Shadows of You
Shadows of You
Shadows of You
CATHERINE COWLES
CONTENTS
Prologue
1. Aspen
2. Roan
3. Aspen
4. Roan
5. Aspen
6. Roan
7. Aspen
8. Roan
9. Aspen
10. Aspen
11. Roan
12. Aspen
13. Roan
14. Aspen
15. Roan
16. Aspen
17. Roan
18. Aspen
19. Roan
20. Aspen
21. Roan
22. Aspen
23. Roan
24. Aspen
25. Roan
26. Aspen
27. Roan
28. Aspen
29. Roan
30. Aspen
31. Roan
32. Aspen
33. Roan
34. Aspen
35. Roan
36. Aspen
37. Aspen
38. Roan
39. Aspen
40. Roan
41. Aspen
42. Roan
43. Roan
44. Aspen
45. Roan
46. Aspen
47. Roan
48. Aspen
49. Roan
50. Aspen
51. Roan
52. Aspen
53. Roan
Epilogue
Please Enjoy This Extended Preview of Ashes of You
Prologue
1. Lawson
2. Hallie
Acknowledgments
Also Available From Catherine Cowles
About Catherine Cowles
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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the products of the
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businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Editor: Margo Lipschultz
Copy Editor: Chelle Olson
Proofreading: Julie Deaton and Jaime Ryter
Paperback Formatting: Stacey Blake, Champagne Book Designs
Cover Design: Hang Le
Cover Photography: Wander Aguiar
For Elsie
Thank you for immunity necklaces, serial killer jokes, epic voice memos, and,
most of all, your friendship. I’m eternally grateful to have you in my life.
For everyone who has felt like they don’t fit.
Your magic is in your uniqueness. Find the people who see your light.
PROLOGUE
R AIN POUNDED against the windshield in a steady drum that only seemed
to accentuate the thumping rhythm in my chest. I glanced in the rearview
mirror, taking mental stock of the vehicles behind me.
Red Acura. Navy sedan. White Honda minivan.
It was the navy sedan that had me on edge. Cars that blended tended to be
the ones you needed to watch out for.
I slowed at a red light, one hand slipping beneath the neck of my T-shirt.
My fingers eased over the angry, raised skin. Even months later, the flesh
there still twinged. I wasn’t sure if there was still a wound somewhere under
the surface or if it was just phantom pain—ghosts of what had happened still
haunting me.
A bubbly laugh broke through my thoughts. My gaze shifted back to the
rearview mirror, taking in the source of the sound. My girl grinned, her tiny
mouth full of spit bubbles and her first few teeth poking through.
For her.
That was why I was doing all of this. Because she deserved everything
good in the world. And I was going to make sure she got it.
Pressure built behind my eyes. “For her. I’ll do anything for her.” I
muttered the words over and over as if to build up my belief in them.
A horn honked behind me, and I jolted, gaze flying to the rearview
mirror. It was the navy sedan. Some hurried businessperson behind the
wheel.
It would’ve irked me under normal circumstances—that rude impatience.
But now, I felt nothing but blissful relief. If he’d been following me, he never
would’ve honked, wouldn’t have drawn attention to himself.
I eased my foot off the brake and placed it on the accelerator. “It’s a
brand-new adventure,” I told Lucy as though I’d actually believe it if I said it
enough.
She banged her little fists on the car seat. “Ba!” she said in emphasis.
“I’m taking that as excitement.” Or she simply wanted her toy ball.
I flipped on my blinker and made a right-hand turn into the mall’s parking
structure. Plenty of cars were doing the exact same thing I was. I couldn’t
help but investigate each one, trying to read if the soccer mom or elderly
gentleman had ulterior motives.
Rolling down my window, I grabbed a parking ticket. “Lower levels. P4,
section C.” I whispered the words to myself over and over. I’d memorized
Evan’s instructions the past three days as I packed as much of our belongings
as possible while still following his dictates to “keep it light.”
Traveling with a toddler meant you could never keep it light. I drove my
sedan to the basement levels, fighting a shiver as darkness descended. Sure,
fluorescent lights guided my way, but lights could fail.
“Maybe we can get a kitty at our new house,” I told Lucy.
She blew air through her lips in answer.
“I’ll even let you name him.”
I had to focus on the happy. The silver linings of everything we were
facing. It would be the only thing to get us through.
Pulling into an empty parking spot, I gripped the steering wheel,
unmoving. Blood roared in my ears as my palms dampened. I could do this.
I’d already been through hell; the last thing I needed was to stay here and
subject myself to more.
Shutting off the engine, I let out a whoosh of air. I climbed out and
rounded to open the back door. Bending, I unhooked Lucy’s straps as she
chattered away in mostly nonsensical sounds, punctuated by the few words
she had in her vocabulary. She slapped a hand against my cheek, and a laugh
bubbled out of me. That light expulsion of air almost sent me into a fit of
sobs.
Keep it together. Just a little longer.
It was the same refrain I’d been telling myself for months. But it was the
only thing that got me through. That, and Lucy.
My throat burned. Soon, I wouldn’t be able to use the name she’d had
since birth. That felt so incredibly wrong. But safe was more important.
Footsteps sounded behind me, and I whirled. A little of my anxiety eased
when I saw the familiar face. “Evan.”
His name sounded more like a rasp of breath than actual syllables.
Light brown brows pulled together. “You okay?”
Another laugh burst free, but this one had a hysterical edge. “Okay is the
last thing I am.”
I was leaving behind everything I’d ever known, every person and my
entire support system.
Evan reached out and squeezed my shoulder, revealing the gun and badge
at his hip. “You’re going to be just fine.”
I nodded, resisting the urge to bite my lip.
He released me and handed over a folder and a set of keys. “New
identification. The name changes are sealed. No one will be able to track
you.”
I flipped open the file. My gaze landed first on Lucy’s new moniker.
Cady. My older sister and I had always loved the name. It was John who
hadn’t been crazy about it. And John always got his way.
Anger flared, hot and deep, but I shoved it down. I couldn’t let it take
hold, not when I needed complete focus for the task at hand.
I pulled a driver’s license out of the folder. The picture was the same as
my Mississippi license, but I guessed cops had access to that sort of thing.
Only this one said my home was in Washington state. And that my name was
Aspen Barlow.
My gaze shot to Evan.
He shrugged. “You said you always wanted to live in the Pacific
Northwest. It was the least I could do.”
My nose stung. “Thank you,” I croaked. Those words didn’t come close
to encompassing what I wanted them to. Not for the officer who had seen me
through the investigation, the arrest, the horrible trial, and everything that
followed.
Evan’s expression went from gentle to the official one I’d seen more than
the rest. “You can thank me by staying safe. No contact with people from
your old life.” He handed me a cell phone and a set of car keys. “Text when
you get in. Say, ‘Is this Joey?’ I’ll know you’re safe. Then don’t contact me
again unless it’s an emergency. Map and address are in the station wagon.”
I nodded, adjusting Lucy, no…Cady on my hip as I handed him my keys
and cell.
“There are enough vehicles coming and going from here that you should
be safe, but I put a wig and sunglasses in the vehicle just in case. Car seat is
ready to go. Don’t stop until you’re over state lines, at least. Your face is still
making the rounds on the news now and then.”
That anger flared to life again. People had a morbid fascination with
others’ suffering. Maybe it made them feel better about their lives. Maybe it
was that car-crash phenomenon. No matter the reason, it kept me from
finding any sort of safety.
“I won’t stop until we’ve gotten some distance.”
Evan nodded. “Check in on the regular.”
I moved on instinct, giving him a quick hug. “Thank you.”
“You’d better get going.” He patted my back. “You’ve got this. It’ll be
the fresh start you two need.”
I swallowed against the burn in my throat, nodding but not trusting my
voice.
Evan studied me for a moment and then dropped his hand. “I’ll get your
stuff.”
I headed toward the station wagon a few spots down. Opening the back
door, I got Cady situated while Evan loaded our bags. I slid behind the wheel
and picked up the black wig. It was so different from my vibrant red hair, but
I guessed that was the point. Pulling it on, I slipped the sunglasses into place.
Evan watched as I carefully pulled out of the parking spot. The gas and
brake were stickier than my sedan, but I’d have plenty of hours to get used to
the vehicle.
I lifted my hand in a wave that Evan answered. Then, swallowing hard, I
headed for the parking garage exit. The mall’s structure was already filling up
on the higher levels, and I was thankful for the cover. I’d learned the hard
way that you never knew who might be watching.
I held my breath as I pulled out into the sunlight. I didn’t release it until I
was two blocks away. My lips moved in a muttered prayer—maybe a mantra.
“Please let us be okay. Please let us be free.”
But if there was one thing I knew, it was that John’s fingers had a far
reach. And they could steal the breath right out of your lungs.
1
ASPEN
FIVE YEARS L ATER
“M AMA !” Cady yelled, flinging her arms wide as she ran out of the
elementary school. “It’s snowing!”
Her glittery, off-brand Uggs weren’t exactly protecting her from the
wetness, but this storm had come on unexpectedly. In our small town nestled
in the mountains of Washington, getting the occasional dump in October
wasn’t unusual. Sometimes, we even got some in September. But we
typically had a bit of warning.
Cady spun in a circle, tipping her head back and trying to catch
snowflakes on her tongue.
My heart squeezed. She was everything good in this world—a walking,
talking beacon of hope. “Come on, Katydid. Let’s get going before your nose
freezes.”
Cady’s best friend, Charlie, laughed. “Dad says it takes at least a couple
of hours for frostbite to set in.”
I pressed my lips together to keep from chuckling. “Good to know.”
“See you tomorrow,” Charlie called as he ran toward the SUV with the
police emblem on its side.
I waved at his dad, Lawson, behind the wheel. He lifted his hand in
answer.
“Can we make snowmen when we get home?” Cady begged as I hustled
her toward my station wagon.
“Depends how much snow we get.”
But given that a good three inches were already on the ground, I had a
feeling we would be in snowman city.
I opened the back door for Cady, and she slid in. “I’d say there’s enough
for snow cones already.”
Her green eyes lit up as a grin split her face. “Can we make mine
strawberry?”
“What do you think?”
“Strawberries and cream!” Cady yelled and held up her hand.
I laughed and high-fived it. “Let’s go home, and then we can get started.”
I just hoped my station wagon would get us there. I needed to replace the
tires. I’d known it months ago but thought I’d have time. Unfortunately, an
early dose of winter waited for no one.
Climbing behind the wheel, I started it up and turned on the heat as high
as it would go. Cady chattered on and on about her day, but I stayed focused
on the roads. The elementary school was on the outskirts of downtown Cedar
Ridge, not too far from The Brew, the coffee shop and café I managed.
I followed Main Street through town. Usually, I let myself take in the
quaint tourist shops, restaurants, and the gorgeous lake that peeked out from
between the buildings. But not today. Even five years into my life in Cedar
Ridge, I still wasn’t used to driving in the snow.
“It’s so pretty,” Cady said with a sigh.
My hands loosened on the wheel a fraction. “It is.”
Something about the blanket of white stretched out around us was
incredibly peaceful. It reminded me how much I loved living here. But it was
more than the beauty that surrounded us. It was the people. Even though my
friends here might not know my past, they loved and supported us with
everything they had.
My gaze flicked to the rearview mirror as I turned onto the road that
would take us out of town. My habit of watching who might be following at
any given moment had proven impossible to break.
I shifted my focus to Cady. “What do you think? Winter wonderland
walk?”
She beamed. “Yes, yes, yeeeesss!”
“I don’t know. You don’t sound excited at all.”
“I’m excited!” She bounced in her seat as if to accentuate the point.
“Okay, I guess we can go.”
The typical ten-minute drive to our house at the base of the mountain took
almost twenty, given how carefully I drove. I was thankful I’d gone to the
supermarket yesterday because I had a feeling we might be holing up for a
day or two.
The moment I pulled to a stop in front of the farmhouse, Cady was
unbuckling her seat belt. “What about the goaties? And Mabel and Phineas?
And—”
“I got them all in the barn before I picked you up,” I assured her.
“We gotta let Mabel out later. She loves the snow.”
I grinned as I slid out of the station wagon, my boots disappearing into
the snow. One of our donkeys was crazy about fresh powder. She would
zoom around her paddock like nothing you’d ever seen. But it was hard to get
her back inside the barn afterward.
“Tomorrow, when the storm has stopped,” I told Cady.
She bounced on her toes. “I wonder if the ducks will like it.”
“They might.”
A customer at The Brew had told me about a mama duck with a broken
wing on their property. She was worried the duck wouldn’t be able to protect
herself and her babies from predators. So, I brought her to our place. Now,
she was set up in the barn with a heat lamp and a play pool in one of the
stalls. My hope was that the wing would heal with time, and then she’d be
able to be on her own again. But until then, she and her babies had a safe
place to stay.
Cady raced through the snow and up the steps, jumping from foot to foot
on the front porch. “Let’s go!”
I laughed as I headed to join her, my gaze going to the tiny piece of wood
I’d left jammed into the screen door. It was still there. I might not have been
able to swing a fancy security system, but I’d learned ways to keep us safe.
Snagging the wood chip, I placed it on the windowsill and opened the
three locks on the door. Cady was inside before I could blink. A deep woof
sounded, and our dog bounded toward his best girl.
“Chauncey!” Cady giggled as the three-legged pup licked her cheek. “I
missed you, too.”
“Come on, buddy,” I called, letting him out into the snow to do his
business.
By the time we were back inside, Cady had donned her bright pink snow
gear. I winced as I took her in. The pants were a little too short, and the jacket
a bit tight. It looked like I would be doling out cash for new gear before the
winter season hit us full steam. Sometimes, I could get two seasons out of
Cady’s gear if I was lucky. But she’d had a growth spurt this year.
Cady shot her gloved fist into the air. “Winter wonderland walk!”
“Let’s go.” I grabbed a pair of gloves and a hat for myself, and then we
headed back out. I locked the door and shoved my keys into my pocket.
Cady launched herself off the porch steps into the snow. “I’m flying!”
I hurried down the steps, caught her around the waist, and lifted her into
the air. Cady’s laughter caught on the air and swam around us. This. This was
what I’d fought for. I hadn’t regretted leaving our old lives behind for a
second.
Cady’s giggles died away. “Mama,” she whispered.
Something about her tone had me on alert. My gaze shot in the direction
Cady was looking, and I stilled.
A deer limped along our drive, headed away from the house.
“She’s hurt,” Cady whispered, tears filling her voice.
My heart clenched. That was obviously the case, and as I squinted, I
could just see what looked like wire wrapped around her chest and leg. A
million curses filled my mind.
“We gotta help her,” Cady begged. “It’s so cold.”
My nose stung, imagining how scared the poor deer must be. Usually,
they traveled in groups, but I didn’t see any signs of other animals around.
They’d probably left her behind because she couldn’t move fast enough.
A burn lit along my sternum. I knew what that felt like, to be alone and
scared, not having anyone at your back.
“Come on,” I said to Cady, hustling her back up the steps.
“We gotta help her,” she argued.
“I’m going to, but I need you to wait inside.” I didn’t want Cady to scare
off the doe as we approached.
To her credit, she didn’t argue, simply followed me inside. I entered the
kitchen and grabbed the apple half I planned to cut up for her after-school
snack. “I’m going to lock the door after me. Don’t answer for anyone.
Promise?”
Cady bobbed her head up and down. “Hurry, Mama.”
I didn’t wait. I slipped out the door and locked it behind me. The deer had
already made it down our long drive and was heading up the two-lane road. I
cursed as the wind picked up in a loud howl, sending the snow flying.
I hurried to catch up with the doe, slowing as I got closer and trying to
examine the wire around her. I bit the inside of my cheek. It was digging into
the poor deer’s flesh. This might be out of my wheelhouse.
Pulling off my glove, I retrieved my phone from my pocket and searched
the number for Fish and Wildlife.
“Harrison County Fish and Wildlife, this is Andrea. How can I help
you?”
“Hi. My name is Aspen Barlow. I live in Cedar Ridge on Huckleberry
Lane. I’m following a deer with some wire wrapped around her pretty badly.
Do you have anyone who might be able to help?”
“Ma’am, do not approach the deer if it’s injured. They can react badly
when cornered.”
“I’m not trying to corner her. I just want to help her,” I explained.
I’d fallen into rehabilitating animals over the last several years. It seemed
like they found me more than I found them. It had started with Mabel. The
farmhouse’s previous owner hadn’t only taken poor care of his property; he’d
neglected his donkey, as well. He’d mentioned just putting her down when he
moved out, and I’d hurried to say I would take her.
I hadn’t had the first clue how to care for a donkey, but the internet had
taught me most of what I needed to know. It had taken time to earn Mabel’s
trust. She was the one who’d taught me not to corner an animal who was
scared or hurt. I had gotten a nasty gash courtesy of a kick from her when I
got too close, too quickly.
The woman on the phone sighed. “My officers are only responding to
emergencies right now due to the snow.”
Annoyance flickered through me. “This deer is suffering. That’s not an
emergency?”
“The public isn’t at risk from an injured deer.”
Meaning she would’ve responded to a call about a black bear or a cougar.
“Ma’am. Please. She’s hurting.” My voice nearly broke as I spoke. I
couldn’t leave the doe out here alone in the cold.
The woman sighed, muttering something under her breath. “I can try one
person who might be out that way, but I can’t make any promises. Where are
you?”
I rattled off my approximate address, and she hung up without another
word.
My teeth began to chatter as the wind picked up again. It was the kind of
cold that hurt your skin. I didn’t want to think about what the temperature
might’ve dropped to.
The deer trembled, looking over her shoulder at me.
“It’s okay, girl. You’re not alone. I’m gonna get you fixed up in no time.”
She started walking again, limping on her bad leg.
“Just stay put. It’ll be easier on both of us.”
The doe didn’t listen.
“I get it. You’re determined. Been living like this a while?”
She kept right on walking.
I followed her, wondering if I could just grab the wire and free her. I
worried the inside of my cheek as I studied the metal imprisoning her. I
thought I might be able to get her out if I got my fingers under a specific
corner.
I made a clucking sound with my tongue as the wind howled again. The
deer halted, glancing skeptically at me.
“Here, girl. Want some apple?”
She sniffed the air and took a step closer.
“That’s it.”
Another step.
“This apple is super yummy.”
A little closer.
The doe strained her neck.
A deep voice cut through the wind. “What the hell do you think you’re
doing?”
2
ROAN
T HE WOMAN WAS GOING to get herself killed. Standing in the freezing cold
in a jacket that wasn’t nearly warm enough and a hat with some sort of
damned pom-pom on the top. And was that glitter woven through it? Sparkly
shit didn’t do anything to keep you warm.
There she was, bending over, trying to get an injured animal to come to
her with an apple. The second she tried to pull that wire free, the deer would
lose its mind and probably kick her in the head. She’d be lucky if she got out
of it with only a concussion.
The woman whirled around, her red hair flying as her eyes went wide—
eyes so green they were a sucker punch to the gut. I sucked in a breath.
The moment I saw true fear in them, I wanted to kick myself. She
covered it quickly, taking up a stance I recognized as one ready for defense. I
instantly took a step back. I should’ve expected it, been used to it by now, but
it still grated. “I’m from Fish and Wildlife,” I gritted out.
A little of the tension bled out of her. “Oh.”
Then annoyance filled her expression. “Then you shouldn’t be barking at
me for trying to help a deer.”
“I didn’t bark at you.”
She arched a brow. “Pretty sure you came storming over here looking like
the abominable snowman and growling like one, too.”
I scowled at her. “I was trying to stop you from getting yourself killed.”
“I know it’s a risk, but she’s hurting and alone. I wasn’t going to leave
her to suffer.”
A muscle in my jaw twitched. “A cornered animal, especially when
they’re in pain, will react badly. Deer’s hooves can be lethal. Especially if
they connect with your skull.”
“I can move quickly. I know how to escape an animal lashing out.”
“Civilians trying to interfere,” I grumbled. Just like Marion Simpson, who
refused to stop feeding that damn bear she’d practically adopted. “Do you
know how much paperwork I’ll have to do if you get dead?”
The redhead gaped at me. “Did you seriously just say that?”
I shrugged and turned back to my snowmobile—the same vehicle she’d
been oblivious to as I approached. A fresh wave of annoyance flashed
through me. Wandering around after a deer in a whiteout was the height of
stupidity. Not being aware of your surroundings was even worse.
Bending, I grabbed my kit from one of the snowmobile’s side
compartments and assembled the tranquilizer gun. It had only taken a quick
glance to see the deer would need medical attention.
I turned around, eyeing the doe, who was trying to make her way through
the deepening snow. Poor girl. I lifted the tranq gun, and the redhead threw
herself in front of me.
“Don’t shoot her!”
I let out a string of curses. “What the hell are you doing?”
“Stopping you from committing deer-i-cide. I won’t let you hurt her.”
A fire blazed in those green depths, one I had to admire begrudgingly,
even if the woman was risking life and limb.
“It’s a tranq gun,” I growled. “The doe needs medical attention.”
“Oh.”
“Yeah. Now, move out of my way so I don’t miss my shot.”
The redhead moved back, and I aimed. The dart hit true. The deer jerked,
then stumbled into the snow.
The woman didn’t wait. She rushed over to the doe, sinking to her knees,
not giving a damn that she wasn’t in proper snow gear. “It’s okay, girl. We’re
going to help you.” She positioned the deer’s head on her lap, stroking her
cheek.
Something about the gesture tugged at a place deep in my chest. I bit the
inside of my cheek to distract myself from the sensation. Grabbing my
medical kit, I made my way over to the fallen deer.
“It looks bad,” the woman whispered.
She wasn’t wrong. The old, rusted tomato cage had cut into the doe’s
flesh, and the injuries looked infected. “These cages are a recipe for disaster.
Deer stick their heads in, trying to get the tomatoes, and they get stuck.”
The redhead worried a spot on the inside of her mouth, making her cheek
pucker. “I never thought about that.”
“Most people don’t.” I grabbed a pair of wire cutters from my kit, quickly
freeing the doe from the cage. The wounds looked angry. “I need to get her
some real medical care.”
I looked at the road. I didn’t want to take her into town. The ride would
be too long.
“I’ve got a barn she can stay in.”
I glanced back at the woman, arching a brow in question.
“I take in injured animals sometimes. One more won’t be a problem.”
Of course, she did. A bleeding heart, through and through. “You’d need
high walls so she doesn’t try to jump out.”
“I’ve got a stall like that. It’s not a problem.”
I searched out her property. I could just see the barn in the distance. Even
from here, I could tell it needed some serious work. I cursed. “Fine. Stay
here.”
“You could say thank you,” she muttered.
I moved back to my snowmobile and grabbed the stretcher. It only took a
minute, but when I returned, the woman was shaking.
“You need a better coat.”
She sighed. “My coat is fine.”
“You’re shivering.”
“I don’t usually make a habit of sitting in the snow.”
She needed a coat made for this climate, not one with little decorative
stars on the sleeves.
“Can you help me roll her so we can get the board under her?”
The woman nodded. “Aspen.”
“Huh?”
“My name is Aspen.”
I simply grunted in response. I didn’t want to know her name. I already
knew too much.
She muttered something under her breath that I couldn’t make out.
“On three. One, two, three.”
We shifted the deer and slid the board into place. It didn’t take long to
strap her down. I hurriedly backed my snowmobile up to the site and
connected the stretcher.
I glanced at Aspen. “Get on.”
Her eyes went wide. “With you?”
“You want to walk all the way back?”
A shiver racked her, and she shook her head. So very carefully, she thrust
a leg over the vehicle’s seat.
“Hold on to my waist.”
My words were low, gravelly, but she obeyed.
The contact nearly made me jerk. Even through layers of snow gear, there
was a burning heat to the woman’s touch. Danger. The message flashed over
and over in my mind as I slowly started down the road.
My back teeth ground together as I made the turn into Aspen’s driveway,
and she gripped me tighter. As we slowed in front of her old farmhouse, she
let go, and I released the breath I’d been holding since the moment she
gripped my waist.
Aspen quickly climbed off the snowmobile just as the front door flew
open, and a little girl ran out. “Mama!”
She charged down the steps as fast as her snowsuit-clad legs could carry
her. She looked like a pink glitter snowball.
“Cady,” Aspen chastised gently. “I told you to wait inside.”
A guilty look passed over her face. “I know, but—” Her words cut off as
she saw the deer at the back of my vehicle. “No! Is she—?”
Aspen quickly wrapped her daughter in a hug. “No, Katydid. She’s just
sleeping so we can help her.”
Tears welled in the little girl’s eyes. “Promise?”
“I promise. We got some help from Fish and Wildlife. We’re going to
make sure she’s okay.”
The little girl’s gaze cut to me, so much like her mother’s, it froze me to
the spot. “You’re going to help my mama save Bambi?”
Fuck me. I couldn’t say no to that face or the damn deer.
3
ASPEN
I SAW the moment the burly man softened. Even the hardest-hearted
didn’t stand a chance against my Cady.
“Yeah. I’m gonna help her,” he muttered.
I couldn’t stop my lips from twitching. The man didn’t miss the
movement, and it turned his reluctant agreement into a scowl. It only made
me grin wider.
Cady wiggled to get out of my hold. “Thank you, thank you, thank you!
What do we do now? I want to help. I’m a real good helper. Right, Mama?”
“The best helper in all the land,” I agreed.
The man frowned. “I think it’s best if you keep a bit of distance, just in
case she wakes up.”
Cady bobbed her head up and down. “I can do that.” She glanced up at
me. “Do you think she needs a blanket?”
I shook my head. “We’ve got straw and heat lamps in the barn.”
The man, whose name I still didn’t know, raised his eyebrows in surprise.
I was going to start calling him The Grouch in my head.
“You’ve got heat lamps?”
I nodded. “We have some baby ducks that need some extra heat right
now. And we’ve had baby goats, too.”
Cady filled him in on our menagerie. “We’ve got ducks and goaties and
donkeys and a pony and an alpaca and four cats and a dog and an emu and
—”
The Grouch’s jaw dropped. “Did you say an emu?”
My cheeks heated. It did sound a little out there when Cady listed them
all like that. “There was a guy over in Brookdale who thought it’d be fun to
have one as a pet but didn’t realize all that went into caring for one.”
The Grouch shook his head. “Let’s get her inside before the snow gets
worse.”
We had at least a foot already.
Cady tugged on my hand. “Think I’ll get a snow day tomorrow?”
“You just might.”
She squealed and spun in a circle. “I love snow!”
I laughed, grinning at Cady. She was a constant reminder of everything I
had to be grateful for.
The man cleared his throat. “Over there?”
I jerked my gaze to him. He’d already unhooked the stretcher from the
snowmobile and had hold of a tow rope.
“Yup. I can help you pull her—”
“I’ve got it,” he clipped.
“Alrighty, then,” I mumbled, leading the way toward the barn. My skin
itched, feeling just a bit too tight for my body. I wasn’t used to having people
in our space. Only the few friends I truly trusted or when it was strictly
necessary. This qualified as necessary—an emergency, even—but it still
made me twitchy.
Cady bounded around us, chattering away about all the animals, sharing
their names and funny stories about them, and how they’d come to live with
us. The man didn’t respond once, except with the occasional grunt, but Cady
didn’t seem to mind. She just kept right on talking.
I hurried ahead to open the barn door. The animals lifted their heads at the
sound. Syd, our deaf pony, just followed the others’ lead and turned toward
the door. He let out a whinny, and Cady hurried over to stroke his nose.
The man tugged the deer into the barn aisle. “Which stall?”
“Far back right has the tallest door.”
He didn’t respond, just dragged the board and doe back there. It didn’t
take him long to unhook her and lay her on the hay.
Cady pressed into my side. “She’s hurt.”
I wrapped an arm around her. “That’s why she’s here. So we can help her
get better.”
She looked up at me. “Did someone hurt her?”
My ribs constricted. I walked a delicate line with Cady, never wanting to
lie to her but also knowing she wasn’t ready for the whole truth. Still, she
knew enough to understand that sometimes people did bad things.
The man’s gaze lifted to Cady, sensing something deeper in her words.
“Not on purpose,” I hurried to assure her. “She got stuck in something
from a garden.”
Cady nodded, a little of the worry leaving her expression. “We gotta give
her a name.”
I tweaked Cady’s nose. “Good thing I know the perfect person for the
job.”
She giggled. “I’ll start thinking.”
“Shouldn’t name her,” the man said.
My eyes narrowed on him. “Everyone deserves a name.”
“She’s not a pet. If we do our jobs right, she’ll be going back into the
wild.”
“She can have a name in the wild,” Cady broke in, not put off by his
brusque tone in the slightest. “I name all the animals that are around. There’s
Rita, the turtle. Juliette and James, the deer. Carson, the chipmunk.” She
tapped her lips. “Sometimes, I forget what I name them because there’s lots
and lots. But I just give them new names, and I don’t think they care.”
The man stared at her as if he didn’t have the first clue what to do with
her. Then he pushed to his feet and pulled out his phone, tapping the screen.
He held it to his ear and waited.
“Yeah. I got an injured deer out on Huckleberry Lane. Got caught in a
tomato cage.”
Silence for a beat.
“Got it free but looks like an infection.”
More quiet except for the animals all around us, making sounds of
curiosity or bids for an early dinner.
“Yeah, got some in my kit. Will do.”
The man glanced at me. “Can Dr. Miller come out here tomorrow to take
a look at her?”
I stiffened. I’d heard there was a newish vet in town, but it hadn’t been
time for Chauncey’s checkup since the doctor had arrived a few months back.
I was sure he was perfectly nice; it just meant more strangers on my property.
I licked my suddenly dry lips.
The man’s gaze narrowed on me, assessing that slight bit of hesitation.
“Sure. Give him my number.” I rattled off the digits, ignoring the sweat
gathering at the base of my spine.
The man read them out to the vet and then hung up. “Miller said he’ll call
you first thing tomorrow.”
“Okay.” The single word caught in my throat, and the man didn’t miss it.
“You got anyone else helping you with all these animals?”
I stiffened, feeling the Taser I always carried in my pocket. “We can
handle it.”
He just shook his head. “Miller wants the doe started on antibiotics. I’m
going to give her an injection now while she’s out. He’ll give you pills
tomorrow. Probably some treats to get her to take them.”
The tension radiating through me eased a fraction as he stalked out of the
barn.
“He’s really tall,” Cady whispered.
“He is,” I agreed. You couldn’t see much of the man through his snow
gear, just the fact that he was tall and clearly built. And those hypnotizing
dark blue eyes.
“He’s gonna help her,” she assured me with complete certainty.
My heart ached as I took in the deer. The poor thing would be terrified
when she woke up.
Footsteps had me looking back to the aisle. The man strode in our
direction, bag in hand. He set it on a tack box and opened it.
Cady left my side immediately. “Whatcha doin’?”
The man glanced down at her. He started to frown but then seemed to
catch himself. “I’m going to give the deer some medicine.”
Cady watched as he pulled out some supplies. “A shot?” She shivered. “I
don’t like shots.”
There was the faintest twitch to his lips. “I don’t either.”
Her eyes went wide. “Really?”
He shook his head. “Never have. Freaks me out.”
Cady bobbed her head up and down. “They hurt, too.” She looked at the
doe. “Is it going to hurt my new friend?”
A pang lit along my sternum. She had the best heart.
“She won’t feel a thing. She’s sleeping right now, which is what she
needs.”
“I wish I was sleeping when I got shots,” Cady grumbled.
The man grinned. That curve of his lips and the flash of straight, white
teeth had me sucking in a surprised breath. When he wasn’t scowling, his
beauty was devastating.
“I wouldn’t mind napping through my shots either,” he agreed.
“Can I help?” Cady asked.
The man opened his mouth as if to say no but then glanced at the deer.
“Sure.”
I watched as he led Cady into the stall. He explained each step as he did
it. The deer didn’t flinch as he inserted the needle and pushed the medicine
into her muscle. Then he slid on gloves and cleaned her wounds, placing
ointment on the gashes.
There was a tenderness to how he treated the animal that was in direct
opposition to his demeanor. The gentleness told me his cold, grouchy exterior
was nothing but a defense mechanism. It was to protect the tenderness that
lived within him.
“We did it, Mama! Did you see? I helped. I spread the medicine on her
and everything.”
I crouched in front of Cady. “You were amazing.”
“I think I wanna be a vet or maybe a—a—what did you say you were
again?” she asked the man.
There was that faint lip twitch again. “A Fish and Wildlife game warden.”
“A game warder,” Cady whispered. “That’s so cool.”
My gaze lifted to the man’s. “Thank you. For helping her.”
The hint of amused affection slipped off his face, and the mask came
back. “It’s my job.”
I only smiled wider, having gotten a glimpse of what he was hiding
beneath the façade. “Well, thank you for doing it.”
He shifted on his feet, clearly uncomfortable. I wanted to laugh but
resisted the urge.
“Call Dr. Miller if she gets worse. I gotta get going.”
“I will.” As he headed into the snowstorm, regret flashed through me at
knowing I’d likely never see him again. Something about the man pulled at
me. Something I couldn’t quite pin down.
“I like him,” Cady said in a matter-of-fact tone.
I pushed to my feet. “Oh, yeah?”
“I think Mr. Grizz and I are gonna be bestest friends.”
My brows flew up. “Mr. Grizz?”
“Yep,” she said, popping the P. “He’s like a grizzly bear. Cranky after
coming out of hi-hi—”
“Hibernation?” I supplied, fighting back laughter.
Cady grinned. “Hibersnation!” Her tiny features scrunched. “Maybe he’s
cranky because he’s hungry.”
This time, I couldn’t hold in my laughter and pulled Cady into my arms.
“You might be right. We should’ve offered him a snack.”
4
ROAN
I’d sent it four minutes ago. I told myself I’d give her five and then go in.
John was at a business dinner, but he could come home at any time, and I
wanted Autumn and my niece out of here first. My phone clicked over to five
minutes to seven. My stomach cramped.
God, I hoped she hadn’t changed her mind. All she’d ever wanted was a
family. To create the environment we’d never had growing up. It made it that
much harder for her to walk away. Even if it was the only thing she could do
to keep her and her daughter safe.
I slid out of my car and headed up the front steps. This McMansion in the
suburbs was never something I’d pictured Autumn in. She had too much heart
and soul. She was more the type for an old farmhouse with a wraparound
porch and notches in a wood post where she’d measure her growing kids.
But John had wanted big. He’d said they needed to keep up appearances,
which meant a pristine home without a single thing out of place. I gritted my
teeth at the memory as I searched my key ring for the pink one Autumn had
given me. Sliding it into the lock, I opened the door.
“Autumn?” I called.
A light was on down the hall, but everything else was dark. Too dark.
Shadows danced along the walls. My heart hammered in my chest.
“Autumn?” I tried again. “Where are you?”
I heard nothing but the drip of a faucet somewhere down the hall. I
moved toward the faint light in the direction of the kitchen.
A soft cry sounded from upstairs. Lucy.
I turned, heading quickly up the stairs, and moved on autopilot toward
my niece’s room. The door was open, the faint glow of a nightlight shining
through.
As I stepped inside, I pulled up short. A figure sat in the rocker. Autumn
had hemmed and hawed over what color she’d wanted for the nursery,
changing her mind at least a dozen times before settling on a pale purple. But
the person in the chair now was too big to be my sister.
And they were completely ignoring the now-wailing baby in the crib as a
faint breeze ruffled the gauzy curtains.
“Hello, Tara. I didn’t hear the bell.”
The voice froze me to the spot. It was so calm yet admonishing. The
familiar line John so often walked.
“What’s wrong with Lucy?” I croaked, my palms sweating.
He didn’t turn to look at me, just fixed his gaze on a spot over the crib.
“Did you really think I wouldn’t find out?”
My throat constricted, tightening to the point of pain. “Where’s
Autumn?”
I could barely get the words out as blood roared in my ears.
John chuckled, the sound light and airy. “I’ve given everything for my
family. Worked myself to the bone to provide a good life.” He tapped a finger
on the arm of the rocker. “And this is how they want to repay me?”
“Where is she?” Hot tears filled my eyes.
He laughed again, but the sound was darker this time. “I don’t know…
Where’s Mommy, Lucy? Where is the traitorous whore?”
The fury broke free then, forcing him straighter in the chair. The
moonlight caught on his crisp white shirt. But it wasn’t just white. There were
red smears and splotches.
John slowly pushed to his feet. The moonlight illuminated his face. Red
spattered what I could see of it.
Blood.
Bile surged into my throat.
“They’re mine.” His hand twitched.
A gleam of silver.
A knife.
Coated in a deep red.
John took one step and then another. “You think you can take them from
me? I’ll send you all to hell first.”
And then he lunged.
I shot up in bed, face beaded with sweat, a scream lodged in my throat.
My fingers fisted in the blankets as I struggled to breathe.
“Just a dream.” I murmured the words over and over. John wasn’t here.
He was thousands of miles away, locked up tight.
My nightlight cast a sea of stars across the ceiling. I hadn’t been able to
handle the dark after that night.
I threw back the covers. The sheets and my pajamas were damp. I
wrinkled my nose, glancing at the clock. Five-thirty in the morning. Too
early to start the wash, but I could at least strip the bed and get cleaned up.
Chauncey looked up from his dog bed in the corner.
“It’s okay. Go back to sleep.”
My muscles trembled as I stood, and I took a moment to get my bearings.
I pulled the sheets off the bed and left them in a pile, putting fresh ones on.
Then I tiptoed across the hallway to my bathroom.
Cady always slept deeply. It took a wrecking ball to wake her up most
days. But that didn’t stop me from worrying about disturbing her.
Stripping out of my sleep clothes, I turned on the water and waited for it
to warm. The old pipes in this house took forever, but it was finally habitable.
I took my time washing away the residue of my nightmare. Only it wasn’t a
nightmare. It was a memory.
My stomach roiled, and I had to fight back the bile that surged up my
throat. I shoved my head under the spray, breathing slowly and deeply.
Eventually, the shakes and nausea subsided.
My fingers played across the scar that curved over my collarbone and
down my side. It had faded over the past five years, but it would always be
there. A reminder of hell on Earth. But also that I had survived.
I shut off the water and stepped out of the shower-tub combo. I took my
time drying off and getting ready for the day. My eyes burned from lack of
sleep. Not only had my nightmare woken me early, but I’d also had a hell of
a time falling asleep. Images of Roan’s panicked expression as he fled last
night played in my head. Something had him on edge; I just had no idea
what.
Taking the hairdryer into my bedroom, I finished preparations for the day.
I went out to give the animals breakfast and Dory her medicine before
coming back inside and making breakfast for my chick.
Maybe it was because I had extra time today, or perhaps because of my
dream, but I made the meal extra special. As I placed the last berry on the
plate, I grinned at my creation. There was something about forcibly turning
around a day that started rough that helped me feel more in control.
I headed down the hallway and slowly opened Cady’s door. A smile
instantly curved my lips. My girl slept wildly: red hair everywhere, arms
thrown wide, legs like a starfish. Her glittery pink nightlight made the room
sparkle.
Crossing to her bed, I knelt and brushed the hair out of her face.
“Morning, Katydid.”
“Mmm,” she mumbled, smacking her lips.
“It’s time to wake up.”
“Nuh-uh,” she argued, still half-asleep.
“I made your favorite…” I tried enticing her.
Cady’s eyes fluttered open. “Cady pancakes?”
I chuckled. “Cady pancakes all the way.”
She beamed. “Today is the bestest.”
I tapped her nose. “I agree. You want to eat first and then get ready?”
Cady bobbed her head in a nod, and I helped her sit up. I slid on one
slipper and then the other. Grabbing her robe off the hook on her door, I got
her into it.
She stumbled slightly as she made her way down the hall, and I couldn’t
help but laugh. Waking up was always a challenge. Chauncey hurried over to
greet her, and she patted his head as she slid into her chair.
Cady grinned down at her breakfast. A stack of two pancakes made to
look just like her. Raspberries for her red hair. Green grapes for her eyes.
Strawberries for her mouth. Nose and eyelashes drawn on with chocolate
syrup.
“I almost don’t want to eat it,” she whispered.
“Well, that would be a waste.”
Cady giggled and cut off a bite. Then she paused. “Do you think Mr.
Grizz has someone to make him pancakes?”
My heart clenched. “I don’t know. He can probably make them himself.”
But that was a lonely proposition, day in and day out. And I knew how
that felt.
Cady’s lips pursed. “We should invite him next time. Pancakes would
make him less grumpy, for sure.”
I choked on a laugh. My girl always told it like it was.
You think you can take her from me? You’re going to pay. In
blood.
10
ASPEN
I STEPPED onto the front porch as Lawson pulled into my drive. Cady
bounced at my side. Her excitement never dimmed when it came to seeing
her best friend. It didn’t matter that she’d spent all day at school with him
yesterday and then had a playdate afterward.
Lawson hopped out of his SUV as I lugged Cady’s booster seat toward
the vehicle. “Here, let me get that.” He had it out of my hands before I could
argue.
“Thanks again for doing pickup duty.”
“It’s no problem at all. When is your car going to be ready? I’m happy to
take you to get it.”
“Hopefully tomorrow. But Maddie said she’d give me a ride. She’s going
to help me with pickup today, too.” Thankfully, I had a day off from The
Brew, so I didn’t need to get myself to work on top of everything else.
Lawson nodded as he got the booster seat in place, Cady and Charlie
chattering over him. “I’ll leave the seat at school so Maddie can grab it.”
“Thank you. I’m really sorry to call on you so much.” Guilt twisted deep.
I was calling on all the people in my life when they had busy schedules of
their own.
Lawson straightened. “Aspen, at this point, you’re family. It’s what we do
for each other.”
A burn lit behind my eyes and in my throat. Family. I’d wanted that for so
long. Hoped Autumn and I would build it together for Cady. And it had all
been ripped away. My hand slipped beneath my flannel shirt, feeling the scar
there.
I should be finding a way out of Cedar Ridge. Moving Cady to a city
where we could be anonymous. But I couldn’t. Not when she was so loved
and cared for here. I’d have to find another way. Figure out how John had
found our location. Make him think we’d moved elsewhere.
“Thanks, Law,” I whispered.
Concern swept over his expression. “Everything okay?”
I’d almost told him about my past a few times; he was law enforcement,
after all. But something always held me back. Part of it was thinking that the
fewer people who knew, the better. The other bit was that I liked just being
Aspen here. Not a woman who’d been through a horrific ordeal and barely
lived to tell the tale.
“I’m good,” I lied. “What about you?”
I hadn’t missed the dark circles under Lawson’s eyes or the deepening
lines of strain on his face. But I knew he’d never tell me exactly what was
going on. Lawson always kept things close to the vest.
He sighed. “Just been a long few weeks.” He glanced out at my pasture.
“I’m worried about Luke.”
Lawson’s eldest son had been acting out a bit and throwing more than a
little attitude toward his dad.
“I’m sorry. I can take Charlie and Drew this weekend. Maybe you and
Luke can do something, just the two of you. It’s probably too cold for
camping, but you could rent a cabin somewhere that isn’t home.”
Lawson nodded, scrubbing a hand over his stubbled jaw. “I don’t want to
dump those two knuckleheads on you.”
I smiled. “It’s what family does, isn’t it?”
The corner of his mouth kicked up. “You’ve got a point there. Let me get
a feel for my caseload, and I’ll let you know.”
“I’m around, so you can decide last minute if you want.”
“Thanks, Aspen.”
Warmth spread through me. Something about giving back to the people
who had given me so much helped. “Anytime.”
“Dad, we’re gonna be late,” Charlie called from the SUV.
Lawson chuckled. “The only kid who’s worried about being on time for
school.”
I grinned and ducked into the vehicle. I rained kisses all over Cady’s face.
“Mama!” she shrieked.
“I’m gonna miss you like crazy. Promise me you’re not gonna run away
and join the circus.”
Cady giggled. “Why would I when we have our own circus right here?
All the best parts, anyway.”
She had a point there.
Charlie frowned. “I don’t know. I think having a trapeze would be pretty
cool.”
I chuckled and tickled his belly. “I’ll get right on that.”
“I’m first up!” he demanded.
“You got it.” I gently shut the door and stepped back, but I didn’t go back
inside the house. I waited until the police-issued SUV disappeared
completely from sight.
A pang lit along my sternum. It was always hard to watch Cady go. It
didn’t matter if it was for twenty minutes or twenty hours. But watching her
disappear with John’s letter hanging over my head? That was torture.
“We’re thousands of miles away,” I whispered. “We’re safe.”
I forced myself to turn and head inside. I grabbed my muck boots, jacket,
and work gloves, and headed back out. Sliding the keys out of my pocket, I
locked the two deadbolts and the doorknob, then checked each one twice.
The temptation to check them all two more times was strong. When we
first arrived in Cedar Ridge, and Cady was still a toddler, I’d ventured into
obsessive territory. I’d spent my nights walking the house, rechecking every
window and door countless times.
I wasn’t sure when it shifted. Maybe after a couple of months of being
here with no one showing up at our door or recognizing me from news
coverage.
When we were in Mississippi, one reporter always seemed to find me, no
matter where I hid. Oren Randal had exposed two houses, an apartment, my
office, and Cady’s daycare in his articles. He’d almost cost me everything all
over again.
But when he hadn’t found me in Cedar Ridge, I’d slowly begun to let it
all go. The panic, the fear. The shadows of it still lived inside me, but I no
longer let them hold me down.
Letting out a long breath, I started toward the barn. I’d already been
through the feeding rigmarole but needed some solid cleaning and muck-out
time.
Mabel brayed from her pasture as she kicked out at Phineas.
“That’s not nice, Mabel,” I called. “He just wants to play.”
She raced along the fence line, and I stopped to scratch between her ears.
I bent and dropped my forehead to hers. “A little kindness goes a long way,
Miss Mabel.”
She huffed out a breath as if to say, “Whatever.”
I couldn’t hold in my laugh. “At least you always stay true to yourself.”
The sound of tires on gravel had me straightening and turning around. I
expected to see Lawson’s SUV, thinking Cady had forgotten something.
Instead, I saw an unfamiliar van.
My stomach twisted into a painful knot. I tugged my Taser out of my
back pocket and instantly checked my best escape routes. I cursed as the
vehicle pulled to a stop between the house and me. And I didn’t have my
damned phone.
Blood roared in my ears as two figures climbed out of the van. My eyes
flared as I recognized the driver—the man from The Brew yesterday
morning.
I should’ve stuck with my first impression of him. The one that told me
something was off. My time in Cedar Ridge had changed my perspective on
things. I tended to give people the benefit of the doubt. Apparently, that was a
mistake.
“Hello again,” the familiar voice greeted.
“This is private property. I’ll have to ask you to leave.” My voice was
even, almost calm. But the Taser dug into my palm as I gripped it.
The second man gave me what he likely intended to be a reassuring
smile. “We don’t mean any harm. We just need to talk to you for a minute.”
“I don’t care what you mean. You’re on private property, and you need to
leave. I’ve got friends on the force here, and they’d be happy to haul you in.”
Lawson and Nash would do that in a heartbeat. But it would also mean
I’d have to answer a hell of a lot of questions.
The first man shot me a cocky grin. “Come on now, Aspen. Don’t be like
that. Or should I say Tara? Tara Monroe, isn’t it?”
All the blood drained from my head, and my mouth went dry. They knew.
How? Had John sent them somehow?
“Quit it. You’re freaking her out,” the second man snapped. He turned
back to me. “We didn’t mean to scare you. Really. I’m Tyson. This is Steven.
We’re podcasters.”
Nausea swept through me. Better than someone wanting me dead, but not
by much. “I want you to leave. Now.”
Steven rounded the vehicle and headed toward me. “We just want to ask
you a few questions. We specialize in true crime.”
Of course, they did. “That’s great for you, but I don’t want anything to do
with your podcast.”
“Come on now. You’re the only one who was there that night besides
John. Well, unless you count that little girl.”
Bile surged up my throat.
“We’re just trying to get to the truth,” Tyson said as he crossed in my
direction. “When a respected doctor goes to jail for murdering his beautiful
wife, our listeners want to know what happened and why.”
“What happened was announced in a court of law. I have no comment
except to say get the hell off my property before I tase you both.”
They stopped a few steps from me. Steven’s mouth pressed into a hard
line. “Not everyone’s convinced the right person is in prison.”
The scar that curved from my chest down my side burned as my breaths
came quicker. I couldn’t get a full one. Couldn’t catch hold of the oxygen I
needed. The memories were too strong.
A door slammed, and my gaze jerked toward the sound. I couldn’t make
out the figure at first. My vision was too blurry with panic. But as the large
man stalked toward us, I saw fury on his face.
“What the hell do you think you’re doing?”
13
ROAN
M ADDIE GLANCED over at me as we drove into town. “Are you okay? You
seem jumpy.”
I winced. Apparently, I hadn’t been circumspect in my search for the
silver van as we drove. I kept expecting the two podcasters to jump out and
give me away at any moment.
“I think I had too much coffee today,” I lied.
She laughed. “A day off, and you still can’t stay away from the stuff.”
“I guess not.”
Maddie was quiet for a second, but a smile played on her lips. “Looks
like you can’t stay away from Roan either.”
I stiffened. Roan had spent the day with me. He’d checked all my
windows and doors to make sure the locks were adequate. Then he’d offered
to help me muck out the barn. It wasn’t until just now that I realized he was
probably supposed to work today.
“He was helping me with Dory,” I said quickly.
Maddie looked confused.
“The deer,” I explained.
“Oh.” She drummed her fingers on the wheel. “He’s not usually willing
to be around people much. Don’t get me wrong, he’d do anything for his
family, but that’s about it. I think that’s why he ended up at Fish and
Wildlife. He does better with animals.”
“He’s good with people, too.”
The words were out before I could stop them. It annoyed me that so many
people saw Roan as something other than what he was: a kind, gentle soul. A
little rough around the edges, sure, but that was just the exterior.
Maddie’s brows lifted. “Sounds like you’re getting to know him pretty
well.”
“Cady likes him,” I said, trying to avoid the subject.
“Well, my bestie certainly has good taste,” Maddie said as she pulled into
the school parking lot.
As we slowed to a stop, Cady jumped up and down, waving maniacally. I
couldn’t help the laugh that bubbled out of me. It was the first one since
Steven and Tyson had shown up. “I think she’s excited you’re picking her
up.”
Maddie chuckled and jumped out of her SUV. Cady ran straight at her,
and Maddie scooped her up in her arms. Cady giggled. “Today is the bestest.
Charlie’s dad took us to school, and you’re picking me up. I gots all my
Hartleys.”
My chest constricted. This. This was why I couldn’t rip Cady out of her
life here. She’d lain down roots. Built a community. Had a support system.
Maddie squeezed her tightly. “You’re the bright spot in my day, too. You
ready to go?”
I grabbed Cady’s booster seat and got to work installing it in Maddie’s
SUV.
“I’m the readiest. Charlie already left with his dad.”
“Then it looks like we can hit the road,” Maddie said, setting her down.
Katelyn led her daughter by us, sending Maddie and me a dirty look. I
tried my best to ignore her as I got Cady settled.
“What’s that woman’s deal?” Maddie whispered as we headed for our
respective doors.
I shook my head. “I have no idea. She’s hated me since day one, and her
daughter is awful to Cady.”
Maddie scowled. “I forgot you’d said that. It’s still bad?”
I nodded. “Unfortunately.”
“It’s depressing that some people never grow out of the mean-girl stage
and then teach it to their children.”
I sighed as I slid into the SUV. “It’s exhausting.”
“What’s sausting?” Cady piped in.
I should’ve known better than to say anything around tiny ears. “Cleaning
up all of Mabel’s poop.”
Cady giggled. “I’m not sorry I missed that.”
Maddie snorted. “I bet.”
Cady chattered on and on about her day as we headed home, telling us
who she and Charlie had played with at recess, the book their teacher read to
them, and the art project of the day. I didn’t think she stopped for a breath
until Maddie parked at our house.
“Can you come in and play, Maddie?” Cady asked hopefully.
“Sorry, bestie. I gotta go train a dog right now. But let’s have a girls’
night soon. We can do glitter manicures.”
“Yes!” Cady cheered.
“Thanks again for the ride. I really appreciate you going out of your
way.”
Maddie just smiled at me. “I love getting a little extra time with you two.
I’ll be by in the morning to get you.”
I tried not to let the feeling of being a burden well up. “So glad you came
into The Brew looking for a job.”
Maddie shot me a dirty look. “Do not make me cry, Aspen Barlow.”
A laugh bubbled out of me, and I held up both hands. “I’d never.”
She pulled me in for a quick hug. “Love you.”
That burn along my sternum was back, spreading and taking over. “Love
you, too.”
But I wasn’t sure I’d earned the right to say those words to Maddie. Not
when I was keeping so many secrets. I released her with guilt swirling around
me and forced myself out of her SUV.
I glanced around my property, a shiver cascading through me. I had the
sudden bizarre wish that Roan was still here. His big, burly presence made
me feel safe in a way I almost resented. I’d been going it alone for years and
worked hard to ensure Cady and I were safe.
Opening the back door, I unhooked Cady’s booster seat straps. “Ready
for a snack?”
“Obvi.”
My brows hit my hairline. “Obvi?”
She grinned. “Drew says it a lot.”
I could only imagine all the things Charlie’s older brother said. I only
hoped Cady wouldn’t accidentally drop an F-bomb in the first grade.
Cady hopped out of the back seat and ran toward the house.
“Just leave the booster since I’m driving you tomorrow,” Maddie said.
“Okay, thanks. Have a great training session.”
“I’m meeting with a chihuahua with aggression issues.”
“Oh, boy,” I muttered.
Maddie’s eyes filled with humor. “He loves the wife but growls and bares
his teeth whenever the husband gets near her.”
I chuckled. “Have fun with that.”
“I always do.”
I shut the door and headed for the front porch. Checking the screen door,
I pulled out the tiny piece of wood. Then I set to work unlocking all the
locks. Each one sounded like a cannon going off. They used to make me feel
safe. Secure. But now I felt exposed. As if a dozen of them wouldn’t protect
me.
Cady charged inside the moment the door was open and began her
lovefest with Chauncey. I quickly closed the door and relocked it, stepping to
the window to survey the drive. I watched and waited as Maddie drove off.
No silver van appeared. But that didn’t mean it wouldn’t.
“Mama?”
I turned at the sound of Cady’s voice.
Her face scrunched. “You okay?”
She was a little empath, through and through, always sensing others’
emotions.
“Yeah, honey. I’m okay.” I wouldn’t lie and say I was good. I wasn’t. But
I was okay. We were. And that would stay true.
I let out a long breath. “You know what we need?”
Cady released her hold on Chauncey. “What?”
“Cocoa smash.”
Her eyes went comically wide. “Before dinner?”
I laughed. “Sometimes, you need to treat yourself. But you have to
promise me you’ll eat your veggies when it’s time.”
“I promise! I promise!” Cady started booty shaking across the living
room toward the kitchen, singing as she went. “Cocoa smash. Cocoa smash.
Cocoa smash.”
Warmth spread through me as I grabbed the vanilla ice cream from the
freezer and the hot chocolate mix from the cupboard. I dished up ice cream
and sprinkled a healthy dose of the powder on top.
“Extra on mine!” Cady begged.
I sprinkled a little more. “Go big or go home, right?”
“I always go big.”
I grinned. “I like your attitude.”
I smashed the ice cream and hot chocolate mix together, creating what
almost looked like chocolatey soft serve. Then I handed a bowl to Cady. She
took it gleefully. “Tell me the story again.”
Pain struck deep, but it was an agony I always welcomed. “Your mom
always had the best ideas.”
Cady was curious about her mom but didn’t bring her up often. She knew
Autumn was in heaven and looking over her, and that Autumn had given her
all the best parts of herself. But she also knew that it wasn’t safe to tell others
about her mother.
Cady smiled as she took a bite of her ice cream. “Maybe that’s where I
get my good ideas from.”
“I bet so.” And it killed that Autumn wouldn’t get to see that in her
daughter. “I’d had a bad day at school. Some kids were mean to me.” I left
out that they’d been making fun of me because my clothes were too small
and ragged. “I really wanted ice cream with chocolate syrup—it was my
favorite—but we didn’t have any syrup. Your mom tore the kitchen apart
looking.”
“But she couldn’t find any,” Cady supplied.
“Nope. There was none to be had. But she told me she was going to make
me the most special dessert.”
Cady grinned, chocolate all over her teeth. “Cocoa smash.”
“She made up the name on the spot. Made it feel special. That was just
the way your mom was. Could make the most normal day feel
extraordinary.”
“I wish I knew her,” Cady whispered.
I slid into the seat next to her. “Me, too, Katydid. But she loved you so
much. The amount of love she gave you in just a few months was more than
most people get in a lifetime.”
Cady stirred her ice cream, now turning to soup. “I’m kinda lucky.”
I stared at the little girl I loved more than life, wondering what she meant.
“I get two of you. My mom and my mama.”
My chest felt shredded. “I’m so lucky I get to be your mama.”
I pulled her into my arms. “Heart explosion. I need to hug you.”
Cady giggled. “It’s too tight.”
“Sorry, I’ve got too much love to give, and it’s leaking out of my
eyeballs.”
She squirmed free. “You gotta get control of that love stuff.”
I picked up my bowl of ice cream and took a bite. “Never.”
A knock sounded on the door.
I was instantly on my feet, crossing the space as my heart hammered. My
fingers curled around my Taser as I peeked through the little window, bracing
myself. The air left my lungs on a whoosh as I took in the figure on the other
side. Unlocking the deadbolts and the knob, I opened the door. “What are you
doing here?”
Roan’s broad form ate up the space, and the intense energy surrounding
him swept outward, cascading over my skin. “You got a couch I could stay
on for a while?”
15
ROAN
A SPEN ’ S JAW WENT SLACK . She had to open and close her mouth a few
times before she could speak. “What?”
“Your couch. Gonna sleep on it for a while.”
She shook herself out of her stupor. “That’s not necessary.”
That muscle in my cheek ticked. “Think it might be. Those two haven’t
left town yet.”
I’d done some digging after leaving Aspen’s and found out where they
were staying. Took a little drive, and there was no packing up happening at
their rental cabin. I would have to get Lawson involved for sure. But the idea
of Aspen and Cady staying here alone in the meantime didn’t sit right.
“Mr. Grizz!” Cady yelled. “We’re having cocoa smash.”
I grimaced as I looked down at the contents of Aspen’s bowl. “What is
that?”
She flushed. “It’s vanilla ice cream with hot chocolate powder.”
I winced. “You’re gonna go into a sugar coma before you finish.”
“Don’t knock it until you try it.”
I simply grunted.
Aspen clutched her bowl tighter. “You don’t need to stay. We’re fine.”
My back teeth ground together. “I could get Law to put a squad car on the
house.”
She snapped her mouth closed.
“You’re staying?” Cady said hopefully, chocolate smeared all over her
face as she popped up behind Aspen.
“Depends on what your mom says.” I arched a brow in challenge.
Aspen glared at me, only it didn’t have the desired effect. It only made
her green eyes burn brighter and her lips purse in a way that made them look
too damned kissable.
“I want a slumber party with Mr. Grizz!” Cady said as she hopped up and
down. “Slumber party! Slumber party!”
“Cady…” Aspen warned gently.
“It’s all the sugar. They turn into little fiends,” I quipped.
Aspen shot me a death stare. “Yup, Mr. Grizz is staying, and he told me
he really wants a glitter manicure.”
“YEEEEEESSSSS!” Cady yelled as she skipped toward the hall. “I’m
getting my stuff right now.”
My eyes narrowed on the too-gorgeous-for-her-own-good redhead.
“Glitter manicure?” I gritted out.
Aspen shrugged. “Payback’s a bitch.” She shoved a bite of ice cream into
her mouth. “And you don’t get any ice cream,” she mumbled around her bite.
A little of the chocolate dribbled onto her lip. My gut tightened as images
of me licking chocolate off all sorts of places filled my mind.
“I’m trying to help,” I growled.
A bit of that anger and frustration melted away, and Aspen’s shoulders
slumped. “I know. I’m sorry. I just—we’re used to taking care of ourselves.
Having someone in our space isn’t normal.”
An invisible fist ground against my sternum like a mortar and pestle. I
hated the defeated cast of her words. I’d take her fire any day. “We can’t
always carry our own load. Sometimes, we need help. It doesn’t make us
weak. It makes us human.”
Those green eyes connected with mine. “What about you? Do you let
someone help carry your load?”
My ribs tightened around my lungs, making it hard to breathe. “I have.”
Aspen arched a brow. “Why am I finding that hard to believe?”
Because she saw way too much.
Aspen sighed as if disappointed that I wouldn’t let her in, but she let me
off the hook. “How do you know the podcasters haven’t left?”
I shifted in place. “Did a little digging. Found out where they’re staying.
Took a drive.”
“Digging?” Aspen pressed.
“I know a thing or two about computers.” It was a skill I kept quiet about,
but it had come in handy more than once.
“Legal things?”
My lips twitched. “Doesn’t matter if no one knows you’re doing it.”
Aspen grumbled something under her breath. “The last thing I need is you
getting arrested because you’re trying to look out for me. Your family would
never forgive me.”
“My family would pat me on the back and tell me good job.”
She frowned. “You really think that?”
“I know that. They get that sometimes you have to color outside the lines
to do what’s right.” Hell, they’d help if I let them in on what was going on.
Aspen worried that spot on the inside of her cheek. “Just don’t get caught,
okay?”
“I’m too good to get caught.”
She rolled her eyes. “Men. Always so cocky.”
“There’s cocky, and then there’s knowing what you’re doing.”
Aspen’s eyes flared, filling with liquid fire.
Oh, hell. That was not what I needed to see. I forced my gaze away to
break her hypnotic spell and cleared my throat. “Didn’t see any signs of
Steven and Tyson packing up.”
Aspen toyed with the hem of her flannel shirt. “They’re going to publish
the podcast.”
“I’m talking to Lawson first thing tomorrow. He’ll give them a more
forceful warning. He might want you to get a restraining order, as well.”
“That won’t stop the media from spewing bullshit. Trust me, I know.”
That grinding feeling was back in my chest. I understood a little of what
she’d been through. Knew what it was for people not to believe you. To turn
against you. But I didn’t know what it was to be caught up in a media storm
on top of it. To have unstable people grabbing hold of the story and coming
after you.
I hated what she’d endured. And even more, I detested that she’d had to
go through it alone. Aspen couldn’t be much older than twenty-six or twenty-
seven. Five years ago, she would’ve been barely past college age. And she’d
taken on a kid and a vicious court battle.
“Law has a way of bringing people around to his way of thinking,” I
assured her. And if he didn’t, I’d be there to help.
Aspen bobbed her head in a nod, but I could see the anxiety eating at her.
And I understood it. People’s morbid curiosity was far too easily reignited.
I’d seen it time and time again.
“Whatever happens, we’ll deal with it.”
Aspen swallowed hard. “Thank you. I don’t know why you’re helping
me, but I’m just going to say thank you.”
“You’re a good person. You don’t deserve this. If I can shield you a bit,
I’m happy to do it.”
“You’re a good man, Roan,” she said softly, but each word hit like a
physical blow.
People around here didn’t see me that way. At best, they saw me as
damaged goods. At worst, someone to fear. But Aspen? She saw me as the
man I wanted to be.
Cady bounded out of the back hallway. “I’ve got pink and purple and
green and blue. The pink’s my favorite. What do you want? Ooooooh, I could
do all the colors! Sometimes, Miss Maddie gives me rainbow nails, and it’s
the bestest.”
Aspen’s lips twitched as she headed for the kitchen. “Have fun, Mr.
Grizz.”
I muttered a curse under my breath. Cady grabbed my hand, leading me
over to the couch and explaining all the different colors in detail. As she
chattered about what glitter shone the brightest, her mom looked on from the
kitchen with amusement. That pressure returned to my chest.
Sheer panic nearly stole my breath. Nothing could happen to these two.
They were lights in a world of darkness. And I knew better than most that
anything could happen when people believed lies about you like the ones
people believed about Aspen.
16
ASPEN
M ADDIE AND C ADY belted out the lyrics to Shake It Off as we pulled into
the elementary school parking lot. Neither of them was particularly on key,
which just made me smile wider.
Maddie came to a stop and turned down the stereo. “You ready for an
awesome day?”
“The awesomest,” Cady said with a grin.
“That’s my bestie. We shake off the haters.” She held out a hand for a
high-five.
Cady slapped her palm against Maddie’s. “Think Taylor Swift likes
glitter?”
“Duh,” Maddie said.
I chuckled, hopping out of the SUV and letting Cady out.
Katelyn walked by with Heather in tow. “Still without a car?”
I forced a grin. “I really appreciate just how much you look out for me,
Katelyn.”
Katelyn’s haughty smile faltered. It was almost as if my back-handed
compliment had short-circuited her brain. She huffed out a breath and
stormed toward the school.
“She’s grumpy all the time, not just when she needs a snack,” Cady piped
in.
I laughed and pulled her into a hug. “Some people are just unhappy,
Katydid.”
She tipped her head back so she could look up at me. “It’s a lot more fun
being happy.”
“I agree.” I kissed the top of her head. “Where’s Charlie?” Usually, we
got here at the same time.
Cady frowned. “He had to come early today because his dad had to
work.”
I mirrored Cady’s frown. Lawson could’ve dropped Charlie off with me
instead of sending him to the school’s early care program. “Well, you’d
better go find him. He’s probably been missing his best pal.”
That was all Cady needed. She took off running, her pink glitter backpack
slapping against her back.
Once she disappeared, I hurried to Maddie’s SUV and slid inside.
“What did the queen bitch have to say?”
I grimaced. “Some snarky comment about me still not having a car.”
“That woman needs a life,” Maddie mumbled as she headed out of the lot.
“You aren’t wrong. How are things with Nash?”
A soft smile spread across her lips as she glanced down at her ring
glimmering in the morning light. “Really good.”
“Love seeing you happy like this,” I said softly.
“Do not make me cry. I’ll boob punch you.”
I snorted. “I’ve been officially warned.”
She pulled into the lot at the body shop and parked, looking over at me. “I
want you to have this kind of joy.”
“I’m happy. I’ve got Cady and the animals and amazing friends.”
Maddie studied me for a moment. “Don’t you want more? A partner?
Ridiculously hot sex?”
I choked on a laugh. “I don’t know, Maddie. I’m not sure I’m built for it.
It’s not the easiest for me to let people in.”
But memories from last night and this morning flashed in my mind.
Stolen seconds with Roan. His tenderness with Cady.
Maddie was quiet for a moment. “You ever going to tell me why that is?”
My stomach twisted like a tightly wound ball of yarn. “It’s not
important.”
Maddie reached over and squeezed my hand. “If it has marked you like
this, it’s important. And I’ll be here to listen whenever you’re ready to
share.”
I swallowed the saliva pooling in my mouth. “Thank you.”
I didn’t deserve her friendship, but I was grateful for it all the same.
“Got your back. Always.”
I glanced over at her. “Same goes. Even when Nash steals the last of your
ice cream.”
Maddie barked out a laugh. “Us doing battle over the last of the ice cream
is something no one wants to get in the middle of.”
“Consider me warned.” I opened my door and climbed out, rounding to
the back passenger seat. I unhooked Cady’s booster seat. “Thank you so
much for carting us around the last two days.”
“Please, I got Taylor Swift sing-alongs and promises of glitter manicures.
I’m a happy camper.”
I laughed. “You and Cady are a match made in heaven.”
Maddie grinned at me. “She’s my girl.”
I adored how my friends loved her. “See you later.”
Maddie gave me a wave as I shut the door and started toward the office.
Footsteps sounded on the pavement, and I jerked.
The younger mechanic stopped in his tracks. “Sorry, ma’am. I was just
gonna take that for you and put it in your wagon.”
I sent him a wobbly smile. “Guess I’m a little jumpy this morning. Thank
you.”
“It’s no problem,” he said, taking the booster seat. “I’ve got a little sister
who still uses one of these. I’m an expert at taking them out and putting them
in.”
“It is a science.”
He chuckled. “First time I tried, I was cussing up a storm.”
“You and me both.”
He laughed as he jogged back toward an open bay.
I let out a breath. “Get it together,” I whispered to myself.
The electronic bell dinged as I opened the door. Jim looked up from the
reception desk. “I’m just finalizing your paperwork. Good news is that it
wasn’t nearly as bad as it first looked.”
The tension that had held me captive for the last few days released a
fraction. “Really?”
“Really. We got you a new set of tires and fixed those corroded cables.
Just cleaned up everything here and there.”
“How much do I owe you?” I braced.
Jim scanned his sheet. “With the discount for letting me take my time and
the used tires, the total comes to six-fifty.”
I blinked. I thought for sure the work would be in the multiple thousands.
“That’s it?”
He bobbed his head in a nod. “That’s it. Jake’s bringing it around front
now.”
I pulled my wallet out of my purse and found my debit card, handing it to
Jim. “Thank you.”
“Anytime.”
I studied the mechanic for a moment. Why did I have a feeling he was
cutting me a deal that was a little too good?
A NNOYANCE HAD PRICKED at me all day, making me surlier than usual. I’d
snapped at Mindy and had bitten Oscar’s head off until everyone finally gave
me a wide berth. It wasn’t their fault.
It was mine. And Aspen’s.
She wouldn’t stay the hell out of my head. I kept thinking about her at the
most inopportune times. Like when I should’ve been finishing up paperwork.
Or while meeting with my boss.
Sometimes, it was a niggling worry, me just needing to know if she and
Cady were all right. Other times, it was a flash of red hair and the gleam of
those green eyes—or worse, the way she smelled. A smoky cinnamon with a
sweetness I couldn’t place.
I hadn’t missed the hint of attraction I’d seen in those green depths—a
look I definitely did not need to see.
I banged a fist against my steering wheel as I stared out at the forest
surrounding the Fish and Wildlife office. I needed to get a grip. I’d never
struggled with control before. I kept more emotions in check than anyone else
I knew. But then again, I’d never been normal.
Turning on the engine, I put my truck in reverse and backed out of my
spot. My cell rang as I turned out of the parking lot, so I hit the button on my
steering wheel to answer. “Hartley.”
“It’s Law. We’ve got another one. Cougar this time.”
My gut twisted. “Where?”
“Meadowrun trail, half a mile from the south trailhead.”
I cursed. “Getting bolder.”
That trail was closer to town. The kill closer to the parking lot and people.
I’d hoped the deer was a one-off. Some freak passing through. But we
weren’t going to get that lucky.
“I know,” Lawson said, voice low. “Can you come take a look?”
“I’m already on my way. Probably take me ten to get there.”
“See you soon.”
I hung up without saying goodbye. Pleasantries always felt like a waste of
time. A falsity. I had no place in my life for that. I wanted raw and real. To
know where I stood with people, not wondering if they would turn around
and stab me in the back.
Turning onto the road that would take me closer to town and the
trailhead, I tapped a beat on my steering wheel. A cougar wasn’t exactly easy
prey to pin down. And they were heavy. Unless the unsub had lucked out and
shot one right on the trail, they’d have to move it. And that took effort.
I made the ten-minute drive in six, anxious to get to the scene and see
what we were dealing with. Several other vehicles were in the lot, and I
recognized Lawson’s SUV parked off to the side. I pulled in next to it.
Jumping out, I grabbed my pack and headed up the trail. The voices
reached me before the sight. But what I saw turned my stomach.
The majestic animal had been torn apart. I bit the inside of my cheek to
keep my temper in check.
Lawson strode toward me. “I do not have a good feeling.”
“Who called it in?” I asked.
“Another out-of-town hiker. The mayor is tweaked, and so is the town
council. They don’t want anything that could mess with tourist season.”
“Good thing it’s about to be winter,” I mumbled.
Lawson shook his head. “That’s not good enough for them. They want
this person found and locked up.”
I did, too. Just not for the reasons our small-town politicians did.
Sometimes, I wondered if anything was more important than tourist dollars in
their eyes.
“The hiker see anything suspicious?” I asked.
“Nope. She ran like hell the minute she saw it. Nearly had a panic attack.”
I didn’t blame the woman. The scene was grisly, to say the least.
A figure near the fallen animal straightened, and my eyes flared in
surprise.
“Roan, good to see you. Wish it was under better circumstances.” Dr.
Miller snapped off his gloves, disposing of them in a trash bag.
“I thought it might be helpful to have a vet’s take,” Lawson explained.
Dr. Miller glanced at my brother. “I wish you would’ve called me about
the first victim. It would’ve been helpful to see it, as well.”
“Sorry, Damien,” Lawson said. “We weren’t thinking this had the
potential to turn into a serial.”
That was true with the deer. Now, it was blind, dumb hope. And hope
was a death sentence.
“Can you tell us anything?” I asked.
Dr. Miller nodded. “The cougar was caught in a trap and then shot. The
body was mutilated postmortem.”
“Small mercies,” I muttered.
“Trapping’s illegal on state land,” Lawson said, a muscle under his eye
fluttering.
“Doesn’t mean people don’t do it,” Dr. Miller said. “I’ve seen several
animals who were caught in traps.”
“People are assholes,” I grumbled.
“They certainly can be,” Dr. Miller agreed. “I’m no crime scene expert,
but from the photos you’ve shown me of the deer, I’d say it’s likely the same
person. The cuts are in the same places. Only these are deeper.”
Lawson scrubbed a hand over his stubbled jaw. “Getting more
comfortable with it.”
“That’d be my guess.” Dr. Miller glanced at his watch. “I have to get
back for a patient.”
Lawson extended a hand. “Thanks for coming out on such short notice.”
Dr. Miller nodded as he shook the proffered palm. “Happy to do what I
can to help. Please let me know if there’s another victim.”
“I will,” Lawson assured him.
Dr. Miller stopped near me. “Question for you.”
I just stared, waiting.
He shifted on his feet. “Do you know if Aspen is single?”
It was as if someone had jabbed a hot poker through my chest. My hands
fisted as I fought off the shock of pain. “She’s got a lot going on right now
and doesn’t need guys giving her trouble. Leave her alone.”
Each word vibrated with fury, and Dr. Miller’s eyes flared. “Not in a
place to date. Got it.”
I glared at him.
“All right, then. I’m gonna head out.” He hightailed it down the trail.
The moment he was out of sight, Lawson barked out a laugh. “Hell,
Roan. Pretty sure you just made the vet crap himself.”
I turned my glare on my brother. “You think Aspen needs someone
messing with her head right now?”
A little of the humor fled Lawson’s expression. “No, she doesn’t. But she
could probably use a partner. Someone who has her back. Someone to share
her burdens with.”
That burn in my chest lit again—some dead part of me trying to flare
back to life.
“But it seems like you’ve been playing that role pretty well the past few
days.”
My back teeth ground together. “That’s not what this is.”
Lawson stared me down, dead-on. “If that’s the case, then you shouldn’t
care about a good man showing interest in her. Have never heard anything
but great things about Damien. Maybe I’ll invite them both over for dinner
and get the ball rolling.”
“Law…” I growled low.
His lips twitched. “Just think about why you hate the idea so much.”
I didn’t want to think about it. Didn’t want to admit what it might mean.
Couldn’t.
“I gotta bring you up to speed on something else,” Lawson said,
interrupting my spiraling thoughts.
“What?” I snapped.
“Went to The Brew this afternoon to talk to Aspen.”
I stiffened.
“The podcasters were there, hassling her.”
Fury lit in my veins. “Why. Didn’t. You. Say. Anything?” I could barely
get the words out.
“I was going to call you but then got word about this.” Lawson gestured
to the scene.
“You should’ve told me the second I got here,” I clipped.
The image of Aspen trembling on her couch flashed in my mind. Was she
scared now? Alone? How had she been when Lawson left?
“I knew you’d freak, and I needed your head in the game when you got
here. Aspen’s fine. I told her we would meet after she picks up Cady and
Charlie from school.”
“You wanted my head in the game?” I gritted out. I was going to kill my
brother.
20
ASPEN
C HARLIE AND C ADY ran out of the double doors, holding hands and
giggling as if there was no one else in the whole world but them.
“Don’t you think that’s a little inappropriate?” Katelyn sneered.
I had to close my eyes for a moment and breathe. It had been the longest
day in recent history. I’d been confronted with a shirtless Roan this morning
—my dry spell making itself abundantly known—a full day at work, the run-
in with the podcasters, talking with Lawson, trying to smooth things over
with Elsie and Jonesy, and attempting to concoct a story they would believe
without outright lying.
I did not need bitter, bitchy Katelyn on top of it all.
“I think their kind of friendship should be celebrated, don’t you?” I asked,
casting a look in her direction.
Her casual perfection made me cringe at my sweater and faded jeans.
Katelyn pursed her lips. “They’re holding hands. They’re too young for that.”
“They’re kids. It’s completely innocent.”
Katelyn scoffed. “I shouldn’t be surprised you’re condoning this
behavior. You were what? Twenty when you had her?”
I stiffened. The judgment wasn’t entirely new. I was twenty-seven now,
twenty-two when I’d taken custody of Cady. But I looked a little younger,
and whatever piece of glitter Cady had stuck on me today didn’t help that
fact.
I plastered on a wide smile. “Katelyn, you’re too kind. I love that you
think I look so youthful.”
Her jaw dropped, and I turned to greet Cady and Charlie. “Hey, you two.”
“Hi, Miss Aspen,” Charlie greeted.
“How do you feel about coming home with us this afternoon? Your dad
and uncle are going to meet us there.”
I heard a sound of annoyance come from Katelyn’s direction as she
stalked away.
Charlie grinned widely. “That would be awesome!”
Cady jumped up and down while keeping hold of his hand. “Is Mr. Grizz
gonna be there?”
A prickle of something passed through me. “He is.”
“This is the best day EVER!” she cheered.
“Come on, kiddos. Charlie, I’ve already got your booster in the car.”
“Aw, man. I keep telling Dad I don’t need one no more.”
I bit back a chuckle. “I’m afraid it’s the law, and it wouldn’t be very good
if your dad didn’t follow the law since he’s the chief of police.”
Charlie’s shoulders slumped. “I guess.”
Cady tugged on his hand. “We can decorate your booster. I put pink
glitter and stickers on mine.”
He looked at her thoughtfully. “Could we do frog stickers?”
“Totally,” Cady said.
“Okay.”
That being settled, I got the two of them situated in the back seat. “Ready
to rock and roll?”
Charlie grinned. “You got cookies at your house?”
I twisted in my seat. “Do I look like an amateur to you?”
His little brow furrowed. “What’s an am-am-a-teur?”
“Someone who doesn’t know what they’re doing. A beginner.”
He grinned again. “Nope. You make the best cookies and muffins and
scones ever.”
“Thanks, Charlie. That just made my day.”
“It’ll make my day if I can get some of those cookies.”
I laughed as I pulled away from the curb. “I’ve got cookies, but I was
thinking we could do some experimenting in the kitchen after I chat with
your dad and uncle. I’m working on a new recipe.”
“Is it a yummy one?” Charlie asked skeptically, not sure he wanted to
give up on cookies.
“Mama’s recipes are always yummy,” Cady told him. “Well, other than
when she makes broccoli. This isn’t broccoli, is it?”
God, these two were good for the soul.
“No broccoli. I wanted to make double chocolate peanut butter cup
muffins.”
Silence reigned in the car for a beat.
“That sounds freaking awesome!” Charlie cheered.
“It’s like my favorite but better,” Cady echoed.
“I’m glad I’ve got your vote,” I said as I turned onto Huckleberry Lane.
The two of them talked in a rapid-fire language I didn’t have a prayer of
understanding. I caught the occasional mention of a type of candy or a
dessert, but that was it. But the chatter and joy warmed my heart. It was the
perfect balm after a trying day.
I pulled into my drive, spotting Lawson’s SUV. But when I saw Roan’s
truck next to it, my heart rate ratcheted up. “Get a grip,” I muttered to myself.
The second the car was in park, and the engine was off, the kids were
unbuckling and climbing out. I hurried to follow them, catching sight of Roan
and Lawson emerging from the barn. The kids ran toward them.
“How’s Dory?” Cady called.
Roan’s lips curved the barest amount. If I didn’t make a habit of studying
the man, I likely would’ve missed it. “She looks really good. Bet she’ll be
able to go home in another few days.”
Cady’s expression dropped. “I’ll miss her.”
Roan’s face gentled. “I bet you’ll see her around. And you’ll be so happy
knowing she’s back with her family.”
Cady bobbed her head in a nod as she looked back at me. “I’d be real sad
if I had to be away from my mama.”
My heart squeezed.
Lawson gave me a chin lift. “You’ve got even more than the last time I
was here. An emu?”
I gave him a sheepish smile as I cast a quick look at Emmaline in a
pasture with a few of the goats. “She needed a place to go.”
Lawson shook his head. “Can’t wait to see what shows up next.”
“I think I want a grizzly bear next,” Cady piped in.
Lawson choked on a laugh. “I think Roan might have to arrest you then.”
Cady glanced up at Roan. “Arrest me?”
Roan’s lips twitched. “Bears aren’t meant to be domesticated. They could
hurt you without meaning to.”
Cady’s mouth pressed into a firm line. “Not if we’re friends, and he’s had
a snack.”
I squeezed Cady’s shoulders. “How about we get you a snack before you
start taking us out one by one?”
She giggled and turned around to fake nibble on my arm. “Tastes just like
Cap’n Crunch.”
I laughed and led the way to the house. At the top of the stairs, I reached
for my little piece of wood in the doorframe, unlocked the deadbolts and
doorknob, and ushered everyone inside.
Chauncey lumbered toward us, and I gave him a quick pat as I held the
door for him to go out and do his business.
Roan eyed the space suspiciously. “Where’s the demon?”
Lawson’s brows hit his hairline. “The demon?”
“You ever meet that one-eyed creature from hell?” he challenged.
Chauncey lumbered back up the steps and inside. I locked the door, even
though the house was full of people. Some habits were hard to break.
“My cat. He’s scared of a poor, innocent cat,” I informed Lawson.
His eyes filled with humor as he turned back to Roan. “You’re scared of a
cat? You work with the most dangerous wildlife in the county, and a cat did
you in?”
“That so-called cat nearly took my toe and my eye,” he grumbled.
“That just means Pirate likes you,” Cady said.
“She could like me a little less,” Roan muttered.
“Can we go play in my room?” Cady asked.
“Don’t you want a snack?”
She shook her head. “I wanna show Charlie my new game.”
“Okay. But let me know if you guys get hungry.”
Charlie glanced over his shoulder. “We’re still making the chocolate
peanut butter muffins, right?”
“You know it,” I promised.
As the two kids disappeared down the hall, I turned to the men dwarfing
my living space. “Can I get you something to drink? I’ve got coffee, tea,
water, and juice.”
“Wouldn’t say no to tea,” Lawson said.
The fact that he drank tea was always a surprise to me. His masculine
energy seemed in opposition to it.
I glanced at Roan in question.
He moved past me into the kitchen. “I’ll get everything. What do you
want?”
I blinked in surprise. “Tea’s good.”
Sitting at the battered kitchen table, I watched Roan move around my
kitchen as if he’d lived in this house all his life. I shouldn’t have been
surprised. He was an expert watcher and could pick up the tiniest details in a
split second.
As the kettle heated on the stove, I turned to Lawson. “What’s the plan?”
Lawson leaned back in his chair. “Roan didn’t think the word I had with
Steven and Tyson was strong enough, so we stopped by their cabin on the
way here.”
My gaze flicked to Roan as he gently pulled mugs from my cabinet. He
paused as he took in the illustrations on the outside. Bright pink hearts on
one. A rainbow between two clouds on the other. And a Pegasus on the last.
He just shook his head and returned to his task. But something about
those large, callused hands dwarfing the mugs Cady had painstakingly picked
out made my heart squeeze.
I forced my focus back to Lawson. “How’d the second conversation go?”
His expression was carefully blank, and that blankness put me on edge.
“They’ve been informed they are no longer allowed on the property of The
Brew or your home. If they go against that official warning, they’ll be
arrested.”
“Can’t imagine they took that well,” I mumbled.
Roan slid the Pegasus mug in front of me. “They don’t have to like it.
They just have to obey it.”
I studied Roan’s rainbow mug as he sat. “Is that hot chocolate?”
A hint of red hit Roan’s cheeks as he shrugged. “I like hot chocolate. Just
not on top of ice cream.”
Lawson dunked his tea bag in and out of his water. “I’ll have officers
keeping an eye out for them.”
I stiffened. “I don’t want anyone else to know.”
Lawson’s expression gentled. “No one here would believe the nonsense
some of those conspiracy theorists spout.”
I pressed my palms against the sides of the mug, trying to let the heat
ward off the dark memories that wanted to break through. “You don’t know
what it was like,” I whispered. “People were awful. Some just stared with
pity, but others were cruel. Someone dumped an entire iced coffee over my
head. Another person who came into my office for a meeting started
screaming at me that I was a liar and a whore.” And everyone had known
where to find me, thanks to Oren Randal.
I stared down at the swirling liquid as those memories pressed—
memories of how things had gotten so much worse.
A hand landed lightly above my knee and squeezed. My gaze flew to
Roan’s, but he didn’t move.
“We’re not going to let that happen to you here,” he vowed.
“You can’t stop it. No one can. Not if everyone knows the truth.”
Lawson blew out a breath. “Okay. I’ll tell my people those two were
hassling you at The Brew and I want to keep an eye out. That’s the truth, just
not all of it.”
I swallowed hard and nodded. “Thank you.”
Roan gave my thigh one more squeeze and then released me. I missed his
heat the second it was gone. I wanted to beg him to bring it back. Needed the
steady pressure that seemed to somehow ground me amidst my swirling
thoughts.
“We need to figure out how they found you,” Lawson said.
I nodded, my gaze dropping to my darkening tea.
“Has anyone else found you here?” Lawson asked.
My blood ran cold, my muscles winding tight. “I got a letter.”
The air around me went electric.
“What kind of letter?” Roan growled.
“Not the warm and fuzzy kind,” I said.
“Was it signed?” Lawson asked.
I shook my head. “No. But I know who sent it.”
“Who?” Roan demanded.
“John. The man who killed my sister.”
21
ROAN
You think you can take her from me? You’re going to pay. In
blood.
That fury was back, burning through me. But the icy-cold fear won out
this time. This wasn’t someone writing to express regret or even anger. This
was someone hell-bent on vengeance for what he saw as a wrong.
My vision tunneled as memories assailed me.
“You think you’re gonna get away with this, you little bitch boy?” a
man’s voice sneered as his boot crashed into my ribs.
“Fuckin’ pigs might not be doing shit, but we will,” another snarled.
Something cracked across my skull, and everything went black.
A hand squeezed my arm, bringing me back to the present. Aspen was
there, worry filling her expression. I blinked a few times and cleared my
throat, trying to shake it off. “He should be having his incoming and outgoing
mail examined, shouldn’t he?”
Lawson nodded. “But inmates have a way of finding workarounds.
Nothing is foolproof.”
“We need to call the warden at his prison.” My voice was even, as if the
memories I battled had deadened everything inside me.
“Gonna do that as soon as I get back to the office, but I’m guessing he’ll
be gone for the day. It’s a few hours later in Mississippi.”
And what could happen overnight? How many letters could John sneak
out? How many plans could he set in motion?
Aspen glanced at my brother. “Why don’t you leave Charlie here? You
can grab him on your way home.”
“You don’t need an extra kid underfoot,” he argued.
“Charlie’s a joy, and I did promise the kids they could help me with some
recipe experimentation. But I should warn you, he’ll probably come home
hopped up and covered in chocolate.”
Lawson chuckled. “He’s come home covered in far worse.”
“Then we’re good to go,” Aspen said with a smile.
It amazed me that it was authentic. We were looking at a threat from the
man who had tried to end her life, and here she was, smiling about inventing
recipes with two six-year-olds.
“Thanks. That gives me a few hours before I need to pick Drew up from
practice and get Luke from his friend’s.” Lawson slid the letter into a second
evidence bag and sealed it. “I’ll get these to the station and filed, but I’ll do it
myself so there aren’t any curious eyes.”
Aspen nodded. “Thanks, Law. I know keeping this under wraps is tough,
but I appreciate it.”
“I’ll do whatever I can to help.” He gathered his things and headed for the
door. “See you later, Charlie Bear,” he called.
“Bye, Dad!”
Aspen followed Lawson and locked the door as it closed.
I turned, watching her make her way back to me. “How do you do it?”
Her expression turned puzzled. “Do what?”
“Laugh with everything that’s going on and truly mean it?”
She rested a hip against the table, looking down at me. “Everyone has
their struggles, but sometimes I think those who have gone through the worst
are the ones with the deepest ability to find joy, even in moments of hardship
and heartache.”
I stared at Aspen, taking in her beauty and letting it fully hit me for the
first time. It wasn’t just her gorgeous red hair, piercing green eyes, and lush
lips. It was the light that radiated out of her, casting a glow on everyone and
everything around her.
Truly seeing that for the first time? I knew one thing.
I was completely screwed.
22
ASPEN
A SPEN ’ S EYES widened in shock as she gaped at me. Then she burst out
laughing. I’d heard her laugh before, but not like this. It was full-out,
completely uninhibited, and wrapped around me like a warm embrace.
Tears filled her eyes as she struggled for control. “Let’s try to hold off on
the child terrorizing, okay?”
My lips thinned at the reminder of Cady sobbing in my arms. “Someone
needs to teach her a lesson.”
Aspen’s expression softened. “I don’t disagree, but I’m not sure that
person is you.”
It would be if that girl didn’t leave Cady alone.
“This been going on long?” I asked.
Aspen toyed with the fringe on one of her throw pillows. “Heather has
never been especially fond of Cady, but it got worse when they all started
ballet.”
A muscle in my jaw ticked. “Have you talked to her parents?”
“It’s just her mom in the picture, Katelyn Beasley.”
I winced. That woman was a piece of work. She was always trying to
snag one of my brothers. As they’d paired off, she’d set her sights on
Lawson, who had no interest whatsoever. “You try talking to her?”
Aspen went quiet, her fingers tangling in the pillow’s fringe.
“Aspen?” I pressed.
Her gaze lifted to mine. “She’s not my biggest fan.”
My back teeth ground together. “What. Do. You. Mean?”
“Nothing. It’s not a big deal.”
I lifted a hand, brushing the hair away from her face. My thumb traced
across her pulse point, the rough pad such a contrast to her petal-soft skin.
“Mean-girl moms,” I muttered, remembering Aspen’s words from the other
day.
Aspen swallowed hard. “It’s nothing I can’t take.”
Her pulse jumped beneath my thumb.
“I can feel when you’re lying.”
Aspen’s eyes widened, and she licked her lips. “She’s a total bitch. It’s no
wonder her daughter’s awful. She insults my car, my clothes, my parenting. I
doubt she’d hear anything I had to say regarding her daughter’s behavior.”
I struggled to keep the anger from my face. “Jealous.”
Aspen snorted. “I think it’s more that she’s deeply unhappy. She has to
tear everyone around her down so she feels better about herself.”
I was sure that was part of it. But not the whole. Not even close. “You
don’t see how bright you shine.”
She looked up at me, confusion swirling in those green depths.
“Everyone around you sees it. You have this pull. Makes people want to
be in your orbit. People like Katelyn will never have that. Too much ugliness
in them.”
Aspen’s breaths grew shallow as her gaze dropped to my lips.
Fire flared in my veins—a need so powerful it almost stole my breath.
She was close, just a breath away. One tiny flicker of movement, and I
could know what it was like to drown in her taste.
“I’m ready!” Cady called as she charged down the hallway. “Can I go see
Dory before I have my snack?”
I jerked my hand away from Aspen as if I’d been burned. And I had in a
way. Had no doubt that simply feeling her skin would leave scars.
Aspen ducked her head and rose. “Sure thing, Katydid. Get your coat. It’s
cold out there.”
I moved on instinct, following Aspen. Her pull still had a hold of me, and
I wasn’t sure that would ever change. I needed to keep my distance. Rebuild
those walls. But for the first time, I didn’t want to.
I slid on my boots by the door, and Aspen stopped close, zipping up her
jacket. “You need a coat, too.”
“I’m good,” I grunted.
She huffed out a breath. “What? You’re a mountain man impervious to
cold?”
“No, he’s a grizzly bear!” Cady said, jumping up and down.
I chuckled and hauled her into my arms, tickling her sides. “What’d you
call me?”
“A grizzly bear!” she yelled between shrieks and giggles. “Big and tall
and grumpy and always hungry.”
I grinned as I set Cady on her feet. “That’s fair, I guess.”
She slipped her little hand into mine. “Let’s go.”
My chest gave a painful squeeze. She had no idea what her simple
acceptance meant to someone like me. The power of it.
Cady tugged me outside and toward the barn as Aspen locked the door
behind us. “Do you think Dory will miss us when she goes?”
“I bet she’ll miss you.”
We’d all been careful to keep our distance other than to give Dory her
medicine twice a day. I hoped like hell that meant she’d be able to be
reintroduced to the wild.
Cady tugged on the barn door, but it only moved an inch. I reached above
her, sliding it open.
“Thanks, Mr. Grizz.”
My lips twitched. “Anytime.”
We moved inside. Most of the animals were still in the pastures, but a few
were in the stalls. As we walked down the aisle, something flashed out and
hit me in the arm. “What the—?” I caught myself just before I dropped an F-
bomb in front of a six-year-old.
“Emmaline,” Cady chastised. “That’s not very nice.”
She moved toward the emu, but I caught her by the back of the shirt. “I’m
not sure that’s a good idea.”
I glared at the bird. That thing could take a chunk out of Cady.
She just grinned at me and shook off my hold. Before I could stop her,
she moved up to the emu’s stall, and the bird dropped its head to her
shoulder, almost like it was hugging Cady.
“Emmaline just wants her cuddles,” Cady said, stroking the bird.
“I’ll be damned,” I muttered.
I felt Aspen stop alongside me, simply watching her daughter.
“She’s got that same light you do. Even the animals feel it,” I said quietly.
“She’s more special than I could ever dream of being,” Aspen whispered.
I tipped my head down to look at her. “You both are. One day you’ll see
that.”
Aspen’s throat worked as she swallowed.
Cady released the emu and started down the aisle again, taking my hand
and tugging me along. “Will you check her wounds?”
I didn’t know as much as Dr. Miller, but I knew enough.
Cady climbed up on the tack box to peek into the stall. “She’s sleeping,”
she whispered.
I glanced inside. The deer was curled up, giving us a good view of her
side. “She’s almost completely healed. Looking great.”
Cady sighed, resting her chin on the side of the stall. “I’m happy for her,
but I’m gonna miss her something awful.”
That pressure in my chest was back. How could anyone be mean to this
little ray of light?
I turned to Aspen. “Let me take Cady to her next dance class.”
Her eyes flared. “Is there going to be a bloodbath if I do that?”
My mouth stretched into a grin. “I’m the town pariah for a reason.
Everyone’s terrified of me.”
Finally, that terror would come in handy.
24
ASPEN
“I T WAS THE BEST !” Cady said as she twirled around the kitchen.
I looked up from the chili I was stirring and glanced at Roan, who
watched my daughter with a hint of amusement on his face. God, he was a
good man. There was no feeling like watching his tenderness around her.
“Mr. Grizz is going to take me all the time so the meanies aren’t mean,”
she added.
My brows lifted at that. “Is that so?”
Roan shrugged. “I don’t mind.”
I filled bowls as his words hit me in the chest. I’d been in this alone for so
long. No help. No one to share the load of both the good and the bad. Getting
a taste of it now almost hurt.
The buzzer on the oven dinged, and Roan moved. “I’ll get it.”
He grabbed oven mitts and pulled out the rolls. He didn’t ask where
anything was. He already knew. He lined a bowl with a towel and placed the
bread inside.
Something about the simple task had me fighting tears. I quickly turned
away and got to work, placing the bowls on the dinner table. “Cady, what do
you want to drink?”
“Milk, please!”
“Roan?” I asked without looking, as if the sight of him so fully living in
my space was too much to bear. What would happen when he left? Would
everything feel empty? It probably wouldn’t be long. Steven and Tyson had
stayed away, though I’d caught sight of Steven watching The Brew from
across the street.
“Milk’s good,” Roan said, his voice gruff.
I turned my focus to the milk. I poured three glasses and set them on the
table.
Cady slid into her chair but bounced up and down. She talked about
dance and school and how Dr. Miller said Dory could be released tomorrow.
I didn’t know how she ate her dinner between her stream of chattering, but
she did.
“Can I please be excused? I want to go practice my pirouettes,” she asked
with a smile.
I nodded. “Take your bowl to the sink, please.”
Cady hopped off her chair, dropped her bowl in the sink, and headed for
her bedroom.
Then it was just Roan and me.
I took the napkin from my lap, folded it carefully, and placed it next to
my placemat. “Thank you for what you did today.”
Roan leaned back in his chair. “It was nothing.”
I shook my head. “It was everything to her. To me.”
Roan’s blue gaze bored into me. “People like Katelyn, her daughter, they
just need to know you’re not alone. That people are paying attention.”
I swallowed hard. “You think it’ll work?”
I didn’t give a damn about Katelyn and her snide comments toward me. I
cared about Cady. What bullying and cruelty could do to her mental health. I
wanted to nip it in the bud before she got to middle school, and there were
things like social media and real crushes.
Roan was quiet for a moment. “I’m gonna keep showing up. They’ll
know that I’m paying attention. Gonna tell Law to do the same when he’s
around. Katelyn wants in his pants, so she might shape up for that reason
alone.”
I choked on a laugh. “You’re throwing your brother to the wolves?”
Roan’s gaze locked with mine. “I’d do anything for you.”
I DRUMMED my fingers against the steering wheel as I sat parked just out
of view at the trailhead. We were all spending time at various spots we
thought might be likely stomping grounds for the unsub. But my thoughts
were a million miles away.
I glanced at my phone for the millionth time. Still nothing from Aspen. It
wasn’t like her to say she’d do something and not follow through. She’d had
plenty of time to drop Cady off and get to work by now.
Worry gnawed at my gut. I reached for my phone to call her, but the
device rang before I could even unlock it. Lawson’s name flashed across the
screen, and I hit accept.
“Hey,” I greeted.
“We’ve got a problem.”
That worry in my gut turned to panic. “What?” I growled.
“Those assholes released the podcast. Aspen got to work, and a dozen
reporters were waiting for her. Apparently, they sent it to the press yesterday
afternoon, hoping to get more coverage.”
I spat out a stream of curses as I started my truck. “Where is she?”
“In my office. She’s okay but shaken up. I sent Grae to get Cady, just in
case. She’s going to give her and Charlie a fun skipping school day.”
That grinding sensation was back along my sternum. Grae would take
care of Cady, I knew it, but God, I wanted to string those podcasters up by
their entrails. “I’m on my way.”
I hung up without another word, needing to focus on the road. On getting
to Aspen.
Gravel spit as I took a tight turn and pressed the accelerator. I made the
ten-minute drive in five, tires squealing as I pulled into a parking spot in front
of the station.
I yanked my keys out of the ignition and charged toward the front door. It
slammed against the wall, and the officer behind the desk jumped.
“M-Mr. Hartley.”
I didn’t even glance his way, just strode toward the bullpen. Cops read
my murderous expression and moved out of my path as I stormed toward
Lawson’s office.
My brother’s door was closed, but I didn’t bother knocking. I swung it
open to find Aspen on Lawson’s couch, her arms wrapped around herself,
staring at her lap. She looked so damned small. Vulnerable.
Law moved to my side. “Take a breath. You don’t want to freak her out
any more than she already is.”
I struggled to keep my breathing under control as I crossed the small
room. Aspen didn’t look up when I approached or when I took a seat next to
her.
“Tender Heart,” I whispered, slipping a hand under her red hair.
At the touch, she twisted, sliding onto my lap and burying her face in my
neck.
I froze. Didn’t move. Didn’t breathe.
Then my arms closed around her, and I held on tightly. As if my arms
could protect her from the nightmare waiting outside these walls.
Aspen didn’t cry, didn’t speak, she didn’t make a damned sound. She just
held on.
Lawson studied us with curiosity.
“How bad?” I asked.
He winced, and I had my answer. “Story’s been picked up by national
news outlets.”
“My face will be everywhere,” Aspen whispered. “We’ll never be safe.”
My arms tightened around her. “You’re safe. We’re gonna keep you that
way.”
“You can’t. You never know who’ll turn against you.”
Everything in me churned and twisted. I knew what that felt like. Too
much. Looking over your shoulder, not trusting anyone.
I stroked a hand down her back. “The attention will fade. Media will
move on.”
“They never move on,” Aspen mumbled.
Her speech was slightly slurred, and I knew the adrenaline crash was
kicking in. I glanced at Lawson. “I need to get her home.”
He jerked his head in a nod. “You parked out front?”
“Yeah.”
“Give me your keys. I’ll move your truck around back. Fewer eyes.”
My teeth ground together, but I handed my key ring to my brother.
He was gone in a flash, leaving me alone with Aspen. I breathed in her
smoky cinnamon scent. I let it calm the most feral parts of me. And then I
stood, keeping her cradled in my arms.
“I can walk,” Aspen said sleepily.
I pressed a kiss to her temple. “Just let me take care of you. I need it.”
“Okay.” She turned her face into my neck, squeezing her eyes closed.
The moment I emerged from Lawson’s office, Nash was at my side, a
worried look on his face. “What do you need?”
“Can you get the back door?”
“Sure.” He strode toward it. “Mads is freaking out.”
I bet everyone in town was losing their minds.
“Just tell her to give Aspen some time.”
Nash nodded as he opened the door. “Call or text if you need anything at
all. We can bring food. Whatever.”
“Thanks, man.”
Nash met my eyes. “We’ve got your back. Both of you.”
That burn had returned. The one that reminded me just how much my
family cared and how much I’d hidden from them.
I forced myself to ignore the regret coursing through me and strode
toward my truck. Lawson opened the passenger door, and I lowered Aspen to
the seat. She blinked up at me, almost as if she were drugged. I pulled the
seat belt across her body, a hint of cinnamon tickling my nose.
Straightening, I carefully shut the door and turned to Lawson and Nash.
“Text me updates?”
“Of course,” Lawson agreed.
I headed for the driver’s side of the vehicle and slid in. Aspen barely
reacted. A muscle in my cheek ticked. I wanted to end every asshole who’d
put her through this torture. Every person who had thrown her most painful
moments in her face.
Starting the engine, I backed out of the parking spot and pulled out of the
lot. It was then that I saw the reporters milling about at the end of the block.
Lawson must’ve forbidden them from coming on department property, but
they were still waiting for their pound of flesh.
Thankfully, they didn’t notice Aspen in my passenger seat as we drove
by. The trip to her house didn’t take long, but I tensed as we climbed
Huckleberry Lane. Vehicles lined the road—average cars and news vans
alike.
A few choice curses slipped free, and I wished my windows were tinted.
“Duck down,” I said, reaching behind Aspen’s shoulders.
“Huh?” she mumbled.
“Reporters. Duck.”
She paled, letting me guide her so she was folded over at the waist.
Thankfully, Lawson had thought ahead, and a squad car was already
parked at the mouth of Aspen’s drive. Clint, one of the department’s long-
standing officers, leaned against the hood. He lifted his chin, motioning me
by as reporters swarmed.
Even through the windows, I heard their invasive questions, and Clint
yelling at them to step back or he’d start putting people in zip ties.
I pressed the accelerator, flying down the drive. At least Aspen’s
farmhouse blocked us from the road a bit. I pulled to a stop and turned off the
engine. “You can sit up,” I said softly.
She glanced up at me and then slowly straightened. There was so much
sorrow in those beautiful green eyes. “This is never going to end.”
I slipped my hand under her hair, squeezing the back of her neck. “It will.
It might take some time, but it’ll fade.” I’d make sure it did. “Let’s get you
inside.”
Aspen nodded slowly, unfastening her seat belt.
I slid out of the truck, rounding the vehicle to help her. She moved a bit
jerkily as she climbed the steps, and my worry for her intensified. I slipped
the key she’d given me into the top deadbolt, unlocking it and the two other
locks. I held the door open as she went inside.
Chauncey was on his feet in a flash, ambling over to us.
“I’m going to let him out real quick,” I said.
Aspen nodded. “I’m going to go lie down. I don’t feel great.”
No one would after an adrenaline crash like that. “Okay. I’ll come check
on you in a minute.”
She didn’t even acknowledge my words, just stumbled toward the
bedroom.
I clenched and flexed my fingers, trying to find an outlet for my anger
that wasn’t me putting a hole through a wall. I grabbed a leash from the
hooks by the door and whistled for Chauncey. “Can’t risk you running off
after one of those reporters. Though I wouldn’t mind if you took a bite out of
them.”
Opening the door, I took the dog to a bit of grass for him to do his
business and then guided him back into the house. As I unhooked his leash, I
listened. I didn’t hear anything, so I headed for the back hallway.
I hovered outside the door I knew was Aspen’s. Even with all the nights
I’d spent in this house, I hadn’t ventured inside her bedroom. It was a no-go
zone in my mind.
Swallowing, I knocked lightly. There was no answer.
I turned the knob and eased the door open a fraction. The space wasn’t at
all what I expected. Instead of bright colors and loud prints, it was muted
pinks and grays with a hint of gold here and there.
Stepping inside, I took Aspen in. She was already burrowed under the
covers, but she wasn’t asleep. She just stared up at the ceiling.
I crossed the distance between us and lowered myself to the bed. “Can I
get you anything?”
She shook her head.
I bit the inside of my cheek, searching for something to say. I wasn’t
good with words. Always said the wrong thing. But I couldn’t leave Aspen
alone in her head either.
“There’s no glitter.”
Aspen’s gaze shifted to find me. “Huh?”
“Your bedroom. There’s no glitter. You usually have it somewhere. A
hair tie or headband. The stars on your coat. Shimmer in a sweater.”
Her lips curved. “Cady hasn’t infiltrated my décor in here.”
“You’re an amazing mom.”
Aspen swallowed hard. “I didn’t protect her from this.”
I took her hand, squeezing. “That’s not on you. It’s on those bloodsucking
vultures.”
“I’m scared she’ll somehow hear that it was her dad who hurt her mom.”
“We’re going to do everything we can to make sure that doesn’t happen.
I’ll have Law call the school and talk to the principal.”
Aspen nodded, her eyes drooping. “Thank you.”
“Get some sleep. I’ll get you something to eat when you wake up.”
“Okay…” But she was already dropping off before she could finish her
sentence.
I didn’t move right away. Couldn’t. I just watched Aspen breathe. Let a
little of the feral energy coursing through me ease with the even inhales and
exhales.
But the worst of the darkness still swirled inside me. Worry and fear
surged and fed it. Terror that I could lose this woman who’d come to mean
everything.
I LEANED back on the porch swing as I stared out at the pastures. How
often had I watched Aspen and Cady move around their property, feeding the
animals, grooming them, playing with them? I’d thought for sure there was
no way the joy on their faces could be real.
Now, I knew it was. But more than that, I knew it was there despite
everything they’d been through—loss and betrayal and pain.
One of the donkeys kicked out as the other got too close. A goat sharing
the field didn’t take too kindly to that and charged donkey number one—the
one Cady called Mabel.
I shook my head and glanced at my watch. Aspen had been asleep for
over five hours. I’d checked on her three times, watching her chest rise and
fall to ensure she was all right. But even telling myself over and over that she
was fine didn’t help.
I forced my gaze back to the fields, trying to find some of the peace I
used to get watching Aspen and her animals. But too many demons circled to
find true relief.
The door behind me squeaked, and I looked up to see Aspen shuffling out
in oversized sweats. She frowned at me. “It’s freezing out here.”
I shrugged. “I like watching the animals.” My gaze swept over her face.
“How do you feel?”
“A lot better. Sorry I freaked out on you.”
“You didn’t.”
“I went all…” Aspen lifted her hands above her head and made circular
motions.
“You’ve been through a lot.”
She studied me for a moment. “Are you okay?”
“Why wouldn’t I be?”
Aspen closed the distance between us and lowered herself to the swing.
“Oh, I don’t know, maybe because you look like you want to tear someone’s
head off.”
My back teeth ground together. “I hate that these jackholes are putting
you through this. Hate that they’re putting you at risk.”
Just voicing it had fear clawing at my insides.
Her hand covered mine. “It’s freeing in a way.”
“Freeing?”
She nodded, looking out at the pasture. “Don’t get me wrong, I’m scared.
I think part of me always will be. But I’ve been hiding for so long, worried
about people finding out who I really am. Now, they know. It’s all out in the
open.”
“You don’t have to hide anymore,” I surmised.
“No. I’ll still have to be careful and figure out ways to shield Cady as
much as possible. But I’m ready to stand my ground. We’ve built a beautiful
life here, and I’ll fight for that.”
Seeing a bit of her fire and strength reemerge soothed something in me,
but the terror still ate away at my insides. “You’re going to be okay.”
“Why don’t you look like you believe that?”
I cursed the fact that Aspen was always so damned perceptive. “I do.”
She was quiet for a moment and then gripped my hand tighter. “Grae told
me what happened when you were younger. That you were a suspect in
Wren’s attack. That people in Cedar Ridge turned against you. This has to
bring a little of that back. If you want to talk about—”
“I don’t,” I snapped.
Aspen stilled but didn’t let go of my hand, didn’t let my temper or scowl
scare her off the way it did with others. “If you don’t talk to me, talk to
someone. Don’t let it take you under.”
Pressure built down deep. So much of it, it felt like I might combust. “I
don’t want anything to happen to you.”
I felt her stare boring into my face, carrying a million silent questions
with it.
“Got jumped when it all went down.”
Aspen’s hand spasmed around mine. “Grae didn’t say anything about
that.”
“She doesn’t know.”
“Because she was younger when it happened?”
I shook my head, keeping my gaze on the animals in the pasture. “None
of my family knows.”
Aspen sucked in a sharp breath. “Why?”
“They had enough going on. Holt and Grae were a wreck with Wren in
the hospital. Nash felt guilty as hell because he’d made Holt late on his way
to meet Wren. Lawson was new on the force. My parents were just trying to
keep us all afloat.”
“But how could you cover up something like that?” she whispered.
I shrugged. “Told the doctor and them I’d fallen off my mountain bike.
Doctor didn’t believe me, but I was over eighteen. He couldn’t do a damned
thing.”
“You were alone in it.”
I turned at that, searching Aspen’s gorgeous face. “The same way you
were.”
She threaded her fingers through mine. “You never reported it?”
“I couldn’t see who it was. They got me from behind on my way home. I
had a house in town back then. One of them hit me so hard on the head I
blacked out. Think that’s what saved me. Not any fun to beat on someone
who’s unconscious.”
Aspen paled. “Roan…”
“I was fine. Concussion. A few broken ribs, broken arm. Eye swollen
shut. Black and blue.”
Her fingers tightened their hold. “But you had to live not knowing who
hurt you. The cops got the guys who hurt me when that reporter leaked where
I worked. They got some serious jail time. You haven’t had any closure. That
has to be terrifying.”
My jaw worked back and forth. “I’m careful. I watch my back. I’m
good.”
“You aren’t good. You’ve completely isolated yourself from the rest of
the world.”
“It’s better that way. Easier.”
“For who?” Aspen challenged. “You must get lonely. And the rest of the
world misses out on the gift you are.”
I scoffed. “Doubt the rest of the world sees it that way.”
The pads of her fingertips pressed into the back of my hand. “Don’t.
You’re an amazing man. I see it every day. You have a gentleness in you
unlike anything I’ve seen before. You just hide it under layers of scowls and
glares.”
“Tender Heart…”
“I see you, Roan. The way you are with Cady. With the animals. With
me. And I have a feeling the incredible things I’ve witnessed are just the tip
of the iceberg.”
I turned, taking her in fully for the first time since she’d walked outside.
Her beauty was staggering, but it was so much more than skin-deep. She
could soothe a ravaged soul with her presence alone.
Aspen moved then, closing the distance and pressing her mouth to mine.
The shock of the contact had my lips parting and my tongue moving of its
own volition. No matter how dangerous I knew it was, the need for her was
too great. Her taste exploded in my mouth, heaven and hell all wrapped into
one. But I knew I’d happily go down in the flames.
28
ASPEN
I HAD NEVER SEEN someone move with the speed Aspen did. She flew off
the bed, frantically searching for her discarded clothes. “Oh, my God. I’m
going to mother jail. What if we hadn’t locked the door? She could’ve
walked in.”
I couldn’t help it. I chuckled.
Aspen glared at me. “This isn’t funny. Would you get dressed?”
My lips twitched, but I sat up, trying to figure out where my clothes had
gone. “No one’s going to break down the door.”
“Men,” she huffed, pulling on her sweats.
A knock sounded on the front door, and Aspen jerked upright. “Crap,
crap, crap!” She whirled on me as she tugged on her sweatshirt. “You get
dressed. I’m going to hold off Cady.”
I nodded, pressing my lips together to keep from laughing. Aspen was
talking about Cady like she was a tiny dictator.
She charged out of the room, and I quickly got dressed and slipped into
the bathroom to pull myself together. By the time I finished, I heard voices in
the living room.
“Who were all those people, Mama? Mr. Caden made me play a disguise
game, and I put his coat over my head when we drove in. He’s so silly.”
My gut twisted at her innocent words, but I was grateful my sister’s
fiancé had thought quickly on his feet. The last thing we needed was a photo
of Cady getting out to the media.
“Mr. Grizz!” Cady flew at me, and I hauled her into my arms.
“Hey, Tiny Dancer. Did you have fun with G and Caden?”
She nodded her head enthusiastically. “The mostest! We got to go to the
stables at the resort and go riding. On a school day.” She sighed. “I wish I
could do that every day. And then Miss Grae took us to get cheeseburgers
and milkshakes. I got strawberry, and it was the yummiest.”
“Sounds like a pretty epic day.” I glanced at Caden. “Thanks for your
help.”
He nodded, studying me as if I were an alien. “Of course.” He paused for
a moment. “Crowd outside is getting bigger.”
I set Cady down. “Hey, can you get your new board game set up in your
room? Then you, me, and your mom can play.”
She grinned up at me. “Totes.” Then she took off down the hall.
“Totes?” I asked.
Aspen shook her head. “Drew is teaching her all sorts of lingo.”
Caden snorted. “Might want to be careful there.”
She winced. “Hopefully, he’s mindful of little ears.”
Caden shifted, glancing from Aspen to me and back again. Aspen’s
cheeks heated, and she twiddled her fingers. He cleared his throat. “If you
guys need a more secure place to stay, you’re welcome to take one of the
cabins at The Peaks. We have tight security, and no press is allowed onsite
without explicit permission.”
“Thank you, Caden,” Aspen said softly. “I really appreciate that. But
we’ve got the animals, and Cady has her routine. I want to try to keep things
as normal as possible.”
He nodded. “I get that. But if you change your mind, the offer’s always
there.”
“That’s really kind of you.”
“I’m sorry for what you’ve been through. I can’t imagine. If you need
anything at all, please let us know,” Caden said.
Aspen’s throat worked as she swallowed. “You’re not mad I didn’t say
anything?”
Caden’s expression softened. “We all have our secrets—the things that
are hard to share. The only reason we’d want to know is so we could help.”
Aspen’s eyes misted. “And G?”
I hadn’t realized how nervous Aspen was about keeping this secret until
right now. Her fingers twisted so hard her knuckles bleached white, and I saw
her breaths coming quicker than normal.
Caden’s lips twitched. “I won’t lie. You’ll probably be getting a visit
from her sooner rather than later. She’s dealing with a mix-up at the resort
right now. Otherwise, she would have been here with me. But she loves you.
She only wants to make sure you’re safe and okay.”
“She’s just going to be nosy and pushy about it,” I muttered.
Caden chuckled. “Roan isn’t wrong.”
Aspen worried her lip. “She’d be right to be pissed at me.”
“She’s not,” Caden assured her. “I promise.”
Aspen nodded, not looking completely convinced.
“I gotta get back to the resort.” Caden glanced at me. “Walk me out?”
I instantly went on alert but nodded, following him to the door.
We headed out into the chilly afternoon air and moved toward Caden’s
G-Wagon. He paused by the driver’s door, twirling his keys around his
finger. “What’s the deal with you two?”
I stiffened. “None of your damn business.”
Caden’s eyes flared. “Not trying to be an ass, but that woman’s been
through a lot. You haven’t exactly been the relationship type.”
I didn’t say a word, simply stared back at him.
Caden sighed. “Gigi’s losing her mind worrying about Aspen. She’s
freaking out about the press, the crazy ex-brother-in-law, Aspen’s mental
health. She’s going to be protective of her right now.”
A little of the tension bled out of me at that. Caden had my sister’s back,
and I couldn’t begrudge him that.
My jaw clenched and unclenched. “I like them. Both of them. They make
me feel…like I belong.”
And for someone who’d never truly felt that way, the feeling mattered.
Caden stilled, pain slicing through his expression. “Roan. You do belong.
You’re family. Your sister loves you like crazy, and so do the rest of your
siblings. Your parents, too.”
I toed a piece of gravel with my boot. “I’m different. I don’t fit.”
“Different doesn’t mean you don’t fit. It just means you make the puzzle
that much more interesting. Grae and your family gave me a place to belong
when I needed it the most. I couldn’t want anything more for you than to feel
that.”
He clapped me on the shoulder. “If Aspen gives you that? Hold tight and
don’t let go.”
That grinding sensation was back along my sternum. I didn’t have words
for Caden, but he seemed to understand. He just clapped me once more on
the shoulder and climbed into his SUV.
I stood there for a moment, staring out into the fields surrounding the
farmhouse.
Don’t let go.
I didn’t want to. But fear that I’d screw it up dug in deep. Or worse,
worry they’d be taken from me.
My gut twisted in a vicious squeeze. I shoved down the fear and turned
back to the house.
As I walked inside, Aspen stilled, mid-pace. “What did he say?”
“He was trying to give me the big-brother staredown, which is hilarious
since he’s younger than me.”
Aspen’s brow furrowed. “About Grae?”
I shook my head. “About you. He was basically asking me my
intentions.”
Aspen’s jaw went slack. “What?”
I chuckled. “You’ve got lots of people in your corner, Tender Heart. Just
need to take a moment to really see it.”
Her expression went soft, and a hint of humor entered her eyes. “What
are your intentions with me?”
I moved in closer, wrapping an arm around her waist and pulling her
close. “Lots of this.” My mouth took hers, my tongue stroking deep. I’d just
had her, yet that fire lit in my veins. The need for more. For everything.
Aspen broke away, struggling to catch her breath. “You need to be
registered as a dangerous weapon.”
My lips twitched.
Aspen’s fingers twisted in my shirt. “I want to take things slow around
Cady. I’ve never introduced anyone to her before.”
“I get that. We can go as slow as you need to, as long as you’re not
kicking me out.”
Aspen’s gaze shifted to the side.
I pulled her tighter against me. “What?”
She forced her focus back to me. “I like having you here. But sometimes I
worry I like it too much.”
Beautiful pain spread through my chest—agony and bliss all wrapped
into one. “I’m here for as long as you’ll have me.”
“Mama! Mr. Grizz! Come oooooon!” Cady called.
A smile spread across Aspen’s face, hitting me center mass. “Come on,
let’s go get our butts kicked by a six-year-old.”
“I THINK I had too many meatballs,” Cady mumbled, holding her tiny
belly.
Aspen shook her head, but a smile played on her lips. “I warned you five
might be too many.”
“But they’re soooooo good.”
I squeezed her shoulder. “I feel your pain. I think I might’ve overdone it,
too. We need to walk it off. Maybe do a few laps around the living room.”
Cady slid off her chair and grabbed my hand, tugging me to my feet. “We
can march like we’re in the army. Charlie always wants to play soldiers, so
I’m good at marching.”
I couldn’t hold in my chuckle as Cady strutted toward the couch, bringing
her knees up ridiculously high with each step. Chauncey lumbered to his feet
and barked, thinking it was a game. The noise sent the demon cat skittering
out of her hidey-hole. She launched herself onto the couch with a loud meow.
A knock sounded on the door, making Chauncey bark louder. It startled
the cat, and Pirate flew off the couch toward the nearest person. Me. Her
claws dug into my shirt and my damned chest. I cursed. Loudly.
“Ooooooh, Mr. Grizz. That’s a no-no word. You’re gonna have to do an
act of kindness to pay that one off,” Cady said, still marching.
I peeled the cat off me, glaring at it as Aspen opened the door. She
stepped back, motioning Lawson in. “Welcome to the zoo.”
His eyes flicked to me and then to the beast in my hands. “Is that a one-
eyed cat?”
“It’s a demon from the fiery pits of hell.” I set Pirate down, and she ran
down the hall.
“That’s another one, Mr. Grizz. Be careful, or you’re gonna get extra
chores,” Cady warned.
My brother chuckled. “You gotta keep him in line, Cady.”
She let out an exasperated sigh. “I’m trying. It’s not easy.”
Lawson pressed his lips together to keep from laughing outright.
Aspen shut the door. “Is everything okay?”
Lawson turned to her. “I need to borrow Roan for a minute about a case.
Not yours,” he assured her.
My skin prickled as I saw something pass across Lawson’s expression.
Something ominous.
“Oh, of course.” Aspen motioned to Cady. “Come on, Katydid. Let’s pick
up your room while they talk.”
Lawson turned, glancing at Aspen again. “I heard from an Evan Kemp in
Jackson.”
She stilled in the hallway. “He’s the police officer who helped me get a
new identity.”
“Seems like a good cop,” Lawson said. “He wanted to make sure you
were okay. That we were looking out for you.”
A soft smile spread across her face, and a hit of jealousy landed in my
gut. “He would. I’ll text him and let him know I’m all right. He doesn’t have
my new number.”
Lawson nodded. “He’s going to be my point of contact at the Jackson PD,
so I’ll keep him up to date.”
“Thanks, Law.” Aspen placed a hand on Cady’s back and guided her
forward.
“Aw, man. I always miss the good stuff,” Cady grumbled as she followed
Aspen down the hall.
Lawson chuckled. “That kid is hilarious.”
I nodded, my lips twitching. “She is.”
He studied me for a moment. “Are you…smiling?”
I instantly wiped the grin from my mouth. “Shut up.”
Lawson slapped me on the shoulder. “Happy for you, brother.”
I scowled at him.
“Unfortunately, I’m about to steal a little of that happiness.”
My entire body went on alert. “What?”
Lawson shifted in place. “Just got a call. Body was discovered. Human
this time. And the death wasn’t accidental.”
30
ASPEN
A SPEN ’ S WORDS had echoed in my head all day. “You’re a good man. The
best man I’ve ever known. Don’t ever let anyone tell you otherwise.”
My throat worked as I swallowed, trying to clear the ache there. It was
impossible because that ache was everywhere. A pain that only came from
coming back to life.
How long had I kept it all turned off—every heightened emotion and
feeling? It had helped keep out the bad, but also locked out the good. Until
Aspen.
She’d changed everything before I’d even known her name. Those little
glimmers of hope and light as I watched her from my cabin perch. As I saw
her kindness play out in front of me.
I turned into the police station parking lot. It was more crowded than
normal. There were a couple of county sheriff vehicles, Fish and Wildlife,
and Forest Service. Seemed Lawson had called everyone in for a meeting of
the minds.
I snagged a parking spot in the back corner and headed around front. As I
opened the door, the officer behind the desk looked up. “They’re in the
conference room.”
“Thanks,” I said with a nod.
The shock on his face was blatant. I cringed. How much of an ass had I
been over the years that a simple thanks warranted a dropped jaw and wide
eyes?
A varied group milled around the conference room. Groups weren’t my
favorite thing. There was a reason I’d chosen to live most of my life in the
wilderness. But I didn’t have a choice.
Taking a deep breath, I stepped inside. My boss, Rob, moved in my
direction and clapped me on the shoulder. “How are you holding up?”
The urge to scowl was so strong. I hated the idea of anyone in my
business, but I knew Rob was asking because he cared, not because he was
being a nosy asshole.
“Good. Thanks for letting me work half-time for a bit.”
The corner of Rob’s mouth kicked up. “You’re saving me from having to
pay you a ridiculous amount of overtime.” The amusement left his
expression. “You need any help, just let me know.”
I gave him a rough nod. “Appreciate it.”
The sheriff called Rob’s name, and he turned to answer. I took that
opportunity to slink into a back corner, hopefully hidden by the majority of
the crowd. Most people gave me a wide berth. They didn’t try to talk to me
because they knew I didn’t do polite chitchat.
That didn’t apply to my siblings, though. Nash elbowed his way through
the crowd, a bakery bag in hand. He squeezed in next to me, looking
annoyed. “Why’d you have to find the most cramped spot in the entire
room?”
I gave him a bland look. “You didn’t have to stand here.”
“Of course, I did. Who else is going to mock Lawson’s authoritative
voice with me?” Nash pawed through his bag and pulled out a donut.
I snagged the bag from him.
“Hey!” he protested.
I grabbed a glazed donut from the bag and handed it back. “Should’ve
stood elsewhere.”
“It’s a damn good thing I brought extras,” he grumbled.
My lips twitched.
“Holy hell. Was that a smile?” Nash gaped at me.
My mouth went flat again. “Shut up.”
“Aspen must be a miracle worker, man.”
“Nash…” I warned.
He munched on his donut. “We need to get her into political office. She
could broker world peace in no time flat.”
I had no doubt.
“All right, everyone,” Lawson said as he strode to the front of the room.
“Let’s get started.”
Nash and I shared a look. Lawson’s voice always went an octave deeper
when he had to speak in an official capacity.
“I appreciate you all coming,” he continued.
Muttered acceptances of the welcome rumbled.
“I want to go through what we’ve got so far. Vic is Marci Peters, twenty-
three years old, from Montana. I spoke with her parents last night. She was
doing a solo backpacking trip around the Pacific Northwest.”
“Stupid,” one of the officers muttered. I thought his last name was Hall.
Lawson sent him a quelling look.
I got the officer’s point, though. Hiking alone wasn’t the smartest move.
Anything could happen out there, from a sprained ankle to an animal attack
to something twisted like this.
“Marci arrived two days ago. She got a room at the motel at the edge of
town and planned to do some day hikes around the area.”
“Anyone at the motel see her talking to anyone?” Clint asked, his notepad
out.
Lawson nodded. “Spoke with the manager. Sally said Marci was the
friendly type, the kind that never met a stranger.”
Just like Aspen. Warm. Welcoming. And that had likely gotten Marci
killed.
“Officers will be interviewing the guests today. Trying to see if anyone
paid her especially close attention.”
Sheriff Jenkins nodded. “We get confirmation yet if the knife wounds on
the vic match the animal kills?”
Lawson shook his head. “Not yet. Luisa is doing the autopsy today, so we
should have that information by tonight.”
“If they match, then this was most likely random,” Nash added.
Lawson glanced in our direction. “Likely. Anything about her could’ve
caught the unsub’s eye. The way she looked, something she did, the simple
fact that she was alone.”
And if we didn’t know why she’d been chosen, it made searching for the
perp much harder. As discussions continued, no one said the one thing we all
knew: We needed another human victim to find a pattern.
“Okay, I think that’s it. Let’s all keep in close contact throughout the
day,” Lawson said. “I’ll send out a memo as soon as I get the report from
Luisa.”
But we all knew what it would say. The chances of those knife wounds
not being a match were slim to none.
Everyone began filing out of the room, but Lawson motioned to me.
“How’s Aspen holding up?”
“As good as can be expected.” My lips twitched. “Helped that you
ticketed every reporter on Huckleberry Lane.”
Nash grinned at our brother. “Abusing police resources for Roan’s babe?
I like it.”
Lawson shrugged, but there was a hint of humor in his eyes. “There’s no
parking on that road. It’s too narrow. It could prevent emergency vehicles
from passing safely. I’m just enforcing the law.”
“Well, they’re gone now, and they haven’t come back,” I informed him.
“Good. They’re still crawling around town, though. I’ve got an officer
stationed outside The Brew, but you might want to pick her up around back.
Don’t let them get a photo if you can avoid it.”
I jerked my head in a nod. “I’m heading there now so we can go pick up
Cady.”
Nash shook his head. “It’s like someone kidnapped our brother and
replaced him with a pod person. He’s all domesticated and shit.”
Lawson smacked Nash upside the head. “Like you aren’t?”
They began to bicker back and forth, and I took that as my cue to leave. I
slipped out of the conference room, made my way through the bullpen, and
headed outside. It was cold, but the sky was clear, the sun glittering on the
lake across the street.
I rounded the building to head for the parking lot, but my steps faltered as
I took in two figures waiting just off police department property. I hadn’t
seen Steven and Tyson since their episode revealing Aspen’s new identity
and location came out. I hadn’t wanted to. I didn’t trust myself.
Now, I knew that had been the right move. Fury surged inside me as I
stalked toward them.
Tyson paled a fraction, but Steven? He looked like he got a charge out of
my anger. An ugly grin spread across his face. “Well, hello, officer.”
“Hope you’re watching your step,” I growled.
“We don’t need to watch shit,” Steven shot back. “We’ve got freedom of
the press.”
“That freedom doesn’t carry to your personal lives. I hope neither of you
has made any mistakes. I got a brother who can find anything, and since you
decided to ignore the warnings of law enforcement, I’m going to let him
unearth everything he can find about you.”
I’d text Holt the second I got into my truck and have him sic Anchor’s
tech team on these two.
Redness crept up Steven’s throat. “You can’t threaten us. We’re press.”
I snorted. “You’re wannabe reporters who don’t have real jobs. And that
wasn’t a threat. It was just a friendly heads-up as to what’s about to happen.”
Steven surged forward, but Tyson caught his shirt and hauled him back.
“Shit, man, don’t hit him.”
Damn, I wished he would’ve gotten in a shot. Because then I could’ve
thrown his ass in lockup.
I shook my head and started toward my truck. “Keep him in line, Tyson.”
Steven snarled and cursed. “We’ve got so much dirt on your precious
girlfriend it’s not even funny. We’re going to ruin her, and you won’t be able
to do anything but watch.”
I forced myself to keep moving, not to give the asshole what he wanted.
But it cost me. Because I wanted to remove every threat to Aspen from this
Earth—and do it permanently.
34
ASPEN
T HE BELL over the door jingled, and I fought the urge to groan as Janice
Peabody walked inside. I’d thought I wouldn’t have to see her for a few
weeks after our tiff over how she talked about Roan. But the triumphant
smile on her face told me my time was up, and this visit wouldn’t be pleasant.
The café had been slammed all day. I didn’t blame people for being
curious. It was a natural reaction. But I did blame them for treating me like a
monkey at the zoo.
There had been a steady stream all morning and into the afternoon.
They’d order a drink or treat and then blatantly stare at me as I worked. It
made me want to pull on a monster Halloween mask and shout boo.
Thankfully, an hour or so after lunch, things calmed down. My regulars
like Jonesy and Elsie came in, and Zeke finished his shift. I could breathe
again.
Until now.
Janice strode toward the counter, a cat-that-got-the-cream smile on her
face. “Aspen. Or do you prefer Tara?”
I jolted at the use of my old name. Just those two short syllables made my
stomach cramp and memories threaten.
I did everything I could to keep any reaction off my face. “What can I get
you, Ms. Peabody?”
Annoyance flickered across her face. “I just was curious if you felt bad
for lying to all of us for years.”
Jonesy lumbered out of his chair. “Janice…”
I held up a hand to tell him I had this. “I didn’t lie to a single one of you.”
Janice’s brows pulled together. “You lied about your name. About where
you’re from. About what you did.”
“I’ve got a legal driver’s license that says my name is Aspen Barlow. Not
a lie. I never actually answered a question about where I’m from; I avoided
talking about it. Also, not a lie. And unless you were in that house where I
was chased with a goddamned knife and stabbed, then I’d back the hell off—
also not a lie.”
Janice’s mouth fell open.
Jonesy started a slow clap.
I let out a long breath. “And now, you can leave and never come back.”
Red hit Janice’s cheeks as she sputtered. “You can’t kick me out. You
don’t own this coffee shop.”
“No, I don’t. But I am the manager, and Sue has given me permission to
ban whomever I see fit. That’s you and the vile bullshit that always comes
out of your mouth.”
“Well, I never—”
“Shut it, woman,” Jonesy snapped. “And get your booty movin’ on out of
here.”
Janice glared at him. “Your family won’t be welcome in my
establishment anymore when they come to visit.”
“They don’t want to stay there anyway. Grae got them a discount to stay
at The Peaks. They’re gonna be livin’ in the lap of luxury instead of having to
deal with your oversalted eggs.”
“I do not oversalt my eggs,” Janice huffed.
Jonesy shooed her toward the door. “Maybe you’re losing your sense of
taste along with your good sense in your old age.”
Janice didn’t even try a comeback for that one, she just stormed out.
Elsie’s gaze jumped from the door to Jonesy to me and back to the door.
Her jaw was slack, and her eyes wide. “That was…”
“A buncha bullshit,” Jonesy muttered and turned back to me. “You okay,
darlin’?”
I opened my mouth to say something, but no words came out.
He made his way back to me. “You’re shakin’. Why don’t you sit down?”
Elsie leapt to her feet and hurried over to me. “Come on.”
I shook my head. “I’m not sad,” I said quietly. “Not scared.”
Jonesy eyed me carefully. “Then what are ya?”
“I’m pissed,” I muttered.
He barked out a laugh. “Now that I can get behind. That woman is a piece
of work.”
“Understatement of the century,” I grumbled.
Elsie’s lips twitched. “You need water or anything?”
“What I need is a shot of whiskey.”
She grinned. “I could get behind that. Maybe we need a night out on the
town.”
I sighed, leaning against the counter. “Maybe once things calm down.
Sorry about the drama.”
She waved me off. “Please, this is the most excitement I’ve had all
week.”
I chuckled. “Well, I hate that I removed your source of entertainment.”
Jonesy snorted. “I can do without that busybody. One of these days, she’s
gonna look around and realize she has not one friend in the world.”
Elsie frowned. “That’s sad.”
“It is,” I agreed. “But she’s gotta start to feel those consequences, or
she’ll never change.”
Something flashed across Elsie’s eyes. “People rarely feel consequences
these days.”
I studied her for a moment. It wasn’t the first time I’d had a hunch that
Elsie had been through some things. It was the tiny things she let slip and the
shadows in her eyes. But I never pushed. I knew from experience that would
only make her bolt.
“You know what we need?” I said.
Jonesy’s bushy gray eyebrows lifted. “What’s that?”
“Double chocolate peanut butter cup muffins on the house.”
He grinned, patting his stomach. “I’d never say no.”
I glanced at Elsie. She forced a smile, clearing those shadows. “I do love
chocolate.”
Plating muffins for all of us, I sent them back to their respective tables.
We all chatted as I worked on cleaning tables, grabbing bites of my muffin in
between. Jonesy told us story after story about his childhood in Cedar Ridge.
The time when he and his friends stole a boat and took it for a joyride. When
they toilet-papered their principal’s house.
I sent him a chastising look. “I had no idea you were such a
troublemaker.”
“It’s how I stay young,” he said with a charming grin.
I snorted. “It’s how you get away with anything.”
The bell over the door jingled, and Officer Smith poked his head in. “Is it
all right if I use your restroom? That coffee you gave me was a little too
good.”
I motioned him in. “Of course. It’s right down the hall.”
He disappeared, and I started to head back to the counter, but the bell
tinkled again. I turned to greet the newcomer—and felt all the blood drain
from my face.
“Hello, Tara,” the man said.
He was at least ten years older than me, his dark brown hair silver at the
temples now, but I’d never forget his face. His photo had been printed
beneath byline after byline. Ones that questioned whether the cops had found
the right person. Ones that called my mental state into question. And worst of
all, those that called me a manipulative liar who was jealous of my sister’s
happiness.
“Get out,” I croaked.
Oren Randal just grinned. “That’s not any way to greet an old friend, is
it?”
Images flashed in my mind. Him shouting horrible questions at me as I
ran from the courthouse to a waiting police cruiser. Him waiting outside my
office, my home. Never giving me a moment’s peace. Telling everyone who
would listen where I lived, worked, and spent any time.
My breaths came faster as my body remembered the feeling of constantly
looking over my shoulder. Of never feeling safe.
“Get out, or I will tase your ass and get you thrown in jail,” I growled.
Oren’s eyes flashed. “Wouldn’t be the first time you tried to ruin a man’s
life, would it?”
Roan’s imposing figure appeared behind Oren. I hadn’t even heard him
come in.
“Back away from her before I rip your spine out through your nose.”
35
ROAN
I HUMMED as I wiped down tables. The tune wasn’t even discernible, but I
didn’t care.
Elsie glanced up from her computer as I came by. “You seem like you’re
in an extra good mood.”
“I am. I’m happy.”
Jonesy chuckled. “Well, that’s sayin’ something considering what you’ve
been through these past few weeks.”
“You know, sometimes going through the hard stuff just makes you
appreciate the good things more,” I said as I dragged my rag across another
table.
Something flickered in Elsie’s eyes that told me she understood. “There’s
something powerful in finding purpose to the pain.”
I nodded, wondering what she’d been through. I kept hoping she might
open up, but she never did. Still, she hadn’t left Cedar Ridge. Maybe she was
trying to find the courage to be a part of a community again.
“It’s finding those little silver linings,” I agreed.
Like the fact that all the events of the past month had brought Roan into
my life. Into my home. Into my bed. And he wanted to stay.
The urge to giddy-squeal embarrassingly loud was strong. He hadn’t said
anything about officially moving in, but I wasn’t sure what else, “I’m not
going anywhere,” could mean.
The bell over the door jingled, and I turned to welcome the newcomer.
Only it wasn’t a customer. It was a guy who looked to be in his early
twenties, carrying a massive spray of red roses.
“Aspen Barlow?” he asked.
“That’s me,” I said, crossing to him.
Elsie let out a low whistle. “That man of yours is not messing around.”
“Thanks,” I said to the guy, taking the flowers and setting them on the
counter. I frowned at the arrangement. This didn’t really seem like a Roan
choice. He was more of a wildflowers-he-picked-on-a-hike kind of guy. But
maybe I was wrong.
I pulled the card out of the holder and opened it.
I STRODE into the conference room to find Nash stuffing his face with a
sandwich while Lawson combed through a file on the table.
Nash lifted his chin. “Hey, man.”
I grimaced at him. “Your face is covered in mustard.”
He shrugged and kept eating. “I’m hungry.”
“You say that like it’s a new revelation,” Lawson muttered. “You’re
always hungry.”
I lowered myself into the chair next to Nash and nabbed a potato chip.
His hand smacked down on mine. “Do not eat my potato chips.”
“Get a grip. There are more in the vending machine,” I grumbled.
“Then go get yourself some. These are my favorites. They’re maple
bacon. Mads orders them special for me.”
I jerked my hand free and popped the chip into my mouth. “Mmm. They
are good.”
“You’re a bastard,” Nash growled.
“Children,” Lawson warned. “Please dial it back before everyone else
gets here. I don’t want to have to stick both of you in the drunk tank.”
Nash scrunched up his nose. “It smells like puke in there. I’d never be
able to finish my sandwich.”
I snorted. “Always has his priorities.”
I moved to snag another chip, but Nash hauled the bag to his chest.
“Mine.”
I couldn’t help it, I laughed. He looked like Gollum in Lord of the Rings.
Both my brothers’ eyes widened, and they gaped at me.
“What?”
Lawson shook himself out of his stupor. “You laughed.”
“So?” I said, a hint of annoyance slipping into my tone.
Nash studied me for a moment. “It’s not that you never laugh; you
chuckle sometimes. But it’s not like that.”
Lawson grinned. “It’s Aspen. She’s got him whistling a merry tune these
days.”
“Oh, grow up,” I muttered.
Nash leaned back in his chair. “It’s true. You’re different. Lighter. You
talk more, too.”
It was probably because I was around Cady all the time. She never
stopped talking. I’d gotten used to the noise instead of constant silence.
I fought the urge to squirm in my seat.
“Happy for you, man,” Lawson said. “Commitment looks good on you.”
I glanced at my older brother, taking in the circles under his eyes and the
scruff on his jaw. “Could look good on you, too.”
Lawson’s face closed down. “Think I’ll pass on that.”
Nash popped a chip into his mouth. “It’s a freakin’ waste, seeing how all
the single women in this town would give their left ovary for a chance at the
chief of police.”
He glared at Nash. “They would not.”
I arched a brow at him. “I don’t know about that. I’ve seen you with some
stage-five clingers.”
That glare turned to me. “I think I liked you better when you didn’t talk.”
Nash burst out laughing. “That’s cold.”
I just shook my head, but my lips twitched. “You guys were always on
me to participate, join in. Careful what you wish for.”
“Don’t worry, I’m regretting it right about now,” Lawson muttered.
A knock sounded on the open door, and Sheriff Jenkins stepped inside.
“Afternoon.”
“Bruce,” Lawson greeted.
“Law,” he said in return, taking a seat. “How are things around here?”
“Quiet,” Lawson said. “I don’t like it.”
Sheriff Jenkins frowned. “I get it. That prickle at the back of your neck
that says this isn’t over.”
Lawson nodded.
Nash set his bag of chips down. “Maybe the vet and Luisa are wrong. If
the knife marks aren’t actually a match, then this death could be an isolated
incident. Wrong place, wrong time sort of thing.”
Sheriff Jenkins let out a low whistle. “Don’t be letting Luisa hear you
think she got it wrong.”
Lawson chuckled. “I’ve learned my lesson once before.”
The corner of Sheriff Jenkins’ mouth kicked up. “I’ve done the same.
Won’t make the mistake twice.”
“It was just a thought,” Nash grumbled.
“Or someone’s waiting for the heat to die down before they make another
move,” I said.
Sheriff Jenkins glanced at me. “I’d guess that’s more likely. I saw the
photos of the body. This was either extremely personal or someone with a
taste for killing.”
I nodded and turned to Lawson. “Did you get ahold of Anson?”
Lawson’s mouth thinned. “Yeah.”
“Who’s Anson?” the sheriff asked.
“An old friend of mine who used to be a profiler with the FBI.”
Nash scoffed. “Can you call him a friend when he tells you to screw off
whenever you get in touch?”
Lawson pinned him with a stare. “He went through a lot during his time
with the bureau. Wants away from that world. I get it. I could just really use
his insight right about now.”
“I take it he wasn’t eager to help?” Sheriff Jenkins asked.
Lawson shook his head. “He hung up on me.”
Nash chuckled.
“Hell,” Lawson muttered. “He might be broodier than Roan used to be.”
I scowled at my brother. “You’re an asshole.”
My phone buzzed in my pocket, and I pulled it out. A text flashed on the
screen.
TENDER HEART
I got something at The Brew. I think it might be from John.
I STARED at the flowers on the counter. I didn’t want to touch them. Even
to throw them in the trash.
I hated that John was winning. That he still had the power to terrify me.
Anger surged so fast and fiercely it nearly stole my breath. And on its heels
came a burning behind my eyes—the pressure of tears. But I refused to let
them fall.
The bell over the door jingled, and I swung around as if John himself
might walk through those doors. But it wasn’t him.
Fury had carved itself into Roan’s face as he stalked toward me. Most
people would’ve taken a step back, trembled even. But Roan’s anger was
comforting in a way. It told me he cared.
Roan pulled me into his arms, holding me tightly. “You’re okay?”
“I’m fine,” I mumbled into his chest.
I could hear that others had entered the café and tried to extricate myself
from Roan’s hold, but he held firm.
“Need a minute.”
His voice was gruff, almost pained, and my heart cracked. But I didn’t
move. I let Roan hold me, taking what he needed, assuring himself I was
okay.
Finally, Roan slowly let me go. His hand lifted to my cheek, his thumb
sweeping back and forth. The callused tip sent a shiver through me. “Need
you to be okay.”
“I am,” I promised.
Lawson cleared his throat. “What happened?”
I turned to see him, Nash, and a worried Jonesy and Elsie. Heat hit my
cheeks. The last thing I wanted was another scene at The Brew. But I guessed
we were past that point. “I got those.” I inclined my head toward the flowers.
“But they came with a card.”
Roan moved to the counter where I’d dropped the note. He let out a series
of curses that deserved an award. “How?” he gritted out.
Nash pulled out his phone and started texting. “I’ll have someone bring
some evidence bags and gloves.”
“God, I hope there are prints,” Lawson said, pulling out his own phone.
He tapped a few things on his screen and held it out between us.
It rang a few times before a woman picked up. “Cedar Ridge Floral and
Gifts, how can I help you?”
“Hey, Nan. It’s Law. You fill an order for red roses to be delivered to The
Brew?”
“Sure did. There a problem?”
Lawson glanced at Roan, whose muscles were strung so tightly it was a
miracle he hadn’t ripped something. “How’d that order come in?”
“Mail, actually. Someone sent cash and their own card. Card was sealed.
Said it was a surprise for an old friend. What’s going on?”
“You still have the envelope?” Lawson pressed, not answering her
question.
Nan was quiet for a moment. “I don’t think so. Came in yesterday. We’ve
taken the trash out already.”
Roan’s jaw clenched, his teeth grinding.
“I’m going to send someone over to check. Okay?”
“All right, Law,” Nan agreed.
“And put a hold on any flowers going to Aspen Barlow,” Lawson said.
“You need to tell me what’s going on,” Nan pushed.
“You watch the news lately?” he asked.
“You know I don’t want to fill my head with that garbage. I watch my
soaps, and that’s it. Plenty of drama there.”
Lawson shook his head. “We’ll explain when we stop by.”
“All right, then,” Nan agreed and hung up.
“Probably the only person in Cedar Ridge who hasn’t seen your face
everywhere,” Nash muttered and typed on his phone. “I’ll tell Clint to head
over.”
“Who doesn’t check the damned card?” Roan growled.
I turned, pressing a hand to his chest. “It’s not her fault.”
Roan pulled me against him again. I could feel his heart beating against
my cheek.
Lawson looked at Jonesy and Elsie. “Did you guys see anyone suspicious
around the time the flowers were delivered?”
Jonesy shook his head. “No, but I wasn’t paying real close attention.”
As Lawson turned to Elsie, her gaze dipped, and her cheeks heated. “It
was just us in the café. I didn’t see anyone outside,” she mumbled.
Lawson, oblivious to Elsie’s reaction, shifted his focus back to me. “You
notice anyone who shouldn’t have been here?”
I frowned. “You think it could be someone here?”
Roan’s hold on me tightened as if he could shield me from the entire
world.
“We need to look into every possibility. You’ve gotten a lot of media
coverage over the past couple of weeks,” Lawson said.
“Oren was waiting outside this morning,” Roan growled. “And those two
damn podcasters are still here.”
Nash’s eyes flared. “Is Oren also dead at this point?”
“Not yet,” Roan gritted out.
“Not helping, Nash,” I chastised.
He sent me an apologetic smile. “Sorry, but that dude is just asking to end
up in a shallow grave somewhere.”
I turned in Roan’s arms so I could face him and framed his face in my
hands. “Look at me.”
He didn’t at first.
I pressed more firmly against his cheeks, feeling the stubble biting into
my palms. “Roan.”
His head dipped, his eyes meeting mine. But he was somewhere else. I
stretched up onto my tiptoes and kissed him. I put everything into the kiss,
trying to reassure. To comfort.
When I pulled away, my Roan was there again.
He pressed his forehead to mine. “Tender Heart.”
“Don’t do that,” I whispered.
“Do what?”
“Disappear on me.”
Roan pulled back, searching my eyes. “I’m with you. Always.”
“This is making me all sorts of uncomfortable because I feel like you’re
about to go find a closet to bang it out,” Nash muttered.
Lawson smacked him upside the head.
“Hey!” Nash rubbed the back of his head. “That hurt.”
Lawson’s phone rang, and he glanced down. Tapping the screen, he put it
to his ear. “Hey, Nan. You remember something?”
Lawson’s expression went stony. “Thank you. Just leave it on a table.
Don’t touch it again. Clint’s coming over to your place now.”
He disconnected and shoved his phone into his pocket.
“What?” Roan demanded.
Lawson looked at us. “She found the envelope the order came in. There
was no return address, but there was a postmark. Jackson.”
“John,” I whispered. I hadn’t been sure about the handwriting this time,
but now we knew.
And just like always, even when he was locked up, he found a way to
reach me. To hurt me. But this time, he wouldn’t settle for torment. He
wanted blood.
40
ROAN
I EASED the porch swing back and forth as I stared at the dark fields and
forests. The quiet shadows had always been a comfort. A blanket of
nothingness that soothed.
But not tonight.
Everything in me was still churned up. It was all I could do to hide it from
Cady. But Aspen saw it all. She always did.
Lawson had put a call into the prison to see about locking down John’s
privileges and talked to Evan at the Jackson PD. The problem was, we didn’t
have hard proof it was Carrington. Just that it was someone in Jackson. The
best the warden could give us was that he’d have guards keep a closer eye on
John.
I knew that wouldn’t actually happen. They were already stretched thin.
And keeping eyes on prisoners twenty-four-seven was impossible.
The hinges on the door squeaked as Aspen stepped out. She pulled her
long coat tighter as she made her way to the swing. “Aren’t you freezing?”
I shrugged. “I don’t really feel it.” It was a miracle I felt anything at all.
Aspen lowered herself to the seat next to me and nestled close. It was one
of the things I loved about her—how she always burrowed deep. It didn’t
matter if I was in a piss-poor mood or not. Nothing kept her away.
She looped her arm through mine and dropped her head to my shoulder.
“I’m worried about you.”
That was her, too. Honest. Straight to the point. Always caring about
others.
“Tweaked me,” I admitted, gazing at the starry sky.
“Me, too,” she said quietly.
“Hate that. Hate that he still has ways to get to you after everything
you’ve been through.”
“Lawson said the guards are keeping a closer eye. Maybe they’ll catch
something,” Aspen said hopefully.
I tugged her closer to me. “Always looking on the bright side.”
“It’s better than the alternative, don’t you think?”
I shrugged. “I think it’s good to be prepared for what might come. And
it’s not just John. I went to the site Oren’s been posting on. Read the
comments section of Steven and Tyson’s podcast. There are some seriously
messed-up people out there.”
Aspen was quiet for a moment. “People who think I lied about John.”
That grinding sensation was back in my chest. “I know what can happen
when people get stuck on a wrong idea. You could get hurt—”
“I’ve already been hurt,” Aspen said, cutting me off. She pressed her
hand over her scar. “I was almost killed.” Her green eyes bored into mine.
“I’ve been harassed and attacked. And guess what? I’m still here.”
Fear dug in its ugly claws. “Nothing can happen to you,” I whispered, my
voice turning gruff.
Aspen reached up, her hands framing my face again. “It already has. I
was alone and made it through. I have no doubt that I’ll make it through
again with you at my side.”
Fire lit in my veins. “How do you have that kind of belief in me?”
“Because I see you, Roan. After you almost scared me to death coming
out of a blizzard like the abominable snowman, I realized that all that gruff
exterior was just trying to hide the most gentle core.”
“Tender Heart…”
“It’s true. I hate that you hide your true self from everyone around you.
It’s time you let them see.”
My ribs tightened around my lungs, making it hard to breathe.
Aspen’s thumbs stroked across my cheeks. “Stop hiding. There’s no
reason for it. You’re the most amazing man I’ve ever known.”
Those three little words teased my tongue, but fear kept me from setting
them free. “Don’t know what I did to deserve you.”
A smile pulled at her lips. “I am a pretty awesome catch.”
I chuckled, and a bit of the pressure in my chest released. My lips brushed
against hers. “You are.”
The kiss deepened. My tongue stroked in, teasing and toying. I’d never
get tired of that taste. It burned through me. Made every nerve ending stand
at attention.
Aspen moaned into my mouth, and my dick twitched.
Her pull was so strong, so fierce. I’d never fight it off. And I didn’t want
to.
I moved then, hauling Aspen so she sat on my lap facing the fields.
“Wha—?”
I cut her off with a nip to her ear. “Stay still. Think you can do that for
me?”
She squirmed on my lap, and I groaned.
“Don’t make me spank you.”
She squirmed again.
I chuckled, but the tone was darker. “Like that idea?”
“Maybe.”
I grinned and trailed my lips down her neck. “Want to feel you come on
my fingers, but you have to be very quiet.”
Aspen’s breaths turned to short pants, punctuating the air. “Yes.”
My grin widened. I unzipped her coat. The sound echoed like a cannon in
the quiet night.
I slipped a hand beneath the waistband of her sweats, then into her
panties. The groan was back on my lips. “This heat could give third-degree
burns.”
I cupped her, and Aspen pressed into my hand with a whimper.
“Still,” I commanded.
She listened.
That ready acceptance had my dick straining against her ass.
My fingers slid inside, and Aspen’s mouth fell open on a pant.
“You feel like heaven.”
I pumped my fingers in and out, stretching and twisting, relishing every
flutter of her core. It was like figuring out all the colors you could paint with.
Which twist and flick brought her higher. What tempo made her quiver.
A third finger slid inside, and Aspen let another whimper free. The sound
wrapped around my cock and squeezed.
I thrust in and out, faster and faster, as Aspen’s legs started to shake. My
thumb found her clit and pressed.
She bit back her cry as she clamped down so hard on my fingers that I’d
likely have bruises. “That’s it. Give it all to me.”
Her head tipped back, her lips parted, and she rode every crest and wave.
I pulled each swell of pleasure, over and over, until she collapsed against me.
I slowly slid my fingers from her heat and licked them clean.
Aspen jerked upright. “You did not.”
My lips twitched. “My favorite flavor.”
Her jaw dropped, and she hopped to her feet, pulling me up and tugging
me toward the door.
“Where are we going?”
Aspen shot me a grin over her shoulder. “You had your fun, it’s only fair
I get mine. And my bathroom has great insulation.”
41
ASPEN
C ADY BOUNCED up and down in her booster seat. “They’re going to bring
bugs and snakes and lizards and all sorts of things.”
I fought a shiver at the word snake but tried to hide it. Cady loved all
living things, and I didn’t want to change that for her.
“What do you think will be your favorite?” Roan asked from the driver’s
seat as he turned into the elementary school parking lot.
“Hmm,” Cady said thoughtfully.
My gaze slid to my phone again. I’d gotten the alert two minutes into the
drive, and my stomach had been in knots ever since. Steven and Tyson’s
podcast had a new episode.
I worried the inside of my cheek as I stared at the title they’d given it.
Who’s Lying Now?
“Lizard!” Cady shouted, breaking into my thoughts. “But I heard he’s
gonna bring a dragon.”
My brows lifted at that. “A dragon?”
Cady and Charlie had been beyond excited for The Bug Guy to visit their
classroom, but dragons seemed extreme.
Roan chuckled. “I bet he has a bearded dragon.”
I turned to glance at him. “That sounds dangerous.”
“No, they actually make great pets,” Roan informed me.
“Maybe we’ll get one of those next, Mama. I want a dragon.”
I pinched the bridge of my nose where a headache was building. “I think
we’ve got a full house right now, Katydid.”
“We’ll see,” she singsonged.
Roan just laughed harder.
“Stop it,” I whisper-hissed.
He pulled to a stop in the pickup line and bent to kiss me. “You’d never
say no to an animal in need.”
Cady giggled. “Don’t do that in front of Charlie. He doesn’t like kissing.”
Roan grunted. “It’s a good thing. If that changes, you let me know.”
“Okay, Mr. Grizz,” Cady said, unbuckling her straps.
I jumped out of the truck and helped her down, then bent to give her a
quick squeeze. “Love you. Have the best day.”
She smacked a kiss on my cheek. “You, too, Mama!”
Then she was gone, running for the doors of the school.
I watched her go for a moment before turning back to the truck. How long
did we have before I had to tell her the truth about her father? How long until
she would be aware of all the articles and podcasts and Dateline specials?
I opened the door and climbed inside. Roan watched me as I buckled my
seat belt and then pulled away from the curb, not saying a word. But instead
of heading straight to The Brew, he pulled to the side of the street in front of
a gallery that hadn’t yet opened.
“What’s wrong?”
I stared at my hands in my lap. “New podcast episode.”
Roan cursed. He unbuckled my belt and pulled me closer to him. “You
don’t have to pay any attention to that noise.”
“Cady will hear it all one day. That’s what I hate the most.”
He sighed. “We’ll be there to help her through it when the time comes.”
My heart rate ratcheted up. We. God, I wanted that. Nothing felt like too
much with Roan by my side. Somehow, his gruffness soothed the worst of
any situation.
“Are you going to listen to it?” he asked softly.
“Probably,” I admitted. It was like a car wreck I couldn’t turn away from.
One I needed to shield Cady from however I could.
Roan plucked the phone from my lap. “Then we listen together.”
He tapped a few buttons on the screen, and the now-familiar intro music
began to play.
“Welcome to Twisted Lies, The True John Carrington Story. I’m Steven.”
“And I’m Tyson.”
“Today, we’ve got a special guest joining us,” Steven said. “A reporter
who has covered this case from the beginning, Oren Randal.”
My stomach dropped, and Roan slid his hand into mine, weaving our
fingers together.
“Welcome, Oren,” Tyson greeted. “It’s great to have someone who’s
been with this case in real time.”
“It’s a pleasure to be here,” Oren said. “We need people like you
keeping this case in the forefront because I don’t think we have the right
person behind bars.”
I gripped Roan’s hand tighter. All I could think about was the
implications of Oren’s casual words. If John ever got a retrial, this could
poison the jury pool. Cady could hear this, possibly causing her to question
things, not to mention it could make everyone in my day-to-day life look at
me differently.
“I’m glad to hear you say that,” Steven cut in. “I’m not even saying that
Tara Monroe meant to lie. She could’ve been traumatized by finding her
sister. By being accidentally stabbed. Her mind could’ve automatically
decided John was the killer, even though there’s a very plausible case for him
not being involved.”
Oren scoffed. “Oh, I think she lied on purpose. I think she was jealous
that Autumn loved John so much. That they had this happy life she wasn’t all
that involved in. She saw a chance to get some payback for John stealing her
sister away and took it.”
“I don’t know,” Tyson said. “We got copies of the forensics reports this
week, and that blood evidence on John was pretty damning.”
There was silence for a moment.
“You seriously think she’s telling the truth?” Steven asked, shock evident
in his voice.
“You saw the photos,” Tyson said. “How do you get that kind of blood on
you? It looked like spray.”
“He loved his wife,” Oren cut in, voice tight. “He said time and time
again that he held her after he found her.”
“But that doesn’t explain—”
Steven cut Tyson off. “It does explain. If you lift someone with those kinds
of wounds, blood is going to get everywhere. I can’t believe you’re starting to
fall for her sob story. She’s a manipulative—”
I hit stop on my phone. “I can’t listen anymore,” I croaked.
Roan hauled me into his lap, cradling me to his chest. “Don’t. They don’t
have any damned evidence. It’s just the same half-cocked conspiracy
theories.”
Tears burned my eyes. “I can’t imagine how scared she was. I told her I’d
always have her back, always be there for her. And when she needed me the
most, I didn’t.”
“Aspen.” Roan brushed his hand over my hair in soothing strokes. “You
fought for her every step of the way. You’re still fighting for her. For the girl
she gave life.”
I let out a hiccuped breath. “I miss her.”
“Of course, you do.” He pressed his lips to the top of my head. “Tell me
about her.”
“She’s the one who invented cocoa smash.”
I could feel Roan’s mouth curve against my hair. “You mean that instant
cavity in a bowl?”
A laugh burst out of me. “She invented it when I wanted ice cream with
chocolate syrup after a bad day, but we didn’t have any. It’s way better
anyway.”
“Sounds like a really good sister.”
“She was the best,” I whispered. “We didn’t have a lot growing up. It was
just my mom and us. Mom couldn’t seem to hold down a job. Sometimes, we
got lucky, and she could scrounge together enough money for an apartment.
Other times, it was a shelter or our car.”
Roan’s grip on me tightened.
“I was okay, though, because I always had Autumn. She made sure I was
all right. Safe. Warm. Fed.”
“She was more like your mom.”
My throat burned. “Yeah.”
We were quiet for a moment, Roan just holding me tightly and soothing
the worst of the hurt.
“I think that’s why she stayed with John longer than she should’ve.
Because she wanted the family we never had. She was so desperate to give
her daughter a good life.”
Roan cupped my cheek, tipping my head back. “But now you’re giving
Cady that good life. Look at how loved she is. How full of magic her life is.
You did that.”
I swallowed, trying to clear the ache in my throat. “I’ve tried. So damn
hard. But things really soared when your family came into our lives.”
The Hartleys had given us so much. Cady’s best friend. Women who had
become like sisters to me. Kerry’s motherly nurturing and care. Nathan’s
sweet gruffness. Holt’s, Nash’s, and Lawson’s brotherly ways. And Roan.
He had become the greatest gift of all.
Roan brushed his mouth against mine and then pulled back. His gaze
bored into mine. “You’ve given me more than I ever could’ve imagined.
Even before I knew you, you were this spark of light in the shadows. But
being in your orbit? It’s so bright it casts out everything else.”
I pressed a hand to his chest, feeling the steady beat there. It wasn’t an I
love you; it was so much better. It was raw and real and…Roan.
T HE WOMAN STARED at me for a beat too long as I offered her the bills and
change in my hand. My stomach twisted. I didn’t recognize her as a local and
hoped like hell she wasn’t a reporter.
She licked her lips as she took her change from me. “I’m so sorry about
what happened to you,” she whispered. “Know that you’re believed.”
Her eyes shone, a glimmer of tears there as her gaze connected with mine.
My throat tightened. There was an understanding in her expression.
Something that told me she’d seen the effects of abuse in one way or another.
“Thank you. I can’t tell you what that means.”
She nodded and shoved the change into the tip jar. “Stay safe.”
“I will.”
And then she was gone.
A weight lifted off my shoulders, something I’d carried for years. And all
it took was one stranger telling me she believed me.
“You okay?” Jonesy asked from his usual table.
I cleared my throat and shot him a smile. “I’m good. Better than good,
actually.”
Elsie’s lips twitched. “That got anything to do with the big, burly man in
your bed?”
I snorted. “It doesn’t hurt.”
“I bet.” She grinned and turned back to her computer, getting to work on
editing her newest batch of photos.
I frowned at the computer screen. “You’re still holding off on going up
into the mountains, right?”
Elsie sent me a sheepish smile. “I went on some trails yesterday—but
close to my cabin, I promise. There haven’t been any more incidents, so I
think it’s fine.”
I pinned her with my best motherly stare. “You should at least wait
another week or two. And bring a Taser and bear spray when you go.”
She grinned at me. “I promise I’ll bring both.”
“Thank you,” I said, letting out a breath.
I turned to grab my rag and cleaning spray. Tackling the bathrooms was
my least favorite task at The Brew, but someone had to do it. And it was
better to get it done while things were quiet.
As I stepped past the pantry, I heard the squeak of hinges. I turned, but it
was too late. A hand clamped over my mouth, and someone jerked me back
into a broad body.
“Listen, you little bitch. You’re going on the record and telling everyone
you’re a lying sack of shit. You’re going to recant your testimony and finally
give John his freedom,” Oren snarled, his breath hot in my ear.
I moved on instinct, my elbow jerking back in a hard thrust. I’d watched
countless self-defense videos on YouTube and practiced the moves until I
knew them by heart, but I’d never actually used them.
Oren grunted, his hand loosening around my mouth.
I twisted, my hand coming up in a palm strike. Unfortunately, he
managed to dodge the worst of it, so it only pissed him off.
Oren’s fist struck out, catching me across the cheek.
I saw stars for a moment, but the adrenaline kicked in as he grabbed for
my shoulders. My knee jerked up on instinct as I yelled.
Oren collapsed to the floor with a cry as Elsie and Jonesy ran into the
hallway.
“What the hell happened?” Elsie asked, her eyes wide.
That was when I started to shake. “I think I broke his balls.”
42
ROAN
L AWSON LEANED against the counter of the sporting goods store on the
outskirts of town. “Has anyone coming through seemed off at all?”
The woman behind the counter stared blandly at him. “Law, I answered
all these questions the first time you came by.”
“I know, Meg,” Lawson soothed. “But we’re talking to everyone a second
time, just to see if anything new shakes loose.”
She grunted. “We get plenty of oddballs. Tourists who have no business
being out on those trails, kooks who think the world is going to end any day
now coming in for supplies, and then just your everyday out-there folks who
like hunting a little too much.”
Lawson sighed. “You know what I mean, Meg. Someone who put you on
edge.”
“You got time for a list?” she asked as she brushed her salt-and-pepper
hair out of her face.
“They’d need something to help them move a body. Tarps and rope,
maybe. Could’ve bought a knife, too,” I said.
Meg’s eyes narrowed a fraction. “You think this is some sicko who’ll
strike again?”
Lawson’s mouth pressed into a firm line. He hated when people gossiped
about an investigation, and the look on Meg’s face told us she was going to
do just that. He pinned her with a stare. “We don’t want to cause alarm. Right
now, we think this was an isolated incident, but we still need to find out who
did it.”
“Of course, you do,” Meg huffed. “Can’t imagine letting my girl head out
backpacking alone. That’s a recipe for disaster.”
“Not everyone knows what you can meet out on the trails,” Lawson said.
Meg shook her head. “Poor thing.” She was quiet for a moment. “I can’t
think of anyone I pegged as a murderer. No one bought all three of those
things. But countless folks have bought one. I can pull invoices and make you
a list, but it’ll take me some time.”
Lawson nodded. “Appreciate it. Just give me a call when you’re ready,
and I’ll send someone to pick it up.”
“Will do. You boys stay safe out there,” she ordered.
“Always do,” Lawson said with a smile.
I followed my brother out of the store and toward his SUV. “Can’t
exactly arrest someone because they bought a knife or rope.”
He shook his head. “No, but it gives us a starting point.”
I guessed that was better than anything we had so far. We had exactly
zero leads. No one had seen a damned thing when it came to Marci Peters.
The fact that a woman could simply disappear and then show up sliced to hell
put me on edge.
We climbed into Lawson’s SUV, and I turned to him as he started the
engine. “What’s next on your list?”
He was about to answer when his phone rang. Lawson pulled it out and
pressed it to his ear. “Hartley.”
His face went stony. “How long ago?” A pause. “On my way.”
He tapped the screen and tossed his phone into the cupholder.
“What?” I asked as he pulled out of the parking spot and stepped on the
gas.
“Don’t freak out on me.”
Every muscle in my body tightened. “Those words don’t exactly help.”
Lawson winced and glanced my way. “Oren Randal attacked Aspen at
The Brew. She’s fine, though.”
Those muscles seized as a tremor cascaded through me. “If she was
attacked, she’s not fine,” I ground out.
Images flashed in my mind, each one worse than the previous. They spun
into memories. The feel of a boot cracking my ribs. A blow to the head.
“Roan, I need you to breathe, or I’ll have to pull over,” Lawson warned.
“Keep driving,” I snapped.
“She’s okay.” He stole a glance at me. “I’m not sure this fixation on
Aspen’s safety is healthy.”
I wanted to deck my brother. He didn’t get it. Didn’t understand. “I just
need her to be all right.”
“And she is.”
“Won’t know that until I see her.”
“Okay,” Lawson muttered.
He flicked on his lights and pressed the accelerator. A second later, we
were pulling up in front of The Brew as two officers jogged down from the
station.
The second Lawson hit the brakes, I was out of the SUV and running for
the door. I jerked it open and stormed inside.
“Back here,” Jonesy called.
I stalked toward the back hall. Only a piece of me recognized the man on
the floor. The piece that wanted his blood. But I only had eyes for Aspen.
Her body trembled as she leaned against the wall. Her cheek was red and
swelling.
I crossed to her in three long strides, my hands hovering over her cheeks,
needing to touch her but not wanting to hurt her. “Aspen.”
“I’m okay.”
But she wasn’t. Aspen’s voice trembled just like the rest of her.
I pulled her gently into my arms, needing to feel the rise and fall of her
chest against mine. “Where does it hurt?”
She swallowed hard. “Just my cheek. He surprised me. I don’t know how
he got in. But I got him pretty good.”
I glanced down at the man cursing and writhing on the floor. He’d been
hog-tied with something.
“Are those…aprons?” Lawson asked.
Elsie blushed. “It was all that was around.”
“Quick thinking. I like it.” He turned to Clint and Officer Adams. “Can
you get this piece of garbage up and book him for assault?”
“With pleasure,” Adams said, bending down to replace the aprons with
cuffs.
“Everyone’s going to know you’re a liar. They’ll come for you,” Oren
screamed.
“He’s crazy,” Aspen whispered as Clint and Adams tugged him down the
hallway.
I forced myself to pull back and look at Aspen’s face. “I think we need to
take you to Doc and get you checked out, just to make sure you’re okay.”
She shook her head but winced. “It’s just a shiner. It’d hurt worse if
anything was broken.”
I scowled. “You don’t know that.”
Aspen sent me a pleading look. “I don’t want to go to the doctor. I just
want to go home.”
Lawson studied her for a moment. “You lose consciousness at all?”
“No. I didn’t even hit the floor.”
My gut twisted. Aspen had been in this hall fighting for survival. Alone.
“Roan,” she whispered.
My gaze jerked to her.
“Stay with me.”
I knew what she meant. Stay in the here and now. Don’t let myself get
pulled into the past. Into memories she knew could drown me.
I pressed my forehead to hers. “I’m with you, Tender Heart.”
Aspen let out a long breath. “Good. Then you can listen to me tell Law
how I broke the asshole’s balls.”
I wanted to laugh because I knew it was what Aspen was going for. But I
couldn’t quite get myself there.
As she recounted every moment of the encounter to Lawson, my body
strung tighter. Oren Randal was clearly unstable and obviously fixated on
Aspen. It was a recipe for disaster.
Lawson moved to the back door and motioned to an evidence tech. “Grab
a photo of this and see if you can get any prints. Someone tampered with the
lock.”
I glared at the door. “We’re getting you better locks and an alarm system
here.”
“Roan—”
“Don’t,” I snapped. “I’m doing everything I can not to lose it right now.
Please just let me do what I can to make you safe.”
Aspen pressed a hand to my chest and stretched up onto her tiptoes. Her
mouth took mine in a long, slow kiss. “Okay. Just promise me you won’t get
lost in the woods. That you’ll stay with me.”
The woods of my mind could be a dangerous place. It was easy to spiral
there. But I had Aspen and Cady to fight for, so I’d always come back.
“Not going anywhere,” I promised.
“Good,” she said with a pat to my chest.
Lawson cleared his throat. “Gonna need to take a few pictures of your
face now, and then again after the bruises develop.”
“Not now,” I gritted out.
Aspen squeezed my arm. “It’s okay. I can do it.”
But I didn’t miss the tremor in her hand as it dropped from my arm. She’d
likely been photographed after John’s attack and now battled with her
memories.
The evidence tech, who didn’t look older than twenty-one at most, held
up his camera. “Just look into the lens.”
The camera flashed, and Aspen jerked.
I let out a curse.
Lawson squeezed my shoulder hard. “Keep it together.”
The tech eyed me skeptically. “Look to the left.”
Another flash and jerk.
“To the right.”
Bright light and twitch.
“That’s enough,” I barked. “I’m taking her home.”
“That’s all I need,” the tech said softly.
Aspen turned to face me, worry etched into her expression. “The worst is
over.”
“You don’t need to comfort me,” I growled. “I should be taking care of
you.”
Her lips twitched. “You are kind of like a grizzly bear with a thorn in his
paw right now.”
Lawson snorted, pulling out his phone as it rang. “She’s not wrong there.”
He tapped the screen. “Hartley.” His entire demeanor changed as he listened.
Then his gaze shot to mine. “There’s another body.”
43
ROAN
L AWSON GUIDED his SUV down the mountain toward the rental Steven
and Tyson had been staying in. “Dumb luck or related?”
It was the question I’d been asking myself since the ID came in. I wanted
it to be dumb luck. It was a small town, after all. There were a limited
number of potential victims.
But something niggled at the back of my mind. Something that said there
were no coincidences in life.
“When they broadcasted Aspen’s location, they could’ve brought anyone
here. Someone who liked John for all the wrong reasons,” I said. My fingers
twitched. I’d already texted Holt and asked him to head to Aspen’s. I needed
more eyes on her until we figured out how everything was linked.
Lawson’s jaw worked back and forth. “Exactly what I’m afraid of.”
“We also need to take a longer look at Oren Randal.”
Lawson’s gaze flicked to me. “You think he’s capable of this?”
“I wouldn’t put it past him. There’s a real sick rage there.”
“You’re right. I’ll do some more digging.”
He flipped on his blinker and turned into the long drive we’d been down
before. The familiar van was parked in front. Lawson pulled in behind it, and
we climbed out.
Lawson rested a hand on his weapon as we approached the house. I did
the same. Neither of us said out loud that we could be walking up on
anything. We didn’t need to.
I lifted my hand and knocked.
No sounds came from inside.
I knocked again.
“Keep your fuckin’ pants on,” Steven shouted as footsteps sounded.
A second later, the door jerked open. He looked like hell—hair sticking
up at every angle, dark circles under bloodshot eyes.
The moment Steven saw us, he scowled. “I haven’t broken any damn
laws, so get off my property.”
“Not actually your property,” I muttered under my breath.
He started to close the door, but Lawson put out a hand to stop it. “We
need to talk to you about Tyson.”
Steven’s scowl deepened. “What’d that prick tell you?”
My brows lifted at that. “Trouble in paradise?”
“He’s a fuckin’ traitor. We had a thesis for our podcast. We were going to
get John’s case overturned. Then we’d have movie deals and book tours.
We’d be set. And then he was all, ‘But what if she’s telling the truth?’ Who
gives a damn? So, I punched him. It barely landed. I can’t believe he called
you assholes.”
“He’s dead,” Lawson said.
Steven reared back. “The fuck you say?”
“Tyson is dead. We found his body two hours ago.”
“Y-you’re wrong. I saw him this morning. I—there’s no way.”
“I’m sorry, Steven.”
I had to give it to Lawson, he sounded like he meant it. And he probably
did. The guy might’ve been an asshole, but he didn’t deserve to die.
“How?” Steven rasped.
Lawson took a breath. “We’ll get to that in a second. I need to ask you a
few questions to get a timeline. When did you last see Tyson?”
“Around ten a.m.,” Steven mumbled.
Lawson nodded. “Where was he headed?”
“I’m not sure. He said he was going into town.”
“And what did you do after you two parted ways?” Lawson pressed.
Steven’s gaze jerked to Lawson. “How’d he die?”
“I’ll fill you in as soon as I’ve got this timeline down,” Lawson said
calmly.
“I’m not answering another question until you tell me how,” Steven
grumbled.
“He was murdered,” I said, not an ounce of emotion in my voice.
Steven paled as his gaze jerked from Lawson to me and back again. “You
think I had something to do with it?”
Lawson held up a hand. “We just have to get a timeline. Cover all our
bases.”
“Bullshit,” Steven spat. “I’ve seen how this works. You guys try to pin it
on the innocent guy just to get the case off your docket.”
“We’re not—”
“Fuck off, pig. You want to talk to me? Call my lawyer. I have one since
you’ve been giving us so much trouble.” Steven slammed the door in our
faces.
I turned to Lawson. “That went well.”
44
ASPEN
“S HE ’ S OUT ,” Roan said softly as he slid into bed next to me, Chauncey
snoring in his dog bed on the floor.
The only light in the room was from my bedside lamp. I turned onto my
side so I could see Roan fully—his sharply angled jaw, those hypnotizing
blue eyes. I surveyed every millimeter of him. “How are you doing?”
His family had stayed until Cady’s bedtime. I didn’t blame them. I
would’ve wanted to stick close after Roan’s admission, too. We’d ordered
pizza and made ice cream sundaes. It had all helped, but I knew Roan had to
be exhausted.
He traced a finger over my deepening bruise. “I should be asking you
that.”
“You’re the one who let loose a decade-old secret. I need to know how
you really are. Not the pretty answer just to make me feel better.”
Roan’s lips twitched. “Like I’ve been run over by a truck.”
I brushed the hair away from his eyes. “Are you glad you did it?”
He stared down at me. “Yes. I hate that it’s causing them pain. But for the
first time, I feel like there isn’t a wall between us.”
My fingers trailed down to his neck. “They’ll get to really see you now.
That will be a gift. But it’s going to take you all some time to process.”
“I know. And I’ll give them that time.”
My mouth curved. “It might require some conversation, and I know those
aren’t always your favorite.”
He grimaced, and I couldn’t help but laugh.
“It’ll be a stretching exercise for all of you.”
Roan pulled me into his arms, burrowing his face into the crook of my
neck. “I wanted to come home to you and Cady. Instead, everyone under the
bloody sun was here.”
“Made me feel loved,” I admitted.
“Then I guess I’m glad,” Roan grumbled.
I couldn’t help it, I laughed.
“Are you laughing at me?” he asked, affronted.
“Can’t help it. You’re funny.”
“I’ll show you funny.” Roan dove in to tickle my sides.
I bit his shoulder to keep from waking Cady.
“Ow! That hurt,” he clipped.
I bit him again. “That’s what you get.”
Roan’s eyes heated. “If you want to talk punishments—”
“Mama!” Cady yelled. “Nightmare!”
We were both on our feet in a flash, all heat vanishing. Roan was out the
door and down the hall before me. The second he opened her door, Cady flew
at him.
Roan cradled her in his arms, rocking her back and forth. “It’s okay, Tiny
Dancer. I’ve got you.”
“There was a monster under my bed, and he was trying to get me,” Cady
sobbed.
“No monsters are gonna get you when I’m around,” Roan said, his voice
gruff.
My heart squeezed painfully. This man was everything I’d ever wanted
for my girl and so much more.
“Look, I’m doing a check, Katydid.” I bent and peeked under the bed.
“Nothing here but a few stuffed animals.”
“Y-you’re sure?” she asked.
“Totally positive.”
Cady burrowed deeper into Roan’s hold. “Will you stay with me for a
while?”
“Always, Tiny Dancer. As long as you want.”
E LSIE WINCED as she strode toward the register. “Should you be working
today? You look a little rough.”
I gave her a wan smile. “Gee, thanks.”
“Sorry. I just meant your shiner. And you seem a little tired.”
I sighed. I felt like I’d been run over by the same truck Roan had. “Cady
had a couple of nightmares last night, and it took us a while to get her down.”
“I’m sorry,” Elsie said. “Is she okay?”
“She was a little sleepy and cranky this morning but hanging in there.
Hopefully, she goes down early tonight.”
“Let me know if I can do anything,” Elsie offered.
“Thanks. I really appreciate it. Now, what can I get you?”
“I’ll take one of those chocolate peanut butter cup muffins. You’ve got
me addicted.”
I laughed as I grabbed the muffin. “I love to hear that.”
Elsie handed me a few bills. “Keep the change.”
“Thanks,” I said, adding the extra to the tip jar.
I lost myself in the rhythm of customers. The sun was out, and things
were busier than they had been lately. It wasn’t just Jonesy and Elsie filling
seats. A handful of tourists, locals on their lunch breaks, and a mom out with
her infant were also in. But Officer Hall stayed perched outside to ensure we
had no unwanted patrons.
The hustle and bustle were a welcome break. It helped to distract me from
everything else that was going on. One hour bled into two, and people came
and went in a steady flow.
A curse sounded from the kitchen, and I winced. “You okay, Zeke?”
“Need you to watch the stove or take out the trash,” he called back.
I did not want to be responsible for ruining whatever Zeke was cooking.
“I’ve got the trash.”
He was right. It was full to bursting and needed to be taken out now. I
lifted the bag and swore it weighed more than I did. It took me two tries to tie
it off, but I finally succeeded and swung it over my shoulder.
I unlocked the new deadbolt Holt had installed on the back door and
stepped into the alley. The forest behind us meant I was greeted by birdsong
and the wind. At least the breeze kept down the smell of the dumpster. I
pushed the lid up and threw the bag in.
As I turned to head back to the café, movement caught my eye. But I was
too late.
Something struck the side of my head. Blinding pain flashed, and I fell. I
hit the ground hard, groaning. I tried to sit up, to do anything, but a boot
stomped down on my neck.
“Time for you to get yours, bitch,” a voice growled.
A needle plunged into my arm, and the world started to melt away. I tried
to scream, call for help, yell for Roan. But every word was stolen from my
lips. And then there was nothing at all.
47
ROAN
T HE B REW and the back alley teemed with people. Evidence techs from
CRPD and the county were combing every inch of the place, but they weren’t
saying anything helpful.
Nash looked up from his phone. “Mom and Dad are getting Cady from
school.”
My gut twisted. Cady. How could I face her? What the hell would I tell
her?
Lawson seemed to read my mind, squeezing my shoulder. “One thing at a
time. We don’t need to tell Cady anything just yet. Hopefully, Aspen will be
home before Cady knows anything is wrong.”
That grinding sensation was back along my sternum like the gears of a
bike that hadn’t been properly oiled. “We have no clue where she is. Who
took her.”
“I’m getting the camera feeds now,” Holt said. “We’ll see if anything’s
there.”
Nash nodded. “There has to be something. It wouldn’t make sense for the
perp to wait in the alley all day. There’d be no guarantee Aspen would go out
there.”
“They had to be in The Brew,” I said quietly.
“Or keeping a close eye from outside,” Lawson agreed. He turned to Holt.
“Did you put anything in on the front of the building?”
Holt sent him a withering look. “Do I look like an amateur to you?”
But there weren’t enough cameras in the back—just one that caught
Aspen heading for the dumpster. And then nothing. Whatever had happened
was just out of sight.
“Okay,” Holt said. “I found when Aspen goes into the kitchen and heads
for the back door.”
I crossed behind him, watching the feeds from several cameras at once.
“We need a list of folks who leave in the next sixty seconds,” he muttered
as he watched it play out.
There was only one figure who slipped out the door.
“Who’s that?” Nash asked.
My back teeth ground together. “Her name’s Elsie. She’s a regular.
Aspen said she’s a photographer taking nature pictures of the area.”
Holt looked up. “She’s a tiny thing. You really think she could take
Aspen down? The other victims?”
“If she had the element of surprise,” I said.
“I’m gonna run her. You know her last name?” Lawson asked.
I shook my head. Why the hell hadn’t I asked when I met her?
“We’ll get it. You know where she’s staying?”
I thought back, trying to remember if Elsie or Aspen had said anything.
Then I stilled. “She had a Cedar Ridge Vacation Adventures pen. She’s either
staying in one of their rentals or went on one of their trips.”
Lawson was already hitting a contact on his phone. “Hey, Jordan. Need
your help. We’ve got a suspect in a missing persons case. First name, Elsie.
She had one of your pens.”
There was a pause. “Thanks, man. She at one of your rentals?”
Another beat.
Lawson motioned for Holt’s computer. “Driver’s license would be great.”
Lawson typed letters and numbers into a database. “Appreciate it. Call me if
you hear from her.” Then he hit end on his phone.
We all waited in silent expectation.
“Elsie Jones went on a private hiking trip with Noel. Said she wanted to
scout some spots for photos. They make copies of the driver’s licenses of all
trip participants.”
Lawson hit search on the database, and a little swirl of color appeared on
the screen as we held our breaths. Then an error box appeared.
This license is not valid.
I cursed. “A fake.”
“Hold on,” Lawson said. “He texted me a photo. Let me make sure I
didn’t get it wrong.”
He pulled up the image, reading off the numbers. It was a match.
My stomach plummeted. “This was planned.” For way longer than we
ever knew. Because Elsie was a staple at The Brew before I even met Aspen.
“What the hell is going on?” Nash muttered.
“I’m texting this to my contact at the prison. I want to see if he recognizes
her,” Lawson said, his fingers flying over his phone’s screen.
My throat grew tighter with every second that passed. As if I could feel
Aspen slipping away. What hell was she living through right now? Was she
even still breathing?
Holt stood, his hand clamping on my shoulder. “Don’t go there. I know
it’s where your mind wants to live, but you can’t let it. We’re going to find
her.” He let out a shuddered breath. “She changed you. Brought you back to
us. Not gonna let you lose her now.”
My eyes burned like they’d been dunked in battery acid. “You can’t
promise that.”
“The hell I can’t. You helped me get Wren back when I thought I’d lost
her all over again. The Universe will help me repay that debt. Just gotta keep
the faith, brother.”
I wanted to. God, did I want to. I let my eyes close and drifted back to
months ago. When I sat on my balcony and saw that flash of red hair. The
way I swore I could catch her laugh on the wind as she hoisted her daughter
into the air. How she soothed her animals with the gentlest touches. The way
she cared for everyone around her. She was light and hope, and I would hold
on to that with everything I had.
“Holy hell,” Lawson muttered.
My eyes flew open. “What?”
“Her name is actually Iris Morton. She visited John in prison every week
for over a year. Those visits stopped three months ago.”
“When she came here,” I growled.
“Running a search now,” Holt clipped, moving instantly to the laptop. His
fingers flew across the keyboard, and then they simply stopped. “I’ve got
something. She’s been flagged in the system. Restraining order from her ex-
husband. She tried to kill him.”
50
ASPEN
I COULDN ’ T TAKE my eyes off the knife, the way the silver gleamed in the
sunlight. I could only wonder one thing. “Did you kill them?”
My voice didn’t even sound like mine. It was empty. Devoid of all
emotion. Like a robot’s. Not someone asking whether the person in front of
them had committed cold-blooded murder.
Iris’s mouth stretched into a smile as she examined the knife. “I studied
the case so closely. Wondered what it would take to do that to someone.
Wondered if I could do it.”
The urge to vomit was so strong, but I forced it down. “Did John tell you
to kill those people?”
Her gaze snapped to me. “John is a good man. He would never.”
He’d simply unlocked something in Iris.
“You killed Ty,” Steven choked.
Iris glared at Steven. “He deserved so much worse than what he got. I
heard him on your show. Lying about how the blood evidence meant John
was guilty. He had to pay.”
A smile stretched across her face. “No one thinks a little thing like me
could ever hurt anyone. I told him I needed to talk to him alone. That I had
information on the case, but he couldn’t tell anyone I was giving it to him.”
She laughed. “So gullible. Met me right at the trailhead. It was nice not to
have to drag his ass anywhere. Kept ruining my tarps having to do that. But I
bet he regretted our little rendezvous.”
“You fucking bitch.”
Iris struck out with her knife, slashing Steven across the chest.
He cried out, thrashing in pain. The cut didn’t look lethal, but it wasn’t
shallow either.
“Do not call me a bitch.” Iris’s eyes flashed, rage swirling in their depths.
“My ex tried that once and lived to regret it.”
My heart hammered against my ribs as Steven struggled for breath. It
wouldn’t surprise me if he passed out. That kind of pain could easily be too
much for a person.
Iris wiped the knife on her jeans, the blood smearing across the denim.
“There’s really no need for name-calling. Especially when I’m about to get
you a goddamned Pulitzer.”
I could see it then. She legitimately believed in this alternate dimension
she’d created for herself.
“How did you meet John?” I asked. I needed to know. Had to understand
how this had all come to be. And maybe, just maybe, I could buy enough
time for Roan to find me.
Just thinking his name had me fighting tears. His face filled my mind: his
gruff snarl, the twitch of his lips, one of those rare and precious smiles. I
loved them all. Loved that each one made me appreciate the other. But most
of all, I loved how deeply he cared. How he gave that care to the people and
creatures around him without wanting to claim a second of glory for himself.
I wanted to tell him that. Wanted to see those blue eyes when I said those
three little words.
He’d given me so much—a true family. A sob lodged in my throat as
Cady’s face swirled in my memory: her beaming smile and shining green
eyes. What would happen to her if I died? Who would take care of her?
“I saw him on the news,” Iris said dreamily, jerking me out of my
spiraling thoughts. “His interview with Oren Randal. How could you not see
his pain? His grief?”
I’d give it to her. John had been convincing in that farce. He’d somehow
managed to dredge up actual tears as he stared into the camera and said, “I
did not kill my wife. I have no idea who did, but they stole everything good
from my life because it means I’ve lost my daughter, too.”
That had been the turning point. The time when people wondered if I was
too traumatized or spiteful to remember things correctly. They’d explained
away the blood evidence. The timelines. So many had simply believed him.
“I wrote to him first,” Iris said. “Told him I’d do whatever I could to help.
We became…friends.”
Except John didn’t have friends. He had people he used.
“I sent him money for the commissary. Books. Magazines. Finally, he
asked me to visit.”
I tugged on my restraints, praying they’d magically loosened. “And you
fell in love?”
She sent me a quelling look. “Not right away. We understood each other.
We’d both been hurt. We supported each other. Listened.”
“And he sent you here?” I pressed.
Iris’s jaw tightened, her teeth gnashing together. “I came on my own. He
just wanted me to get the truth out of you so he could be free. Scare you a
little bit. But I knew you needed worse.”
“Boiling baby bunnies and killing a bunch of people isn’t exactly getting
the truth,” Steven mumbled.
“Don’t make me slit your throat before it’s time,” Iris growled.
I expected Steven to panic or pale, but he just stared at her. Maybe he’d
realized what I had. She had no plans of letting us walk out of here. Or
maybe his temper would always get the best of him.
“Thought you needed me for an interview,” he taunted.
Iris moved to the duffel and crouched. “I can always run the interview
myself,” she said, pulling out a gun.
My mouth went dry. The knife was bad enough. A gun felt more final
somehow—a quicker end.
Steven bit back whatever retort was on his lips and simply glared.
“That’s better,” Iris said with a smile.
She shoved the knife back into her waistband but kept hold of the gun. A
reminder, maybe. She pushed the table where she’d placed the audio gear
toward us.
“We really need to get moving. Time’s running out. I hear ole Cedar
Ridge is crawling with cops.”
A flicker of hope lit somewhere deep. Roan was one of the smartest
people I knew. He’d figure this out. He’d find me. I just needed time.
I’d spin a hell of a story if it got me that. If it bought me a chance.
Iris positioned the microphones in front of Steven and me, then connected
them to her laptop. “I don’t have your intro music, but I can add that later.
What’s important now is the interview.” Her eyes narrowed on Steven. “Help
me clear John’s name.”
Steven snorted. “I’m not doing a damn thing for that asshole. He’s been
treating me like a puppet for six months.”
At least this little adventure had opened someone’s eyes.
Iris pushed to her feet. “He has given you everything.”
“He told me where his sister-in-law was hiding out. That’s it. I should’ve
known when he said he’d turned someone in the court system that the dude
was bad news.”
Iris’s breaths came faster and faster. “I turned him. I had to sleep with that
disgusting piece of trash to get information on Tara’s new identity.” She
closed her eyes and slowly exhaled. “But I’ll do anything for John.”
My stomach roiled. How many people had John twisted?
Steven started laughing, but it was the maniacal kind. The type that told
me he was losing it and quickly. “Lady, if he’s whoring you out to get what
he wants, get a clue. He doesn’t love you.”
Iris moved in a flash, raising her hand. There was a deafening pop.
Steven screamed as blood bloomed on his shoulder. “You fucking shot
me!”
“You’re lucky I didn’t put a bullet in your brain,” Iris seethed. She turned
to me, gun still pointed. “Start talking or I’ll give you a hole to match his.”
51
ROAN
H OLT ’ S GAZE tracked back and forth across the screen. “There’s not a lot
of information to go on here. Wait. I’ve got some notes from the original
police file.”
I struggled to swallow as Holt read. Every second felt like agony.
“Iris found out her husband was cheating on her and stabbed him with a
kitchen knife,” Holt said, still scanning the screen.
“Holy shit,” Nash muttered.
I couldn’t breathe. Aspen was in the hands of someone incredibly violent
who had been in close contact with the man who’d tried to kill her.
“Roan?” Lawson asked carefully.
“We need to find her,” I croaked. A million different scenarios flew
through my head, none of them good.
“Already looking,” Holt assured me. “Under her alias and legal name.
I’m guessing she has a rental. Someplace removed.” His fingers stilled on the
keyboard. “Bingo.”
I moved in a flash, taking in the address on the screen. I knew the area.
Removed was exactly right. There were no other homes. No cell phone
reception. No Wi-Fi. A place you could get away with anything because no
one could see or hear you.
I was moving before I even realized it, running for the door.
Someone called my name, but I didn’t stop. Footsteps followed me, and I
knew it was my brothers having my back. But I didn’t pause to acknowledge
them. All I could think about was Aspen.
Her name was a whispered chant in my head—a form of prayer. As
though if I said it over and over, she would be okay.
“My SUV,” Lawson yelled as we reached the parking lot at the back of
the police station. “I’ve got gear in the back.”
I made a beeline for the passenger side as he beeped the locks. We
climbed in within a matter of seconds.
Lawson started the engine.
“I called it in. Backup’s en route. They’ll wait on the main road,” Nash
said as he buckled his seat belt.
He knew better than most how delicate these situations could be. One
wrong move, and Elsie, or whatever the hell her name was, could be spooked.
And then anything could happen.
Lawson flicked on his lights as he pulled out of the lot, but he didn’t hit
his sirens. He pressed down on the accelerator. “Holt, you gotta stay in the
SUV.”
“The hell I do.”
“You’re not law enforcement,” Lawson growled.
“I signed that piece of paper. I’m a consultant,” he argued.
“That doesn’t cover this sort of thing, and you damn well know it,”
Lawson shot back.
Nash clapped him on the shoulder. “Give Law a break. He’s going to
have an aneurysm with all the rules he’s already breaking.”
Because I shouldn’t be here. Shouldn’t be part of an operation trying to
get the woman I loved out of harm’s way. I wasn’t a cop in this town. Law
enforcement, sure, but not under Lawson’s jurisdiction. But he hadn’t even
suggested I should stay back. He knew it wouldn’t have gotten him
anywhere.
Lawson flicked off his lights as he turned onto the road that led to the
cabin. When we reached the long drive, he pulled behind some trees and
threw the vehicle into park.
We hopped out instantly, closing our doors as quietly as possible. We
moved to the back of the SUV, and Holt pulled the hatch open. Lawson
handed all of us but Holt vests. We checked our weapons, and Lawson
retrieved his long-range rifle.
He glanced at Holt. “Bring them up to speed when they get here.”
Holt jerked his head in a nod. “Don’t do anything stupid and get
yourselves shot.”
Nash’s lips twitched. “I’d never do that.”
Holt smacked him upside the head. “You get one more hole in your body,
and Maddie’ll kill you herself.”
Nash winced. “You’ve got a point there.”
“Let’s move,” I gritted out. There was no time to waste. We could be too
late as it was.
That thought had everything in me constricting. It was hard to walk, to
breathe. I didn’t want anything to do with a world without Aspen.
“We stick to the trees, see what we’re dealing with. Then, we go in,”
Lawson instructed.
Nash and I both gave quick nods and followed Lawson’s lead. It took us
less than two minutes before the cabin came into view. But those one
hundred and twenty seconds felt like a lifetime.
A navy SUV was parked out front, but everything was quiet—too quiet.
Lawson moved in closer, up to the very edge of the tree line. We circled
until we reached the first set of windows. They looked in on a kitchen and
through to a—my breath caught.
Aspen.
Tied to a fucking chair.
Her face was black and blue from Oren’s attack, and now she had a split
lip. Shock ripped through me as I saw Steven tied to the chair next to her. I
could only get a glimpse of Iris. A flash of her blond hair. Her arm. The gun
in her hand.
Nash cursed. “Second hostage is shot.”
I hadn’t even noticed the blood blooming on Steven’s shoulder.
“We need to move,” I growled.
“Let me see if I can get a shot from the front,” Lawson said.
“She could see you,” I argued.
Lawson was already moving. “I’ll stay covered.”
We followed the edge of the trees, and Lawson crouched low, getting into
position. He let out a slew of curses. “I don’t have it.”
A crack lit the air as though lightning had struck without any hint of a
storm.
I didn’t think. I simply moved. Running for the cabin with everything I
had.
I hauled open the door. Steven cried out in pain, more blood oozing from
his good shoulder.
Iris’s head jerked in my direction. Her eyes went wide. “No! She doesn’t
get to be happy. She has to pay!”
Iris raised the gun and pointed it at Aspen.
I didn’t think, I simply dove.
Iris screamed, the sound so loud and deranged that it nearly pierced my
eardrums. “No! She has to die!”
She was strong for such a little thing, and I struggled to grab hold of the
weapon.
A crack sounded, and the world went sideways.
52
ASPEN
R OAN GRUMBLED something under his breath from his spot on the couch
next to me.
I shifted, my brow furrowing. “Is your shoulder hurting?” I asked, my
voice barely audible above the laughter and chatter in the room.
“No,” he grumbled. “It’s fine.”
“Don’t glare at me. You were shot.”
A muscle in Roan’s jaw flexed. “Grazed.”
“You needed twenty stitches,” I snapped back.
Thankfully, that was all he’d required. My life had stopped the moment
the gunshot sounded. It wasn’t until I saw Roan still moving and pulling the
weapon from Elsie’s grasp that I’d started to breathe again.
“I’m fine,” he muttered. But he sounded anything but as he scowled at the
rest of the people in the room.
Everyone was here: Nathan and Kerry. Holt and Wren. Nash and Maddie.
Grae and Caden. Lawson and his boys. Cady was in heaven, and so was I.
“They’ve been here forever,” he mumbled.
I pressed my lips together to keep from laughing. “That’s why you’re
glaring?”
“I’m not glaring.”
I raised an eyebrow at that. As much as Roan smiled and laughed more,
big groups for long periods of time would never be his thing.
I leaned in. “Roan. I was kidnapped. You were shot. Cut them some
slack. They want to make sure we’re okay.”
We were all piled into my tiny house, and Kerry had made so much food
we’d never eat it all. Thankfully, Roan’s and my injuries were mild, but the
hospital had wanted us to stay overnight just to be safe. Luckily, Cady just
thought she was getting a fun sleepover with Nathan, Kerry, and Charlie.
But now we were home. Iris was in jail. Steven had made it through
surgery. Oren had been charged with assault. And John had lost all visitor
and communication privileges. Lawson’s source at the prison told him that
John was already losing his mind at not having contact with the outside
world.
It wasn’t justice, not truly, because it wouldn’t bring Autumn back. But
Cady and I were safe now. And that was the only thing Autumn would truly
care about. I had to hope our safety meant she was finally at peace.
It would take time to heal, but we would be okay—better than okay.
Roan pulled me tighter against him. He hadn’t stopped touching me since
the moment he found me. Not even in the hospital. The nurses had finally
given up and just let us share a bed.
I pressed a hand to his chest. “I’m okay.”
He nuzzled my neck. “I know. It’s just going to take a little while for the
rest of me to believe it.”
My heart ached at that. The whole ordeal had impacted Roan more than
me. I was sure I’d have nightmares for a while, but I had always known Roan
would come. No one made me feel safer or more loved. I didn’t need the
damn words.
Roan stood, hauling me up with him.
“What are you doing?” I asked.
“Need to show you something,” he said.
“Now?”
“Is this your way of telling us you want us to leave?” Holt called, his
arms around Wren’s pregnant belly.
“No, I know I’m stuck with the lot of you for the foreseeable future,”
Roan grumbled.
Grae laughed. “Good thing you’re aware. I was thinking we could have a
pretty epic slumber party tonight.”
“Yes!” Cady cheered. “I want all the slumber parties.”
I laughed, and Roan groaned. He started tugging me toward the door.
“Let’s go before they all move in.”
I grinned at Cady. “Be back in a minute, Katydid.”
“Okay, Mama.” But she was already distracted by something Charlie was
showing her.
Roan guided me out the door and toward his truck.
“We have to drive to this something?”
He opened the passenger door and helped me in. “It’s not far.”
I slid in and fastened my belt. The air was cold and smelled like snow. I
wouldn’t have been surprised if we got a few inches tonight.
Roan got behind the wheel and started the engine.
“Are you going to give me any clues?”
He grunted and shook his head.
The reaction only made me smile. Too many people for one day.
Instead of turning toward town, he went in the opposite direction. He
guided his truck up Huckleberry Lane until we reached a gate with several
cameras. He rolled down his window and punched in a code.
“Is this your property?”
He nodded. “Bought it not long after my attack. Made it as secure as I
could. No one’s ever been up here but me.”
And he was letting me in. The simple action had tears gathering in my
eyes.
As the gate slid open, my gaze searched for the house. It took a minute
for it to come into view. A simple but gorgeous A-frame cabin. With some
snow, it could’ve been a Christmas card.
“It’s beautiful,” I whispered.
“Thanks,” he mumbled, pulling to a stop.
Roan slid out and came to help me. He took my hand and led me up the
walk to the front door. He slid a key into one lock after the other and then
guided us inside.
The space was minimalistic, but the walls had gorgeous photographs of
nature and animals. There was also a massive stone fireplace and a back wall
that was all windows.
I gasped as I headed for it. His view was jaw-dropping. You could see all
of Cedar Ridge. The town, the lake, the beautiful mountains surrounding us.
Roan slid open the door and ushered me out onto the balcony, shutting it
behind us.
I instinctively moved toward the railing, wanting to take it all in.
“This is where I first saw you.”
I looked up at the sound of Roan’s voice, right into those beautiful blue
eyes.
“It was just a flash of red.” His lips twitched. “I was annoyed at first. I
never saw the old guy who lived there before you. It was like I had this whole
mountainside to myself.”
My mouth curved.
“But then I saw your kindness. The animals you added, one after another.
How patient you were with your daughter. At times, I swore a light shone
straight out of you.”
My heart jerked in my chest as my breaths came quicker.
“You were the light in the shadows. A glimmer of hope when I felt like
all mine had been burned out. I think maybe I loved you even then.”
My lips parted with a sharp inhale. “You love me?”
Roan wrapped his arms around me. “With every ounce of my being.
Didn’t think it was possible. Didn’t think I was capable. I know I won’t do it
exactly right—”
I pressed a hand to his chest. “You do it perfectly.”
Those blue eyes shone. “I love you, Tender Heart. That’s never going to
end.”
“I love you, too.” My voice broke on the words. “Never thought I’d get
this. You’ve given me everything. Safety. Acceptance. A family.”
“You gonna give me something in return?” Roan asked.
“Anything.”
He inclined his head over the balcony. My gaze followed, and the tears
were instant. Everyone we loved was out in my drive, holding up a massive
handmade banner. Each letter had been painted and decorated, most likely by
Cady and Charlie.
MARRY ME?
My gaze shot back to Roan’s, tears spilling over. “You wanna marry
me?”
“I want to be yours in every way I can. Want to be your husband. Father
to Cady and any babies you’ll give me. Everything you’ll let me be.”
“Yes,” I whispered. A single syllable, not nearly enough for what I
wanted to say, but all I could get out.
He slid a diamond band onto my finger. It looked like glittering leaves
woven together. The most perfect ring for me. One that wouldn’t bang up
against things as I worked with the animals or at the café. One that reminded
me of the peace we’d both found in the nature around us. One that was a
blend of him and me.
I stretched up onto my tiptoes, my mouth hovering over his. “You already
are everything to me.”
53
ROAN
ONE MONTH L ATER
“M AMA ,” a little voice whispered on the other side of the bed.
Cady was trying to be quiet, I’d give her that. But it was more of a
whisper-shout, her excitement bleeding into her voice.
“Mmm,” Aspen mumbled, pressing her backside into me as she shifted.
I fought the urge to groan at the sensation. I mentally recited SAR
procedures in my head.
“I gots to show you something,” Cady whispered louder.
I squinted against the early morning light filtering in through the bedroom
windows. “What’s going on?” I grumbled.
“We gots to go,” Cady urged.
“The wedding isn’t for hours, Tiny Dancer.”
She bounced on her tiptoes, a ballerina through and through. “Not the
wedding. Something else. You have to see.”
“You can keep sleeping,” Aspen told me as she sat up.
I blinked a few times, shoving up against the pillows. “No, I’m up.”
Movement caught my eye, and I tried to shift, but it was too late.
Pirate launched herself from her spot on our dresser and onto my damned
head. Her claws dug into my hair and scalp. I spit out some words I really
hoped Cady didn’t remember.
“Demon cat,” I growled as I pulled the thing off me.
She swiped at my nose.
“Shit!”
Then the damned cat headbutted my chin and started purring.
Cady and Aspen promptly burst out laughing.
“See, she loves you, Mr. Grizz,” Cady chirped.
I stood, setting the cat on the bed. “Well, her love’s toxic.”
Aspen stifled another giggle and turned to Cady. “What did you want to
show us?”
Her eyes brightened. “Come on!”
Aspen grabbed my robe as I picked up a sweatshirt.
“I can’t believe she’s up. She didn’t fall asleep until after ten,” I mumbled
as we followed her out the door.
Aspen shrugged. “Big day. She’s excited.”
I wrapped an arm around her and brushed my mouth across hers. “You
ready?”
“Would’ve married you the day you asked.”
A burn lit in my chest—the best kind of pain.
Cady opened the front door and stepped out onto the porch. There was a
light dusting of snow over everything, a sight I’d never get tired of. “Dory
came. She brought her family.”
I followed Cady’s hand as she pointed. And there Dory was, surrounded
by her herd. That burn deepened and spread. You could never be sure if the
ones you helped would make it, but she had. And she’d come to show us that
she was okay.
I lifted Cady into my arms. “See those two little ones?”
Cady nodded.
“I’m pretty sure those are her babies. They’re sticking pretty close. She
probably had them last spring.”
Cady’s eyes went wide. “I bet they missed her so much when she was
gone.”
Aspen slipped under my free arm. “But think how happy they are now
that they’re all together.”
A smile spread across Cady’s face. “I bet they’re the happiest. Just like
us.”
The burn flared deeper. My girls. I wasn’t sure how, after everything, I’d
gotten this damned lucky.
Aspen looked up at me, her eyes glistening with unshed tears. And I knew
she felt the same way.
“Love you, Tender Heart.”
“Love you, too,” she echoed.
“I love you both. And Dory and Mabel and Emmaline and—”
A horn sounded, cutting Cady off and making all the deer head off in the
opposite direction. Grae’s SUV pulled to a stop in front of us, and she,
Maddie, and Wren jumped out.
“It’s wedding day!” Grae yelled, doing some sort of shimmy shake.
I frowned at her. “Isn’t it a little early?” I wanted time with my family
before we had to deal with all the people. It was a small wedding, but it had
still grown to more than I wanted to deal with. I would only do this for
Aspen. She’d insisted on Jonesy attending, but I’d drawn the line at inviting
Dr. Miller, who continued to care for all the animals. I wasn’t having a man
who’d asked her out at our wedding.
“Early?” Maddie asked. “We need all day to prep. It’s girl time. You need
to get.”
I jerked back. “It’s my house.”
At least it was for the moment. We’d cleared everything out of my A-
frame so we could do a major expansion on the home. We were going to
combine our two properties so we could have the view and our animals.
“Not today, it’s not,” Grae singsonged.
Wren patted me on the shoulder. “Holt’s heading up to The Peaks to meet
the rest of the guys. Caden’s got them putting on quite the breakfast spread
for you.”
“Whatever,” I grumbled.
Aspen stretched up onto her tiptoes and pressed her lips to mine. “See
you at the altar?”
I smiled against her mouth. “I’ll be the one saying I do.”
Want to find out who can give Lawson the happily ever after he deserves?
Find out in Ashes of You, book five in The Lost & Found Series, available for
purchase by TAPPING HERE or read on for a sneak peek!
Want more of Roan and Aspen? Get an exclusive bonus scene by TAPPING
HERE.
PLEASE ENJOY THIS EXTENDED
PREVIEW OF ASHES OF YOU
PROLOGUE
HALSTON
FIVE YEARS AGO
“K EEP MOVING . K EEP MOVING . K EEP MOVING .”
I said the words over and over, even though they were barely audible
anymore. They’d become my mantra. The steady beat forced me forward,
even if the howling wind swallowed the words, and my lips barely moved.
My teeth chattered violently as I struggled to get my legs to continue their
motion. The fresh cuts on my stomach stung as the wind whipped against the
thin sheath I wore. I wanted to tear it from my body and rip away everything
that he had tainted.
I squinted into the night, trying to see through the thick trees and falling
snow to…anything.
A whimper escaped my lips as my bare foot hit an especially sharp rock.
I’d thought my limbs had lost feeling in the freezing snow, but I was wrong.
I told myself that was good. It meant they weren’t frostbitten—yet.
I glanced over my shoulder at the night behind me. I didn’t hear him. Not
anymore. At first, he’d screamed my name into the night, but then he’d gone
quiet.
Quiet was always worse. I’d learned that on day four. But then twenty-
nine days followed. Days where I was sure I’d die in that damp, dark cave.
Days where I sometimes wished I had.
“Keep moving.”
I clenched my fists as my body trembled, pressing my fingernails into my
palms and hoping the pain would spur me on. My nails were long now with
nothing to cut them with. But I’d gotten used to pain, had a higher tolerance
for it, and my nails cutting into my flesh did nothing.
My stomach cramped in a vicious twist. My joints felt stiff, like the Tin
Man in that movie. What was it called?
A wave of dizziness swept over me, followed by a surge of heat. I
suddenly felt like I was sweating, burning up from the inside out. The urge to
pull the flimsy shift from my body was so strong.
Everything hurt, from the tips of my toes to the ends of my hair. My flesh
felt as though it were cracking open.
I stumbled, falling to my knees. The chill of the snow was bliss on my
overheated flesh. I let myself topple and roll to my back. Blessed snow. The
cold seeped into my skin, soothing.
A voice lifted on the wind. I thought I heard my name.
Tears leaked from my eyes. It was him. He’d found me.
I needed to get up. Run. Fight.
But I couldn’t. Maybe I’d be lucky, and he’d finally kill me.
Movement swam above me—a figure.
“Halston?”
The voice was deep with grit, as though sandpaper coated it. But there
was also something comforting about it; it had a gentleness. It wasn’t like the
man’s.
“Holy hell,” another voice rumbled. “Is she wearing a nightgown? It’s
nine degrees.”
“Call it in,” the voice above me snapped.
The figure swam above me again, his face coming in and going out of
focus. In and out. But every time my vision cleared, beauty struck me: dark
hair and thick scruff around an angular jaw. A nose that looked as if it had
possibly been broken at one point. And his eyes…
There was something about the deep blue. I wanted to drown in the pools.
They were kind. Not mean. Not like the man’s angry brown ones.
“Halston, you’re safe now. We’re gonna get you out of here. Can you tell
me where you’re hurt?”
I heard the other man calling off numbers and then the crackle of a radio.
I opened my mouth. Tried to speak. But nothing came out.
The man above me shifted, pulling something from a backpack. “Need to
get you warm.”
As he moved to cover me with a blanket, he froze. His head jerked up,
and he looked at the other man. “She’s bleeding. Been cut.”
The second man cursed. “The rest of the team is still thirty minutes out.”
“We gotta get her warm. She’s hypothermic.”
They moved around me.
Blue eyes hovered above me. “We need to move you. It might hurt. But
we have to get you warm.”
“No,” I croaked. “Hot.”
Pain streaked through those beautiful blue eyes. “I know you feel hot, but
your body’s lying to you right now. We’re going to move you. On three. One.
Two. Three.”
Fiery agony ripped through me as the men lifted me onto something. But
I didn’t make a sound. It was instinct. He always liked when I screamed. I’d
learned to stay quiet and not give him the power.
Darkness wavered at the corners of my vision.
A hand gripped mine. “Halston, stay with me.”
Those fathomless eyes filled my vision. So beautiful. “Blue,” I
whispered.
He squeezed my hand harder. “Halston!”
But I was already slipping under. I didn’t mind. At least I’d be drowning
in kindness when I went.
1
L AW S O N
PRESENT DAY
I BLINKED against the early morning sunlight streaming through my
bedroom window and tried to shift the weight off my bad shoulder—the one
I’d hurt playing ball in high school—only I couldn’t move. Hell, I could
barely breathe with the tiny foot shoved into my diaphragm.
A six-year-old shouldn’t have that kind of strength. But Charlie slept
wild, like some wildebeest trapped in a cage. He kicked and punched. He’d
even given me a black eye one night. That had been interesting to explain at
the station.
Currently, he’d twisted himself sideways in my California king, so I had
less than a foot of space and had his heel planted firmly in my gut. At least, it
wasn’t the face this time.
My alarm blared on my nightstand, and I reached over the small lump in
my bed to shut it off. My eyes burned as if someone had poured acid into
them.
Coffee. I needed coffee. Preferably an IV drip I could carry around with
me all day.
As I shifted to lay back on the pillow, Charlie jerked, his legs lashing out,
one striking me directly in the balls.
The strangled noise that escaped my throat sounded like a wounded
animal going through puberty. I bit the inside of my cheek so hard I tasted
blood.
Charlie stretched, oblivious to the fact that he had just ended all
possibility of me having any future children. Good thing the three I already
had were enough.
He smacked his lips. “Morning.”
I breathed in through my nose and out through my mouth, waiting for the
pain to pass.
Charlie’s brow scrunched. “You’ve got a funny face, Dad.”
I let one last breath out. “Just tired, bud.”
He grinned at me. “I slept great.”
Of course, he had. Even though I risked injury and possible death, I
couldn’t say no when my six-year-old appeared at my door after having a
nightmare.
I studied my little man, his dark hair sticking up in all directions. He had
more nightmares than his older brothers seemed to have. A weight settled in
my gut, worry that past events had somehow embedded the nightmares there.
Charlie flicked my nose. “Stop staring.”
I chuckled, tickling his sides. He squealed and jumped out of bed, a flash
of color in his pajamas. They were his favorites, the ones covered in frogs.
I’d had to order two more pairs because he refused to sleep in anything else.
“Daaaaaaaaad,” Charlie whined, but I heard laughter in his voice.
“Do me a favor and go wake up your brothers.”
A glint lit Charlie’s eyes—irises a blue so similar to mine. “Can I jump
on them?”
“Whatever it takes, Charlie Bear.”
His grin was huge, and he let out some sort of war cry as he ran from my
room.
I flopped back down on the mattress, my balls still aching. That kid
would be the death of me.
My head throbbed, trying to think about the last time I’d gotten a full
night’s sleep. I honestly couldn’t pull it from memory. Maybe the miracle
would come this weekend. If Charlie was exhausted from his uncle’s
wedding, and Drew and Luke didn’t pull something stupid.
I would sell a kidney for a good twelve-hour stretch of rest.
“Get the hell out of my room,” Luke bellowed from down the hall.
Shit.
I sat up, swinging my legs over the side of my bed. Twelve hours wasn’t
coming anytime soon.
I SPREAD my hand over the comforter, smoothing it. It was a little shabby-
looking, fraying at the corners and faded from the sunshine that streamed
through the window. If my brother knew where I was staying, he would not
be pleased. He’d demand that I change to a nicer, more expensive place.
But I didn’t want that. Emerson and his husband, Adrian, had done more
than enough for me over the past five years—more than anyone should have
to. And they weren’t exactly rolling in it.
They were both teachers in Chicago. They’d met in grad school and had
fallen head over heels for each other. My parents had already been displeased
about Em’s career choice, but when he told them he was marrying a man,
they’d cut him off completely.
As if I’d summoned evil by simply thinking about it, my phone dinged.
MOTHER
I called Emerson’s apartment. He said you weren’t there.
Where are you, Halston?
Not a lie. I did have an interview. It was just hours away from where she
thought I was.
MOTHER
What kind of job? I thought we agreed that the art world was
your future. You know I have connections in several important
galleries. That’s where you should be putting your focus.
I stared down at the phone, my vision going a little blurry. My fingertips
tingled, a telltale sign I was headed for a panic attack.
No. Not today.
I focused on the space around me. Five things you can see.
“Nightstand. Lamp. Pillow. Book. Water bottle.”
I took a deep breath, and the tingling abated a smidge. Four things you
can hear.
I listened carefully, picking up the faint strains of more than a few things.
“Traffic. A door. The TV. A faucet dripping.”
Three things you can feel.
“Slippers. Sweater.” I let my hand drop to the bed. “Comforter.”
Two things you can smell.
“Musty.” I strained to smell anything beyond the old motel room. “Pine.”
Something about that hint of wood gave me a sense of peace, pushing
back the panic trying to grab hold.
One final long breath escaped my lungs. I stared at the phone. If I got this
job, maybe I would finally be brave enough to change my number and be
done with her—with them.
My cell rang in my hand, making me jump. I cringed, expecting my
mother’s number to flash across the screen. The pressure in my chest eased as
I took in Emerson and that familiar Chicago area code.
Panic quickly followed when I saw that it was a video call. I scanned the
room, looking for the best place to accept the call, a spot where he wouldn’t
instantly be on alert that I was staying somewhere he wouldn’t consider safe.
I sat on the bed, kicking off my slippers. The headboard seemed pretty
standard and undamaged.
Swiping my finger across the screen, I forced a bright smile. “Em.”
His familiar face greeted me. His blond hair was a few shades darker than
my nearly white locks, but our gray eyes were practically identical.
Unfortunately, worry filled his now. “Mom called.”
I winced.
He sighed. “I thought I’d beat her to you.”
One corner of my mouth pulled up. “She wants to know why I’m not
going on interviews with the galleries she suggested.”
Emerson groaned. “Maybe because you think the gallery world is as
interesting as watching paint dry?”
I grinned, the action easing some of the tension thrumming through me.
On the drive out here, everything inside me had spun, constricting tighter and
tighter. By the time I reached Washington, I’d felt like a spool of fishing line.
My brother studied me for a moment. “Are you okay? I could come out
there. And you know you can always come back here.”
“Em—”
“I mean it. You’re our family. We love you more than anything. It’s okay
if you’re not ready.”
I let out a slow breath, tracing one of the flowers on the comforter with
my finger. “You’re starting your own family. You need the space to do that.”
Emerson and Adrian’s apartment was nice but not exactly spacious. It
was crowded with the three of us, no matter how much I tried to stay out of
their way. And if you added a baby into that mix, it would be too much.
“Adrian and I talked. There are a few suburbs we could move to—”
“No.” My voice was stronger than I’d heard it in a long time. “You love
the city. The energy. The people. The food. You’re not moving to the ‘boring
ol’ suburbs’ as you call them because of me.”
Em loved city life in a way that I never had. I’d always been partial to our
family’s vacation home a few towns from here. The mountains had always
made me feel like I could breathe and had the freedom to be who I truly was.
After my ordeal, everything set off my anxiety. Loud noises, crowded
spaces. It didn’t make living in a city easy. I’d worked hard on all my
triggers, but that didn’t mean I didn’t long for the peace of the mountains.
Emerson’s expression gentled. “I’m just not sure it’s healthy for you to be
back there. There are a million places you could consider living. Illinois has
plenty of lake communities—places that are only a couple hours’ drive from
us.”
I heard what he didn’t say: Places where they could get to me quickly if I
had a meltdown from being on my own.
I pressed my lips together, biting the bottom one as I tried to choose my
words carefully. “I want to face it.”
I’d been working hard in therapy for the past five years. Doing every
exercise my therapist recommended and slowly increasing my tolerance for
difficult things. I’d managed to finish college, get a good job as a nanny, and
even take a trip on my own. These mountains had been my favorite place in
the world. I wanted to reclaim them.
And the truth was, when I first saw them again through my windshield, I
hadn’t felt anxiety. I’d felt wonder.
“That’s very brave of you, but—”
A dark brown hand clamped down on my brother’s shoulder in a squeeze,
cutting off Emerson’s words. The gesture was affectionate and a warning all
at once.
Adrian’s face filled the screen, then a wide grin spread across it. “How’s
our girl?”
I sent him a grateful smile. “Good.”
“Have you explored the town at all yet? I looked it up yesterday, and it’s
absolutely adorable.”
My fingers gripped the comforter, twisting. “Not yet. I’m pretty tired
from all the driving.”
Or scared.
I’d order pizza and have it delivered to my room when dinner rolled
around, and would have my pepper spray in hand when it arrived.
“I’m just going to rest tonight, but I’ll go out to get some breakfast
tomorrow.” I’d give myself today, but if I stayed in this room much longer, I
knew I’d never leave. Which would mean I’d miss my interview, and
Emerson might really have to come and get me.
“I saw an adorable little coffee shop and café online called The Brew. Has
all the Alice in Wonderland feels,” Adrian suggested. “It’s right downtown.”
I nodded my head for far too long, probably looking like some deranged
bobblehead doll. “I’ll check it out and report back.”
Adrian’s amber eyes glowed with pride. “Try one of the double chocolate
muffins for me. They look like heaven.”
My mouth curved in a hint of an authentic smile. “I think I can handle
that.”
“What time is your interview tomorrow?” Emerson cut in.
“Ten.” My stomach did a series of somersaults. All I knew about the
family was that they had three boys aged six, thirteen, and sixteen and needed
help Monday through Friday with an occasional emergency thrown in.
“I don’t know if this is a good idea—”
Adrian cut Emerson off again. “The agency fully vets all their clients.
And Hallie is amazing with kids. She was born to do this.”
Warmth spread through my chest at his words. There were times when I
felt more comfortable around children than adults. There was no pretense. No
pretending to be something you weren’t. No hiding the dark sides.
“If it’s meant to be, I’ll get it. If it’s not, then I’ll keep looking.” It was
what I’d told myself time and time again. But the fact that my savings were
limited kept me from fully believing it.
Emerson let out a long breath. “Okay.” He met my gaze through the
screen. “They’d be lucky to have you.”
“Thanks, Em,” I whispered.
“Call us as soon as you’re done,” Adrian insisted. “We want to hear
everything.”
The corners of my mouth pulled into a full smile. “You’ll be my first call
as soon as I get back to my hotel room.”
“Knock ‘em dead,” he said as a sign-off.
Emerson just waved.
I hit end on the call and let the phone drop.
I pulled my knees to my chest and hugged them hard. Sometimes, it
helped keep the anxiety at bay, the hard pressure against my chest.
“You can do this,” I whispered into the room.
Releasing my legs, I picked up my phone again and opened the internet
browser. I typed in The Brew, Cedar Ridge. The photos that popped up on my
screen were beyond cute, and the menu had my mouth watering.
My heart began to hammer against my ribs, and my breaths came faster.
My eyes burned, tears of frustration trying to break free.
“One step at a time. What’s the next step?”
My voice was shaky, but the words helped. My hand trembled around the
phone. Opening my maps app, I typed in The Brew.
Directions populated the screen, and I traced them with my gaze. It was
only three blocks from here.
I surveyed everything I would pass along the way and envisioned the
streets I’d seen when I drove in yesterday with their quaint shops and
picturesque restaurants.
New was never easy for me. It was even worse if someone tried to push
me into it. Precisely why I’d left my parents’ home and went to live with
Emerson and Adrian. I needed to go at my own pace, and I’d found that if I
practiced something in my mind before I did it, it wasn’t quite as scary.
I ran my gaze over the route twice more. “Tomorrow, you just take the
next step.”
I surveyed what I’d need in the morning: the leather boots, my puffy
jacket, and the hat from the chair in the corner. My focus shifted to the
pepper spray on my nightstand. It wasn’t as if I thought someone would
attack me on a Saturday morning in the downtown area of a small
community.
I wanted to believe that thought. But I knew that bad things could happen
when you least expected them.
Writer of words. Drinker of Diet Cokes. Lover of all things cute and furry, especially her dog.
Catherine has had her nose in a book since the time she could read and finally decided to write down
some of her own stories. When she's not writing she can be found exploring her home state of Oregon,
listening to true crime podcasts, or searching for her next book boyfriend.
S TAY C O N N E C T E D