Riding Shotgun. Joanna Wayne

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Riding Shotgun - Joanna Wayne The Kavanaughs

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winked. “I figure having a great-grandson who’s a deputy ought to get me a perk on a day like this.”

      “I’d say you’re right.” Not that anyone in town would question where Elizabeth parked her fifteen-year-old blue Honda. She was a living legend in this mountain town where she’d been born and lived all her life.

      Grace envied her that. Having so many close friends, living in one place so long she was part of the town’s fabric.

      Elizabeth picked up her books with her left hand and took her cane in her right. Grace would at least open the heavy front door for her. As Grace stepped from behind the counter, the door swung open, ushering in an icy blast.

      Grace turned to see who else had ventured out on this cold December afternoon. The library was practically deserted today.

      The young man was in jeans, an unzipped black leather jacket and no hat, clearly paying little heed to the area’s first real taste of winter.

      He held the door for Elizabeth and then stepped inside. His earth-colored eyes fastened on Grace, his gaze searing into hers. The intensity rattled her. She stared back.

      She’d looked into those eyes before. Three days ago in the cereal aisle of Tatum’s grocery. She’d looked up as she dropped a package of granola into her cart and spotted the man a few feet away, his stare as penetrating as it was now.

      She’d seen him again yesterday, practically running into him on the sidewalk when she’d walked out of the town’s pharmacy. Again he had stared before disappearing into the shop himself.

      Panic knotted her stomach. Her fingers tightened around the corner of the counter. She took a deep breath and struggled to separate her fears from reality.

      This was a small town. Running into him didn’t mean the stranger was following her. But it didn’t guarantee that he wasn’t, either.

      He let his gaze drop from hers and glanced around the library.

      “May I help you?” she asked as he approached the counter.

      “I’m new in town. What do I do to get a library card?”

      “You’ll need a photo ID and a local address.”

      “No problem.” He pulled out his wallet and flashed a Louisiana driver’s license. A new wave of panic hit. She forced her hands not to shake as she pulled a printed form from the niche below the counter.

      “Just fill this out, read the requirements for checking out books and sign your consent,” she said.

      “How long before I get the card?”

      “I can give you a number that will allow you to check out books today. The permanent card will be mailed to your local home address.”

      “That’ll work.”

      “What brings you to our area?” she asked.

      “A job.”

      He didn’t offer more. She tensed again. The small town of Mountain Edge was not a mecca for employment opportunities.

      He looked over the form and then took a pen from the black plastic cup. Before making a mark, he shook his head and returned the pen to its holder. “Sorry. My phone always interrupts at the most inconvenient times.”

      She hadn’t heard it ring. Either he had it on vibrate as the note on the counter requested or he was stalling.

      He pulled his phone from his pocket as he stepped away from the counter and then walked back to the deserted reference section.

      “This is it for today.”

      Grace startled, then turned as John Everly, a local retired attorney, set a stack of books on the counter.

      She glanced at the books he’d chosen, a mix of thrillers, political intrigue and history. “Nice choices.”

      “Hope so. Looks like we’re going to have a few more days of arctic blasts, so figured I better stock up on reading material.”

      “You’re right,” she agreed, “nothing better than getting lost in an engrossing novel while cuddled in front of a roaring fire in this type of weather.”

      “And it’s only mid-December,” he said. “I hate to think what January’s going to bring.”

      She checked out the books and pushed them back to him. “Stay warm.”

      “You, too.”

      As he walked away, she scanned the room until she spotted the suspicious stranger near the end of one of the stacks, phone in hand, but not held to his ear. He was taking her picture.

      When he saw her looking back, he quickly shoved the phone in his jacket pocket.

      He knew who she was. Why else would he be taking her picture?

      She fought the urge to jump across the counter and bolt for the door. But panic could lead to bad decisions. Forcing herself to stay in control, she considered her options.

      But there was really only one. She’d run again, blindly, like a fox fleeing a team of vicious hunting dogs. She’d have to change her appearance, might even try out that horrible wig she’d purchased online from a costume website. She looked at least forty in that. She’d swap her contact lens for some big-rimmed glasses.

      She’d find a new identity, a new job, a new town. She’d start over once again, always living on the precipice of fear and ready to run on a minute’s notice.

       Chapter Two

      The wheels hit the runway with a thump and then bumped along a few yards before steadying. Back in the United States. Home again. For the first time in over a year.

      But home to what?

      A divorce from a wife who’d grown so emotionally distant that they’d stopped communicating altogether except for things concerning their daughter, Jaci.

      No job prospects. No plans. And no more ties to the navy SEALs and the sense of purpose and comradery that had been his life for the past eight years.

      The plane pulled up to the Jetway and jerked to a stop.

      “Please remain seated until the captain turns off the seat-belt sign.”

      No one did, including Pierce Lawrence. He opened the overhead storage compartment and retrieved his duffel and the one of the middle-aged woman who’d had the seat next to him. They’d barely exchanged a hello on the long flight. She’d slept. He’d struggled through silent rehearsals for what he was about to face.

      As wary as if he were preparing for enemy fire, he followed the crowd of passengers to baggage claim.

      He spotted Leslie before she saw him. Her long blond hair fell into curls that cascaded about her narrow shoulders. Her body was as spectacular as it had been when they’d met six years

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