The Masked Man. B.J. Daniels
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Reeling, Jill stumbled out of the condo. Her head throbbed, and when she touched the bump on her forehead, her fingers came away sticky with blood.
All she wanted to do was go home and forget this day had ever happened. Forget Trevor. Too bad she couldn’t forget what had happened between them in the cottage—before the other Scarlett had shown up.
As she drove downtown to her apartment over the bakery she owned, she told herself this night couldn’t get any worse. But as she passed the bakery, she saw the sheriff’s deputy car parked across the street. Two deputies got out as she parked the van out front rather than continue on around to the back entrance to the upstairs apartment.
She stood paralyzed with worry on the sidewalk as they approached, afraid it had something to do with her father. Gary Lawson hadn’t been well enough to attend the party tonight. He’d said it was only the flu—
“Jill Lawson?” the taller of the deputies asked, the one whose name tag read James Samuelson. “Sorry to bother you so late. May we come in and have a word with you?”
She nodded dumbly and swallowed, her throat constricting, as she shakily unlocked the door to the bakery and let them in.
“We’re here about Trevor Forester,” the shorter, stouter of the two said. He introduced himself as Rex Duncan. He took out a small notebook and pen.
She stared at the deputy. “Is Trevor in some kind of trouble?” Understatement of the year.
She could feel Samuelson studying her face. Past him, she caught her reflection in the front window. Her eyes were red and puffy from crying, and the bump on her forehead was now bruised and caked with blood around the small cut where she’d been hit.
“When was the last time you saw him?” Samuelson asked.
“Tonight. At the party.” She saw the deputies exchange a look.
“Tonight? What time was that?” Duncan asked.
“About eight-fifteen.”
“You’re sure you saw him?” Samuelson said.
“I was with him until about…nine-thirty, then I left. Has something happened?”
The deputies exchanged another look.
“Please tell me what this is about,” she said. “You’re scaring me.”
“Ms. Lawson, you couldn’t have been with Trevor Forester tonight at the party,” Samuelson said. “Mr. Forester was murdered during the time you say you were with him at another location. I think you’d better tell us why you’d make up such a story.”
Chapter Two
As the woman stormed out of the lake cottage, Mackenzie Cooper pushed himself up from the floor on one elbow and groaned.
“Who the hell was that?” he asked the darkness, still stunned by what had happened between them.
Silently he cursed himself. When she’d come into the cottage while he was spying on the boat just off the shore, he’d kissed her, only planning to shut her up and keep her from giving him away. But one thing had led to another so quickly…
Damn. What had he been thinking? That was just it. He hadn’t been thinking.
He felt dazed as he checked his watch. Nine-forty. He’d completely lost track of the time. Completely lost track of everything. Especially his senses.
He quickly dressed, changing enough of the costume so that he wouldn’t be recognized as Rhett Butler. The last thing he wanted to do was run into either of the Scarlett O’Haras again tonight. In the mood they were in it could be dangerous. Another reason to hightail it out of here as fast as possible.
It was obvious the man he was supposed to meet here had stood him up. Which, all things considered, was just as well.
But first, Mac had to know what the woman had thrown at him. Using the penlight he’d brought with him, he shone it around on the floor.
Something in the corner glittered in the light and he bent to pick it up. A diamond ring. The stone was a nice size, the setting obviously old. He pocketed the ring and started to leave, but spotted something else on the floor in the beam of the penlight.
It appeared to be a scrap of black fabric. He picked up the skimpy, sexy panties. Silk. Her scent filled his nostrils, momentarily paralyzing him with total recall of the woman he’d had in his arms tonight.
Suddenly he wished he could have seen her in these. But his tactile memory flashed on an image of her that was now branded on his mouth, his hands, his body and his brain.
It seemed the woman had thought he was Trevor Forester—her fiancé. At least he had been her fiancé until the other Scarlett O’Hara had shown up.
He swore again, realizing the magnitude of what he’d done. He’d just made love to the last woman on earth he should have!
Not wanting to leave any evidence, he pocketed the panties along with the ring, then moved to the cottage door to make sure the coast was clear. It was time to get out of here. He’d gotten more than he’d come for. And then some.
TREVOR DEAD? Murdered? Jill staggered, her legs suddenly unable to hold her.
Deputy Rex Duncan pulled out a chair for her at one of the small round serving tables at the front of her bakery and helped her into it. He then drew up seats across from her for him and Samuelson, who pulled a small tape recorder from his pocket, set it on the table, and clicked it on.
“There must be some mistake,” she said, looking from one to the other of them.
“There is no mistake,” Samuelson said. “That’s why we’re confused. Why would you say you were with Trevor Forester tonight at the party? Unless for some reason you think you need an alibi.”
She stared at him, stunned. “An alibi? I was with Trevor in the lake cottage during the time I told you.” She looked from Samuelson to Duncan.
Duncan shook his head.
She felt the blood leave her head. If she hadn’t been in the cottage with Trevor… Oh, my God.
“Why don’t you start at the beginning?” Duncan suggested as he handed her a napkin from the dispenser on the table. “You arrived at the party at what time?”
She took the napkin and wiped her eyes, panic making her hands shake. “About seven-thirty.”
“Alone?” Duncan asked.
She nodded. “I thought Trevor would meet me at the party since he was running so late.”
“Trevor Forester was your fiancé?” Deputy Samuelson asked.
She nodded, then glanced down at her ringless finger, the white mark on her lightly