Hostage Midwife. Cassie Miles

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me. I gave up my apartment in Austin.”

      “That sounds like a permanent move.” And he was glad to hear it. He wanted to get to know Kelly better, which might take more than a couple of weeks. “Are you planning to stay here with Serena?”

      “God, no. I love her and adore her kids, but I’d go mad if I lived here. I need my privacy.”

      When she pushed open the door to an open room with cathedral ceilings, they walked into a recital of something that sounded like “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star.” All three kids were singing and banging on various types of drums while their parents watched and dutifully applauded before welcoming Nick into their home.

      Nick shook hands with Nigel, who looked familiar. “Have you done work at the Spencer Building?”

      “Private contracting with a couple of the software firms,” he said. “My wife tells me that you showed Kelly the gold.”

      Everybody loved that gold. “If you’d like to see it, let me know when you’re coming by.”

      “You bet I will.”

      Serena, with her beautiful baby in her arms, joined them. She allowed him one peek at the infant who was, miraculously, sleeping. Then she got right to the point. “You and Kelly have made a connection. I couldn’t be happier.”

      “A connection?”

      “She’s ready to settle down,” Serena said, “and I want her to stay in Valiant and help me build my business.”

      Kelly popped up beside him. Still wearing her khaki pants, she’d changed into a lightweight burgundy jacket. “We have to go.”

      “Stay,” Serena cajoled. “There’s so much more I have to tell Nick about you.”

      Teasing, Nick said, “And I want to hear it all.”

      “Not today.” She linked her arm with his and pulled him toward the door. “Serena, I have my cell if you need me.”

      On the porch, she exhaled in a whoosh. “I bet you didn’t know you’d volunteered to be on the Serena Bellows version of the dating game.”

      “I like her and Nigel.” Fifi trotted by carrying the red dragon cape in her mouth. “And the whole menagerie.”

      With all this rampant energy and enthusiasm, he’d forgotten that he’d come here to make sure Kelly wasn’t being harassed or threatened by Trask. As they walked toward his SUV, he was reminded of the possible danger. Parked at the end of the winding drive that led to the Bellowses’ house was a black stretch limousine.

      Kelly saw it, too. “Do you know who that is?”

      “I intend to find out.” He paused outside the driver’s-side door to his SUV. “You should go back to the house while I talk to them.”

      “If this has something to do with Samuel’s death and his last words, the people in the limo might be looking for me,” she said. “I’m coming with you.”

      He didn’t argue. “I’ll drive. I want the limo to follow us. If it stays here, Princess Butterfly and the goats might decide to check it out.”

      “That can’t happen.” Her voice was determined. “If anybody scares these kids, I’ll have to kill them.”

      “You bloodthirsty dragons are all alike.”

      He brought her around to the passenger side and opened the door for her. Though Nick was keeping the tone light so Kelly wouldn’t be worried, he had misgivings. Why was a limo here? What the hell were they after?

      He drove down the driveway toward the cheerful mailbox and made a right turn as though heading back to Valiant. As he’d expected, the limo followed on the two-lane asphalt road. The way he saw it, there were two options: contact the police or face the limo himself.

      Thus far, he hadn’t been impressed with the local cops or the Colorado Bureau of Investigation agents. They’d been quick to accept that Samuel committed suicide, and the case was closed. Nick thought there was a lot more to be investigated, and he was going to have to be more involved.

      Kelly had her cell phone in hand. “Should I call 911?”

      “Not yet. I want to see what they’re up to.”

      The SUV was approaching the unmanned volunteer fire department building, a good place to pull over. Nick signaled a turn and stepped on the brake.

      “Do you have a gun?” she asked.

      He was an architect, not a sharpshooter. “I’m just going to talk to them. You stay in the car and lock the doors. Get behind the steering wheel so we can make a fast getaway if we need to.”

      “I really don’t like the way that sounds.”

      “This isn’t going to be a problem. I’ll be back here before you know it.”

      He opened his car door and got out. At the same time, the limo driver emerged. A stocky guy with a thick neck, he looked as if he could also be a bodyguard.

      “Mr. Spencer,” he said, “Mr. Radcliff will see you now.”

      His civilized attitude didn’t fit with the situation. “Why were you following me?”

      “Convenience.”

      He held open the rear door to the limo, and Nick entered. He hoped he’d be able to come back out in one piece.

       Chapter Five

      Monday, 12:48 p.m.

      In the rearview mirror, Kelly watched Nick disappear into the back of the long stretch limousine with tinted windows. It worried her that she couldn’t see him. She held up her cell phone, ready to call the police at the slightest sign of trouble.

      The limo driver closed the door behind Nick and strolled around the car toward the gleaming front grill where he leaned against the fender and gazed across the road into the forested area on the other side. Though his attitude was relaxed, he looked like the kind of guy who would carry a gun and know how to use it. Why was she thinking about guns? Maybe she’d been in Texas too long.

      She checked the mirror again. Sunlight flashed off the silver chrome. She hated limos. Her ex had always insisted on taking a limo when they went to gala events because he liked to make an entrance. In his tailored tuxedo with his diamond-stud cuff links, Ted Maxwell was a very handsome man. Heads always turned when he walked by.

      And she had followed in his wake, aware that she’d never be as pretty as he was. He’d tried to coach her about what to wear and how to behave. The only bit of grooming that had really worked was the way she’d highlighted her straight brown hair, which was the only thing she’d kept after the divorce. According to Ted, he’d fought to become an associate partner at a top Denver law firm before he was thirty-five. He’d done the hard work, and all she had to do—her only real job as his wife—was to look good and back him up. She’d been a miserable failure, emphasis on the miserable.

      Not

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