Название: A Secret In Conard County
Автор: Rachel Lee
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Короткие любовные романы
Серия: Conard County: The Next Generation
isbn: 9781474040075
isbn:
She should get up and get going again. No matter how much it hurt. But she could see no harm whatsoever in enjoying these few minutes of peace, where no threat hovered, where no pain touched her.
She’d left the lights on, and she dared to turn her head a little. For a supposed fleabag, the La-Z-Rest wasn’t that bad. The decor was badly outdated Western, the kind that shrieked cheap and old, but everything she’d used so far had been spotlessly clean. It would never get five stars, or even two, but all she cared was that it was clean.
Finally, the time to move had come. Her damaged body began to ache again, to throb in a few places. Sleep was losing its grip on her brain.
Sighing, moving slowly, she sat up and swung her feet to the floor. No carpeting, just linoleum that had been scrubbed almost bare of its pattern. Somehow that was reassuring. Next, a hot shower, as hot as she could stand. That would loosen her up for dressing.
Then she had to decide. Move on again? Or stay put for a few days? Staying put and walking the streets of this town lost in time seemed amazingly appealing after all the driving. And walking would help keep her loosened up, keep the pain from reaching shrieking intensity as it did if she held still for too long. The way it probably would when she stood up after such a lengthy sleep.
Agony struck her the minute she rose. It froze her in place while she sucked air from the shock of it, then it eased enough for her to move. It would get better. The docs had promised. It was just that she had suffered so much injury.
Which was putting it mildly, she thought with a kind of bitter amusement as she eased her way into the bathroom and turned on the shower. One of them had even tried to joke about it. “Pain is your friend. It means you’re still alive.”
Well, that was debatable, she thought as she stood under the hot spray. There were times when surviving being shot and being blown up didn’t seem like such a good thing. Ironic, though, that the gunshot that had brought her down just as she stumbled on the bomber had helped protect her when the bomb blew up her house. Very ironic. Maybe someday she could even tell the story with humor. Not yet, however. Definitely not yet.
A half hour later, she was dressed in a light beige slack suit—probably not the style for this place—and comfortable walking flats. She still hadn’t made up her mind about moving on, but she figured she’d stick out on the streets dressed this way. So what? Only Fran knew where she was, and she couldn’t face the restrictive waistband on jeans today. This slack suit had elastic gores in the waist, reducing the pressure on some of her scars.
Moving with care, she managed to get her shoulder holster on over the royal blue shell and put her pistol into it. Once she pulled on the lightweight matching jacket, only an experienced eye would be able to tell she was armed.
She put her credentials and her wallet in the slacks pockets and felt as ready as she would ever be to face this day.
Breakfast first, she decided. But when she stepped outside, she saw what Lance had meant about this stretch of highway. Crossing it on foot might be suicidal unless a person could move swiftly, and that was beyond her now.
Car keys in her hand, she debated whether to try to find that diner. And she still had to pay for the room.
As she was standing there in an unusual state of indecision, a sheriff’s vehicle rolled up right in front of her. Lance sat in the driver’s seat and he leaned his elbow on the open window as he smiled at her.
“Saw your car still here. You staying for a while?”
“Thinking about it,” she admitted. “Mostly thinking about breakfast. I see what you mean about the highway.”
“Like I said, some fools can’t read and others don’t care. Hop in and I’ll take you to the diner.”
She liked the way he suggested she hop in, especially since he’d practically had to pour her into his vehicle when he picked her up yesterday. “Don’t you have to work?”
“You’re my work now.”
Thunderstruck, she narrowed her eyes. “What do you mean?”
“Well, after I checked you out yesterday, my boss got a call from the Bureau. Asked us to keep an eye on you as long as you wanted to stay. So here I am, your protection detail. Wanna tell me to go to hell?”
The way he asked the question and arched one eyebrow drew a reluctant laugh from her. “No, but I do want breakfast.”
“And the sheriff wants to meet you. So if you want to climb in, we’ll do the diner first.”
So much for a low profile, she thought, scanning the highway as her nerves started to jump. Why had the sheriff been dragged in on this? Why did they feel she needed protection?
All of a sudden a lot of questions hammered at her. “Sheriff first,” she said decisively.
“You got it.”
* * *
Appearing more rested, and dressed in that quietly elegant pantsuit, Erin looked as if she ought to be strolling the streets of a much bigger, classier burg than this one, Lance thought as he drove them toward the sheriff’s offices. Kinda pretty, too, now that her brown eyes didn’t appear quite as sunken. But no one would mistake her yet for being in perfect health. She did resemble a Fed now, though.
“You’re looking a whole lot better this morning,” he said.
“Fourteen hours of sleep will do that.”
“Fourteen?” He whistled. “My dogs wouldn’t let me get away with that.”
A quiet laugh reached him. “How many do you have?”
“Two. One’s an English mastiff, the other a short-haired Saint Bernard. When they jump on the bed, I don’t have much of a choice.”
“I guess not. There wouldn’t be any room left.”
“And to think I considered getting an Irish wolfhound once upon a time.”
“Uh... I’ve only seen one in my life but they’re huge, aren’t they?”
“Practically need a stable for one. My guys are good dogs, by the way, so if you ever come by my place, you don’t need to be nervous. They’d give away the store, not guard it. Of course, the mastiff might not let you leave after you robbed me blind.”
That drew a genuine laugh from her, a nice sound that he was glad to hear. “I think I’d like to meet them,” she said.
“That can be arranged.”
At least she was no longer looking haunted and indecisive as she had been while standing outside her room. There was an instant change, though, when they pulled up at the sheriff’s offices, across the street from the courthouse square. Maybe she was expecting memories to be brought up, things she didn’t want to talk about.
Well, СКАЧАТЬ