Hook, Line and Shotgun Bride. Cassie Miles

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Shane still lived in Silver Plume, where he was a deputy sheriff. Of all Tom’s friends, Shane had been the most understanding. His was the shoulder she cried on.

      And she had a secret agenda for Shane while he was in town. Eyes still closed, Angela smiled to herself. She planned to fix him up with the French woman who provided pastries for her restaurant. They were both tall with black hair and blue eyes. Obviously, made for each other.

      Happy thoughts of matchmaking filled her mind, and she breathed more easily. Everything’s going to be just fine. She dozed for a moment before a loud clap of thunder roused her. No sleeping allowed. She’d promised Shane that she’d be awake when he arrived.

      Her legs were steady when she rose from the sofa, and she was pleased that her bout of nerves had passed. In the entry to the kitchen, her hand paused above the light switch. She saw a reflection in the window above the sink. A light? But that didn’t make sense. That window faced the backyard. She squinted hard and focused on the dark beyond the glass panes.

      She saw two lights, side by side. As she watched, they grew larger. Like the headlights on a truck. A ghostly truck. The lights bore down on her. Closer and closer. Coming right at her. They were going to crash through the window.

      Reflexively, she threw up her hands.

      When she looked again, the lights were gone.

      A hallucination? No, it was too real. She knew what she’d seen. Without turning on the overhead light, she crept across the tile floor, leaned over the kitchen sink and peered into the yard. A flash of lightning illuminated the shrubs, the flowers and the peach tree. No headlights. No truck.

      It must have been some kind of optical illusion—a trick of the light and rain.

      She filled a plastic cup with water from the sink and took a sip.

      A loud crash came from the hallway.

      The cup fell from her hands and splashed water on the kitchen floor. The noise came from the direction of Benjy’s bedroom. She remembered his open window with the loose screen. Someone could have climbed inside through that window.

      She grabbed a butcher knife from the drawer by the sink, dashed down the hallway and flung open the door to her son’s room. With no thought for her own safety, she charged inside. He wasn’t in the bed. Frantic, she turned on the light. He was gone. Oh, God, no.

      “Benjy?” Her voice quavered. “Where are you?”

      Her heart thumped hard and heavy. She ran to his window. It was closed, exactly the way she’d left it.

      The door to his closet was slightly ajar. Holding the knife in her right hand, she grasped the door handle with the left and pulled the door open.

      With a huge grin, Benjy greeted her. “Mommy.”

      She placed the knife on his dresser and gathered him into her arms. She held him tightly against her breast— relieved that he was all right and terrified of the unknown danger that might still be in her house. Something had made that crash. She couldn’t let down her guard, couldn’t pretend that nothing had happened. “Why were you in the closet?”

      “I don’t know.”

      He didn’t seem frightened. Wide awake and alert, but not scared. “Were you hiding?”

      “I couldn’t find my stegosaurus. I want him to sleep with me.”

      “Benjy, this is important. Was anyone in your room?”

      “Mommy, what’s wrong?”

      She struggled to keep the tremor from her voice. “Everything’s fine. We’re going to be fine.”

      The doorbell rang. It had to be Shane. Please let it be Shane.

      Benjy wriggled free from her grasp. She tried to grab him, but he dashed from his room and down the hall. Directly into danger? What if it wasn’t Shane at the door?

      She grabbed the knife and ran to the door behind her son. Loudly, she shouted, “Who’s there?”

      “It’s Shane. I’m getting wet out here.”

      “Shane’s here!” Benjy cried delightedly.

      She flipped the lock and opened the door for the big, tall mountain man in his cowboy hat. She’d never been so glad to see anyone in her entire life.

       Chapter Two

      After years as a deputy sheriff, Shane was accustomed to dealing with crises. He read terror in Angela’s eyes. Something had thrown her into a panic, and she wasn’t a woman who scared easily.

      He ruffled Benjy’s hair and pulled Angela into a one-armed hug. “What’s the problem?”

      Trembling, she whispered, “I think someone broke into the house.”

      “Did you see him?”

      “No.”

      “Do you think he’s still here?”

      Her voice cracked at the edge of a sob. “I don’t know.”

      With a small child in the mix, this wasn’t the time for a showdown with an intruder. He separated from Angela. Was that a knife in her hand? What the hell was she thinking? He scooped her son off the floor and said, “Let’s go for a drive.”

      “You’re wet,” Benjy said.

      “Rain will do that.” He dug his cell from his jacket pocket and handed it to Angela. “Make the call to 911.”

      She stared at the phone as though it might grow fangs and bite her. “I don’t want to contact the C-O-P-S. I might be imagining things. Could you just take a look around?”

      He’d never been able to say no to Angela. From the first time Tom introduced her as his fiancée, she’d been able to twist Shane around her little finger. Not that she asked for much or tried to manipulate him. Angela didn’t have a devious bone in her body. She faced the world with a straightforward determination. A flame burned within her. Sometimes she was bright as a torch. Other times, like now, she was a flickering candle. He’d do anything to nurture her delicate fire.

      “You said you might be imagining things,” he said. “Why?”

      “I heard a crash. Down the hall.”

      “Toward your bedroom?”

      “Yes.” Her lips were tight. Beneath the sweep of her long brown hair, her forehead pinched. She was desperate, stressed to the breaking point.

      “I’ll take care of this,” he said.

      He was pretty sure they weren’t dealing with a drug-crazed psycho, mainly because they hadn’t been attacked while standing here talking. But he intended to take her supposed imagining seriously. Until he knew better, he would assume there was an intruder.

      From

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