by Mandy Baxter
Nick had yet to unpack his shit. He tossed his duffel onto the bed and dug out a pair of jeans, T-shirt, and a sweater. He searched around in the bottom of the bag and found a pair of wool socks that he added to the pile. His boots were in the mudroom along with his coat, gloves, and hat. Probably should have brought long underwear or some shit. Another angry shout came from outside and spurred Nick into action as he threw on his clothes.
He didn’t have a snow shovel, damn it.
Hell, he didn’t have much of anything. No groceries and a little over a week’s worth of clothes. Was it wishful thinking that he’d get the job done and be out of there in a little less than a week? Probably. Which meant if he was planning on sticking around Ski Town, USA, then he should probably get his ass in gear and load up on some shit. It might not be a bad idea to get his hands on a snowblower if he had any intention of making it up the lane to the city street. He had four-wheel drive and good tires, but still. This was some serious fucking snow on the ground.
Jesus, it took less time to get outfitted in his vest and tactical gear to go out in the field. Once he got his boots laced, Nick headed out onto the porch. Olivia stood beside her car, digging snow out from underneath it as best she could with the snow shovel’s scoop, which was way too big and awkward for the job she was trying to use it for. But since Nick didn’t have even a piece-of-shit broken shovel to help her out with, he supposed they’d have to make do.
She kept her back turned to him, completely oblivious to his presence. It was a vulnerable position, one that left her exposed to all sorts of danger. He found himself wanting to chide her, but why? No doubt Joel Meecum’s old lady could take care of herself. Meek and weak didn’t cut it when you rolled with bikers. He waded through the knee-deep snow, closer. Olivia straightened to lean on the shovel and pushed her slouchy hat up on her forehead. A frustrated shriek sent a cloud of steam billowing up into the air above her. “Son of a bitch!”
This snowstorm was absolute, fucking bullshit.
Fingers of trepidation speared Livy’s chest as she tried to focus on the task at hand and not the lights that had sprung to life at the neighboring house. This time of year, most of the cabins along the lake went uninhabited or rented to vacationers, like the cabin that faced hers from across the narrow lane. She hadn’t met her new neighbors yet and she didn’t plan on it. Livy kept to herself and she couldn’t help but be a little annoyed that her peaceful, deserted haven had gained another resident. No matter how temporary.
That light flicking on—a simple, everyday act that probably had nothing to do with her—was a sore reminder that not a fake identity nor a life a million miles from anywhere in all directions was enough to make her feel safe.
She continued to dig, but with every scoop of snow she moved, it seemed that twice as much sloughed from the drift to take its place. “Stupid, fucking, powdery pain in my ass!” Snow might be pure and white, but it was surely a device of the devil. Five months and counting till spring . . .
After what felt like a year’s worth of shoveling, Livy got in the car and put it in gear. The Caliber’s wheels continued to spin and the engine growled as she punched down the accelerator. “Come on, you Dodge piece of shit! Move!”
From the corner of her eye, she glanced at the cabin next door. No doubt she’d given her neighbor a lovely six a.m. wake-up call with her revving engine and swear-fest. The Toyota pickup parked in the driveway looked like it had the clearance to maneuver through the accumulated snow with little effort.
Maybe they had a tow strap . . . No. Livy banished the thought from her mind. She had no idea who had rented the cabin. It could be anyone. And she’d managed to stay hidden the past four years by not taking chances.
A frustrated growl grated in Livy’s throat as she threw the car into park and got out. She scooped several more shovelfuls of snow out from under the car, her breath coming in quick pants. Was twenty-five too young for a heart attack? Because she was pretty sure she felt one coming on. Her back ached as she straightened and leaned on the shovel handle. Damn it, she needed to take a breather. The wood splintered under her weight and broke in two. “Are you fucking kidding me?” she shouted as she held the splintered remains of her snow shovel. The damned thing was beyond ancient, and she’d needed a new one about two winters ago. But when forty dollars could be better spent on groceries, she’d decided to live dangerously and work the poor thing to death.
“Well, Frank, I wish I could say it was fun while it lasted.”
Frank totally sounded like the sort of name a snow shovel would have. Utilitarian. All business. Frank didn’t take any shit. He plowed through the accumulated feet of powdered evil and made that snow his bitch. Sort of.
The scoop was bent and the sharp metal dug grooves into the wood of her deck every time she tried to clear the snow away. Like her life, Frank was useless and pathetic, hiding out in the shed when he wasn’t being put to use. For the hundredth time she wondered how she hadn’t died from the excitement.
Commercials always made you think that a four-wheel drive vehicle could go anywhere and do anything. But after a winter storm dumps two feet of snow overnight, even the most stalwart of cars is going to have some trouble. High-centered in a snowdrift, and now no shovel to dig out with. She wasn’t going anywhere.
“Goddamn it!”
She pulled her gloves up tighter on her hands and went to her knees with the scoop end of the broken shovel. If she could clear some of the snow out from under the car, she might have a chance of getting unstuck. She was already late for work, and since her paycheck was dependent on the number of students she had, she couldn’t afford to miss a half day getting her car out of the driveway.
Nope, she wasn’t going to ask for help. She’d gotten by this long on her own.
She kicked at the back bumper and her boot slipped against the slick plastic. Her legs went out from under her and she landed in the snow squarely on her ass. “Fuck!” Her voice echoed in the quiet of snowfall. “Fuck, fuck, fuck!”
She took the broken handle and wedged it underneath one of the back wheels of her car for traction and went to her knees. The cold soaked through her heavy ski pants. Ass up in the air, toes anchoring her to the snow, she continued to shovel the packed snow out from under her car. Who needed to go to the gym for a workout? With every scoop of snow, the calories were melting away . . .
“You stuck?”
The rumble of a deep voice behind her sent Livy’s heart up into her throat. She could practically feel the icy barrel of a gun pressing into the exposed skin at the back of her neck. A shiver of trepidation traveled down her spine and Livy’s brain went absolutely blank. Her mouth went dry. She froze; one-half of Frank’s severed body clutched in her fists.
Slowly, Livy rose up to her knees. The fact that she wasn’t dead yet was a good sign. Either that, or she’d grown so paranoid that she couldn’t even carry on a simple conversation with another human being in fear that he might be one of Joel’s thugs sent to get her. With the shovel clutched close to her chest, Livy stood. Took a deep breath, and turned to face the source of that deep voice.
She brought her gaze up, up, up to the face of the man standing just to the left of her headlights. His features were indistinguishable in the dark, making him look sinister and strangely alluring all at once. Livy’s heart raced and she swallowed the lump of fear that rose in her throat.
“H-high-centered,” she rasped just before clearing her throat. “The road’s drifted shut. The snowplow hasn’t been by yet.”
He tilted his head to one side as though studying her. She could make out the outline of a strong jaw, and his lips curved as though in amusement as he turned his attention to her car. His profile displayed strong, sharp features and a shock of hair poked out from beneath his beanie, brushing his brows. “You’re trying to go forward when you should be backing up.” He jerked his head toward the driver’s-side door. “Get in. I’ll push.”
Livy regarded him for a m
oment. Bossy neighbor is bossy. But his voice wasn’t at all as threatening as her first impression had led her to believe. Instead, it was decadent and warm, like a bubble bath on a cold night. It eased the tension that caused her muscles to ache and filled her with a sense of calm. Holy shit. If he could bottle his voice, he’d make a fortune. It had been a long damned time since she’d felt comfortable in the presence of a stranger. Anyone, really. “Okay. Thanks.”
Her tongue stuck to the roof of her mouth and she was suddenly painfully aware that she was decked out in five layers of clothes and a slouchy hat that she had to keep pushing up on her forehead. If he was there to kill her, he’d have no problem catching her. She looked like that kid from A Christmas Story, and if she fell down, Livy was pretty sure she wasn’t getting back up.
She knocked the snow from her boots on the front tire before getting in the car. With her teeth, she pulled her gloves from her hands as her neighbor rounded the car. Livy shifted into reverse and braced both hands against the wheel. He stepped into the glare of her headlights and brought his head up to look at her through the windshield.
Dear God.
Livy’s breath left her lungs in a rush. There might as well have been a cape waving in the breeze behind him. Those chiseled features weren’t simply a play of shadow. And the warmth of his voice was nothing compared to his deep brown eyes. The dark hair that brushed his brow curled just a bit at the ends. He smiled, showcasing a row of straight white teeth, and Livy thought her ovaries might explode right then and there. Ka-boom! It would totally be just her luck that her assassin would show up with killer good looks to match his profession.
“Straighten out the wheel. Then give it a little gas and let off. We’ll see if we can rock you out.” Oh, he could rock her out all right. His good looks had to be an illusion. Like a reverse mirage brought on by the cold and snow. Livy’s jaw went slack as she continued to stare. One brow arched curiously over his eye. “Ready?”
Huh? Ready for what? If it wouldn’t have made her look insane, she’d have given herself a solid slap across the face. “Oh yeah. Right.” She hit the button on her armrest and lowered her window a crack. “I’m ready. Just say when.”
“Okay.” He braced his arms on the hood of the car. “Now.”
It took a moment for her brain to kick into gear. He was Atlas, and Livy knew that under the layers of clothes, there was a body that could easily shoulder the weight of the world. Why did it have to be the dead of winter when a hot guy rented the cabin next door? Mid-August would have been soooo much better. He paused and looked up, quirking a brow. Shit! Her boot slipped in her haste to hit the gas and the engine revved. “Sorry! I’m ready now.”
“Okay.” His eyes locked with hers and Livy’s insides went molten. She hit the gas and the car rocked backward. “Again.”
He gave the car a solid shove and she eased her foot down on the accelerator. The snow gave way under the car and moved several feet back before rocking forward.
“One more and I think we’ve got it!”
He put all of his weight into the action and Livy stomped her foot down on the pedal. The car gained traction and backed out of the drift with little effort. Free of the deepest snow, she put the car in park and opened the door. “Thank you so much. I would have been screwed if you hadn’t come out to help. I owe you. Big-time.”
“Big-time, huh?” Good Lord, that smile should’ve been illegal. “What do you have in mind?”
ZEBRA BOOKS are published by
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Copyright © 2015 by Amanda Bonilla
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ISBN-13: 978-1-4201-3483-4
ISBN-10: 1-4201-3483-3
ISBN: 978-1-4201-3483-4