"I'll be right back," Chase said. "I'm gonna walk the dog and take a look around."
As he slipped out again, Sara locked and latched the door. She turned and eyed the double beds. Was this forced intimacy just a means for him to take advantage of her? Surely not. He'd given her no reason to think he'd helped her for any reason other than human decency.
Besides, she knew what she looked like. She'd dressed this way intentionally for years. And for good reason.
Kendal came out of the bathroom, looking lost.
"Feeling better, sweetheart?" she asked. She crossed the room to catch his face between her hands. He was almost as tall as she was.
"Where are we going?" he demanded ignoring the question. "Not with him, I hope."
"No," she reassured him. "Chief McCaffrey is going to take us as far as Oklahoma," she explained. "From there we'll get a ride to Texas."
"Why? What's in Texas?"
The time had come to share her burning secret. "My real mother is in Texas. I was adopted, Kendal. Your father doesn't know that."
Kendal's jaw dropped. His gaze flicked over her like he'd never really seen her before. "Cool," he finally said. A glimmer of hope lit his eyes.
"That's why this is going to work," she insisted. "We're going to start all over again, with new names and everything."
"But what about all my stuff?" he asked with belated regret. "My PlayStation and my computer?"
"I'll buy you new stuff," Sara promised. "After we get settled and I get a job. It isn't going to be easy, honey," she admitted. "But it will be better. We'll make our own decisions. We'll do whatever we want without constantly having to worry whether we'll upset your father."
He gave her a searching look. "You would've stayed, wouldn't you, if Dad hadn't killed Mr. Whiskers?"
"I couldn't stand to watch him hurt you," she admitted.
"But he hurt you all the time."
He'd noticed, then, despite her efforts to protect him. Hiding her stricken look, she kissed his cheek and moved past him, into the bathroom.
When she reemerged, Kendal was watching TV. Chase knocked on the door, and she went to let him in.
"Spotted a Super Kmart across the street," he announced, letting Jesse off the leash. "I'm gonna run over there and get us what we need."
Sara snatched up her backpack, pulling out two twenty-dollar bills. "Take this," she said, holding out the money. "I need some scissors and some hair color." She wanted something in a blond shade. "Maybe we should come with you?"
He took the money, sliding it into his pocket. "Not yet. Stay away from the windows, and keep the door locked," he instructed. "Oh, and Kendal?"
Kendal lifted wary eyes at him.
"You mind feedin' the dog for me? His food and bowl are in that plastic bag right there. Don't forget to give him water."
'"Kay," the boy said, slipping off the bed.
With a wink at Sara, Chase was gone, shutting the door behind him.
Reassured by the wink, Sara drew the latch a second time. "I know he sounds rough, honey," she said, as much for herself as for him, "but he helped us four years ago, back in California, when our car wouldn't start at the library. Remember that?"
Kendal had been six years old, then. "No," he said, dropping nuggets into Jesse's metal bowl.
Sara plopped down on the edge of a bed and watched him carry the water bowl to the bathroom. It was obvious that Kendal didn't trust the stranger helping them. She couldn't blame him. Chase had been silently forbidding since his appearance at the park, not exactly the laid-back, considerate gentleman he seemed to be before.
Trust me, no one's going to hurt you again, Kendal,
she swore to herself, watching as he offered the dog water and petted his broad head.
An hour later, she had to wonder if she'd let him down already. In addition to the sandwiches that they'd wolfed down, Chase had bought a deluxe hair-cutting kit that included an electric shaver.
"We need to cut the boy's hair," he'd said to Sara.
She'd been so eager to start coloring her own hair that she'd agreed to his offer to do so. The bathroom door was left ajar, reassuring her further as she stood before the desk, using the mirror in the room to put dye in her hair.
Entering the bathroom fifteen minutes later, she found Kendal's hair buzzed down to a smart, military cut.
"All set," Chase said, whisking the boy's neck and ears with a brush. Kendal winced at the dusting. Chase pulled the poncho off.
With the look of a wounded animal, Kendal pushed past his mother and went to flop down near the TV and sulk.
"It'll grow out," Chase called after him. He sent Sara an apologetic grimace. "Sorry 'bout that. I should've used a different size head," he muttered.
"That's okay." The apology appeased her. Not once in eleven years had Garret ever apologized.
Skirting around Chase, Sara dropped to her knees beside the tub and stuck her head under the faucet.
Warm water sluiced by her ears. Yellow-brown dye rushed down the drain. She was conscious of Chase coming to stand behind her.
"You're missing some," he observed, and suddenly his hands were cradling her head, angling it under the stream to ensure that all the excess dye got washed out.
A gasp wedged itself into Sara's lungs.
He was touching her, and she could feel the strength in his gentle fingers all the way down to her toes.
"All set," he said, turning the water off.
Sara fumbled with the conditioning tube, squirting the white stuff into her palm and rubbing it briskly into her hair. Before Chase could help her again, she rinsed it out, not bothering to wait the requisite two minutes.
He plopped a towel over her head. She came shakily to her feet, wondering when he intended to step out.
"How do you want your hair cut?" he asked her.
"Oh." From beneath the towel she added, "I think I'll cut it myself." Although, on second thought, Kendal's haircut had looked professional.
"Suit yourself," Chase replied. "Concealment's what I do for a living. I know how to make you look different," he added.
Sara wavered. Pulling the towel off her head, she looked at him.
"Trust me," he said, his blue eyes compelling.
She wanted to. She was longing to put her whole faith in him. If he could just act like the laid-back cowboy who'd rescued her in San Diego instead of this serious, uncommunicative commando.
"All right," she agreed, taking her chances. She positioned herself before the mirror.
"Color looks good on you," he said, lifting the comb and drawing the snarls out of her shoulder-length hair.
She thought so, too, but watching him groom her was distracting. He was perhaps just six feet tall, several inches shorter than Garret, but his shoulders were twice as broad, making her seem petite by comparison.
"I was blond as a child," she admitted. At one time, she'd been told that she resembled Meg Ryan, but that was way back before she'd started planning her escape.
Chase put the comb down and picked up the scissors. He began by hacking four inches off her hair.
Sara gaped.
"Just need a place to start," he explained, with a hint of humor in his eyes.
His fingers slid into her hair, just above her scalp. He tugged and snipped. Three more inches fell away. He repeated the movement, and this time it felt like a caress, which he repeated, over and over again.
Sara relaxed by degrees. In place of her tension came a heightened awareness of him as a male, touching her in a way that Garret had never touched her. It wasn't meant to be sexual, but it made her acutely aware of her femininity.
"You gonna change your name?" he inquired. He seemed to know exactly what he was doing, moving without hesitation, from front to back, snipping off tendrils that drifted toward the floor to layer over Kendal's darker hair.
It wouldn't hurt to tell him, would it? "Serenity," she admitted. She'd chosen the name when she'd first considered leaving, right after Kendal's birth.
The look that he bounced off the mirror went straight through her. "Serenity what?"
"I'd rather not say," she hedged.
He was silent a second. "Good," he decided. "It's smart to be cautious."
In lieu of asking more questions, he started twisting strands of her hair and snipping the ends. The shortness of the cut had Sara holding her breath, though she dared not complain. The idea was to change her look completely, and he was definitely doing that.
"Face me now," he instructed.
She did so, her pulse fluttering as she stood within six inches of him, gaze riveted to his muscle-corded neck and the pulse that thudded steadily at the base of it. Drawing a secret breath, she decided that he smelled like fresh-cut wood.
"Close your eyes," he said, going to work on her bangs.
Snip, snip, snip.
She heard the scissors slide onto the sink. Chase ruffled her hair. "You're done," he said.
Sara turned toward the mirror. "Oh, my," she exclaimed, discovering that she looked more like Meg Ryan than ever. She touched the soft, spiky strands by her ears. "How'd you learn to cut hair so well?"
"No barbers in the places I go," he answered matter-of-factly. "While I clean up in here, why don't you check out the clothes I bought for you?"
She'd seen the bags that he'd brought back from the Super Kmart. This was her getaway, and yet he seemed to be masterminding it.
Kendal stared at her as she stepped from the bathroom. "You look like that movie star," he commented.
"Meg Ryan?"
"I don't know her name." He went back to watching TV.
Moving past him, Sara spilled the plastic sacks open on the second bed.
Oh, no.
For a shocked minute she stared at the clothes and accessories that Chase had bought her: shorts from the juniors department; baby-doll T-shirts in every pastel hue imaginable; two pair of sling sandals, pink and green with sequined flowers on them, and a bagful of makeup.
She couldn't dress like this! She would look like ... like a completely different woman, a teenager, practically.
She glanced up as Chase stepped into view, carrying their hair in a sack. He paused by the bed, taking in her reaction with a challenging lift to his eyebrows.
"This had to have cost more than forty dollars," she said, trying to find some way around having to wear what he'd bought.
"End-of-summer sale," he countered, eyes narrowing. "Sixty percent off."
She just looked at him. "So, no refunds then."
"Nope."
With a nod, she started putting the clothes away. "Kendal's going to need clothes, too."
"You can shop for him tomorrow," Chase said.
Sara drew a deep breath. "You know," she said, giving rare voice to her opinion, "I wouldn't have bought these kinds of clothes for myself," she dared to tell him.
A tiny smile touched the edges of his mouth. "I know. And trust me, ma'am, I don't get my kicks out of tellin' you what to wear. But this is what I do for a living. You wear these clothes, and no one's going to recognize you."
His argument was infuriatingly reasonable. With a sigh of surrender, Sara put the clothes in the bags for the night.
Chase went outside to toss their hair in the Dumpster. When he came back in, he grabbed sweatpants from his duffel bag and disappeared into the shower.
Sara went to sit with Kendal. Everything was happening so quickly, yet, at the same time slowly enough to fray her nerves. What if, in the next twenty-four hours, Garret guessed how she'd engineered her flight?
Impossible. He didn't even know that she knew Chief McCaffrey. How could he guess he'd helped her get away?
The bathroom door yawned open, and Chase materialized on a puff of steam, wearing nothing but a pair of gray sweatpants.
She and Kendal both stared. Sara had never seen a man more powerfully put together. His was the body of a warrior, with muscles that came from daily, rigorous training, and scars suggesting deadly hand-to-hand combat, not to mention a fearsome black tattoo on his left triceps. The rest was golden skin and tawny fur, a combination that left her dry-mouthed.
He crossed in front of them, heading toward his duffel bag, and his footfalls were undetectable.
He leaned over his bag, and when he straightened again, he was holding a gun in his hand.
Sara gasped, reaching for her son.
"Relax," Chase told her, keeping it pointed at the floor. He carried it over to his bed, pulled the quilt down, and stuffed it under the pillow. "It's my security blanket."
"Is it... loaded?"
He sent her an incredulous look.
"Stupid question," she acknowledged.
He sprawled with masculine grace upon his stomach, and her gaze slid helplessly to his tattoo. Four skeletons rose from a common gravesite.
Good heavens.
He was a far cry from the clean-cut, starched-shirt officer she'd married. She'd once credited Garret with traits that he didn't posses: fairness and self-control.
What if her evaluation of Chase was equally flawed?
Officer Stan Laughlin of the Virginia Beach Police Department Crime Unit cast a trained eye around the study in Captain Bartholomew Garret's upscale mansion.
The study, with its burgundy walls and heavy mahogany furniture, was a true male retreat. The wall behind the desk displayed Garret's credentials: diplomas, plaques, and certifications. The man was obviously successful. Too bad success couldn't shield a man from crime, which leached upward through the layers of society like an overflowing septic tank.
It was 10:00 p.m. on Saturday evening, and Stan had a judgment to make based on scant evidence. One eyewitness had placed the wife and son of Captain Garret in a canoe that day, in the company of a stranger. Because stranger abductions were the most dangerous to children, it was in Kendal Garret's best interest for Stan to issue an Amber Alert, a cooperative agreement between law enforcement and broadcasters, sponsored by the US Department of Justice.
But, in this situation, the mother had disappeared, as well, making it equally feasible that Mrs. Garret had abducted her own son. Feasible, but not likely, given Captain Garret's fervent assertion that he and his wife were happily married; that Sara was not at all the type to do something so irresponsible.