He cleared his throat and fixed a polite smile onto his face. “Excuse me?”
The woman lifted her eyes and aimed a bored stare his way. “Yes?”
“Sorry for the interruption, but did you happen to see a blonde woman come by in the last minute or two?”
“People come and go all the time.”
“This one would’ve been in pajamas.”
“Pajamas?”
“With a sheep theme.”
“Are we talking about a patient?”
Anderson pressed his lips together for a moment before answering. Sounding the alarm about a patient on the run seemed a bit over the top. He somehow doubted it would help Nadine want him around, too.
“Just a woman with a strong love of casual wear,” he said.
“And casual wear is now sheep-themed pajamas?” The woman lifted a dubious eyebrow.
“Guess it is.”
“Then, no.”
“No?”
“I haven’t seen a blonde woman in casual wear come by in the last one or two minutes.”
“You’re sure?”
“Every person who comes in or out has to walk right past me.”
“True enough. Thanks anyway.”
Fighting a need to curse, he turned back toward the stairs and stopped. From where he stood, he could hardly see the first set of elevator doors. He was standing up. If he’d been sitting down like the woman behind the desk, he doubted he’d be able to see them at all. It’d be easy enough to exit the elevator and veer to the right instead of the left.
“What’s at the other end of the hall?” he asked.
The woman let out a sigh. “What?”
Anderson pointed. “If I went down there instead of past you.”
“Staff lounge.”
“Any way to get out?”
“Are you sure this isn’t about a patient?”
“Yes,” he lied.
She sighed again. “There’s an exit. But in order to get to the exit, you need to get into the staff lounge. And in order to get into the staff lounge, you need a passkey. So unless your friend in the pajamas is a staff member, she couldn’t have gone that way.”
Anderson forced another smile. “Thanks again.”
His cop’s gut was rearing its head, telling him that Nadine would’ve found a way. He didn’t waste time questioning his instincts. Moving quickly, he took long, decisive steps across the linoleum. In seconds, he reached a door clearly labeled with a Staff Lounge sign. There he stopped and studied the locking mechanism. It was a simple, magnetic swipe system. With a quick glance around, he yanked his wallet from his pocket and chose a card at random, then jammed it into the slot. The light above the handle flickered but stayed red. He yanked his card free and threw the door a glare.
“Card get demagnetized?” said a voice from over his shoulder.
Anderson turned and nodded at the man who’d appeared behind him. “Guess so.”
The man smiled. “Happens to me about twice a week. Gotta love overpriced technology that only works a quarter of the time. Here, I’ll let you in with mine.”
“Thanks.”
A heartbeat later, he was standing inside the supposedly secure staff lounge, his eyes on the glass door at the rear of the room. Through it, he could see just what he needed to.
Nadine Stuart.
She was planted on the edge of the sidewalk in the taxi zone, her head down, her cell phone pressed to her ear. Anderson walked toward the door, watching as she hung up, stuck the phone into her bag, then fixed her eyes straight ahead. When she started to cross the narrow strip of pavement in front of her—presumably toward the bench she had in her sights—a navy-colored car on the same side of the road started to move, too. First at a crawl. Then a little faster.
Worry hit Anderson like a truck.
He threw himself against the door, slamming it open so hard that he half expected it to shatter or at least crack. He didn’t stop to check if it did. He dived forward. He wrapped his arms around Nadine’s waist. And he pulled her out of sight and out of harm’s way a heartbeat before the navy car screeched through the spot where she’d just been standing.
Chapter 2
Nadine’s chest compressed and the air blew out of her lungs as her body flattened between Anderson’s solid form and the concrete pillar behind her. Vaguely she was aware that just ahead on the other side of the bushes where they now stood, a car had first careened to a halt, then peeled out. But, mostly, the man pinning her to the spot took her attention.
His arms were firm around her waist, his hands warm on her hips. If she’d been able to breathe, she might’ve demanded to know what he thought he was doing. As it was, all she could do was work to draw in a gasp of air as she glared up at him. His ocean-blue eyes stared back, no apology for the intrusion touching them. She wondered why she hadn’t noticed before how intense and stormy his irises were. She felt like she was being sucked in. Drowning. But maybe in a good way. If that was even possible.
After what felt like a lifetime but what really couldn’t have been more than few seconds, he finally released his hold on her. Physically, anyway. His gaze still held her.
“Are you trying to get yourself killed?” he demanded gruffly.
She sucked in a trickle of oxygen, then managed to exhale a single-word reply. “No.”
“Could’ve fooled me.”
She tried again. Inhale. Exhale. Inhale. Speak.
“How do you figure?” It was better, if only slightly.
“You snuck out of the hospital and—”
“Care center.”
“What?”
“It’s technically not a hospital.”
“So?”
“So if you’re going to throw around accusations, you should get your facts straight first.”
“Are you helping me argue?”
“Someone has to. Clearly.”
His mouth twitched just a little. “Okay. You snuck out of the care facility and—”
“Sneaked,” she corrected.
“Really?”
“Well. It’s the more correct word. Snuck is acceptable, but if you want to sound smart...”
“So I seem like I care if I sound smart?”
“Do you really want me to answer that?”
“Fine. You sneaked out of a care facility where you’re supposed to be on bed rest with IV fluids because you suffered a head injury. In the middle of the night. Does that cover my concern about the death wish?”
“I asked to be checked out days ago,” she replied. “And they were going to let me go until you talked them into keeping me. My leaving isn’t a death wish. It’s a preservation of my sanity.”
“In your attempt to preserve your sanity, did it slip your mind that it’s not safe for you to be walking around alone?” he countered.
“I live here. I need to be able to cross the street without a bodyguard.”
“Someone just tried to run you down, Nadine.”
“Accidents happen.”
His mouth set in a flat line for a second before he answered. “You really think that was an accident?”
Her heart fluttered nervously, but she brushed it off. “Of course.”
“It’s the middle of the night. The spot where you crossed was well lit. There were no other cars, no other people and no reason for whoever that was to come tearing through like that. Think about it for just a second.”
She swallowed. She’d been so wrapped up in her escape that she hadn’t been paying much attention to what was happening around her. Had she even noticed the car before it zoomed past? Would she have seen it at all if it weren’t for Anderson? And if she had seen it, would it have been too late?
And what about the most important question? added a pushy little voice in her head.
Is Anderson right? Was the swipe in my direction purposeful?
Now that he’d put the idea forward, she couldn’t deny that it was a possibility. She’d seen what Jesse Garibaldi’s men—or one of them, anyway—was capable of. Her brother’s death was proof of the ruthlessness. And that didn’t even factor in the pipe bomb and fire that had killed her father and scarred her for life.
Unconsciously, she lifted her fingers and ran them over the puckered marks that followed the curve of her cheek. And unexpectedly, Anderson’s hand joined hers. She was too surprised to pull away. Even when he tipped her face up so that their eyes locked again, she didn’t move. Or maybe she couldn’t.
“Now that you’re thinking about it,” he said softly, “and you see that it might be true, do you understand why I might think you’re putting yourself in danger by running out like that?”
Nadine drew a breath. It annoyed her that he was right. It got her back up just enough that she couldn’t help but shake her head, and the motion dislodged Anderson’s grip. For a second, his hand hung in the air. Then he dropped it and shook his head, too.
“No?” he said. “Really? You can’t even acknowledge that staying here might be safer for you?”
“It doesn’t matter if you’re right or not,” she replied. “What matters is that I’m being treated like an incompetent invalid. I’m the one who found Garibaldi’s underground storage unit. Didn’t your partner tell you that?”
“Of course he did. Brayden told me—and the others—everything before he and Reggie left for Mexico.” He shot her a look as he said it.
She refused to be embarrassed. When “everything” happened, Nadine hadn’t known that Brayden Maxwell was an undercover detective searching for Jesse Garibaldi. All she’d been sure of was that Reggie Frost—a waitress at the local diner—had witnessed her brother Tyler’s murder. Nadine had just been protecting herself. So, yes. “Everything” might’ve included knocking Anderson’s friend on the head, a little bit of breaking and entering, and a small run-in with Reggie. But it also meant she’d kept her identity a secret, eluded a trained professional and only come forward because she wanted to.
Her reply came out strong. “So if you know everything, then why am I being kept tied to a bed in a hospital?”
He scratched at his chin, his face showing his frustration clearly. “Look, Nadine...”
“Yes, Detective?” There was more than a hint of sarcasm in her reply.
“It’s just plain safer for you to be in one spot.”
“My apartment is one spot.”
“Your apartment is also private.”
“Isn’t that better?”
“No. The hosp—care center, I mean, is full of people around the clock. Approaching you there would be a dangerous move for Garibaldi.” He spit out the man’s name with a grimace, then added, “We know that he doesn’t want to expose himself publicly, so staying here...”
“But for how long, Anderson? There are only fifteen long-term rooms here, and if I had to guess, I’d say you can only talk the doctors into believing I’m more injured than I am for another few days at most. And after that, you can’t expect me to just hide. The school is waiting for me to come back. People will start to talk. It’s not like it’s a secret that I’m here. You’re protecting me and exposing me at the same time.”
He had a funny look on his face, and she had a feeling he might’ve missed everything she’d just said.
“What’s wrong?” she asked.
“That’s the first time you’ve said my name.”
“Is there something you’d rather be called? You don’t look like much of an Andy, but if that’s what you want...”
“No.”
“Then what’s the problem?”
“You’ve been calling me ‘detective’ for a week.”
She crossed her arms over her chest. “Not when anyone can hear.”
“No,” he agreed. “When anyone can hear, you don’t call me anything at all.”
“We’re getting off topic.”
“You’re right. We are. We need to be talking about you going back upstairs.”
“No. We need to talk about the fact that I’m going home.”
“You can’t go home, Nadine. Garibaldi’s men could be watching your apartment. Waiting for a wrong move.”
Fear made her shiver. “I don’t want to stay here.”
He lifted his hand again, reached it toward his face, then dropped it to his side instead. “First, let’s go back upstairs. If you really think you can’t stay here, I’ll call the team. I’ll see what they say. We’ll find a solution. I promise.”
“You promise?” she echoed doubtfully.
“Do you think I like the idea of living my life on a bench outside your room? ’Cause I really don’t. I can’t get any further in my case if I’m playing watchdog. And I’d really like to build on what Brayden found out about Garibaldi.”
“So go work on it, then.”
“And leave you unprotected? I don’t think so. That’s not how I work. Whether you think so or not, keeping you alive is more important to me than making progress on the case.”
Another snarky reply popped into Nadine’s mind, but a trickle of conscience kept her from saying it aloud. She’d been right when she’d surmised that the detective had things he’d rather be doing. But she hadn’t really considered it in terms of a sacrifice on her behalf.
“Okay,” she said. “I’ll go back up. But I don’t want the IV. And I want to know that you’re going to keep that promise.”
His face cleared, a charming smile making an appearance. “I will.”
“Don’t be smug.”
“I’ll try not to be.”
“That sounded smug.”
“Sorry.”
“Can we just go?”
“Yep.” He stepped back and swept an arm out. “Ladies first.”
Nadine snorted. She moved ahead of him anyway. But as they came out from their secluded spot, she stopped abruptly. The care center’s lobby was jam-packed, and the wail of distant sirens cut through the air.
* * *
It took Anderson only a second to figure out that the facility was in the process of being evacuated. A couple of administrative staff held clipboards and were checking off names and filtering people through to frazzled-looking medical personnel. Mobile patients to one spot. Those in wheelchairs to another. He cast a glance toward Nadine. Whatever was going on, he was damned sure it had something to do with her. Which meant he needed to get her as far away as possible.
He grabbed her elbow and started to steer her away from the building.
“Well,” he said, “I guess you’re going to get your wish and not be stuck here any longer.”
She let him guide her for all of five steps before she planted her feet so hard that his fingers slipped from her arm. “Wait.”
“Seriously?”
“Don’t you think we should find out what’s going on?”
“It’s an evacuation.”
“An evacuation? Why are they still inside, then?”
“They must be confident that whatever’s happened, the lobby is secure,” he said. “And they could be doing a full head count before they escort them all outside. Easier to keep everyone straight if no one can wander off.”
Nadine’s gaze swiveled sharply to the scene. “A head count?”
“Yes.”
“So they’ll figure out that I’m gone.”
“Presumably. But I’m more concerned about making sure you’re safe than I am about reassuring the staff that they’ve got the right number of patients.”
“But it could be worse in the long run. I really think we should take a minute and ask what happened.”
Anderson’s teeth wanted to grind together, and he wondered if this new state of impat
ience was going to become permanent. “If I go over there and ask, will you agree to leave?”
She nodded. “It’s not like I want to stay.”
Now his teeth did grind together. “I’m going to walk you to the spot we were a second ago, and I want you to promise me you’ll stay put.”
Amusement made her brown eyes warm for a second. “Like a good girl?”
“Right. As if that’s the role you’re going for.”
A laugh escaped her lips as his hand closed on her elbow again, and for a second, Anderson was surprised into stillness. In the week since he’d met her, he hadn’t once heard Nadine laugh. It was a nice sound, and Anderson liked it enough that he almost forgot his irritation.
At least until she spoke again, her voice back to its slightly stinging tone. “Are we going?”
He jerked his head in a short nod of ascent. “Yep.”
He guided her quickly to the other side of the bushes, shot her his best stern-cop look, then moved away again. Fast enough that she couldn’t comment. As he strode toward the front of the building, though, he kind of wished he could hear that laugh of hers again. It was light and pleasant. Not quite musical. But almost.
Yeah, he definitely wanted to hear it again. Preferably soon.
He reached the automatic glass doors then, and they slid open. He tried to step through, smiling automatically as a woman in a nurse’s uniform approached him right away and stopped him from going any farther.
“Can I help you, sir?”
“I hope so.”
“Well, I’ll try. But I’m afraid we’ve got a bit of situation and can’t let in any visitors.”
“Yeah, I figured that much out.” He widened his smile. “I was actually already inside. Took a patient for a walk a short bit ago. Just a little worried about getting her back in.”
“What’s the patient’s name?”
“Nadine Stuart.”
The nurse bent to make a note, then lifted her head again and smiled back at him. “All right. She’s accounted for.”
“She is?” He couldn’t quite keep the surprise from his voice.
She laughed. “That’s a good thing. And her doctor himself noted that he saw her out here, so even better. We’re actually taking everyone outside shortly so the police can do their thing. I’m going to suggest just sitting tight for now.”
Undercover Protector Page 2