by C. J. Miller
They had three seconds before the thugs figured out she wasn’t in the bathroom and started looking for her. Taking Reilly’s hand and ignoring the surge of heat in his touch, she ran with him toward the door.
When they were outside, he stopped, setting his hands on her arms, forcing her to face him. “What’s going on? What are you—”
She cut him off and ignored the heat lightning that ricocheted between them at the contact. They didn’t have time for delay. “Someone from my past has found me.”
His eyes narrowed in thought. “Are you sure?”
Yes, she was sure. She didn’t know how they had found her, but they had. “Please, we have to go. They can’t know where we’re headed, or nowhere is safe.” She took his sleeve and tugged him in the direction of his car. He followed her.
Reilly swore under his breath. “I didn’t see anyone tailing us.”
It didn’t matter now. All that mattered was getting away. “We’ll worry about the how later. Please, let’s just go!”
Reilly drew her to a stop. “Which car is theirs?”
Carey scanned the parking lot. A minivan. A Cadillac. And the black sports car. “The black car.” The one parked a space down from Reilly’s white sedan.
Reilly dragged his keys from his pocket and opened the pocketknife attached to his key ring. He pressed the button to unlock his car doors. “Get inside the car.”
He went to the front tire of the black car and slit the rubber. Then he did the same to the back tire. Hearing a shout, Carey looked to the entrance of the building. The thugs had seen them and were racing in their direction.
“Hurry,” Carey yelled from the passenger seat.
Reilly circled his car and got inside, started the engine and zipped out of the spot. Carey couldn’t tear her eyes from the side mirror. The thugs climbed in their car, prepared to give chase.
“Why did you slit both tires?” she asked. The seconds might have cost them.
“In case they have a spare. They won’t have two,” he said, his jaw tight with tension.
Turning in her seat to watch behind them, fear drained from her chest when they skidded to the side of the road. “They stopped.”
Reilly swore under his breath and banged his fist against the steering wheel. “I made a rookie mistake. They must have followed my electronic trail.”
“What mistake?” she asked. Was it a mistake that would cost their lives? “Did they follow your cell? Your pager?”
“No, my cell is department-issued. The signal bounces across cell towers at random locations across the country. But I used my credit card at the minimart on 59. We’re still traveling on 59. If someone was watching my cards, they would have gotten the location.” He glanced at her, his face filled with questions. “Someone who can trace credit card activity must be serious about finding you.”
Panic swelled inside her. How could she answer that without giving away too much information?
She got lucky and Reilly didn’t wait for her to answer. She was faintly aware of him calling the police. But most of her was reeling in relief at having escaped another close call with Mark.
* * *
Taking back roads to his family’s house added a few hours to the drive, but Reilly wasn’t taking chances more men had been stationed along the main highway looking for his car. The near miss at the rest stop had convinced him that the man—or men—after Carey meant business.
The ranch came into view in the distance, atop a hill accessible by vehicle via one road that scaled to the summit, weaving across the terrain. His father would see him as he drove closer to home, no trees blocking the view. The final few miles of the trip brought the familiarity and comforts of home.
Carey stirred when he stopped the car in front of the house and burrowed deeper beneath her blanket sweatshirt. He touched her arm and she started, turning in her seat, her eyes wide.
He was quick to reassure her. “You’re okay. We’re at my family’s house.”
She pressed her hand over her heart. “Sorry, I’m a little jumpy.”
What must it be like for her to live in a constant state of fear? To never have a sense of family and security? She must live one day to the next, no plans for the future, spending her time running from the past. After being chased from the rest stop, her fears of being found didn’t seem as extreme as he’d first believed. The man searching for her was dangerously dedicated to finding her. Reilly wanted to find the words to reassure her that everything would work out. He’d see to it. “You’ll be safe here. My family has over three hundred acres of land and the nearest town is over ten miles away. We live in the middle of nowhere.”
An uneasy expression crossed her face and it dawned on him she might fear being alone with a man without a place to flee. So much for finding the right words. “My mom will love having another woman in the house,” he added.
She sat up, unbuckling her seat belt. “I’m sorry I wasn’t good company on the drive. I was so tired.”
Reilly made a sound of acknowledgment and didn’t bother mentioning he was dead on his feet. He looked toward the house, up to the second-floor front window of his bedroom. The brick chimney smoked into the cold air and Reilly smiled at the thought of a warm bed, a hot cup of cocoa and a huge homemade meal. His mom was great at keeping food around for him, his dad and his brothers. The refrigerator and pantry would be stocked in preparation for the holidays.
They got out of the car and Reilly carried her duffel and his bag to the front porch. He rang the bell once and his mother pulled the door open, her arms extended.
Letting out an exclamation of joy, she hugged Reilly close. “And you brought a friend with you.” The word friend hung thick with implication. Reilly ignored it. He’d explain later the reasons she was here. For now he wanted Carey to feel at home.
“Mom, this is Carey. Carey, this is my mom, Jane.”
Jane took Carey’s hands in hers. “It’s a pleasure to meet you. Come inside and we’ll get you settled.” Jane moved away from the door to allow them entrance.
“Thank you for having me,” Carey said, stepping across the threshold and wiping her feet on the mat.
“I welcome anyone who’s a friend of my son,” Jane said. Again the word friend came with a questioning look to Reilly.
Twenty minutes later his mother had taken Carey upstairs and decided she would sleep in his old bedroom. “You and Harris can bunk in his room,” Jane said with a smile.
His mom was pleased he’d brought a friend to visit, but Jane was as old-fashioned as June Cleaver. No sleepovers with girls, even if her sons were well into their thirties.
Reilly shrugged at his mom, letting her know the arrangement was fine even if the image of Carey stretched out in his bed beside him brought fresh waves of heat washing over him. A ridiculous thought. He and Carey weren’t a couple; he was handling this situation with complete professionalism, and going to bed with her was out of the question. Harris’s room was close enough that he could keep an eye on her and be at her side in seconds if anything happened.
“Get yourselves settled. Dinner is in a few hours.” Jane walked from the room, leaving the door to the bedroom ajar.
“I guess your mom was surprised to see me,” Carey said.
Dang, she was pretty. Those brilliant blue eyes could speak right to a man’s soul. Why couldn’t she have been utterly unappealing? “I don’t bring women around often.”
“You could have explained why I’m here.”
Reilly rolled his shoulders. “I will. Soon. Right now I need a nap.” Alone. To get his thoughts together and focus on the case.
Worry filled her eyes. “When’s the last time you had some sleep?”
He glanced at his watch. “Too long ago. I didn’t want to waste time napping when we needed to get out of the city.”
Carey looked at the floor and the impulse to draw her into his arms rocked him. Lack of sleep was making his thoughts hazy, centering around the idea of her spooned against him, his arms a
round her. Warmth. Comfort. Happiness.
Simple things he missed having with a woman. Taking naps together on cool sheets on lazy afternoons. Gentle wake-up kisses in the morning. Sleeping in late and having breakfast at noon. Things he hadn’t shared with a woman in years. Hadn’t missed in years.
Years? Had it really been that long since he’d been in a relationship? He’d had casual flings, quick rolls in the sack to sate his physical urges. He’d had sex with zero emotional connection, but hadn’t shared anything real with a woman in too long.
Yeah, he definitely needed sleep. He was getting overemotional and weepy, thinking about chick stuff. Next thing he knew, he’d be buffing his nails and blow-drying his hair.
“Would it be okay if I took a shower?” Carey asked. “I’ve got two days of grime on me.”
“Do you need help?” he asked, remembering the injuries on her head and arm. Seeing her alarmed expression, he hurriedly added, “With your bandages. My mom could give you a hand.” Though his body responded to the image of her naked, and his hands running soap over her, he quashed it. Wasn’t going to happen. What she needed now was some sense of safety and the freedom to relax. He didn’t want her to feel afraid at the Truman Ranch. He didn’t know how, but he was going to take care of her and give her back her life.
Carey shook her head. “No, I can manage. I’m fine.”
There was that word again. Fine. Was she really fine? Or was she hungry? In pain? “I’ll get you a towel. Do you need anything else?”
He knew she’d decline and she did. “No, but thank you for bringing me here. I don’t know where else I could have gone.”
He reached out and cupped her cheek, the lightest of touches, careful to be exceedingly gentle. She inhaled sharply and stiffened, but after a few moments, she relaxed. He’d intended the gesture to set her at ease, to assure her she could trust him. It had the unintended effect of sending desire blazing through him. Every time they touched, the sultry hum of anticipation buzzed in his ears. Telling himself nothing could happen, not now, not ever, didn’t silence it.
“I’ll protect you, Carey. You don’t have to be scared.”
Their gazes connected in a hot, devouring stare. Her eyes never leaving his, she turned her head and kissed the inside of his wrist.
His body flared with heat, excitement pooling in his lower extremities. A kiss of gratitude? Did she think she owed him something for helping her? He’d met women who’d never been given kindness without an expectation of a return favor. Is that what this was?
He dropped his hand and stepped away. No matter how appealing she was, no matter how badly he wanted her beneath him, he had to keep some boundaries between them, maintain a professional distance to let her know she was safe here and no one expected she pay them back.
“I’ll get you a towel,” he said quickly and put space between them before he threw his code of honor out the window, caved to his raging hormones and kissed her.
* * *
Carey peeled off her shoes and socks, grateful for the opportunity to bathe in a spotless shower. The one in her apartment had never made her feel clean. The water pressure hadn’t been good, the hot water lasted only a few minutes, and the stains on the walls and tub couldn’t be bleached away. She knew. She had tried endlessly to scrub them.
The bathroom adjoined Reilly’s bedroom, where she would be sleeping, and his brother’s room, where he would be staying. One door separated the bathroom from where she presumed Reilly was napping. She was careful about every noise she made, trying not to make a racket and keep him awake. Then again, he had needed rest and might have stumbled into bed and fallen dead asleep.
A refreshing shower would help her clear her head and settle her nerves. The terror of seeing Mark’s goons, the adrenaline rush of escaping, the surge of desire when she was close to Reilly mixed in her mind, confusing and exhausting her.
Lifting her arms over her head to remove her shirt made the side of her ribs ache and she squelched a cry of pain that rose to her lips. She hadn’t had time to examine her injuries fully since the incident in the alley. Easing the shirt over her head, she folded it and set it on the floor. She inspected her back and her side in the bathroom mirror, both dark purple with bruises. She pulled her hair free of the elastic holding it and angled a hand mirror to examine her scalp in the bathroom mirror. Thanks to Reilly, the back of her head wasn’t a clotted bloody mess, but it needed to be tended to again.
She looked at herself directly in the mirror and nearly gasped. Her dyed red hair hung limp around her head and dark rings circled her eyes. She looked gaunt and tired, the scrape on her chin red and raw. She hadn’t had a haircut in a salon in a year. Only the grown-out layers lingering in her hair gave it any shape. Trips to the salon for a trendy haircut belonged in her old life; she didn’t have time or money to be vain. She carefully removed the bandage from her arm and examined the cut. The butterfly stitches had held.
The care Reilly had shown her, cleaning her cut, asking about her injuries, amounted to another point in his favor, another reason she liked him. Reilly Truman was the whole package: great career, great family, great protector and gorgeous, to boot. The chemistry between them wouldn’t quit. One touch of his hand had nearly unhinged her.
Powerful, undeniable chemistry with a cop. Just what she needed to make this situation more difficult to navigate.
She was lucky to be alive and grateful to be here with Reilly and his butt-kicking family. She wouldn’t have agreed to come, worried she would lure danger to them, but he’d presented his family like a team of superheroes. They could take care of themselves, and she wouldn’t be around for long. Maybe a few days at most, enough time for the worst of her wounds to heal. Then she could hitchhike to a nearby city and start her life over.
Again.
The idea made her weary, but she’d known her life would be this way when she ran from Mark. His arms extended long and his power was unstoppable. She’d do what she had to to stay alive and keep the people around her safe.
Stepping into the shower, Carey winced when the hot water ran over her scalp. She pressed her lips together and remained quiet, knowing Reilly was trying to sleep on the other side of that door. After all he had done, he deserved some rest and time away from her. She was grateful he’d kept his word and hadn’t pressed to know more about Mark. Carey didn’t have the energy to discuss him.
She turned in the shower, letting the hot water soothe her body. The shower felt heavenly. The tiles were snow white and the grout clean, the tub without sticky grunge coating the bottom, the water pressure perfect to massage her back muscles.
Taking a bottle of shampoo from the ledge, she poured some into her palm and worked it into a thick lather. The contact of the soap to her head stung and her rib cage protested the movements of her arms with pulses of pain. But it felt too good to be this clean, so she ignored her body’s aches. Closing her eyes, she thought of Reilly, of the tenderness of his touch, the kindnesses he’d shown her. If she allowed herself and if her life had been different, falling for him would be easy.
No. She couldn’t go there. Not now. Maybe not ever. Her life didn’t allow her to play for keeps.
Ignoring the heaviness in her chest, she rinsed her hair and scrubbed her body quickly, lingering an extra few minutes beneath the hot water.
Carey turned off the water and stepped out of the tub, wrapping herself in the plush towel Reilly had given her. Even the towels here felt nicer than she’d had in her apartment. They were thick and smelled of fabric softener. After wiping her feet on the bath mat, she scampered to her room and closed the door.
Inside her duffel she had the one luxury she’d allowed herself to save from her old life—her lingerie. Carey rationalized no one except her would see it beneath the shapeless frump of her clothes. She’d tried to outwardly stifle her femininity, figuring a woman was an easier target for a mugging than a man. But she’d needed something to remind her she was a woman.
&
nbsp; Sliding on her bra and panties, she tugged on her oversize jeans, using her belt to hold them around her waist. But when she reached her arms up to pull her navy-
and-red-striped rugby shirt over her head, she muffled the scream that came to her lips. Pain shot down her spine, exploding across her arms.
She dropped the shirt and moved toward the bed. If she could lie down and stretch her back, she would be fine. She must have a pinched nerve or a torn muscle.
But she couldn’t bring herself to move. Every muscle twitch was utterly painful. What should she do? Call out for help? She was standing in Reilly’s bedroom in her jeans and bra. How embarrassing was this?
She heard movement in Reilly’s bedroom. Was he awake?
“Reilly?” she called, keeping her voice low. If he didn’t respond to her summons, she would assume he was sleeping and try Plan B. Okay, she didn’t have a Plan B, but she would figure something out. Her mantra played through her mind. “Take it one minute at a time.”
“Carey?” his gruff voice answered back.
Grimacing, she spoke. “Umm, I got a little problem.”
The door to her bedroom banged open in seconds. He swore under his breath at the sight of her bruised body and then averted his eyes. “Why didn’t you tell me you were hurt this badly?”
She was utterly aware she made an appalling sight with her baggy, worn jeans, bruised body and ratty, uncombed red hair. The dark red hair dye had been on sale at the drugstore and after several washings had turned brighter, like the color of Pebbles Flintstone’s hair—not her intention. Yeah. She was a train wreck. Her humiliation spread from the root of her hair to her toes. “You knew about some of it,” she said lamely.
His eyes glimmered with concern. “What’s wrong?”
It took her a few moments to process his question. Reilly had stripped out of his dress shirt and tie and had been sleeping in a tight black T-shirt that made it obvious she’d been right about the muscles beneath his clothes. Roped arms, steely chest, tight abs. Yowsa. “My back. I can’t move without shooting pain up my spine.”
He held out his hands in a calming gesture. “Okay, just take it easy. Can I come closer?”