Read Buckhorn Beginnings Online

Authors: Lori Foster

Buckhorn Beginnings (12 page)

Sawyer's eyes narrowed and his jaw locked.
With a vicious oath he turned away, then ran a hand through his dark hair. Just then Honey noticed Sawyer wore only boxers himself. Tight boxers. That hugged his muscled behind like a second skin.

Her lips parted. Her skin flushed. Blinking was an impossibility.

She stood there spellbound until Jordan set the cat down and started to lead her away. He held her arm with one hand and his sheet with the other and tried to take her to the table. Belatedly she realized his intent and held back because that would put her alongside Morgan, and she knew no one had thrown him any pants yet.

“I'm all right,” she whispered, wishing Sawyer would look at her instead of staring out the window at the pitch-black night.

Jordan released her with a worried frown. She went back to the door and began picking up the keys and the contents of her purse. No one said anything, and when she was done, she carefully replaced the keys where they belonged. With her back to all of them, she said, “I wanted to get to the next town. I have a credit card, and I could charge a room, then call my sister to let her know I'm okay.”

Jordan, Gabe and Morgan all asked, “You have a sister?” and, “Does she look like you?” and, “How old is she?”

Honey rolled her eyes. She couldn't believe they could be interested in that right now. “She's way prettier than me, but dark instead of fair, and she's a year younger. But the point is, she'll be worried. I told her I'd call her when I got settled somewhere.
Then I'm going to hire a private detective to find out who's after me.”

Casey frowned at her. “Why couldn't you do that from here?”

How could she tell him she was already starting to care too much about them all? Especially Sawyer? She tempered the truth and admitted, “I want to make things as simple as possible. I don't want to involve anyone else in my private problems.”

Sawyer still hadn't turned or said a word, and it bothered her.

Gabe rooted through the cabinets for a cookie. “Why not just go to the police?”

She really hated to bare her soul, but it looked as if her time had run out. She clutched her purse tightly and stared at Sawyer's back. “My father is an influential man. Recently he decided to run for city council. He's been campaigning, and things have looked promising so far. When I broke off my engagement, he was really angry because he'd planned to use the wedding as a means to campaign, inviting a lot of important, connected people to the normal round of celebrations that go with an engagement. Our relationship was already strained, and we'd barely spoken all week. He…well, he hit the roof when I told him I thought someone was after me. He thinks I'm just overreacting, letting my imagination run away because I'm distraught over the broken engagement. When I said I was going to the police, he threatened to cut me off because he says I'm causing him too much bad publicity, and he's certain I'll only make
a fool of myself and draw a lot of unnecessary negative speculation that will damage his campaign.”

Morgan started to stand, but when she squealed and covered her eyes, he sat back down again. “Casey, go get me something to wear, will you?”

“Why me? I don't wanna miss what's going on.”

Morgan frowned at him. “I'm not dressed, that's why. And she's acting all squeamish about it, so she'd probably rather I didn't get up and parade around right now. Course, if you don't care how she feels…”

Put that way, Casey had little choice. He looked thoroughly disgruntled, and agreed with a lot of reluctance. “All right. But you owe me.” He sauntered off, and the cat, apparently enjoying all the middle-of-the-night excitement, bounded after him.

Morgan folded his arms on the bar, looking like he'd made the most magnanimous gesture of all by offering to put on clothes. “So since your daddy threatened to cut the purse strings, you ran off instead?”

Now, that did it! It was almost one o'clock in the morning; she was tired, frazzled, embarrassed and worried. The last thing she intended to put up with was sarcasm.

Honey slammed her purse down on the counter and stalked over to face Morgan from the other side of the bar. Hands flat on the bar top, she leaned over until she was practically nose to nose with him. “Actually,” she growled, forcing the words through her teeth, “I told him to stick his damn money where the sun doesn't shine.”

Morgan pulled back, and astonishment flickered
briefly in his cobalt eyes, mixed with a comical wariness. “Uh, you said that, did you?”

“Yes, I did. My father and I have never gotten along, and money won't change that.”

Jordan applauded. “Good for you!”

She whipped about and pointed a commanding finger at Jordan. “You be quiet! All of you have done your best to bulldoze me, and I'm getting sick and tired of it. I don't take well to threats, and I couldn't care less about my father's money.”

Jordan chuckled, not at all put off by her vehemence. “So what happened?”

Deflated by their eternal good humor, Honey sighed. Men in general were hard enough to understand, but these men were absolutely impossible. “He threatened to cut off my sister, instead, and though she reacted about the same as I did, I can't be responsible for that. I had no choice except to leave.”

Sawyer spoke quietly from behind her. “Except that you got sick, so you didn't make it very far. At least, not far enough to feel safe.”

She didn't turn to face him. Her gaze locked onto Gabe's, and he smiled in encouragement. As long as she didn't see the disappointment and resentment in Sawyer's eyes, she thought she'd be all right.

“Someone had been following me for two days. I wasn't imagining it. I know I wasn't.” She spoke in the flatest monotone she could manage. She didn't want them to hear her fear, her worry. It left her feeling too exposed. “The first day I managed to dodge them.”

“You say ‘them.' Was there more than one person?”

She glanced at Morgan. “It's just a figure of speech. I never saw inside the car. It was a black Mustang, and the windows were darkened. I noticed it the day after I ended things with Alden. When I left the bank where I worked, the car was in the parking lot, and it followed me. I'd promised my sister to stop at the grocery, so I did, and it was there when I came out. It spooked me, so I drove around a little and managed to lose it by jumping on the express-way into the heavy traffic, then taking an exit that I never take.”

Morgan rubbed his chin. “Must not have been a professional if you lost 'em that easy.”

“I don't know if they're professional or not. I don't know anything about them.”

Gabe leaned against the countertop, ankles crossed, eating cookies. “You know, I hate to say this, but you could have just been spooked. If that's all that happened—”

“That's not all! I'm not an idiot.”

He held up both hands, one with a cookie in it, and mumbled, “I wasn't suggesting you are.”

Totally ruffled, she glared at him a moment longer, then continued. “The car was there again the next day. And that's too much of a coincidence for me.”

They each made various gestures of agreement, all but Sawyer, who merely continued to watch her through dark, narrowed eyes.

“This time it followed me right up until I pulled into my sister's house. The car slowed, waited, and I practically ran to get inside. Then it just drove away.”

“I still think it's your ex,” Jordan said. “If you left him, he probably wanted to know where you'd gone. I would have.”

“Me, too,” Gabe concurred.

“I thought it might be Alden at first. But it just doesn't fit.” Honey watched Casey come back in with jeans and toss them to Morgan. Casual as you please, Morgan stood to put them on, and she quickly turned her back, but she could already feel the heat climbing up her neck to her cheeks. The man could improve with just an ounce of true modesty!

“So what changed your mind?”

Sawyer didn't look so angry now. Or rather, he didn't look so angry at
her.
He still seemed furious over the circumstances.

“I talked to Alden. He kicked up a fuss about me breaking things off, yelling about how humiliated he'd be since so many of his associates knew we were engaged. And he even threatened me some.”

With cold fury, Sawyer whispered, “He threatened you?”

A chill went up her spine as she remembered again the lengths Alden had gone to just to punish her for breaking things off. And worst of all, she knew he wasn't motivated by love, but obviously by something much darker. “He used the same type of threats as my father. Alden told me he'd get me fired from my job, and he did. The bank claimed they were just scaling down employees, but Alden has a relative in a management position at the bank.”

“You could sue,” Jordan pointed out, and she saw he was now as angry as Sawyer. It was an unusual
sight to see, since Jordan had always looked so serene. Now his green eyes were glittering with anger, his lean jaw locked.

“I…I might have,” she admitted, dumbfounded by their support, “but that night when I was at my sister's house, someone broke in. She was out on a late date, so I was alone. I could hear them going through the drawers, the cabinets. I
know
it was the same people who'd been following me. They saw where I was staying and then they came back. They went through everything. I just don't know why, or what they were looking for. I'm ashamed to admit it, but I don't think I've ever been so afraid in my life. For the longest time I couldn't move. I just laid in the bed, frozen, listening. When I realized they'd eventually search the bedroom, I forced myself to get up. I didn't bother getting clothes, I just grabbed up my purse, slipped out the bedroom window and snuck to my car. I saw the curtain open in the front room as I started the engine, then I just concentrated on getting away. I was nearly hysterical by the time I got to my father's.”

She lowered her face, embarrassed and shaken all over again. Masculine hands touched her, patting her back, stroking her head, and gruff words of comfort were murmured. She was caught between wanting to laugh and wanting to cry.

She pulled herself together and lifted her chin. After a deep breath, she continued, and the men all subsided back to their original lounging posts.

“My father took me seriously this time, at least for a while. He sent some men over to check out the
apartment, but they said nothing seemed to be out of place. The only thing open was the window I'd gone through, and there was no one there when they arrived. Again, my father thought I was just overreacting. He wanted to call Alden, thinking I'd feel better when we got back together.”

Sawyer never said a word, but Morgan grunted. “Did you tell him the bastard had cost you your job?”

She shrugged. “My father said he was just acting out of wounded male pride.”

“Hogwash.” Gabe tossed the rest of the cookies aside to pace around the kitchen. Though he wore only his underwear, he made an awesome sight. “Men don't threaten women, period.”

“That's what my sister said. My father had sent men to get her, also, before he decided there wasn't a problem, that I'd made it all up. Luckily she believed me. She promised not to go back to the house until after a security alarm was put in—a concession from my father, which my sister refused, saying she'd get her own.”

Jordan grinned. “Your sister sounds a lot like you.”

Why that amused him, she couldn't guess. “In some ways.”

Gabe looked thoroughly disgusted. “Someone is following you around town, looting through your house with you in it, and the best your father could do was offer an alarm system?”

Honey held up her hands. She couldn't very well explain her father's detachment when the very idea would be alien to such protective men. Why, even
now, they'd gathered in the kitchen, in the middle of the night, pulled from their beds, and no one was complaining. They just wanted to help.

Those damn tears welled in her eyes again.

Morgan flexed his knuckles, and the look on his face was terrifying. Even though she felt disturbed rehashing the whole story, Honey smiled. They were all so overprotective, so wonderful. She couldn't drag them into her mess. She had no idea how much danger she might actually be in. “When I left my father's that afternoon, the car was there again, following me, and I
did
panic. I took off. But it followed, and even tried to run me off the road.”

Jordan stared at her. “Good God.”

“It kept coming alongside me, and when I wouldn't pull over, it…it hit the back of my car. The first time, I managed to keep control, but then it happened again, and the third time I went into a spin. The Mustang had to hit his brakes, too, to keep from barreling into me, and there was an oncoming car and the Mustang lost control. He went off the side of the road and crashed into a guardrail. The other car stopped to see if he was hurt, but I just kept going.”

“And you've been going ever since?”

She nodded. “I left Alden a week ago. It seems like a year. I stopped once and traded in my car, which was a nice little cherry-red Chevy Malibu, not worth much with the recent damage in the back. I bought that old rusted Buick instead. But I've been so on edge. I stopped to get gas once, and saw the Mustang again. I have no doubt I'm being followed, I just don't know why. Alden didn't really care about
me, so it seems insane he'd go to this much trouble to harass me. And harassing me certainly wouldn't make me reconsider marrying him.”

Sawyer pulled out a kitchen chair then forced her to sit in it. He said to Jordan, “Why don't you put on some coffee or something? Casey, you should go on back to bed.”

Casey, who'd been sitting at the table, his head in his hand, looking weary, said, “No way.”

Other books

Detours by Vollbrecht, Jane
Goose Girl by Giselle Renarde
A Time for Dying by Hardin, Jude
Flood Tide by Stella Whitelaw
The View From the Tower by Charles Lambert
Women in the Wall by O'Faolain, Julia
The Doomsday Key by James Rollins


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024