Dear Reader,
Thanks for joining Hart & Drake in their adventures! If you are new to them, their story begins in NERVES OF STEEL, SLEIGHT OF HAND, FACE TO FACE, and their holiday wedding takes place in EYE OF THE STORM.
I hope you enjoy these two wounded souls as they reclaim their lives and learn to love again. Want news of my next book? Sign up for my Thrillers with Heart newsletter HERE
Can two lost souls save each other? Meet Hart & Drake:
THE SECURITY GUARD was surprised to see her there. All alone.
He remembered checking her into the Fairstone Museum. She had arrived early, before the rush of limos and Town Cars, accompanied by the tall guy in the off-white dinner jacket and black tie—he remembered because this crowd was strictly into monkey suits. The Artist, the guard thought. They were the only ones who ever arrived early.
At least Mr. Dinner Jacket seemed to have some class. At the last opening, the Artist had arrived in surfer shorts, sporting roach clips and a heroin spoon as jewelry. The crowd loved that, talked all night about his “free spirit” and unwillingness to be “caged by conformity.” The guard rolled his eyes at the memory. What a crock. The guy was merely stoned out of his gourd. From the looks of his so-called art, piles of sand with twigs and dog crap stuck in them, drugs were his main source of inspiration as well.
The guard fidgeted, one hand smoothing his hair over the bald spot on top of his head. He looked out into the glass-walled atrium—itself a piece of art with its never-ending springtime of colorful blooms, songbirds, and butterflies that even now, three days before Christmas, kept the Pittsburgh winter at bay. Why was she out there all alone? Did she and Mr. Dinner Jacket have a fight? Maybe he should see if she needed anything.
She sat, knees hugged to her chest, the long, purple dress flowing away from her body in streams of color, and curled her bare feet into the luscious carpet of grass. Eggplant, the guard thought, that’s what his wife would call the color of her dress. It didn’t look like the color of a vegetable, not to him. It reminded him of those ancient sailors, the Phoenicians; the Discovery Channel had just done a special on them; he’d liked the way their ships seemed to fly over the water. They had a special purple dye reserved for royalty—that’s what color her dress was.
He glanced at his watch. It was getting late, everyone was here already. Should he tell her? Maybe she didn’t want to go inside and face the guy? He could call her a cab, help her get back home.
The guard sighed and stopped his futile fantasies. Seven years of watching couples drift in and out of the gallery, seeing the effect beautiful and powerful art had on them, he recognized true emotion when he saw it.
There was no fight, no reason for him to rescue her. He’d seen the look she’d given her escort, the way the man’s hand never strayed far from her body—not out of possessiveness, but compelled by tender regard.
She watched the antics of a hummingbird attracted to the day lilies. Then she smiled. His breath caught. This was no damsel in distress, but if she had been, he would have gladly slain a dragon or two for a chance to see that smile. It wasn’t that she was beautiful; her skin was too pale, hair unruly like a child’s, eyes a touch too wide and deeply set to be comforting. And her smile was a little cock-eyed, lopsided even.
But there was just something about her. The same something that most of these society women paid their surgeons and cosmetologists dearly for but never achieved. He watched her rise and walk barefoot across the grass toward him. Her dress was sleeveless, falling in drapes down her chest and much lower in the back. He slid off his stool and moved to open the heavy glass door for her as she crossed back into the lobby.
“Thank you.”
She wasn’t going to tip him for holding the door for her. But he didn’t mind. She strode past, her deep purple dress swishing against bare skin. No, he didn’t mind at all. He knew instinctively she wasn’t like the other women who attended these galas, women who brushed their bodies and hands against him as they waited for husbands to return with the car. Women who acted as if their five-dollar tips had bought and paid for him, who didn’t recognize that not everyone had a price.
He watched her bend forward, set black leather heels into place on the gold marble floor, and he sucked in his breath as the folds of her dress shifted over her back, tantalizing him with possibilities.
She rose in one fluid motion and curled her toes before stepping into the shoes. His sigh resonated with hers, echoing against the glass walls of the lobby. He admired the view as she continued down the hall, heels clicking against the marble floor.
She was graceful, but not rigid like a dancer, he thought, hypnotized by the fabric swinging back and forth at her lower back. When he was young, he’d seen a group of Chinese acrobats. One of the set pieces had been two men dueling with sharp swords, one in each hand. The four blades moved faster and faster until they became a blur dancing around the stage. The only thing that prevented bloodshed had been the acrobats’ grace, balance, and supreme confidence.
She disappeared into the main gallery and the guard sighed once more, longing for something he’d never possessed in the first place. He gave thanks to God for the mysteries that were women.
His finger tapped the guest list; it was easy to find her name, she and her escort had been the first to arrive. Hart, Cassandra Hart.
The guard moved back to his desk. He had the sudden urge to talk to his wife, to hear the voice that had kept him company for the past eleven years.