Alana smiled. “No trouble at all.”
Lorie wondered whether it actually wasn’t any trouble, or whether Alana had simply chosen not to let it be a problem. Either way, Alana handed Dad the key.
“Any new guests?” Matt’s tone was casual, but Lorie knew a lot was riding on the answer.
Alana shook her head. “Not since the couple from Pickertown this morning, who took Cabin 12. One attempt to register from the L.A. area, but I put them off. They wanted a week, too.”
“I’m so sorry.” Guilt washed over Lorie. “It’s all my fault. If it weren’t for me, you could have rented it and made a lot of money.”
“Money’s not that important.” Alana sounded definite. “Not where there’s a life at stake.”
“Don’t you dare feel guilty,” Matt added. “None of this is your fault. Remember that.”
“I keep trying.”
If how she felt now was any indication, it was going to be a long time before Lorie felt safe and guilt-free.
*
Seated around the dining table in Lorie’s cabin with her and her parents, Matt could see that they were as tight-knit as his own family. How well would an outsider fit into their little unit? Would they embrace a son-in-law, or would he always feel like an unwelcome addition? Of course, that was none of his business, unless the Lord changed his circumstances drastically.
Listening to the three of them chat as they shared glasses of iced tea, Matt leaned back in his chair. Lorie and her mother were doing most of the talking. Ben was sitting back looking as if he was trying unsuccessfully not to worry. Before long, the talk shifted back to their current circumstances.
“But what do I tell my Sunday-school class?”
“You call Dorothy and get her to substitute for you, Mom. The class will understand once we can tell them what’s going on. In the meantime, get the prayer chain started. That can only help.”
Matt spoke up. “Tell them you need their prayers, but don’t go into specifics. And don’t tell them where you are or how long you’ll be away. The first is for your safety, and answering ‘I don’t know’ for the second is nothing but the truth.”
“I hope we aren’t in for too long a haul.”
“Me, too, Dad. I’m sorry about all this.”
“You were in the wrong place at the wrong time.”
Lorie chewed her lower lip a moment. “You know, I’m not sure about that anymore. God knows everything from beginning to end. I’m not sure but what I was meant to be in that restroom lobby at that moment in time. I can’t believe I was meant to kill that man, but I know the Lord’s hand was on me.”
“And you did save Miss Montoya’s life.”
Something about that scenario still bothered Matt. Why would the woman leave Lorie to face trial like that, without even testifying on her behalf? It didn’t feel right.
Lorie turned to Matt. “So, where do we go from here?”
“Well, first and foremost, we do our best to protect you. Second, we try to catch the person responsible, so none of you are in any more danger.”
“I think we need to pray about this.”
Ben’s quiet assertion resonated with Matt. Matt nodded. Lorie and Margaret held out their hands, and Matt was drawn into their circle in an intimate, spiritual way.
Ben’s praying voice was as straightforward as his speaking voice.
“Lord, we’re in a mess here. Please give us the grace we need to go through this time of testing. Please protect and show us what to do. Give Matt wisdom and guidance. Let this person threatening us be brought to justice, and don’t let him harm Your children, Lord. We ask this all in the name of Your Son, Jesus. Amen.”
Margaret added her two cents’ worth to the prayer. “Lord, thank You that we heard of this plot against us before more damage could be done. Thank You for Your protection every day, not just today. You’re so good, Lord. Thank You that Lorie is safe. Amen.”
Lorie took a breath. “Thank You for Matt, Lord. Please keep him safe, and Mom and Dad.”
Lorie squeezed Matt’s hand, and for a moment, all conscious thought left him. Then he realized she meant for him to add to their prayer. Whew. This attraction had to stop before he lost control of the situation and the unthinkable happened. He couldn’t let Lorie or her parents be killed. Not on his watch. Instantly, he felt a rebuke in his spirit.
“Not on Your watch, Lord. Don’t let them be hurt on Your watch. And help us to remember we’re always on Your watch. Thank You. Amen.”
Lorie gave him a warm smile. “Thanks, Matt. I really needed that.”
She squeezed his hand again, and his brain nearly exploded.
Lord, keep me sane. And if this attraction is from You, please work things out so we can have a future together. If not…
That was the hard part.
If not, he had to let her go.
THIRTEEN
Matt asked Lorie and her parents over to supper with the family, but they turned him down. Lorie hoped the MacGregors would understand.
“Not a problem,” Matt assured her. “I’ll bring y’all a plate of everything.”
“You don’t have to do that.” Mom was always more polite than practical.
“It’s no problem, Mrs. Narramore.”
“Please call us Ben and Margaret.”
“Thank you.”
Matt left, instructing Lorie to lock the door after him and not let anyone else in.
Left alone with her parents, Lorie discovered they had taken a keen interest in Matt.
“That young man likes you.”
“Oh, Mom.”
“Your mother’s right. You should see the way he looks when he’s watching you.” Dad grinned. “I believe the boy’s smitten.”
“He’s hardly a boy, Dad. He’s older than I am. He went through school with Jen.”
Dad exchanged a glance with Mom, one of those smiling, parents-know-best looks. The kind Lorie loathed. Especially since they were usually right. That only made it worse.
“It doesn’t matter whether he likes me or not.”
“You like him, too.” Another Mom pronouncement.
“Now is not the right time.”
“I know you’re going through a lot, but he seems like a nice man.”
“You know how I feel about policemen.”
“He’s not a policeman, he’s a deputy.” Mom tried unsuccessfully to hide another smile.
Lorie sighed. “I can’t handle it, Mom.”
Dad reached out and took Lorie by the hand. “You know, cupcake, you can’t keep on blaming the entire world of law enforcement for what you experienced in California.”
“I know.” Lorie swung her hand in her Dad’s, the way she had when she was a little girl. “It’s just so hard to get past the emotional blockade.” Even though they were right. It wasn’t fair to blame Matt for every assumption San Diego County law enforcement had made of her guilt. Her cousin Noah worked for the San Diego Sheriff’s Department, for pity’s sake, and she hadn’t taken it out on him. But family was different. And she wasn’t sure she could let go of all of her fears and defensiveness just because she knew Matt didn’t deserve them.
Mom dragged her into a hug. “I’m sorry, sweetie. You know I just want you to be happy.”
“I’ll be happy when all this is over and our lives can go back to normal.” If that ever happens.
A knock at the door and Matt’s voice told them he was back with supper. A delicious aroma assaulted Lorie’s senses when she opened the door. “Oh, that smells so good. Come on in.”
“Hope you don’t mind if I join you. I brought enough for all of us, and I’ll feel better keeping an eye on you.”
“Of course we don’t mind.” Mom spoke for all of them. She started getting plates down from the cupboard.
Lorie got flatware out of the drawer. Dad grabbed a basket of goodies from Matt. This was turning into a picnic. Indoors. With her favorite chaperones.
Lord, help me to
remember why we’re all here. This is about our lives.
Part of her couldn’t help wishing, however, that she and Matt were on a nice picnic somewhere, maybe under a tree, with warm sunshine and the sweet scent of honeysuckle in the air. But dwelling on that would be foolish—and letting her mind wander might put her at risk.
“Who’s watching to make certain nobody sneaks onto the ranch?”
“You mean besides the security video and the SWAT officer from West Bluff? I called the department. We’ve got a deputy volunteering to be here on his free time. Then, too, my brothers are no slouches. My sisters and the in-laws, either. If anything were to happen, if someone tried to come onto the property with the intent to do harm, there are plenty of us to see that doesn’t happen.”
Matt’s words gave her a confidence she hadn’t felt since the first note appeared.
“I just thought of something.”
“What’s that?” Dad looked up from the plate of chicken fried steak.
“The harassment started while I was still in San Diego. After I moved back here, it let up for months. I thought it was over. Why now? What changed?”
“Maybe they were letting you have a breather. Letting you think it was over, before this new plan of attack.”
Lorie swallowed a bite of potato salad. “I can’t imagine who it could be, unless it’s someone connected with Carl’s operation. Oh, I wish I’d never gone to that gala dinner and auction.”
“You didn’t have a choice, from what you told your mother and me,” Dad said, clearly trying to comfort her.
Lorie shook her head. “It was such a huge event, crawling with media. No excuses, be there or else, unless you’re dying.”
Lorie swallowed hard. If she hadn’t been there, would Carl still be alive? Or would Ms. Montoya have killed him? Would he have killed Ms. Montoya? The story might have had a vastly different ending if she’d had a flat tire and couldn’t make it, or had contracted, say, pneumonia. Anything. But as she’d said earlier, she had to believe the events were part of God’s plan. A plan that would come clear to her in time—she just wasn’t there yet.
“Lorie, are you all right?”
Lorie shook herself. The words finally penetrated after Mom repeated them.
“I will be. This is just one more trial. I pray the Lord will help us through it.” If He didn’t… No. That didn’t bear consideration.
*
Matt’s hand tightened on Lorie’s, and something flared in her eyes. Hope?
“Let’s finish eating this before it gets cold.”
“Are you—”
The phone rang.
Fear flashed across Lorie’s face.
“Who knows we’re here?”
Matt got up. “I’ll answer it.” He crossed to the phone and picked up the ancient black receiver.
“Rob Roy Ranch.”
But it was only Jim on the phone. “We had a call from Leonard Adderson wanting half a dozen cabins for a weekend party.”
“Leonard Adderson?” Matt’s voice was louder than he’d have liked. Three heads swiveled to look in his direction. He lowered his voice. “We just ran into him at Proudfoot’s in West Bluff.”
“All of you?” Jim’s question came quick and hard.
“Yup. What did you do?”
“I told him that we didn’t have that many vacancies. Also, due to the family nature of the ranch, we couldn’t allow him to bring his party here, not without having to remove the other guests, and they had first priority.”
“Good thinking. But we’ll have to keep a closer eye on things now.”
“Yep. Wanted to give you a heads-up.”
“Thanks.”
Matt rang off and looked back at the Narramores. “Nothing too serious—just a cabin rental request. We turned it down.”
“What is it about Adderson you don’t like?” Ben had his head cocked to one side. “Aside from his flamboyant lifestyle, I mean.”
“The day I met Lorie, I’d narrowly missed making a drug bust. A lead on a meth lab fizzled. The cooks had gotten advance warning and cleared everything out. They were gone before we arrived. We’d put a lot of time into the investigation.” He took the three of them in with a look. “I hope I can trust you not to let this go any further. Adderson owned the property where the meth was being made. And he’s been tied to multiple other properties associated with drugs before.”
Alarm flared in Lorie’s eyes. Margaret reached out and took Ben’s hand.
“Do you think he’s connected with Carl’s drug organization? Could he be behind the threats?” Ben’s voice was quiet, as if he were concerned someone might be listening at the door.
“From what I can tell, no, but his wanting to rent cabins today, after seeing me with all of you—”
“It does seem a trifle opportune.” Margaret squeezed Ben’s hand.
“That makes me nervous about staying here.” The way Lorie gnawed her lower lip emphasized the statement.
“Try not to worry. The department is keeping him under surveillance. You’re safe here.”
“What about church tomorrow? I know Mom wanted to go to First.”
“If you don’t mind, we could go together to Grace Church. It’d be better than going back to Daingerville.”
“Is that around here?” Ben asked.
“Yes, about three miles down the road in Preston. My brothers and sisters and family are there every week. I join them when I can, but I’m almost never here.”
“Well, you’re working.” Ben nodded. “Hard to be two places at once, though I’d have done it a few times during my military career if I could have.”
Margaret reached out and squeezed Ben’s hand. Obviously, they had a good marriage. The same sort Matt wanted for himself one day. The sort he’d kept too busy working since the breakup with Lorene to try to find.
Not that he hadn’t had ladies interested in him, especially at his church in town, but somehow, none had ever generated more than a slight interest on his part. Nothing like the connection he felt with Lorie.
Even with her parents sitting here in the same room with them, he felt warmer just being near her.
If this isn’t from You, Lord, please let it end well, so we can still be friends.
A memory of Lorene surfaced. The diamond engagement ring glittered on her left hand as she showed it off to their friends. He’d felt so proud then, so happy the head cheerleader had chosen a linebacker instead of the quarterback. So glad she didn’t want to wait until they went off to college to get married.
Then his football scholarship to the University of Louisville came through, and suddenly, Lorene didn’t want to leave Arkansas. They’d argued about it, to the point where she’d announced she wouldn’t marry him unless he changed his mind. It was an uncharacteristic argument. Up to that point, he’d always given her what she wanted, always conceded. This time, however, the school had the Justice Administration degree he needed. He tried reasoning with her, to no avail.
Two nights later, he caught her with Owen, the quarterback, at their spot on Lake Cholah. Matt’s stomach churned, remembering Lorene’s hurried “I can explain” along with Owen’s “It’s not what you think.” Right. Sure it wasn’t.
Later, she’d tried to stay friends. Matt had cut her off every time she tried to talk to him, had walked away after Lorene shoved his ring into his shirt pocket. He had gone to Kentucky and not looked back, but news of Lorene and Owen’s hasty marriage, followed by the birth of their daughter five months later, told him she’d been cheating on him a lot longer than he’d imagined.
“Matt? Is something wrong?” Lorie’s voice broke through into his unhappy thoughts.
“I’m okay. Why? Did you hear something?”
Lorie shook her head. Matt was thankful that she didn’t look like his former Lorie. It was a small blessing. Maybe not so small.
Thank You, Lord, for Your guidance in this situation, and please help us to get out of it safely by Your grace.
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Saturday sank into oblivion. They finished the dessert Matt had brought over, a delicious Sacher torte Alana liked to bake.
“Well, I guess we’d better turn in.”
Margaret gave Lorie another big hug. “Call us if you need anything.”
“You, too, Mom.”
“Are you sure you don’t want to come and sleep on the couch in our cabin?”
“Mom, I’ll be fine.”
Watching her parents walk to Cabin 4 with Matt, Lorie felt a sense of foreboding. Colleen whined from the bedroom where she’d been shut in. The cats’ displeased meows added to the cacophony.
“Oh, poor things.” Lorie opened the door and buried her hands in Colleen’s amber-and-white fur as the cats headed for the cozy couch. “You poor baby. Are you feeling better? Huh, girl?”
Colleen responded by licking her hand.
Lorie checked Colleen’s bandage. It hadn’t worked loose. That was a blessing. The last thing she needed on top of everything else she was going through was for Colleen to get a bad infection.
An attempt to pet the cats was met with disdain on their part. Oh, well. They’d forgive her eventually. She hoped.
After she’d changed into her pajamas, Lorie realized she’d still forgotten to bring anything to read. She picked up the Gideon Bible again and opened it to the front, flipping through the pages. The cadence of Renaissance language, the Elizabethan flavor of the words, made them seem like poetry.
Depth of mercy. Grace. Peace.
Lorie flipped the book open to the back, and thumbed through until she came to “Peace I give unto you. Not as the world giveth, peace give I unto you.” Jesus’s words gave her comfort. Peace in the midst of storm. That’s what it was all about.
Lord, thank You for Your peace. Thank You for this place to shelter ourselves from those who would seek to harm my family and me.
The feeling of peace lasted, and Lorie readied herself for bed. Colleen lay at the foot of the bed again as Lorie tucked herself in and turned out the light.
Despite the sensation of peace, sleep was a long time in coming.
*
A knock at the door seemed to come just after Lorie had fallen asleep. But, blinking at the light leaking through the draperies, she realized it must be morning.
Love Inspired Suspense June 2014 Bundle 2 of 2: Forced AllianceOut for JusticeNo Place to Run Page 55