed. The day was definitely not going the way she’d hoped. “Go ahead and call the sheriff. If he can’t manage the patrol car, I’ll go to the hotel, but I’m not staying with your family.”

She leaned her head against the seat as Kane called the sheriff’s office, wishing she could go back to the harvest party and keep from being photographed. She’d been so careful for so long, but Deer Park felt like home, and she’d let her guard down. Allowed herself to believe that the past was truly behind her.

That had been her first mistake.

She couldn’t afford to make any more.

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Yaş sınırı:
0+
Hacim:
201 s. 3 illüstrasyon
ISBN:
9781472023773
Telif hakkı:
HarperCollins
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