HOT ON HIS TRAIL

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HOT ON HIS TRAIL Page 5

by Linda Winstead Jones


  He nodded. "I know what you mean. You be careful, though. When I came on duty I heard a murderer from Huntsville escaped this afternoon." Billy shook his head, a quite large head on a long, narrow neck, she noticed.

  "Really?"

  "I hear it was all over the news, but since I'm on night shift I slept right through it." He gave her a crooked smile. "Didn't you see nothing about it?"

  "Nope. I guess I was busy packing for the trip when the news was on."

  The trooper looked through the window to the truck, where Taggert stirred. Just a little.

  "I'd better get moving. In a couple of hours it'll be my turn to sleep and Pookie will have to do the driving." Pookie? What was she thinking! "He'll expect to find us a ways down the road when that happens."

  Shea shuffled the drinks and Moon Pies to make sure they were secure in her hands, said good-night to the clerk and the trooper, and escaped into the muggy night air with a sigh of relief. He hadn't recognized her! Would he later, when he saw her picture on television or in the newspaper? Maybe. Maybe not.

  She climbed into the truck and placed her purchases on the seat between her and Taggert. He opened his eyes, just slightly, and reached up to remove the ball cap.

  And the trooper left the store with a cup of coffee in his hand.

  Taggert leaned forward, moving slowly toward her, his lips parted to speak. The trooper was just about to pass in front of the truck, and his head rotated in their direction. After her heart leaped into her throat, Shea drew a deep breath and followed her instincts.

  She took Taggert's face in her hands and pulled his mouth to hers, kissing him to hide his face from the trooper. Out of the corner of her eye she saw Billy smile as he passed. She watched the trooper turn his attention to his patrol car, his smile still in place, and all the while her lips were glued to Taggert's.

  Feeling the danger was past when Billy stepped into his car, she started to pull away, but Taggert grabbed the back of her head with tender fingers and held her in place. His mouth moved over hers, soft and tender, as his tongue tasted her lower lip. Heavens, he was warm, softly arousing, close and intimate. There was no searing demand in the kiss, in fact it was quite sweet, but as it continued, she instinctively kissed him back, and something deep within her stirred. Something that didn't need stirring, thank you very much.

  Taggert's hand slipped down and settled at the back of her neck, and a low growl escaped from deep in his throat as he continued to kiss her quite thoroughly. He didn't touch her anywhere else, but Shea felt that kiss all through her body. Her nipples hardened, her knees shook, she felt her heart rate increase.

  The trooper pulled away, and Shea turned her head to remove her lips from Taggert's. He didn't fight, but instead let his head fall heavily onto her shoulder. "Did I tell you how good you smell?" he whispered. "Fresh and clean and feminine. I didn't know I would miss the way a woman smells," he said in a low, groggy voice.

  "Go back to sleep, Taggert," Shea said, placing her hands on his shoulders and forcing him gently into his corner of the truck. "With any luck, you won't even remember this."

  "Nick," he said as he settled back with his eyes drifting closed. "Any woman who kisses like you do should call me Nick."

  "Nick," she said softly, placing the baseball cap on his head. He immediately removed it and tossed it to the floor, where it laded on a small stack of T-shirts Lenny had contributed to the cause.

  She sighed heavily and started the rumbling engine, pulling away from the pumps and onto the two-lane road. Heavens. If that trooper ever did recognize her and realize who the man in the truck was, she would be in deep. Way too deep.

  About a mile down the road, she took the cell phone from her purse and switched it on. Mark was on speed dial. This would be her last chance to use the phone. Once they got where they were going it wouldn't be safe. The cellular company could trace them to this area, but right now they were on the move. From here they could go anywhere. Georgia, Florida. South Alabama.

  "Mark," she said, when her cameraman answered the phone. "It's me."

  "Shea?" he shouted. "Oh my, are you all right? Did he hurt you? Where are you? I'll come—"

  "Mark, I just have a minute," she interrupted. "Listen carefully."

  She heard him breathing, but he said nothing. "First of all, call Boone in Birmingham and tell him to call my folks and Clint and Dean and tell them I'm all right."

  "Are you?" Mark asked softly.

  "Yes, I'm fine," Shea assured him. "Ask Boone to check into the Taggert trial and the Winkler murder and see if he finds anything odd."

  "Done," Mark said, all-business.

  "Then call my friend Grace Madigan and see if she'll do the same. She and Boone will take different tacks, so they might come up with different results." Grace's husband was a private investigator in Huntsville, and she'd been working for him for months. Mark and Boone and Grace. Shea didn't trust anyone else.

  "Okay. Shea? What's going on?"

  "Just … trust me, Mark."

  She heard his uncertain sigh over the crackling line.

  "Do you have caller ID yet?" she asked.

  "Nope."

  "Don't get it," she said. "I'll call you in a few days and this will only work if you don't know where I am."

  "Jeez, Shea," he said in a low voice. "This sounds dangerous."

  She glanced at the man sleeping beside her. "It is," she said softly.

  * * *

  Tara, Nick thought dizzily as he opened his eyes. A gravel driveway crunched beneath the slow-moving truck tires, and the moonlight shone brightly on … Tara.

  "You're awake," the weathergirl said in a low voice. "That's good. I was afraid I wouldn't be able to rouse you, and I really do not want to spend the night in this truck."

  He'd been out for hours. Plenty of time for Shea Sinclair to reconsider her foolish plan and drive him directly to the nearest police station.

  But she hadn't. "Where are we?"

  "Marion," she said with a smile. "My aunt's house. They're on vacation. My cousin Susan lives in California, and her first baby is due in a couple of days. Aunt Irene and Uncle Henry won't be home for weeks."

  The gravel drive circled the house, and Shea stopped before the back door. Not Tara, Nick thought as he looked at the peeling white paint and overgrown garden. But not a police station, either. It was such a relief to know that someone, anyone, believed in his innocence. He might be a good story to the weathergirl, but she had to believe… She wouldn't bring him here if she thought he was guilty. She wouldn't stay with him if she thought he was a cold-blooded killer. She didn't kill the engine, but jumped out of the driver's seat to circle the truck and open his door. She offered an arm in assistance, and he took it and stepped down.

  "You wait here," she said softly, "while I hide the truck in the barn."

  "There's a barn?" He leaned on her and remembered … something. The way she smelled, the way she tasted. The way she tasted?

  "It's pretty far back on the property and hidden from the road, so I don't think anyone will even think to look for the truck there. It's too far for you to walk, though." She left him leaning against the kitchen door and hurried back to the truck. As it rumbled away, he watched the tail lights. When he couldn't see them anymore, he closed his eyes and slumped to the ground. How did he know what she tasted like?

  The next thing he knew Shea was there again, and he was sitting on the porch with his back against the door. He'd fallen asleep, or passed out, while she'd been taking care of hiding the truck. She lifted a potted plant and reached beneath it, pulling out a key. What kind of a town was this?

  "The kind of town where people trust their neighbors," Shea said as she assisted him to his feet and placed an arm around his waist, propping him up while she slipped the key into the lock.

  "Did I ask that out loud?" he whispered.

  "You mumbled," she said, opening the door to a dark kitchen.

  "No lights," she said. "I don't expect
any of the neighbors are up this late, and most of the house is shielded by trees anyway, but I don't want to take any chances. We haven't come this far just to get caught because we turned on a light."

  We, she said.

  "The moonlight will do," she said sensibly. "For now."

  He let her lead him through the kitchen, through a huge dining room, to the foot of the stairway.

  "Can you make it up the stairs?" she asked, uncertainty in her voice.

  "Of course I can," he snapped, angry at his weakness, at his inability to think straight. Tomorrow morning everything would be better. Tomorrow he would know what to do.

  Moving up the stairs was slow going, with Shea on one side, the banister on the other and his body being completely uncooperative. He was breathless when they reached the first landing, near to passing out again when they reached the second floor.

  "Carol's room is the closest," Shea said, turning him to the right. "I hope you like purple."

  Nothing had any color in the moonlight, but oh, the double bed looked soft, and warm, and if he could just make it that far…

  At the edge of the bed he tumbled, falling to the soft mattress, pulling Shea with him. She squealed a little, in surprise, just before they laded with a gentle bounce.

  He held on tight to still the spinning in his head. Shea Sinclair could make the spinning stop. She could ground him. He drew her close, testing her softness and warmth. Feeling the wonderful way her curves settled against the length of his body.

  "You can let me up now," she whispered.

  "Not yet." He buried his face against her hair, reached out and removed the rubber band that contained the dark strands, so her locks spilled down and around. "You smell so good."

  "So I've been told," she muttered unhappily.

  "You smell like sunshine and soap and … sex."

  "I do not," she insisted, pushing against his chest.

  He didn't let go. He hadn't slept in a real bed in ten months, had forgotten what a soft mattress felt like. He'd forgotten what a woman felt like, but Shea brought it all back. The feminine shape. The gentle suppleness.

  "How do I know how good you taste?" he asked, pulling her close and resting his head against her shoulder as he laid one leg, the uninjured one, over both of hers.

  "You don't," she snapped. "You're delusional."

  He pressed his lips against her neck, very briefly. "No," he said. "I'm not." He used what little strength he had against her, holding her down gently, locking his leg around hers, laying an arm over her chest.

  "Let me go."

  "I just want to sleep," he said, feeling himself drift away. "And I want to hold you while I sleep. Smell you. Taste you."

  "Taggert…" she said, her voice distant and uncertain.

  "I won't hurt you, I swear," he whispered. "I would never…"

  As he drifted away he heard her whisper, "I know."

  * * *

  Taggert was heavy, warm and massive, and sound asleep. It might've been possible to slip out from under him and make her way to Susan's room for the night, but Shea allowed herself to remain beneath him as her own exhaustion washed over her.

  Besides, maybe he really did need to hold her as he slept. She liked that idea, that someone needed her in such a simple way. She didn't have to worry about him trying anything funny. He was in no shape, physically, to be a threat to her.

  Stretched out beside and over her exhausted body, touching and holding her, Taggert seemed massive and overwhelming. He fixed her to the mattress with his muscled arm and one long leg. He leaned into her, too, in a way that pinned her down without crushing her beneath his weight.

  Still at last, safe in the dark, she finally had time to ask herself the big question. What had she done? Taggert had given her the chance to escape, and other chances had come and gone. Yes, this was a big story, but it was more than that.

  The same sense of right and wrong that had driven Dean to the U.S. Marshals Service and Boone to the Birmingham Police Department and then into his own P.I. practice lurked within her, too. She couldn't stand by while an innocent man went to prison, and maybe even to the electric chair. It went against everything her parents had taught her. Justice. Honor. Moral integrity. Okay, they were old-fashioned ideals in a technical world, but they were what she knew and believed in.

  She sank into the mattress, Taggert's heavily muscled leg over hers, his arm across her midsection, his breath against her neck. She had to admit, as her eyes drifted closed, that it felt good, after an endless, crazy day, to sleep entangled with a long, warm man. It was a sensation she'd never experienced before, one she was surprised to like so much.

  Shea didn't drift toward sleep, but fell. Hard and fast.

  * * *

  Chapter 5

  « ^ »

  She remembered this large old kitchen well. Summers spent in this house had been magical for Shea. For a few weeks she had the sisters she'd never known, a mother who danced in the kitchen and a father who told gross jokes to make the girls laugh.

  Not that she didn't love her own family. She adored her brothers, each and every one of them, and her parents had been wonderful to her. They just weren't much fun. Her mother was reserved and her father was solemn. The only time she'd seem them display any real emotion was when Clint had run off to join the rodeo. Her mother had almost fainted, and her father had turned quite pale and said words she'd not heard from his mouth before or since.

  They would be livid when they learned that she'd passed up a chance at escape to remain with Nick Taggert. And they would find out. When this was all over, she couldn't let anyone think he'd kept her captive this long! She'd tell anyone who would listen that he'd tried to let her go a couple of hours after the initial kidnapping.

  She'd awakened this morning to find herself still trapped in his arms, but extricating herself had not been difficult. He'd been dead to the world. His breathing had been deep but normal, and he hadn't felt hot to her, so she decided to believe that he was simply sleeping deeply. Not unconscious. If he got worse, she would have to call in a doctor. Nick wouldn't like that, and if anyone knew where they were hiding they wouldn't have time to find the real murderer. But what good would the truth be if Taggert was dead?

  Shea rearranged the sizzling bacon in the pan and sang along with the cassette that played in the boom box on the windowsill. With two female cousins to hang out with and Aunt Irene's all-time-favorite music playing most of the day, they had formed their own girl group every summer. They hadn't sung and lip-synched to the popular stuff of the day, but to good old sixties Motown. The Supremes. Martha Reeves and the Vandellas. Oh, Shea had so wanted to be a Vandella, a doo-wop singer in a slinky green sequined gown and a voice that made people stop in the streets.

  Well, she had a voice that made people stop in the streets, but not for the right reason. Still, she wanted to be able to doo-wop, and when she'd stayed with her cousins and her Aunt Irene, she had. They never threatened to gag her the way Boone always did when he caught her singing.

  "Heat Wave" came on, and Shea couldn't help but sing along; very softly, of course, to keep from disturbing the man who slept upstairs. She turned the bacon again and then threw in one of the old moves she and Susan and Carol had practiced. A step to the right, a swing of the hips, a twirl … and she found herself facing the tall, dark man who leaned against the kitchen doorjamb. In spite of herself, she squealed.

  A wry smile crept across his face. "Good morning. I smelled the bacon."

  In the jeans he'd slept in and a very wrinkled plaid shirt, his short dark hair only slightly mussed, Nick Taggert still was temptingly handsome. That stubbled chin made him look rough and untamed.

  Shea quickly gathered her composure. "I found a package in the freezer, and a half-dozen eggs in the fridge. What are you doing out of bed? I was going to bring you breakfast when it's finished. You should be resting."

  His smile didn't last long. Too bad. It was rather nice. "Where's the pistol?"
he asked in a low voice.

  She prepared to do battle. "Sitting in the front seat of my car, along with what's left of our clothes."

  "At Lenny's," he said, his nostrils flaring slightly.

  "At Lenny's." She wasn't going to allow him to intimidate her. They had too much to do, no time to waste. Besides, with three older brothers to harass her all her life, she'd never intimidated easily. "What's the matter, did you plan to shoot someone this morning?"

  "No."

  "Neither do I." She flashed him a grin. "So you see, we don't need that pistol at all."

  He sighed, long and slowly, before speaking again. "Why are you still here? Didn't you wake up this morning and come to your senses?"

  "Apparently not," she answered softly, aware that no matter how she tried to pretend otherwise, the mere presence of this man kindled something inside her. Cool was impossible, calm was unlikely. She, who was always so together, felt jumpy when he rested those blue eyes on her this way.

  Shea dismissed her inappropriate attraction for a dozen different reasons. She'd never slept with a man before. That alone might give her these tingly, jumpy sensations. They were surviving a crisis together. She'd probably be attracted to any halfway decent looking man in these dire circumstances. And Nick Taggert was much more than halfway decent looking.

  Then there was a woman's habit of being drawn to exactly the wrong kind of man. Shea had never let herself fall into that trap before, but Taggert was definitely the most wrong kind of man a woman could imagine.

  He limped to the kitchen table and took the nearest chair, moving cautiously, stretching his wounded leg carefully before him. "Now that my head is clear, I want you to explain to me exactly why you're still here and what you're planning to do."

  "You're a great—" Shea began.

  "A great story, I know," he snapped. "Honey, I'm already a great story. I kidnapped you on camera. You could leave here right now and be interviewed by all the major networks. Every morning show in the country will want you to be a guest, every—"

 

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