Identity: Classified

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Identity: Classified Page 4

by Liz Shoaf


  Chloe quickly reassured herself that he wouldn’t find anything from her past, only her real name. He shouldn’t be able to get into her juvenile record unless he had a valid reason to present to a judge. But even knowing her real name would be problematic. He’d want to know why she’d given him an alias. That would lead to questions she didn’t want to answer. She had to get out of there and away from Jackson Hole as soon as possible.

  Her handkerchief-bound Bersa disappeared into his jacket pocket, and she was already thinking of a way to retrieve it when his voice caught her attention.

  “Don’t even think about it, Sam. I’ll return your weapon after we get some answers.”

  She shrugged, trying for nonchalance, but inside she shivered. “Whatever. I’m in the clear because I had nothing to do with this—” she lifted her chin in false bravado “—and you can tell yourself you know what I’m thinking, but you’re wrong.”

  Ethan stared at her hard, but a squad car pulled into the parking lot and gained his attention. She was vastly relieved by the interruption. He must have been an ace detective, because he stood there looking all righteous and dignified, silently urging her to spill her secrets, daring her to do the right thing. The man had probably never even had a parking ticket.

  A young, clean-cut guy dressed in a starched police uniform hurriedly got out of the patrol car and rushed toward Ethan.

  “Sir, I got here as quick as I could.”

  And when, exactly, had Sheriff Hoyt called his deputy? Almost as if he could hear her thoughts, he turned his head toward her. “I texted my deputy to come as soon as I saw the bodies.” It shocked her that he could read her so well, but she covered her surprise by holding up her hands. “Did I say anything?” It came out sounding waspish, but she was in a waspish mood. Things were going downhill fast. Ethan motioned his deputy into the motel room, but not before he gave her instructions. The kind of instructions she didn’t like.

  “Stay put. Don’t make me come after you.”

  Her gut was screaming at her to run as fast as she could, but the good sheriff had her picklocks, her gun and, worst of all, her prints.

  She crossed her arms over her chest. “Fine.”

  He gave her one last hard look and disappeared into the room. Thirty minutes later several vehicles pulled up. One man got out of a car carrying a medical bag. She assumed it was the medical examiner. Two men exited the second car carrying an array of cases. They looked like crime scene techs. A few minutes later, Sheriff Hoyt stepped out of the room with a hard jaw and a purposeful stride. He took her by the arm and she jerked it back. She’d give it one last shot.

  “I want my picklocks and firearm returned. I haven’t done anything wrong.”

  He just stood there, looking all grim and tough. Well, she wasn’t in a good mood, either, and jerked the tiger’s tail. She shouldn’t have, given the situation, but couldn’t seem to stop herself. She gave him a saucy grin. “I had to try.”

  He didn’t look amused, and the grin slid off her face as the gravity of the situation hit her. She ran a hand through her short hair.

  “It’s late and I’ll give you two options. We can go back to the bed-and-breakfast and make a nice big pot of coffee for our little informative chat, or we can have bad coffee at the station and spend our time in the interrogation room. Your choice.”

  Another shiver racked her body at the thought of being in a police station, so she chose wisely, but didn’t give in easily. “Fine, we’ll go to the bed-and-breakfast, but you’re going to have to apologize when you catch whoever—” she waved a hand toward room 126 “—did this.”

  * * *

  Silence shrouded the patrol car as Ethan drove them to the B and B. He hadn’t taken the time to run the plate numbers he’d collected earlier, but that was fast becoming a priority. He had a bad feeling that Sam was in this thing up to her eyeballs.

  Sam stared out the window during the short drive. The coroner had offered to give his deputy a ride home. He and Sam could have walked, but after getting shot at and finding two men dead in the motel room, he didn’t feel it was safe, and that angered him. They had their minor incidents, but Jackson Hole had always been a safe town. Now he had a double homicide to solve.

  He parked the car on the side of the street in front of the B and B and cut the engine. He didn’t acknowledge Sam as he dug his cell phone out of his pocket. He hit speed dial, and the babysitter answered on the third ring.

  “Margaret, this is Ethan. I’m sorry to call so late, but I’m going to be tied up awhile.”

  “Is it true? Did you find two dead bodies in the motel?”

  He sighed. Jackson Hole was a small town, and he should’ve known the happenings at the motel would spread like wildfire. “Yes, you heard right. There were two murders at the motel. Listen, can you take care of Penny the rest of the night? And could you swing by my house and pack her enough clothes for several days and bring her to the B and B in the morning? I’ll see that she gets to school. Oh, and pack me a few changes of clothes, if you have time. I sure would appreciate it.”

  “Sure thing, Sheriff.”

  “Thanks, and make sure everything is locked up tight before you turn in. Don’t worry, I’ll be careful. Bye.”

  He hung up the phone, lowered his head against the headrest and closed his eyes. The close call with Sam getting shot in her earlobe, then seeing the two dead men, brought death to the forefront of his mind and stirred memories of his deceased wife. He and Penny had finally found a measure of peace after the long, cruel terminal disease had taken Sherri’s life. He’d hoped his small family would thrive and be happy in Jackson Hole, but Sherri, being a city girl, had never quite fit in with the small-town folks. It wasn’t that she thought she was better than the town’s people—she just didn’t fit in, no matter how hard she tried.

  A sharp voice intruded into his thoughts. “Margaret your girlfriend?”

  He opened his eyes, the memories drifting away, and turned his head. He stared at the woman sitting in the passenger seat of the patrol car, a woman his gut was telling him had brought a truckload of trouble with her to Jackson Hole. The first woman since Sherri died who had even remotely caught his interest, not that he’d follow up on it. He wasn’t interested in finding a wife, and even if he was, he didn’t want another city gal, especially one who rode a Harley, had guns and knives stashed on her person, and owned an attack poodle. “Not that it’s any of your business, but Margaret is my babysitter.”

  Her next question volleyed right on the heels of his answer. Sam was a spitfire. “You going somewhere?”

  It took a minute for him to remember she’d heard him speaking to Margaret on the phone. He took grim satisfaction in answering her. “Penny and I will be temporarily staying at the B and B until I can sort things out and get some answers.”

  Her right eye twitched, but she kept her expression neutral. At such a young age, Ethan wondered where Sam had acquired skills that took most detectives years to learn. Hiding your emotions was hard to accomplish, which made him all the more curious about her past.

  “Why were you following me in the first place? You had no right to do that.”

  Deflecting attention away from yourself was another highly coveted skill, one that Sam had learned well.

  He shifted in his seat and turned toward her. “I don’t have to give you an explanation. Now, do we have our chat here at the B and B, or do we go to the station?”

  She fingered her right cuff with her left hand, and he wanted to kick himself for forgetting about the knife she had hidden up her sleeve. She immediately relaxed her fingers when she caught him staring and grabbed the door handle. He thought about taking the knife from her, but let it go for the moment.

  “Fine, let’s get this over with, because I’m shaking this town’s dust off my feet as soon as possible.”

  He grabbed his own door
handle. “Fine with me.” And it was fine with him. He didn’t like being even remotely attracted to a woman shrouded in secrets. He had enough to deal with trying to raise his daughter. But he had to admit he was curious about Sam, and he was determined to get some answers. Back at the motel, he’d slipped her gun to his deputy and instructed him to put a rush on running the prints. He’d know soon enough if Sam was in the system.

  Mrs. Denton had given Sam a key, and it was very late when they entered the foyer. He had just stepped over the threshold when she whipped around to face him.

  “I have to check on Geordie before we get started. He probably needs to go to the bathroom.”

  He folded his hands across his chest. “Fine, but make it fast.”

  A glimmer of annoyance appeared in her eyes before she patted his arm and released her inner Southern charm. “Don’t you worry none, I’ll be back in a jiff.”

  He watched her agile leather-clad body take the stairs two at a time. She reminded him of a cat burglar, which was not a comforting thought. He moved into the kitchen and discovered Mrs. Denton, bless her heart, had left a pot of coffee already made.

  He knew where everything was from having spent a good deal of his childhood stopping by to nab cookies on his way home from school, so he pulled down two mugs. The cream and sugar followed. He was getting ready to pour coffee into the mugs when Sam rounded the door frame of the kitchen with her poodle wrapped tightly in her arms. He froze when he saw the expression on her face. She was trying to hide it but failed to suppress the underlying fear.

  He put the coffeepot back where it belonged and rounded the kitchen island to stand in front of her. “Sam, what is it?”

  She finally looked at him, as if just realizing he was standing there, and shook her head. “Somebody’s been in my room. They went through my things.”

  It didn’t take but a few seconds for the information to register, and his heart pounded at the implications. “Mrs. Denton,” he breathed. If anything, her face paled even more, in stark contrast to her short black hair.

  “No,” she whispered, then louder, “no!”

  She turned and raced toward the stairs before he could get in front of her. He grabbed her arm on the top step and pulled her back. “Wait,” he whispered forcefully. “You wait here while I check out her bedroom.”

  She nodded and he removed his gun from his jacket pocket. After one last look to make sure she stayed put, he crept down the hallway and stopped in front of Mrs. Denton’s room. He pressed his ear to the door, but didn’t hear anything. Slowly, he eased the door open and saw the older woman tucked into bed. Nothing looked disturbed, and he breathed a sigh of relief when he heard gentle snoring. The perpetrators were probably long gone. He closed the door and nodded at Sam. Her shoulders sagged in relief, and he was glad to see she cared about Mrs. Denton’s safety. Taking her by the arm, he led her farther down the hall. He wanted to check out her room. They were about halfway there when the fur ball in Sam’s arms released a low, fierce growl.

  Ethan stopped walking and looked at Sam for direction. He didn’t know what the growl meant, but he saw fear, mixed with a healthy dose of courage, on her face and watched the knife slip from her sleeve and into her hand. He tensed a second before a closet door to his right slammed open with maximum force. The impact of the door caught him in his right side and he stumbled before falling to the floor. He caught a glimpse of a masked man jumping out of the closet, gun in hand, and knew they were in trouble, and in that moment, he was glad he hadn’t confiscated Sam’s knife.

  FIVE

  Chloe assessed the situation in an instant and knew that if shots were fired someone might get hurt. She gave Geordie a sharp command, dropped the dog to the floor and, a split second later, released the knife already balanced on the edge of her fingertips.

  It flew past Ethan, who was reaching inside his jacket to retrieve the gun she knew he kept there, and embedded itself in the upper arm of the masked gunman. Mean dark eyes glared at her from the holes in the ski mask, and the guy shook Geordie’s teeth off his ankle before he fled down the hallway. Ethan scrambled up off the floor and turned to pursue, yelling over his shoulder, “Lock the doors behind me and take care of Mrs. Denton.”

  Chloe picked up Geordie and held him close. She was shaken by the surprise attack, but the assault itself only hastened her urge to flee. It was like a living thing in her body, something she’d battled her whole life. When life got dicey, she ran.

  Geordie whimpered in her arms and licked her on the chin. She kissed the top of his soft head and glanced toward Mrs. Denton’s room. As badly as she wanted to throw her stuff in a duffel bag and get out of Jackson Hole, she couldn’t leave a defenseless old lady alone with a gunman on the loose.

  She heard the front door slam. Her window of opportunity to flee closed as Ethan’s heavy footsteps pounded up the stairs. His dark hair appeared first, followed by flashing green eyes.

  “I thought I told you to lock the door behind me.” His bellow was loud enough to wake the dead, but his belligerence helped her to get rid of the shakes. She could deal with this far better than the mess her life had become.

  “I decided it was safer to stay close to Mrs. Denton’s room. What if there had been two of them? You need to give me my gun back, and now I’m going to have to buy a new knife.” She tried to sound nonchalant, and she succeeded, judging by the look on his face. She wasn’t nearly as blasé as she let on, but she’d spent years learning to mask her emotions. First at juvenile hall, and then at the FBI.

  He took a deep breath, as if reaching for a fountain of patience, and took several steps past her. “Let’s have a look at your room, then you and I are going to have a nice long chat.”

  As she followed him down the hall and into her room, her stomach roiled and her mind worked frantically to separate what she could say that would pacify him long enough for her to leave town. She was a master at doling out half-truths. Not lies, just not the full truth. Sarah Rutledge’s sweet, radiant face swam into her mind, reminding her that half-truths were the same as lies, but Chloe highly doubted that Sarah had ever had a killer nipping at her heels.

  If the room toss was connected to the murder, were they searching for the mysterious disc? Ethan studied the room with those eagle eyes of his and, as if echoing her thoughts, said exactly what she was thinking. “Unless you find something missing, it looks to me as if someone was searching for something.” Storm-filled eyes, backed up by well over six feet of toned muscle, turned in her direction. “You know of any reason someone would want to go through your things and shoot at you, Sam?”

  She studied the room while avoiding his sharp, intelligent gaze boring a hole through her skull, as if trying to forcefully extract the answers he wanted. Her duffel bag had been upended in the middle of the beautiful handcrafted blanket covering the bed, and her toiletries were scattered alongside the few clothes she’d packed. The blanket had been thrown back, and the pillows tossed to the floor, but all in all it wasn’t too big a mess. Maybe they were looking for identification to confirm they had followed the right person since she’d used a fake name.

  As if she’d be stupid enough to leave her information anywhere but on her person. Identity theft was a big international problem, and she knew how to protect herself, online and off. Stealing identities was for the novice hackers. Her skills went far beyond that.

  In her arms, Geordie gave a happy bark right before Mrs. Denton rounded the doorway of the room. Her nightgown was one of those old-fashioned numbers with lace on the collar. Her pink bedroom slippers looked ancient.

  She lifted a hand in the air. “I heard a ruckus going on in the hall, but it took me a few minutes to find my Taser. It was in the bathroom. Must’ve forgot to put it on my nightstand.”

  Ethan’s tight lips softened and his taut jaw relaxed when he looked at Mrs. Denton. Chloe wondered if he’d ever look at her like
that, then castigated herself. It didn’t matter how he looked at her. She needed to get out of Jackson Hole so people like Mrs. Denton wouldn’t get hurt because of her.

  While giving the older woman a quiet, condensed version of events, Ethan started herding Mrs. Denton out of Chloe’s bedroom, but glanced over his shoulder. “The kitchen in five minutes. We need to talk. And don’t even try to leave. I’ll come after you.”

  They disappeared, and Chloe plopped down on the bed with her dog still in her arms. She rubbed her cheek against his soft brown curls. “Why does trouble always have to follow me, Geordie? Why can’t I just be a normal person like everyone else?”

  She got a lick on the chin, then she placed her most trusted companion on the floor. She had only a few minutes to get her facts lined up, at least the facts she was willing to share with a man of the law.

  * * *

  After assuring Mrs. Denton he had everything under control, Ethan closed the door to her bedroom and took a deep, calming breath before starting down the stairs. Sam was an enigma. He shuddered at the thought of being even remotely drawn to a woman who seemed to attract trouble like flies at a picnic. Then those dimples of hers would make an appearance and his heart would almost stop. And she just had to be kind to older ladies like Mrs. Denton. That made it worse. Ethan had a real soft spot for elderly people.

  Just because she was the first woman to catch his eye since Sherri had died didn’t mean he had to do anything about it. It was probably nothing, just a passing fancy—an attraction to the odd and unusual—because he certainly hadn’t ever met anyone like Sam. Plus, the woman was in some kind of trouble, and it was his job to dig out the truth.

 

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