The Enforcer. Anna Perrin

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The Enforcer - Anna Perrin Mills & Boon Intrigue

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or impatient tapping of his foot. Obviously, he viewed her presentation about counseling options as useless and had only shown up because he’d been ordered to.

      Young’s disdain for counseling hadn’t surprised her. What had surprised her was the surge of attraction she’d felt for him. With his linebacker shoulders, coal-black hair and cheekbones that hinted at a Native American ancestor, he looked like a hard-core renegade. But there had been something appealing about his smile—which he’d let loose a few times in response to his colleagues’ wisecracks. Against all logic, she wished her remarks had elicited the same response.

      The wind rattled the panes of glass. The storm was getting worse.

      “You can count on Brent to protect you,” Gene said, correctly interpreting her silence as a lack of enthusiasm for her escort.

      The overhead light went out, plunging the room into darkness. “Oh no,” she muttered.

      “What’s wrong?”

      “The storm just killed the power.” She lifted her free hand, but she couldn’t see it—or anything else.

      “Check outside,” Gene said, his tone urgent. “See if the streetlights are on.”

      Hadn’t he been listening to her? No power meant no streetlights. Unless—

      Understanding dawned on her, followed by a stab of fear. Unless somebody had cut the power to her house.

      Still holding her cell phone, she rushed to the window. After what seemed like an eternity, her shaking fingers forced apart two slats of the horizontal blinds.

      “The whole neighborhood’s dark,” she said, relief making her voice thin and breathless.

      “Go to Java Heaven. Call me when you get there.”

      Pocketing her phone, she stared into the surrounding darkness. Collecting her luggage and shoes would be a lot easier if she had even a glimmer of light. She headed into the hall, where she kept a flashlight in a maple cabinet. As her outstretched hands made contact with the wood, the basement stairs creaked. She froze, listening for more creaks. The only sounds were the ones made by the storm driving rain against the windows and the pounding of her heart.

      She retrieved the flashlight, walked two steps. Stopped and listened again. Nothing.

      The knotted muscles in her shoulders relaxed, and she nearly laughed. Gene’s call had made her jumpy. She was alone in her home. Of course, she was alone.

      No creak this time. A soft rustle. The shifting of clothes. Someone was in the hall.

      Fear shot through her. She bolted for the front door.

      When a deep baritone ordered, “Stop,” she whirled around and smashed the flashlight into the source of that voice.

      His surprised yelp was extremely satisfying. She swung the flashlight again but didn’t connect this time. Instead, a muscled forearm shoved her backward. She fell hard against the wall, crying out as her right shoulder absorbed the brunt of the impact.

      The flashlight bumped against the door frame.

       Oh God, let the batteries work.

      She depressed the switch. A brilliant beam erupted from the cylinder, and she directed it at his face, hoping to blind him. But the circle of light revealed he had his head tipped back and his hand over his nose. Blood streamed down his clean-shaven face.

      Forrester had a beard.

      “Nice work, doc. You damn near broke my nose.”

      Anxiety must have dulled her senses earlier because this time she recognized his voice. The man dripping blood all over her front hall was Brent Young, not the mentally unstable agent who’d threatened her.

      She sagged against the wall in relief.

      “Don’t you dare faint on me,” he said. “If anybody deserves to pass out, it’s me. I got knifed by a junkie last year, and it didn’t bleed this much.”

      If Young expected an apology, he’d be disappointed. She had nearly suffered a heart attack because of him. “You were supposed to meet me at Java Heaven. Didn’t Gene’s assistant call you?”

      He looked at her, his eyes narrowed against the glare of the flashlight. “My cell vibrated, but I was too busy to answer it—”

      “—because you were breaking into my house, right?”

      He gripped her wrist, redirecting the beam of light toward the floor. “I arrived just before you did and wanted to make sure Forrester wasn’t hiding inside. By the way, you should have bars installed on your basement windows.”

      “I’ll add it to my chore list,” she muttered.

      His next words were barely more than a whisper. “Aren’t you glad it’s me, not Forrester, here with you now?”

      In the semidarkness, his voice sounded intimate, seductive. Warmth from his hand seeped through her skin and traveled up her arm. Her heart beat faster, but this time fear wasn’t the cause. It was attraction, raw and potent. An attraction that roared through her blood, demanding release. An attraction she had to suppress.

      She jerked her wrist out of his grasp.

      He gave a low, knowing chuckle.

      Gene respected Young’s ability to keep her safe. She shouldn’t let him unsettle her.

      “Let’s head out,” he said.

      “I need my shoes.”

      He nodded, then cursed softly. The movement must have started his nose bleeding again. She thought of offering him ice, but it seemed prudent to leave immediately. They could stop and buy ice when they were well away from here.

      She shone the flashlight around the hall. The beam illuminated her sneakers in the corner, and she shoved her feet into them. Then she aimed the flashlight toward the spot where she’d left her luggage.

      A noise like a car backfiring sounded outside. In the same instant, the pane of glass beside the front door shattered, and a tiny round hole appeared on the side of her carry-on case.

      Her blood turned cold.

      The bullet had missed her by inches.

      BRENT CURSED as a second bullet plowed into the case. The flashlight was a beacon for the bastard outside.

      He knocked the traitorous item out of Claire’s hand, dragged her to the floor and covered her with his body. Her full breasts rose and fell in agitation. Under other circumstances, he would have enjoyed the softness of those curves, but tonight wasn’t about pleasure. It was about staying alive.

      The shooting stopped—probably because the flashlight had gone out after hitting the floor. But the threat wasn’t over. Whoever was out there couldn’t know if he’d hit his target unless he ventured inside.

      Brent placed his lips against her ear and murmured, “Let’s go.”

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