Mission: Marriage. Karen Whiddon
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“What if it’s not?”
Outside, the air was bracingly chilly. The wind coming out of the north felt like ice. They kept close to the building, looking for smoke.
Other people poured from the building and stood around in clusters, some looking confused, others angry or bemused. All of them looked cold.
Fire engines pulled up in front of the inn.
“There’s no smoke,” someone said.
“I don’t see anything.” Sean squinted into the early-afternoon glare. The bright sunlight seemed at odds with the bitter cold. “No smoke. No fire.”
“False alarm.” One of the bellmen came outside and shouted. “Once the fire department gives the okay, everyone can return to their rooms. It should be just a few minutes.”
“Good.” Wrapping her arms around herself, Natalie shivered. “Damn. I wish I’d grabbed my coat.”
He pulled her into his arms. “Come here.” When she hesitated, he shook his head. “No funny business, Nat. Shared body heat is better. You’ll be warmer this way.”
She relaxed against him, but only slightly. “Have you checked out the parking lot?”
“We’re on the north side of the building. All the cars are parked on the south. Whoever pulled the fire alarm wanted us out of the building, but why?”
“The code!” The bellman indicated they could return to their rooms and she ran for the entrance. “Maybe they think I left it in the room.”
He limped after her, struggling to keep up. “Did you?”
“Of course not,” she scoffed. “It’s with me. I never let it out of my sight. And Corbett’s info is on the laptop.”
“How would they know you have either of them?”
“That’s what I’d like to know.” Shooting him an exasperated look, she yanked open the side door and quickly entered the registration area.
“Nat, wait for me. We’re a team, remember? For now, you’re supposed to work with me, to trust me.” The instant he spoke he knew he’d made a major mistake.
“Been there, done that. No thanks.” She stopped a moment and looked at him, her face unreadable, her mouth set in a grim line that was totally unlike the Natalie he knew and loved.
“Nat, wait …”
Ignoring him, she kept going.
Since he had no choice, he followed, grabbing her arm. “You can’t just walk away from me if we’re going to work together …”
“Work?” She spun to face him and he was startled to see tears in her caramel eyes. “This has nothing to do with work.”
Sean took a deep breath. “Look, Nat, I know you’ll never forgive me for what I did two years ago. I can explain my reasons until I’m blue in the face, and you won’t understand.”
“I swear if you say it’s time to put the past behind us and move forward, I’m going to puke all over you.”
Since that was exactly what he’d been planning to say, he said nothing. Instead, he kept his mouth shut and stared at her.
She stared back, the coldness of her expression at war with the pain in her eyes.
“You’ve gone on with your life, have you?” he finally asked.
“As best I could.”
“You’ve found someone else then?”
For the space of one heartbeat, two, she said nothing. Finally, she made an odd little sound and shook her head. “You don’t know how badly I’d like to lie and tell you yes, I’ve found someone else.”
“Like Dennie Pachla, the doctor?” he suggested, hating himself for asking but wanting, needing to know.
“He’s a friend.” Her voice was tired. “Like Auggie. I don’t know why I’m telling you this, but there’s been no one else.”
Some devil urged him on. “Why not?” he pushed. “Two years is plenty of time for a griefstricken widow to move on with her life.”
She looked down, twisting her hands together. When she finally raised her head, the anguished look on her face made him feel as if he’d twisted the knife.
“Do you know what it’s like to love someone so much that every beat of your heart echoes theirs?” Her voice broke, but she didn’t cry.
Before he could answer, she continued.
“Do you have any idea, any idea at all, what it’s like to love someone that much and then have them ripped out of your arms?”
“Yes,” he said quietly. “I do.”
“I don’t think so.” She held up her hand when he would have argued. “Because honestly, Sean, if you had, you would have known I nearly followed you to the grave.”
Shocked, stunned, he shook his head. “You mean you …? Corbett never told me.”
“Corbett doesn’t know. Would it have made a difference, Sean? Would you have shown up at my funeral?”
“How can you ask such a thing?” Now, when he’d thought he had nothing left unbroken, the last bit of his heart shattered. “I can’t believe you tried to—”
She shrugged. “It wasn’t intentional, Sean. I was hurting and my doctor had prescribed pills. I suppose I knew I shouldn’t mix antidepressants and alcohol, but I only intended to have one drink.” She took a deep breath. “Next thing I knew, I woke up in a hospital.”
This he couldn’t wrap his mind around. “I had no idea.”
“How could you? You were dead.”
The repercussions of his lie had been worse and had spread wider than he’d ever imagined. “I couldn’t have lived with myself if you’d died,” he said.
“How do you think I felt?” The sheer anguish in her voice struck him raw. And as she turned away, he wanted only to wrap her tight in his arms and tell her he’d never let her go again.
Chapter 8
Moving with the others down the long hallway, Natalie knew when she saw the partially opened door of their room that they had been right.
Whoever had pulled the alarm had been in their room. Had trashed it.
“The only other person I’ve told about the code is Corbett. This must be the work of the Lazlo Group mole.”
“That’s possible.”