Storm Warnings

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by Judi Lind




  Table of Contents

  Cover Page

  Except

  Dear Reader

  Title Page

  Dedication

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Copyright

  He didn’t look like a skulking criminal…

  With his wind-tousled hair, two-day beard and crinkly sun lines at the edges of his eyes, he reminded her of a world-weary philosopher. Albeit a handsome, sexy one.

  He turned his head and caught her watching him, and, embarrassed, she whipped around and gazed out the windshield at the driving rain. A hurricane was coming, he’d said. A deadly hurricane. Were they really in extreme danger, or was it a ruse to get her to accompany him? Terror floated in her brain, battling common sense. Would he have saved her, only to kill her?

  Out of the corner of her eye she saw her cabin, Sunny Haven. There she’d be safe. Safe from the blinding rain and shrieking wind. Safe from nerves that jangled like downed power lines. And safe from this stranger. But where could she go to be safe from her attraction to him?

  Dear Reader,

  When a woman’s alone, who can she trust, where can she run…? Straight into the arms of HER PROTECTOR. Because when danger lurks around every corner, there’s only one place you’re safe—in the strong, sheltering arms of the man who loves you.

  You told us how much you loved the HER PROTECTOR promotion last year, so we’ve brought it back! And you’ll love these brand-new stories of women in jeopardy and in love—with the only person who can keep them safe.

  Since childhood, author Judi Lind has loved cozying up and watching storms, the rain pelting outside while she was safe and warm inside. But what if inside wasn’t safe, either, she asked herself. What if you were cut off from the world while danger stalked closer and closer? That was the starting point for Storm Warnings.

  I know you’ll enjoy this and all the books in the HER PROTECTOR series!

  Regards,

  Debra Matteucci

  Senior Editor & Editorial Coordinator

  Harlequin Books

  300 East 42nd Street

  New York, NY 10017

  Storm Warnings

  Judi Lind

  For my mother, Lois Cooper, the strongest woman I’ve ever known. This story is about picking up the pieces and starting over. A feat you’ve accomplished so many times, always with courage and grace.

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  Elisa Montoya—She had lost everything; would she also lose her life?

  F. Storm Delaney—Why would a skilled therapist hide himself away on a tiny island? And why was he always around when something went wrong?

  Heather Gellis—Had been a lifesaver since Elisa’s accident. Did her kindness hide an ulterior motive?

  Brian McPherson—Their brawny neighbor was always around to help. But was he sticking so close for another, darker, reason?

  Hank and Miriam Danziger—The elderly hotel owners seemed the soul of Southern hospitality. But they seemed very interested in Elisa’s problems.

  Betty and Mark Bowman—Owners of an island restaurant, they always seemed to be in the background. Watching Elisa’s every move.

  Carey Howard—Another local businessman. He quickly became Heather’s shadow. Or was his professed attraction just a ploy to stay close to Elisa?

  David Welton—The New York attorney had represented Elisa’s former boyfriend, now deceased. So why had he traveled hundreds of miles to deliver a document that could have been mailed?

  Prologue

  Double Dare Island, North Carolina

  The month of August melted away—hot, sticky, somnambulant. After Labor Day, the islanders said, the tropical breezes would finally arrive, cooling the land and, more importantly, lowering the ocean temperature.

  But as the days of September ticked by and the water temperature stayed in the eighties, the locals stopped talking about the weather. Bad luck. Despite their conspiracy of silence, the atmosphere hissed with a new urgency. The slow-moving townspeople walked a little faster. Their Southern drawls sped up just a bit. Frequently they interrupted their conversations to stare for long moments at the sea. Anyone keeping track of such things would have noticed that stores of canned goods and bottled water kept disappearing from Newton’s Grocery.

  The remaining vacationers and weekend beachgoers patted themselves on the back—how wise they’d been, taking their holiday after the summer crunch went back north to the cities.

  But the vacationers didn’t notice that crisp electricity in the air. Didn’t pay attention to the weather reports of a tropical depression in the Caribbean. The vacationers didn’t understand the signs: wide expanses of eighty-degree ocean water, warm, humid air, and high winds blowing in the same direction as those near the surface.

  The seafaring islanders understood all the signs. They could smell it in the air. They could feel it in their bones. Closer and closer came the oppressive feeling of doom.

  A hurricane was on the way—and they were ensnared in its path.

  Chapter One

  Elisa Montoya scuffed her foot in the frothy white foam that tickled her toes through her sandals. The water was warm and satiny as it washed the fine grains of sand from her feet.

  She glanced around, watching other tourists frolicking in the surf, or lazing on colorful beach towels. The scene was magical and serene, yet she stared at her surroundings with apathy. The charm of the tiny island off North Carolina’s coast was lost on Elisa.

  “A change of scenery will do you good,” her mother had argued.

  She hadn’t understood that for Elisa, a change of environment wouldn’t ease the confusion and nameless fear that clouded her days and plagued her nights. Nor would a different location blur the half memories that were too painful to remember.

  The night Jay had killed himself.

  The letter she’d received shortly after his death. She still couldn’t bring herself to open it, because she knew Jay’s suicide note would blame her. Remind her of her hurtful final words that must have shoved him over the brink.

  In the short time they dated, she’d grown fond of Jay Morrow, but her brutal rehearsal and performance schedule had put a heavy strain on the budding relationship. Elisa closed her eyes, recalling their last date, when he’d unexpectedly asked her to marry him. Although she blamed the rigors of her career, they’d both known the truth. She simply hadn’t loved him.

  Elisa would never forget the hurt mirrored in his eyes when he’d slipped the ring box back into his pocket.

  A beach ball skipped across the sand and nudged Elisa’s sore foot. Suddenly she had to escape the blaring radios and children squealing with delight. There were too many memories, too many regrets, in their laughter. Yet, even when she was alone, she couldn’t gain a moment’s respite from the gaping hole in her memory.

  If only she could have that time back. Those precious few hours before the accident. The damage was done, nothing would change that. But if she could just remember why it had happened, perhaps she could find a measure of peace.

  She turned her face into the sharpening wind and gathered her towel and tote bag and limped farther up the beach—toward solitude. A quarter mile. Then a half mile.
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  She trudged on, ignoring the sand’s bite against her bare legs, until an enormous dune blocked her path. With a growl of determination, Elisa slipped off her thongs and slogged up the grainy slope.

  When she reached the crest, she stopped and looked around. Fifteen feet beneath her was a narrow inlet, an inverted vee cut into the high bank. The incision left a small, perfect beach, populated only by a family of skittering sand crabs. A pile of rocks reposed almost in the center, as if delivered by the sea for Elisa’s private use.

  She closed her eyes and breathed in the tangy air. Surely here, for a short while, she could forget her problems.

  Smiling for the first time in days, she hobbled down the dune. As her bare feet crunched across the hot sand, she noticed that the beach was below the high-tide mark. Right now the tide was out, but she would have to make sure to climb back over the dune before her private cove became submerged in seawater.

  One of the boulders was relatively flat and sloped at an angle toward the sea. Perfect. She spread her beach towel and stretched out. She was tired, so very tired. Her eyelids drooped, and Elisa blinked rapidly, willing herself to stay awake. Sleep was no longer a friend; these days, her dreams were like movies, filled with images of happier times. And nightmares about the single night that had ended them.

  Switching on her portable radio, she scanned the dial for soothing classical music. Only a news broadcast preempted the static. Elisa listened for a few moments to a report of a tropical storm being upgraded to a hurricane. She looked out toward the horizon. Maybe the fringes of the storm would bring rain to the island. A respite from this hot, muggy wind.

  Unable to find any music, she snapped off the radio and leaned back, hugging her knees to her chest. Music wouldn’t soothe the savage beast snarling inside her, anyway.

  Almost in spite of herself, she lowered her head, allowing her gaze to travel down her body, lingering on her torso before moving on to her long, slender legs. Then, as if she wanted to taunt herself, her eyes fastened on her right foot.

  Except for a few bright red welts, the physical healing was almost complete. At least, as much as it ever would be. Even though she’d sustained a badly mangled ankle and a skull fracture, the hospital staff said she was lucky, very lucky, to have recovered with so little residual damage. Although her ankle still throbbed and burned, the headaches were easing with time. And for most people, a broken ankle and mild amnesia would be a small price to pay for the horrific automobile crash she had survived.

  But for Elisa Montoya, prima ballerina, a weakened right foot meant the end of her career. The end of life as she knew it. At only twenty-six, she was faced with a forced retirement, and she didn’t know what to do with the rest of her life.

  Nor could she go on with her future until she could remember what had propelled her into the darkness on that fateful night. A night that had ended in tragedy.

  Ignoring the darkening clouds rolling in on the horizon, she wound her long black hair into a knot and leaned back on the beach towel. Closing her eyes, she once again tried to recall those elusive hours before her little red sports car had plunged over the side of a steep ravine.

  What chain of events had transpired on that rainy night on the Pennsylvania Turnpike? The police intimated she was fleeing the scene of a suspicious death, but, fortunately, they had only circumstantial evidence. They’d grilled her for hours in the hospital before mercifully leaving her in peace.

  But she couldn’t be so kind to herself. Where had she been going? Why had she been traveling alone? If only she could remember. A shudder rippled through her body as she slid into slumber. If only, if only, if…

  F. STORM DELANEY III, M.D., held the binoculars to his eyes, scanning the deserted beach. Here and there a plastic wrapper skipped along the sand, propelled by the everincreasing gusts of wind. The seagulls and pelicans had deserted their flight patterns and were huddled, hundreds of them, along the shoreline.

  He looked back at the darkening horizon. Before going off to college and, ultimately, medical school, he had lived on the Outer Banks his entire life. His father, and his father before that, had been fishermen who spent their lives pitting their nautical skills against the treacherous sea. If anyone should have been able to gauge the intensity of the approaching tempest, it was he.

  Two days ago, the initial forecast had called for Hurricane Jake to slam into shore down in Florida, but wily old Jake had changed his mind, looping back out to sea. Now he was headed north, currently spiraling off the coast of Georgia. No telling where the fickle bastard would actually touch land.

  Storm’s ruminations were interrupted by Deputy Sheriff Roger Guidry, who was stalking across the blustering sand, his hand atop his head, hanging on to his hat. “All clear!” Roger shouted, when he was close enough to be heard over the roaring wind.

  Storm wasn’t so sure. Something kept nagging at him. Something they’d overlooked.

  But what? Heading up the volunteer unit in the North Beach area, Storm had personally supervised the evacuation of the beachfront. At the mere mention of Hurricane Jake’s possible approach, the remaining sunbathers had practically raced over one another to get to their cars. By now, all the beachgoers were safely stowed on the last ferry back to the mainland. But something didn’t feel right. What was he missing?

  He looked at his watch. The ferryman was going to start for Cape Hatteras at four o’clock sharp. Anyone left on the island had only forty minutes to make that boat back to relative safety.

  “I guess you’re right,” he finally conceded. “Why don’t you head on to the ferry?”

  “How about you? Aren’t you coming with us?”

  Storm cupped his hands around his mouth and shouted into the quickening wind. “I’m going to check out a few of those shacks off the main road! Most of them don’t have electricity—let alone a radio!”

  The deputy reached up to grab his hat as a gust of wind tried to steal it. “Most of them are staying out of pure cussedness. No sense you getting blown to kingdom come along with them.”

  “Maybe so.” Storm’s voice rose over the howling wind. “That’s their right. Mine, too. And I’m staying.”

  Guidry stuffed his hat back onto his head. “Doggone it, Doc, you’re one stubborn cuss. I ain’t going to waste my breath arguing with you. If you want to commit suicide, I guess nobody’s going to be able to stop you.”

  Suicide? Was that what the islanders thought was his goal? Storm shrugged. That might have been a possibility a year ago, but now…now he just wanted to be left alone. Besides, he didn’t think he was facing any immediate danger. Everyone knew this hurricane was a “loop-thelooper.” Like the metal sphere in a pinball machine, a loopthe-looper headed for one spot, only to glance off sharply and aim in a different direction. Hurricane Jake might hit the Carolina coast, or it might come ashore much farther north.

  He slapped Guidry on the shoulder. “Quit mothering me and head for the ferry. Otherwise you’re going to be stranded with me.”

  “Your funeral, Doc.” Throwing up his hands in resignation, Guidry loped down the path between the shifting dunes to the parking lot.

  Turning back to the deserted beach, Storm raised his binoculars once again and scanned the shore. Why couldn’t he shake this feeling that they’d missed something? Or someone?

  With a growl of frustration, he spun on his heel and started back to his Jeep. A momentary shift of the clouds cast a stark beam of sunlight on the soft sand, reminding him that it was still the middle of the afternoon. In another hour, if the hurricane kept heading their way, the sky would be as black as a sea cave. He couldn’t afford to waste what little daylight remained. He needed to get back to the village and help Danziger board up the hotel’s windows. Then he should take a last walk through-He stopped. Something flashed for an instant where an errant sunbeam touched the ground. At first Storm thought he had imagined the light, for the somber clouds smothered the frail sparkle almost immediately. He walked slowly, pushin
g aside waist-high blades of sea oats. There, behind that small dune, something silver…

  He brushed aside the last sheaf of weeds. Half-hidden by the blowing sand was a shiny silver bicycle.

  Just like the one he’d seen that dark, beautiful woman riding around town the past few days.

  The same hauntingly beautiful woman he hadn’t seen boarding the ferry.

  The “mystery lady,” as the villagers called her, had become a familiar sight lately. Although pleasant enough when spoken to, she kept to herself, seldom initiating conversation. But what a rare and lovely picture she was traversing the island on her bicycle—her long blue-black hair snapping in the breeze. Lean, supple legs pedaling effortlessly.

  But where was she now? Storm knew without a doubt that she hadn’t boarded the ferry.

  Drawing in a deep breath, he sighed and stared back toward the beach. The cloud cover drifted again, and the sky darkened perceptibly. Was she down there? Alone? Possibly hurt?

  With grim determination etched across his strong features, Storm stalked back to the beach.

  IT HAD BEEN a good performance. Although Elisa’s eyes were closed, the roar of the audience was proof enough. The offstage wind machine was hard at work, but the air it was blowing was hot and humid. She raised a hand to wipe a trickle of sweat from her brow. Funny, her heavy stage makeup felt unusually grimy. Too heavy for her face.

  She tried to open her eyes but was momentarily blinded by stinging perspiration that dripped off her fine black eyebrows and clung to her thick lashes.

  They hadn’t turned up the houselights yet. The audience was still a dark, roaring blur in front of her. Someone had cranked up the wind machine, it was whirring the thick air around her in a steamy vortex.

 

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