Название: Fugitive
Автор: Shirlee McCoy
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Короткие любовные романы
Серия: Heroes for Hire
isbn: 9781472014542
isbn:
She’d spent three months planning and plotting and trying to convince herself that she should return to the place she despised. Those months had made her realize just how easily she’d shoved aside her childhood and how tightly she’d been holding on to the dreams she’d built with William. Dreams that had died with him.
Move on.
That had become her mantra.
So, it had made perfect sense to take a two-week vacation in the middle of February, make the trip back across Washington, tying up the loose ends of her life as she went.
She wasn’t sure how much sense it made now that the storm of the century was blowing through the eastern part of the state.
She shoved paper under the fire log she’d brought from home, struck a match and tossed it in. If William had been around, he’d have taken care of that. He’d also have braved the wind and snow to grab logs from the back porch. He wasn’t, so Laney went herself, pulling her hood over her hair and walking out the back door. Frigid wind cut through her coat and chilled her to the bone as she lifted an armful of wood from the neat pile that William had left on the covered back porch the last time they’d been there.
Two and a half years ago.
Had it really been that long?
They’d been married less time than that. Just eighteen months, and she’d thought they would have forever. Instead, she’d been without William for longer than she’d been with him.
She walked back inside, the wind slamming the door closed behind her. She ignored it as she chose the driest log and set it on top of the burning kindling. It was easy enough to make a fire. She’d learned the skill years ago, but doing this herself, here where she and William had once bent close and worked together, it hurt more than she’d expected it to.
She nudged the log deeper into the fire. Sparks flew, wood crackled and something banged against the back door.
She jumped, whirling to face the door and whatever was outside it.
The wind.
It had to be.
But her racing pulse said different. So did the hair standing up on the back of her neck.
Bang!
The door shuddered, the weight of whatever was out there seeming to press in, demanding entry.
She grabbed the fireplace poker and walked to the door. “Who’s there?”
No one answered.
She hadn’t really expected anyone to because she couldn’t imagine that anyone was wandering through the mountains during a winter storm. A tree branch must have flown into the door.
Two tree branches?
The wind was certainly blowing hard enough to tear off pieces of old pine trees, and there were plenty of those around the cabin.
She opened the door, determined to prove it to herself.
A shadow lurched through the doorway, white and gray and strangely dead looking. She screamed, and screamed again as the figure stumbled into her, knocking her to the ground.
Breathless, she twisted, fighting against deadweight and icy cold, then realizing suddenly that she was fighting herself. That her attacker was limp and heavy and motionless. She shoved him sideways and scrambled out from beneath him, her breath panting.
The poker! Where was it?
She snatched it from the ground, backing away, her heart pounding wildly in her ears.
Go! Now! Before he gets up!
She reached blindly, grabbing her purse from the hook near the front door, snatching her coat from the rocking chair and never taking her eyes off the motionless man.
The dead man?
Snow blew across his prone body, the back door banging against his legs and feet as the wind tried to push it shut. No response from him. Not even a twitch. Facedown, features hidden, everything about him still and silent.
She took a step closer, afraid he was dead.
Dark hair. Orange jumpsuit that looked crisp and frozen rather than wet. It had to be prison issue, which meant he had to be a prisoner. An escaped one. The state prison was twenty miles away. Had he walked that far?
Did it matter?
She needed to get out before he got up. Run before he recovered enough to take a hostage.
She turned her back to him, her hands shaking as she unlocked the front door. She’d head down the mountain, find a spot where she could get a cell phone signal and call the police.
“Help me.”
Two words. Raw and hot and rasping.
She wanted to ignore them.
She couldn’t.
She pressed her back to the door and kept her hand on the knob. “I’ll call for help as soon as I get far enough down the mountain to get a signal. You’ll be okay until the rescue crew gets here.”
“Don’t.” He raised his head, his eyes midnight-blue in his gray-white face. Dark lashes wet from melting snow. Blood seeping down his face.
His very familiar face.
“Logan?” It couldn’t be.
She knelt beside him, her hand shaking as she touched his cheek and brushed hair from his forehead, looking for the thin white scar near his hairline.
There. Just like she’d known it would be.
“What happened?” she whispered.
His eyes drifted closed, and he didn’t respond.
She grabbed a blanket from the trunk at the end of the bed, her throat aching with all the memories she’d shoved out of her mind and done her very best to forget.
“You have to get up. I need to close the door, and you’ve got to warm up.” She slid her arm around his shoulders, tried to nudge him into motion. He felt different. Thirteen years had built muscle and weight on his lean frame, made the twenty-year-old kid that he’d been into a man.
A wanted man.
She shuddered, the cold wetness of his jumpsuit seeping into her sweater and jeans as she tried to maneuver him out of the doorway. He rolled onto his back, his hand capturing hers so unexpectedly that her heart jumped. Cuffs clanked, the frigid metal burning against her arm, Logan’s grip tight and hard as he pulled her closer.
“Laney?” he rasped, his breath hot against her cheek.
“Yes.”
“Go.”
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