A strong-willed woman, a heart-weary deputy, and a cozy mountain cabin. What could possibly go wrong… or right?
Fiercely independent, Aelissm Davis prefers to manage her own affairs. But when an obsessive friend refuses to take no for an answer, it’s time to call in reinforcements. Unfortunately, her meddling uncle’s solution—send his best deputy “on vacation” to protect her—could be an even bigger complication.
For three years, Pat O’Neil has buried himself in his work to get past a violent relationship, and it hasn’t done him any good. This assignment to protect his boss’s niece could be just what he needs. Aelissm is an irresistible breath of fresh mountain air, but as his heart learns how to breathe again, her past entwines with his and trouble comes knocking. Will she let him do his job or will her stubbornness put them both in danger?
Chapter One
Any day that involved closing a case or didn’t involve opening a new one was a good day. By that rule, today had been a good day, but from the moment he’d opened his eyes with that long-familiar tension coiled tightly in his neck, nothing else about today had been particularly agreeable. It was just one of those days that had no reason to be bad beyond the inexplicable fog of depression. Pat was eager to go home, fix himself something for dinner, sit on his well-worn couch with a book, and wait for the day to be over.
He was just getting ready to head out the door when a request from his boss put his grandiose plans on hold.
“Pat, meet me in my office in a minute.”
Pat, his boss had called him, not O’Neil. Whatever Bill Granger wanted to discuss, it was personal. Anxiety curled more tightly in his gut. One subject had been flirting with his mind all day, and he had no desire to be dragged down that road right now. On a good day, a trip down that bleak alley was a painful experience, but on a day like today, such a trip would leave him exhausted and incapable of doing more than pulling the covers of his bed over himself with a prayer that sleep would relieve him from the bitter memories and empty stomach.
To pass the time, Pat studied the photographs in Bill’s office. In a log frame on the wall behind the desk was a poster-sized photograph of a two-story cabin illuminated by filtered rays of golden sunlight. The structure was nearly an A-frame, but the peak was not as steep as the sides. In other photographs, Pat recognized Bill’s incredible, dark-haired wife and his sister and brother-in-law. There was a new picture of a beautiful young woman with strawberry-blonde hair and striking, deep green eyes wearing a DayGlo orange vest and matching stocking hat. There was a rifle slung over her shoulder and a triumphant smile on her face as she knelt beside a magnificent four-point whitetail buck. She gripped the antlers with long, graceful fingers to hold the animal’s head up for the camera. Pat knew she was his boss’s niece and had seen her face smiling from a multitude of other photos, but he hadn’t yet met her.
Pat turned his attention from the pictures to the matching pair of four-tiered, wrought-iron filing shelves. He hadn’t seen them before. The craftsmanship was stunning and, along with the collection of rustic picture frames, did a lot to reduce the beige sterility of the room.
Bill’s boisterous laughter rumbled through the closed door from the workroom. With his back to the door, Pat smiled as his boss entered noisily.
“Afternoon, Pat,” was his greeting.
“Afternoon, Bill,” Pat replied as the older man sat down behind his desk.
“Sorry about the delay, but Garrity made another smart remark about my age, so I had to remind him of how thoroughly I trounced him at racquetball over the weekend.”
Pat chuckled. Bill was only fifty-three and still had the body he’d had during his enlistment in the navy. His rich brown hair was only starting to gray on the sides and in his short beard, and he looked anything but old.
“He’ll learn one of these days,” Pat remarked. He inclined his head toward the filing shelves. “Did your niece make those, too?”
“She did. She’s had a lot more time to build since she went back to Montana.” Bill paused to look at the photograph of his niece. “Her friend June took this picture and the one of my sister’s cabin on the wall behind me. So, Pat, you don’t have any plans tonight, do you?”
“No more than usual.”
“Good. Mary wanted me to invite you over for dinner. She said something about not bothering to come home tonight unless I brought you with me.”
Pat chuckled. “I suppose I shouldn’t keep you from your wife’s good cooking… not that you couldn’t stand to miss a meal or two.”
“Keep it up, smart ass.” Bill opened one of the drawers on the desk and took out a manila envelope. “See you at the house?”
Pat nodded and left.
As he drove to Bill’s house, he decided that an evening with Bill and Mary was the perfect medicine for his ailments. So long as that subject wasn’t broached. However, Mary was always careful to steer Bill clear of it, especially on days like this one. As much as he didn’t like talking about that weekend three years ago or the miserable months leading up to it, he knew he’d have been lost if Bill and Mary Granger hadn’t been there to pull him back from the proverbial cliff’s edge. As it was, he still wasn’t too many steps back from it.
“Pat, welcome!” Mary greeted him with a warm hug when he arrived at the Grangers’ modest house on the bluff overlooking the Indianola beach. “I’m so glad you came.”
So am I, he thought. “Can I help with anything?”
“No. Everything’s ready. We’ll just wait for Bill to get home. He called a few minutes ago to say he was leaving. Would you like anything to drink? Beer? Wine? Juice?”
“Water would be fine, Mary,” he replied.
He followed her through the house to the back deck. The handiwork of Bill’s niece was everywhere. More frames of weathered wood, like those on Bill’s desk at the sheriff’s department, hung on the walls, filled with family photos and more of his sister’s cabin in Montana. Walking through the Grangers’ home was a stroll through a Rocky Mountain dream. Mary dabbled in interior design as a hobby, and she’d put the rustic furniture and decorations to perfect uses. Her house could have graced the pages of a magazine devoted to Western living.
Pat would love to meet Bill’s niece someday. Bill had tried to introduce them in the past, but work, school, distance, or something else had always prevented it. Admiring her work, he got the sense that she was dedicated, driven, and artistic but also giving, loyal, and he suspected a little stubborn. Any woman who chose to make her living in a field that traditionally belonged to men was no soft lady to take what life handed her.
Pat followed Mary outside to the deck. Below him, the tide washed up the broad sand spit, reaching toward the rocks farther up the shore. The old ferry dock stretched far out into the glassy ripples beneath a cloudless sky and to his left, Seattle glinted in the distance, bathed in the rich golden light of the westering sun. It was a rare, perfect March day laden with the promise of the warmer months to come.
“Oh, I wanted to ask,” Mary said. “Do you know if Shannon got the birthday present we sent? It was supposed to be there yesterday, but I haven’t had a chance to call your mom to ask. I’m sorry it was late, but it took longer than we expected to ship.”
“It was waiting for her when she and Mom got home from Seattle. She loved it.”
“Did you change your mind and meet them?”
Pat shook his head. “No, but I talked to Mom yesterday. I still can’t believe my little sister is seventeen already.”
“Neither can I, but I can’t believe you’ll be twenty-nine in a few more months, either. It doesn’t seem like so long ago that your father was more excited about your birth than graduating from college.” Mary smiled fondly and patted his hand.
“Are you calling me old, Mary?”
She laughed. “Indeed not. You’re just a pup. I’m calling me old. Was Shannon disappointed you didn’t go?”
“No. I think she understands.”
Mary hesitated a moment, then said quietly, “I’m glad Bill convinced you to come work for the sheriff’s department. I think you’re happier here than you would have been if you’d stayed with the Seattle PD.”
“It’s certainly a much quieter job. Grandpa Antony says the Kitsap Peninsula fits me better, and he’s right.” Pat smiled fondly. “He was so proud that I’d seized the opportunity to become a detective and glad that I was happy.”
If Mary noticed how his voice hitched on the last word, she didn’t say anything. Instead, she pointed out the beach party below them. A group of teenagers had broken away from the bonfire and were now racing across the sand toward the water’s approaching edge, followed by a black lab, a border collie mix, and two smaller mutts. Their excited, carefree voices rang wonderfully in the still evening, and Pat’s depression slipped away.
Bill arrived a scant twenty minutes later to find his wife and Pat laughing uproariously at the antics of the teenagers and dogs.
“Glad to see your mood’s improved, Pat,” Bill remarked as he joined them.
“Your wife is a charming woman,” Pat said. “I can’t help myself.”
“She certainly is.”
Mary went back inside, leaving them to talk. Dread wormed its way back into the pit of Pat’s stomach. There was nothing overly prodding about Bill’s demeanor, but Pat suspected his enjoyable evening was about to head in a direction he didn’t want to go.
“Before you give me your usual, evasive responses, hear me out.”
“Do I have a choice?”
“Absolutely not.” Bill took a deep breath and plunged ahead. “You’re regressing. Over the last few months, I’ve watched you slide back down into the pit. I’d be willing to bet a large sum of money that you’ve had as many bad days as good in the last three months. That worries me, Pat. You’ve worked too hard to recover from Sara.”
And there it was.
“I want you to take a vacation.”
“I’m fine, Bill.”
“I’d be more convinced by the truth, and we both know that isn’t it.”
“C’mon, Bill. It’s been a long, wet, gray winter. Everyone’s been—”
The look Bill gave him—brows lifted, mouth flat—silenced him.
“There’s a trend here, Pat. Every time something reminds you of Sara, you have one of these days after. What did you see, hear, or do yesterday that reminded you of her?”
“My mother mentioned her. First time I’ve talked to my mother in two months, and she came up. She always does.”
“What do you mean, mentioned her?”
“Mom thought I should be warned, but I wish she hadn’t told me. Apparently, yesterday when she took Shannon shopping for prom in Seattle, they bumped into Sara at the mall. She asked how I’ve been.”
“That little….” Bill shook his head. “I’m sorry, Pat. I shouldn’t be dragging you through this tonight. It just makes me so angry. What you need is a good woman like my niece to show you Sara isn’t worth any of the pain she’s caused you.” He cleared his throat, and Pat sensed he was stalling. “My niece is the other reason I wanted you to come to dinner tonight.”
Pat sat back in his chair and gaped. The situation had suddenly gone from depressing to absurd. “Oh, no. They’ve finally gotten to you, haven’t they? Listen, I’m sure she’s a very nice girl, but…”
Bill’s laughter rang out in the still evening air. He kept laughing until his eyes glittered wetly. “You think that’s what I’m trying to do? You really know how to bring a man to tears, Pat.” He wiped beneath his eyes, still chuckling. “I’d bet my niece would be a much better match for you than any woman anyone in the department can find, and as much as I’d love to have you legally a part of my family as a nephew, I’m afraid my reason for mentioning her is more serious.”
Bill pulled the manila envelope out of his bag and handed it to Pat. On the cover was one of the more unique names he’d seen. He knew it was the name of Bill’s niece, but Bill had always pronounced it like the flower alyssum when he wasn’t calling her what sounded like “Allie.”
Inside the envelope was what appeared to be a criminal file but less official. It included a sheet of personal data with the last known address, phone number—both of which were months out of date—the physical descriptions of the man, and a photo. Pat narrowed his eyes. There was something about the hazel eyes that hooked his attention, a contained fervor shimmering beneath a placid surface. The man had the look of someone who had spent his entire life reaching for something unattainable and had not yet realized the hopelessness of his endeavor. The longish, messy medium-brown hair was further evidence, but beneath the mop, the man could be called good-looking. What a pity. Behind the photo was a copy of a restraining order. There were a few more pages, but Pat shifted his attention for the time being back to Bill.
“What is this?” he asked.
“The biggest favor I’ll ever ask of you. Aelissm called me two days ago. I told you that she moved back to Northstar but not why. Adam Winters—” Bill tapped the picture from the file. “—won’t leave her alone. We filed a restraining order against him, and he’s broken it, but he’s off the grid. I can’t find him to arrest him.”
“So you want me to find him.”
“Yes and no. There’s more to it. The night Aeli’s boyfriend, Brent Ellington died, he tried to rape her. Adam heard her scream, came to her rescue and started to strangle Brent. Aeli ran out. Brent died a few hours later of a burst aneurysm, possibly brought about by being throttled, but there’s no way to prove that. A neighbor saw Brent stumbling back to his apartment later that night. She thought he was drunk, and he was. By that time, Adam was long gone, so Brent was still alive after Adam left. The landlord found Brent’s body in the morning when he entered the apartment for a routine testing of the smoke alarms. It’s a mess.”
“Sounds like it.”
“Anyhow, a copy of the statements and records of Brent’s death are in the back there, along with the statements Aeli gave to get the restraining order and what she dictated to me over the phone the day before yesterday.” Bill paused and took a deep breath. “Adam has had a thing for her since they met a couple years ago. At first, she was flattered, and I thought he would have been a better match for her. Until this mess happened, I liked him. I still want to like him because I think he’s a good man beneath it all, but something snapped that night. He’s become obsessed with her.”
“Obsessed how?”
“Calling her, writing her letters, and proclaiming his love for her. A couple times, she arrived home to find him sitting on her couch.”
“Sounds like a bit of a creep.”
“I hate to say it, but yes. She changed her number a couple times, and when she decided she had no desire to finish her master’s degree in Seattle, she moved in with her parents here in Indianola for a few months, but he didn’t get the message.”
“And now she’s in Northstar. How did that come about?”
“Her grandparents called about six months ago and asked if she was interested in taking over operations of their inn. Her grandmother also works at the local post office, and the inn is getting to be too much work. She said yes, and the move has been good for her because she enjoys the work at the inn and the blacksmithing class she teaches one night a week at the college in Devyn, and she’s been able to unwind. Until Adam called her two nights ago.”
“So, how do I fit in to all this?”
“This is your vacation. I want you to go to Montana, take a couple months to relax and clear your head. And, while you’re at it, find anything you can about Adam Winters and protect my niece if the need arises.”
Pat considered Bill’s request, then laughed. “Good one, Bill. You almost had me, what with the file and the story.”
Bill’s eyes hardened. “I wish to God this was a joke. There isn’t much Aeli can’t do, but when she told me Adam had called again, she was in tears. I don’t trust anyone else to do this, Pat, and even if I did, I’m not kidding about wanting you to take a break. You need to get away for a while, take a step back, and forget about Sara.”
“It’s not that simple, Bill.”
“I understand that. I also know that working yourself half to death hasn’t done you a bit of good. I’m hoping a good, long vacation away from everything that reminds you of her will succeed where distraction has failed.”
“I suppose you have it all figured out,” Pat said sharply. He winced. He hadn’t meant that to come out so harshly.
“You’ll stay with Aelissm, of course. She could probably use a little extra help at the Bedspread, and it would give you something to do.” Bill held Pat’s gaze for a moment. “I love you both. I hate to see either of you struggling.”
“How long do you expect me to stay there?”
“As long as necessary, on both counts, even if I have to pay you out of my own pocket.”
Pat sat back in his chair, stunned. This was one hell of a favor, and he wasn’t sure if he was up to the challenge. He glanced at Bill, saw the silent plea in the older man’s gaze, and considered it. He very briefly thought about turning Bill down, but his boss—his friend—had done a lot for him over the years.
“Do you need a day to think about it?”
Pat shook his head. “I’ll do it. And I’m sure you’re right that I should get away for a while. Maybe it will help.”
Bill scribbled some notes on a piece of paper and stuffed it in the file. “All right, then. It’s all here. We’ve notified the local law enforcement about the restraining order, so if you do find Adam, he can be dealt with legally. Aaron Hammond lives in the valley and is a sheriff’s deputy, so if you need any help, call him. I’ve included his contact information in the file as well as all the numbers for the Devyn Police Department and the county sheriff’s office. I really hope you won’t need any of it. I keep hoping Adam will come to his senses and just leave Aelissm alone.”
Mary’s return with dinner brought an end to their head-spinning conversation. They talked about other things while they ate, but as Pat listened and talked and laughed with his friends, his thoughts were focused on what he might be facing and how he could best tackle the task. It was… refreshing.
“I really appreciate this, Pat,” Bill said as Pat was leaving. “You have no idea what peace of mind I’ll have knowing you’re there with Aeli.”
Pat nodded and tucked the file under his arm. He leaned down to embrace Mary and thank her for dinner. As he drove away, he began to wonder what he’d gotten himself into. When he got home, he picked up his road atlas and glanced at the notes Bill had scribbled as he studied the map of Montana. There it was, a tiny dot in the southwest corner of the state. The nearest town of any size was Devyn to the east with a population that nearly matched its elevation of just over five thousand feet. Beyond that, the closest city was Butte, many miles more to the north. His eyes traveled back to the little dot that would be his home for the next little while.
“Northstar, here I come,” he sighed. Then he chuckled as he recalled the picture of Bill’s niece with her buck. “Looks like someday is just around the corner. It’ll be nice to finally meet you, Aelissm Davis.”
“Uncle Bill, I didn’t want you to send me a protector. That’s the last thing I need.”
“Then you shouldn’t have called me.”
“You’re wasting his time.” Aeli glanced at her friend, rolled her eyes, and sighed. “When I called you the other night, I only wanted to let you know Adam had called me again. That’s all.”
“You’re not fooling anyone, Aelissm, except maybe yourself.”
“I don’t know how Adam got the phone number here, but he can’t find me. Hell, Unk, you couldn’t find this place last summer, and you’ve been here before.”
“You thought Adam wouldn’t find you when you moved to your parents’ house, too, remember?”
“Yes, but—”
“Humor me, Aelissm.”
“I don’t need someone to watch over me like I’m a child.”
“I know you can take care of yourself, Aeli darling, but Adam is not the same man he used to be.” Her uncle sighed, and she pictured him sitting in his recliner at home, massaging his temples. “I chose Pat because I trust him and because I know he can protect you. Knowing he’s there will ease my old heart.”
“Old? Ha!”
“I’m serious.”
“I know you are. All right, fine. It might be nice to have a man around.”
Bill laughed. “I know that tone. You’re a devil, you know that?”
“Yep. Anything else?”
“Yes, actually. Make sure Pat relaxes while he’s there.”
“Will he be here on vacation or to protect me, Unk? Because that seems a little contradictory.”
“Both. He went through a bad break up a few years ago and hasn’t given himself the chance to get past it, so I’m using one stone to kill two birds.”
“A bad break up, huh? You’re not playing matchmaker again, are you?”
“No, but it certainly wouldn’t break my heart if the two of you got together.”
“Uh-huh.”
“Just make sure he gets some rest while he’s there, will you?”
“I’ll see what I can do. Well, I should probably get off this thing. I don’t want to run up June’s phone bill.”
“All right. Love you, Aeli Girl.”
“Love you, too, Unk. G’night.”
She set the cordless phone back in its cradle and glanced at her friend, who sat on the couch with her scrawny, twelve-year-old foster son, Luke, curled up beside her. It amazed Aelissm how much their lives had changed in the last year. And yet, here they were, together in Northstar again. Suddenly, she was very grateful her grandparents had asked her to start taking over management of the Bedspread Inn because, until she’d returned to Northstar six months ago, she hadn’t realized just how much she’d needed to come here. The utter peacefulness of the remote valley was such a welcome relief to the constant pulse of Seattle. Besides, this was home.
She flopped on June’s matching love seat and exhaled.
“I take it Uncle Bill is sending one of his detectives over?” June asked.
“Yeah. Patrick O’Neil.”
“O’Neil? As in…?”
“The son of Uncle Bill and Aunt Mary’s friends from college, yes.”
“Why do I get the feeling Uncle Bill is meddling again?”
“Because he probably is. You know Unk.”
June glanced at Luke and smiled fondly. “Yes, I do. When’s your bodyguard supposed to get here?”
“Most likely in the next couple days. I don’t need someone to protect me.”
“Maybe you do.”
June’s tendency for being right was sometimes very aggravating, Aeli mused, but it was also nice to be slapped with the truth now and again. She’d thought that coming out here, to Northstar, would end her problems with Adam, and for a pleasant six months, it had. Then, two days ago, he’d called her parents’ cabin. She’d held the phone against her ear with a trembling hand, frightened beyond words at the sound of his voice. Just leave me alone, she’d finally told him. Then she’d hung up. Running away never solved the problem, she thought, only postponed it.
“It’s almost like old times, isn’t it?” June asked. “Back in college when we used to sit up in your cabin, reading and snacking on Spaghetti-O’s while it snowed.”
Aelissm smiled, and some of the tension she hadn’t realized was binding her shoulders slipped away. “Those were good times.”
“Grandma Davis told me about you singing Christmas carols at the top of your lungs,” Luke said.
“While we were out chopping wood,” Aeli remarked. She tried not to look surprised that he’d spoken, but the boy was usually so quiet that it was hard not to. “I guess we were making a bit of a racket.”
“I like it up here,” the boy said.
June pulled her fingers through the boy’s blond hair. Aelissm wondered, as she often did, what had possessed June to agree to Uncle Bill’s plea that she take him. Luke was a good kid—very quiet, well behaved, and disturbingly tidy—but June wasn’t even twenty-five yet. A little voice in the back of Aeli’s mind retorted rather coldly, What possessed you to go out with Brent? It wasn’t a question she was willing to ponder. Chalk it up to a disastrous lack of judgment, she told herself, and leave it at that.
“I should have known Unk would do something like this,” Aelissm muttered. “Poor Deputy O’Neil is in for a shock when he sees where I live. I swear, if he complains about the lack of creature comforts, I’ll strip him down to his birthday suit and leave him out in the snow.”
“Aeli, it’s really not nice to judge people before you’ve met them,” June said. When Aeli opened her mouth to object, her friend held a finger up for silence. “But if he complains, I’ll help.”
“You’ve got a deal. Now, I don’t know about you, but watching a movie sounds dull. How about we go take a dip in the hot springs?”
“Sounds like a plan to me. Luke, run upstairs and get your swim trunks.”
The boy nodded and leapt off the couch. He raced across the living room, skidded around the snack bar and counter that divided the kitchen from the living room, and bounded up the spiral stairs. Aeli shook her head and chuckled. “He’s a cute little monkey, I’ll give him that.”
“Yes, he is. You know, Aeli, I’ve been thinking.”
“That’s dangerous.”
June frowned at her but continued. “I want to adopt him.”
The flood of maternal warmth surprised Aeli, but June’s admission didn’t. She and Luke had built an incredible bond in just eight months, so unbelievably like that of a mother and her child despite the circumstances. It wasn’t just the golden hair and blue eyes. Luke looked like her son and had already shown a lot of the same characteristics, right down to June’s quirky sense of humor and uncanny intuition.
Aelissm shook off the tingle of envy. What had happened to them, to their promise that neither of them would ever have kids until they were ready or be dependent on a man? Life happened, Aeli thought. Yes, they were still young, and though she often scorned girls her age who already had children, she found it harder and harder to deny that she envied the wives and the mothers. When she’d told Uncle Bill that it would be nice to have a man around, she hadn’t been entirely joking.
“Hey, June, why don’t you call Aaron and Henry? They always like hanging out with us.”
“Yeah, because they still have the naïve hope that we might yet go out with them.”
“It’s not naïve. It could happen.”
“Please, Aelissm. If I were to go for one of the Hammond boys, it would have been Nick, but I don’t date married men.”
“And sweet Beth is about to pop,” Aeli muttered. “Yeah. Henry’s still too much of a partier, and Aaron…. Well, he’s just not my type.”
“Do you even have a type?”
“Not yet. Get your damned suit, and I’ll call them. With Luke around, they won’t dare try anything scandalous.”
She picked up the phone she’d abandoned moments ago and June’s Northstar Directory. With her thumb hovering over the buttons of the cordless handset, she stared at her own name, then at her phone number. Outside of the valley and the directory, only her parents, Uncle Bill, her father’s brother in Ohio, and June’s mother and stepfather knew the cabin number. Anyone else wishing to contact her were given her grandparents’ number. They hadn’t mentioned any suspicious phone calls before they’d left for Ohio two weeks ago. What if Adam had somehow gotten hold of the directory? Panic raged like a blizzard through her veins. The only way he could have gotten one was from someone who lived in Northstar. What if he was in the valley right now, looking for her?
Stubbornly, Aelissm straightened her spine and refused to give in to her wild thoughts. This valley was a very close community, and anyone out of place quickly became the subject of the grapevine. If Adam was here, she would have heard about it. Taking a slow, deep breath and letting it out even more slowly, Aelissm reasoned that she was just jittery from his phone call the other night. He’d gotten the number from someone else. That had to be it. After all, he knew all of her friends in Washington, and breaking and entering didn’t faze him in the least.
“Aeli, are you all right?” June asked, coming down the stairs. “You’re shaking.”
“I’m all right now. I just had a scare. I thought maybe Adam had somehow gotten hold of one of these,” she replied, holding up the directory. “But I’m sure he must’ve found it a while ago. Maybe he picked it up from my apartment in Seattle or something.”
“Are you sure you’re all right?”
She nodded, then dialed Aaron Hammond. He wasn’t home, and his twin brother Henry wasn’t, either. Then she remembered. It was their mother’s birthday today, so they were all probably down at the main house celebrating.
“That’s okay. I didn’t really want their company, anyhow.”
June wrapped her arms around Aelissm. Aeli drew a ragged breath and assured her friend that she would be all right.
“Maybe Uncle Bill sending Mr. O’Neil will help,” Luke said, joining them in the living room. “You know, maybe he’ll be able to chase Adam away.”
Aeli smiled and draped an arm around his narrow shoulders and around June’s. “Let’s go take a dip, shall we? Just the three of us. You don’t mind two such gorgeous ladies as June and me hanging on your arms, do you Luke?”
He grinned. “I’ll be the envy of the valley.”
June reached over and ruffled his hair affectionately. She glanced at Aeli and asked, “So, what do you think?”
After nineteen years of friendship, she didn’t have to ask what June was talking about. Aeli considered what June had said, about adopting Luke, and gazed at the boy. In just the eight short months he’d been here, he’d already come a long way. She glanced at June and nodded. “I think you should.”
They climbed in June’s pickup and drove up to Aeli’s cabin so she could grab her swimsuit. When she opened the door to her cabin—which she rarely ever locked unless she was going to be out of the valley—she saw that there were two messages on her answering machine. She hit the play button. The first was from Bill, letting her know that Pat O’Neil was leaving early in the morning with plans to be in Northstar tomorrow evening. He reminded her to keep detailed notes of Adam’s calls. He also recommended that she sign up for caller ID. The moment the second message started playing, Aelissm froze.
“What is your problem, Aelissm? You didn’t have to talk to me like that the other night. I didn’t mean for any of this to happen, and I didn’t want Brent to die, but you don’t care about that. You think I’m a monster now, but you’re too much of a bitch to remember that he tried to hurt you, that I only hurt him to save you. Why can’t you see how much I love you?”
The message ended, and Aeli stared at the machine. With that rough, desperate voice, he barely sounded like the Adam she knew. Shuddering, she picked up the note pad beside the phone and jotted down the time of the message, the date, and exactly what he’d said. Then she erased the messages, grabbed her swimsuit and a towel, and trotted back out to June’s truck, locking the door behind her.
“He called again,” she told her friend as they drove down the mountain.
“Oh? What did he have to say?”
“More or less the same things he always says.”
Twenty minutes later, Aelissm slid into the soothing embrace of hot water in the Ramshorn’s larger pool. She and June and Luke were the only people in the pools, and she was grateful for the solitude. With a sigh, she settled on the steps, submerged in blissfully warm water up to her neck. She tilted her head back and stared skyward. Steam rose in drifting clouds beneath the blue-white light of the lamps around the pools, randomly obscuring and revealing the glittering stars. The night was crisp and fresh with all her favorite scents of home—pine, sagebrush, and snow. There were still almost six inches of the latter in places on the boardwalk around the pools, and Aelissm grabbed a handful and held it under water, amused by how it tickled as it quickly melted.
June joined her on the stairs and they watched Luke swim around for a while, silent.
What’s happened to me? Aelissm wondered. She’d never run from anything in her life until that night. Yet, here she was, hiding in a remote valley in Montana, terrified that Adam would find her. She could argue that she’d come home to Northstar to help her grandparents, but the truth was that she probably wouldn’t have said yes to them if Adam wasn’t breathing down her neck. She probably would have muscled her way through the last of her master’s classes and continued on with her plan to teach at the college level. At least I’m sort of still on that path, she thought. But one class isn’t a full-time position, and I still have those classes to finish. When am I going to do that?
“I’m scared, June, and I don’t know what I’m going to do,” she admitted. “I’m staring into a blank future.”
Her friend looked at her with concern etched in her face. “Then maybe it really is good Bill is sending Pat. Having a big, strong man around might give you peace of mind or, if nothing else, a distraction.”
“Maybe.”
June smiled and returned her attention to her foster son. The boy was down at the deep end, hanging off the side to catch his breath.
“Let’s fling him,” Aeli said. “Hey! Luke! C’mere!”
Obediently, Luke swam back to the shallow end. June and Aelissm faced each other with their hands locked together underwater. The boy grinned and put his feet in the cradle, and they launched his small body skyward. He went in head first, then resurfaced, laughing.
Aelissm enjoyed herself, and slowly, the anxiety eased out of her. Everything would be all right. She had her best friend close by, good clean mountain air in her lungs, and two good jobs. Except for Brent’s death and Adam’s obsession with her, life was pretty good. She helped June launch Luke again and decided things could be a lot worse and would someday get better. Look at Luke. Eight months ago, after his father had been killed, Luke had been sickly, pale, and skittish, and now he was healthy and happy.
“He’s still skinny, though,” Aelissm murmured.
“Not because he doesn’t eat,” June remarked, watching the boy swim. “He’s tiny now, but I’ll bet he’s going to be tall.” She turned her eyes on her friend. “But that’s not what you were thinking.”
“No, I was just thinking that I’m glad I came back to Northstar. If I have to face Adam, I’d rather do it here.”
* * * * *