Название: Living On The Edge
Автор: Susan Mallery
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
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“Wasn’t the kidnapping enough for one week?” he asked, barely able to restrain his temper.
“I’m not playing a game,” she said, her eyes wide with a lot of emotion he wasn’t interested in reading. “You can’t return me to my family. Take me anywhere else. Please.”
“How about a police station?”
She considered that option. Funny how he wasn’t surprised when she slowly shook her head. The cops wouldn’t be the kind of audience that interested her. They wouldn’t be willing to play her little game, either.
He narrowed his gaze as he wondered if mental problems ran in her family.
She took a step toward him. “Christopher is the one who kidnapped me. I was attacked and drugged as I walked into my condo. I couldn’t see anyone, but I recognized his watch right before I passed out. It’s very distinctive—he had it custom-made.”
“Uh-huh.” He would have to give her points for originality, if nothing else. “Can you prove it?”
“What? Of course not. It was a kidnapping. It’s not as if they sent me an itinerary ahead of time and used Christopher’s letterhead. But I know what I saw.”
Sure. “So tell me, Madison, why would your husband want to kidnap you?”
“I don’t know. I guess he needed the money.”
“You both already have plenty of that.”
“Christopher doesn’t have as much as you’d think. He’s always running short of cash. That’s the only thing that explains the excessive ransom.”
“Twenty million is a hell of a lot for him to need.”
She nodded. “Please. I know how this sounds. I know you have no reason to trust me, but things are not as they seem. Christopher lives on the edge. He gambles and usually loses a lot. He buys expensive pieces of art and furniture. Trust me, he always needs more money.”
“Nothing personal, Mrs. Hilliard, but I don’t trust you.”
“You don’t like me, either,” Madison said. “That’s okay. But it doesn’t give you the right to put me at risk.”
“I don’t believe you are. Why would your husband have hired two different companies to find you if he wanted you dead?”
“Because I’m worth more to him alive. You don’t actually know he hired another company. He could be lying.”
“Sure, and so could you.” Tanner reached the end of his attention span for this conversation. “I was hired by your husband and your father to find you, and I did. Because of that, one of my best men is close to death. All I want is my fee and you out of my life. I’m not interested in getting involved in whatever sick game you and your husband are playing.”
With that, he turned and headed for the door.
Madison rushed toward him. “We’re not married. Did he tell you that? We’ve been divorced for over six months. I’m sure there’s a way you could check the court records to verify it.”
Tanner stared at her. Divorced? He glanced at her left hand. No ring and no marks to show one had been removed recently. Neither Hilliard nor her father had said anything about a divorce. In fact, Hilliard had made it very clear he wanted his wife home with him, where she belonged. Tanner remembered wondering about Mrs. Hilliard’s feelings on being such an important possession.
Not that it changed anything, he told himself. Divorced or not, he’d been paid to complete a job and he had. Except…
He swore under his breath. There was something about her desperation, something about her words and, most important, something about the tension in his gut. He’d learned from hard experience to never ignore that feeling.
Madison must have sensed she had his attention, because she started talking very quickly.
“I left him nearly two years ago. He spent the first six months trying to convince me to come back and the next year fighting the divorce. Fortunately California is a no-fault state, and in the end, he couldn’t stop it.”
“Why was he so interested in keeping a woman who wanted to get away?”
“Money.”
“You’ve brought that up before. Your ex is loaded.”
She shook her head. “No. He’s not. His lifestyle sucks up a lot of his company profits. Plus he’s into something big. I don’t know what it is—I’ve only heard my father talking about it from time to time.”
“Didn’t he get a big chunk of your net worth after the divorce?”
“No. There was a pretty tight prenuptial agreement.” For the first time since he’d met her, she smiled. “Besides, I’m not worth all that much on my own. The bulk of the family fortune is tied up in Adams Electronics. My father is the principal stockholder, not me. I only own a few thousand shares. Christopher did get the house, which was fine with me.”
So Hilliard had lost the eye-candy wife and access to the big bucks. That couldn’t have made him happy.
“He and your father are working on something together. It came up in my research,” Tanner told her.
“I know. I’ve read the same thing. I don’t talk to my father about it. I’ve tried to convince him to stop doing business with Christopher, but he won’t listen. He doesn’t understand how I could have let such a good man get away.”
She tilted her head, which caused her long blond hair to fall away from her face, exposing the side with the still-red scar. He narrowed his gaze. Why would such a beautiful woman keep such an ugly mark on her face? She would have had access to the best plastic surgeons in the world, along with the money to pay them. As much as he hated to admit it, a lot of things didn’t make sense.
“He set up the kidnapping to get the ransom money,” she said earnestly. “I doubt there was any other company looking for me. I’m sure he told my father there was to keep him from worrying.”
“Why wouldn’t your father have insisted on going to the police?”
Her mouth twisted. “He trusts Christopher implicitly. As far as he was concerned, his son-in-law would handle everything perfectly.” She glanced down at the floor, then back at him. “My father is something of an absentminded professor. He likes it best when the real world doesn’t interfere with his time in the lab.”
Which meant what? That her father hadn’t been all that worried about the kidnapping because good old Hilliard was taking care of it?
Tanner recalled his meeting with the two men. Hilliard had done all the talking. Blaine Adams had seemed concerned, but not overly so.
“If nothing else, you should make sure you get paid,” Madison told him. “My ex has a bad habit of offering fees in halves. Half up front, half at the end of the deal. Only that second half doesn’t ever seem to get paid.”
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