Kimani Press
March 2010
On Sale: March 1, 2010
Featuring: Julia Kelley; Carson Webber
320 pages ISBN: 0373831803 EAN: 9780373831807 Mass Market Paperback Add to Wish List
In the dead of night, Julia Kelley could barely see through
the heavy sheets of rain pounding her car's windshield. The
fact that there were no streetlights lining the desolate
highway made it worse. For miles now, she'd been unable to
read the road signs and could honestly say that she had no
idea where she was. At this point, what did it
matter?
Her depression deepened. The life she once
knew was over. The farther she was from Atlanta, the better.
The events from the past month filtered through her mind. A
small part of her wished that she could turn back time. If
she could, maybe her husband would still be alive.
A
loud bang startled her from her reverie. The car lurched and
her heart skipped a beat. Suddenly there was a strange
clicking noise as the car slowed. In a panic, she floored
the accelerator.
"Please, don't do this. Now now,"
she begged, clutching the steering wheel. But the car
refused to respond. She veered off the side of the road just
as the engine cut off.
Fear washed over her in waves,
and her heart raced in double time. She tried to restart the
car but it was no use. It was dead.
"This can't be
happening," Julia mumbled under her breath, shivering
against the cold. She glanced down at the wet clothes
clinging to her body. The last thing she needed was to catch
pneumonia.
Rain continued to bounce and scatter
across the windshield, making it nearly impossible for her
to see more than two feet in front of the car. Leaving the
car was out of the question, but she entertained the thought
all the same. Desperate times called for desperate
measures.
Swiveling around in her seat to scan out
the windows, Julia was both relieved and fearful that there
weren't any other cars on the road. Now that she thought
about it, she hadn't seen a car for miles now.
"Oh,
dear God, what am I going to do?" She closed her eyes. At
this point, she wouldn't be surprised if He had abandoned
her as well. She needed a plan—something. Her mind drew a
blank. She had been so preoccupied with getting the hell out
of Atlanta that she hadn't given much thought to where she
was going.
For what seemed like the millionth time,
she thought about calling the authorities, but she'd already
tried that route before and it had nearly cost her her life.
Her gaze lowered to the small form curled up in the
backseat. Now there was more at stake. She had her daughter,
Robin, to consider.
A car's high beams appeared off
in the distance. Julia's first thoughts were that she'd been
caught. She tried to pacify her jumbled nerves, but
couldn't. As the car drew near, her heart hammered against
her rib cage and her mind scrambled for logic.
Her
thoughts instantly flew to the gun stashed in her glove
compartment. She would use it if she had to, but she prayed
that it wouldn't come to that.
The mysterious car
zoomed past; her car rocked in its wake, yet she was spared
a major heart attack. Julia exhaled in a long, shaky breath;
her body trembled worse than before. She turned back around
in her seat and twisted the key in the ignition, but got the
same results.
She looked up into the rearview mirror,
where she stared at her reflection. She touched her botched
haircut, thinking that it looked as though she'd run her
once curly mane through a rusted chain saw. It wasn't much
of a disguise, but it was the best that she could do,
especially given the limited time she'd had.
Could
she truly say goodbye to her life—to everything that she had
achieved as a mother, a wife, and a doctor? The answer: she
had no choice.
Finally Julia focused on the problem
at hand—getting the car started. She turned again toward the
backseat and reached down to the floorboard to grab her
jacket. It wasn't going to protect her from the downpour
outside, but it was better than nothing.
After
jerking the jacket on, she reached under the dashboard and
pulled the lever to pop the hood. Looking inside the glove
compartment, she ignored the .357 Magnum and retrieved a
small flashlight, then braced herself for the worst. When
she stepped out of the car, she was instantly drenched and
miserable. She lifted the hood with no idea what she was
looking for. What did she know about cars?
The small
light that jetted from the flashlight was useless. There was
no smoke or flashing signs pointing to the problem, as she'd
partially hoped. Despair washed over her with the same
velocity as the rain. She hung her head and struggled to
keep her tears at bay, but she couldn't honestly say that
the rain was the only moisture on her face.
Off in
the distance, another set of high beams drew her attention,
and another series of heart palpitations followed. It never
occurred to her to get out of the rain, or even to move, for
that matter. She watched the car approach, hoping against
hope that it, too, would pass her by. But if she wasn't
mistaken, the vehicle seemed to be slowing.
She was
right.
What appeared to be a white truck pulled up
behind her car. Julia remained rooted where she stood.
This is it, she recited in her head. This was the
end. They were going to kill her and Robin on the side of
the road and she was helpless to do anything about
it.
Carson Webber squinted at the vision before him
and immediately thought how unfortunate it was for anyone to
be stranded on the side of the road on a night like this. He
was already an hour late for dinner and held no illusions
that his sister wouldn't let him have it as soon as he
arrived. Sometimes he swore that she forgot who was the
eldest.
If his eyes weren't playing tricks on him, it
appeared to be a woman standing on the side of the road. She
was completely drenched and made no attempt to shield
herself from the downpour. Crazy
woman.
Carson parked and made a quick search for
an umbrella, which he could never find when he needed one.
The role of knight in shining armor was never easy, he
thought.
After a few well-chosen expletives, he
finally found the umbrella buried under mounds of paper,
maps and God knew what else. In a mad rush, he pushed open
his car door and was immediately pelted by the rain. He
pressed the release button near the bottom of the umbrella's
handle and was disappointed when the blasted thing refused
to open. He waved it around and ended up having to manually
push it open, only to discover that one side was broken,
rendering the thing useless.
Another stream of curses
followed while he had just as much trouble closing the
umbrella as he had had opening it.
Finally, out of
frustration, he jumped out of the truck and discarded the
worthless piece of junk into the back of his truck. By the
time he headed toward the car, his features had twisted into
a scowl.
Julia took a nervous step backward. The man
storming angrily toward her looked more like a giant than
anything else. He had to be at least six-three or six-four
and had the sinewy physique of a bodybuilder.
"Are
you having some problems, ma'am?"
The man's deep
baritone was silky smooth, even seductive.
Julia
opened her mouth to respond, when he stopped in front of her
and the friendliest face she'd ever seen greeted her.
Handsome was too mild a word to describe him.
Breathtaking was close. As he looked at her, his
warm brown eyes reflected kindness and
concern.
"Ma'am, are you all right?"
Shaking
off her brief trance, she managed to nod before sweeping her
hand toward her car. "It just died on me," she shouted above
the rain.
"You mind if I take a look?"
"By all
means." She handed him the flashlight.
"Tell you
what—why don't you wait in your car so you can get out of
the rain and I'll see what we got here?"
He must have
read the uncertainty in her face because he added, "Please.
By the way you're trembling, you'll be lucky if you don't
catch your death out here."
Julia stiffened at his
choice of words.
"It should only take me a few
minutes."
"All right," she shouted after deducing
that she had little choice in the matter. Circumstances
being what they were, she should count herself lucky. She
turned around and half ran to the driver side, then slipped
into her car.
There was a small moan from the
backseat, shortly before Robin spoke.
"Mommy, I'm
cold."
Julia twisted around and dug for a blanket
from the floorboard. Within seconds Robin had drifted back
to sleep. Julia stared down at her and was again attacked by
guilt, and questioned whether she'd done the right thing by
running from her problems. If only her problems hadn't
carried such large guns….
There was a tap at the
window. She jerked around, breathed a sigh of relief, then
rolled down the glass.
"With this rain, I can't see
what the problem is right off. We're probably going to have
to wait till morning."
Julia's heart sank. "But I
can't sit out here until the morning."
A breathtaking
smile curved the stranger's lips.
"I'm not
recommending that you do. Do you live somewhere near here? I
don't mind dropping you off somewhere."
That nearly
won a laugh from her. She was a long way from
home.
"No. We were just passing through," she
confessed, then remembered to be cautious.
The man's
gaze skittered behind her, and she couldn't help but turn in
her seat to see Robin now sitting up and rubbing the sleep
from her eyes.
"Mommy, where are we?"
"Don't
worry, sweetie. We're almost there," Julia lied. In truth,
she hadn't told Robin where they were headed. She'd just
teased her that their destination was a
surprise.
Julia returned her attention to the
stranger, fully aware that they were in a vulnerable
position with very few options—or, more precisely,
none.
Her rescuer surprised her with another smile.
"Quite an angel you got there. I got one myself. She's eight
years old and wishes that she were a boy."
Julia
swelled with relief. Surely a murderer wouldn't share such
intimate details with someone he intended to
kill.
"I'll tell you what—there's a motel in the next
town. I'd be more than happy to drop you off there. As you
see, I have a tow truck. I can just hitch your car up and
off we go."
"A motel?" She frowned, certain that her
limited funds wouldn't allow such luxuries.
"Or," he
said as if sensing her duress, "my sister runs a
bed-and-breakfast in Moreland, which is about twenty miles
from here. I'm sure she can put you up for the night as a
favor to me."
She didn't know what to say. The last
thing she wanted was to be indebted, but then again, what
choice did she have? "Uh…"
"It's really no big deal.
She's used to me bringing home strange women in the middle
of the night."
Julia frowned.
He slapped his
open palm against his head. "That didn't come out right.
What I mean was…well, let's just say that my sister is one
of the most kindhearted women that you'll ever meet, and
she'd kill me if she even thought I was going to
leave a woman stranded on the side of the
road."
Whatever trepidation Julia had felt moments
ago disappeared at the look of genuine sincerity in the
man's eyes. Was she crazy? How many times had she heard that
it was the one people hadn't suspected who turned out to be
an ax murderer? But she had a gut feeling that she could
trust this man.
She gave him a trembling smile and
exhaled as she took a leap of faith. "All right. We'll go
with you."
Julia sneaked a peek at the handsome
stranger while he concentrated on the road. He was as
drenched as she after having hitched the car onto his tow
truck. To her surprise, her fear had subsided, and she'd
even allowed herself to feel safe in his presence.
He
turned and smiled when he caught her stare. "It won't be
long now. It's about another ten minutes up the
road."
Julia nodded.
"By the way, the name is
Carson Webber."
She hesitated, then replied,
"Julia."
His smile broadened as he repeated her name.
"Julia. It's a beautiful name. It suits you."
She
shifted uncomfortably at the unexpected compliment. "Thank
you," she managed to say.
"And what's the little
one's name?"
Julia, who thought her daughter was
asleep, looked down to discover Robin staring at the
stranger.
She kissed the top of her daughter's head,
hoping to comfort her and reassure her that everything was
fine.
"My name is Robin," the child answered for
herself.
"Ah, another beautiful name, and please
don't mind me when I say you're the spitting image of your
mom."
Robin tightened her arms around her mother, and
Julia hugged her back.
"So are you two just passing
through?"
"I guess you can say that." Julia made a
point to be ambiguous, yet at the same time she didn't want
to come off as rude. He was, after all, doing them a
favor.
An awkward moment of silence lapsed before
Carson cleared his throat and tried again.
"I'm
sorry. I really don't mean to pry. I've been accused plenty
of times of asking too many questions. I'm not as bad as my
sister, mind you, but it's a flaw all the same." He smiled
again.
"It's okay." Julia relaxed. She couldn't help
it. The man's friendly demeanor made it impossible not to
like him. Maybe it had been a stroke of good luck that their
paths had crossed.
Weariness crept over her. Since
when had she believed in good fortune?
"Mommy, where
are we going?" Robin asked almost in a whine.
Julia
stiffened as a rush of heat clawed at her
neck.
"Mommy?"
"Don't worry, baby. It's going
to be a surprise."
Julia kissed Robin's head again
and hoped that her short answer would stifle any further
questions. To her relief it seemed to work, and Robin
dropped back off to sleep.
Meanwhile, a flicker of
disappointment hit Carson as he caught a glimpse of a
wedding ring on her hand. Then again, he shouldn't have been
surprised. The woman was a real knockout. A man would have
to be blind not to see that even through the drenched hair
and oversize clothes.
Her honey-colored, cat-shaped
eyes held a tinge of apprehension, but were undoubtedly the
most intriguing pair he'd ever seen.
"So I take it
that you two are on your way to see your husband?" he
couldn't help but ask.
Julia clenched her jaw and
kept her gaze focused on the road.
When she didn't
answer, Carson realized that he was asking too many
questions. "Sorry. I'm doing it again."
Julia forced
an amicable smile. "Thank you for coming to our rescue back
there. I don't want you to think that I don't appreciate it.
I do."