Page 24 of Colton's Killer Pursuit
; She looked up at Clarke. âThatâs the first time Iâve fully realized that,â she told him. âI was like a possession. Not a real person to him...â
And all the while, sheâd been committed to making their vows matter, to being true and loyal, to making the marriage work, rather than walking out on it when times got tough.
âWhat an idiot I was.â
âNo!â His shoulders, even bigger in the confined space due to the heavy coat he wore, seemed to loom so large. The carâs heater was on, but the late afternoon chill still filled the air. âDonât judge yourself by his failings,â he told her.
âI chose him.â
âYou chose what he presented himself to be. The lies are on him.â
Sheâd buy that, except... âHow do I know, how does anyone ever know, whatâs really inside someone elseâs head?â she asked him. âI fell for Fritzâs lies. Whatâs to say I wouldnât fall for another guy like that? I should have been able to sense that something was off...â
âExcept that it probably wasnât off at first. Or maybe wasnât ever all the way off. Iâm guessing there was a part of him that was the man you saw, the man you loved. Part of him who wanted to be that man.â
âMaybe.â Or maybe Clarke was just being kind. âBut the cheating... They say a woman knows. I didnât.â
âSometimes we only see what we expect to see.â
She frowned. âYou think I didnât want to know he was cheating, so I subconsciously turned a blind eye to it, mentally as well as physically?â
âIâm saying that you believed him to be one thing and so that was what you saw. You had faith in your husband, Everleigh. Thatâs a good thing.â
So why didnât it feel good? Why did it leave her alone at thirty-eight with no family of her own, no kids, no career and feeling like a fool...and having to hide out in a gorgeous manâs luxury condominium and pretend he was her boyfriend, just to try to save her life?
Ping! A sound came from just behind her, down by the seat. Jerking with a force that slammed her hand into the door handle, she ducked just as Clarke said âGet down!â with enough urgency to fill her with fear.
The car sped up so fast the force sent her backward into the seat. Then he swerved, and her shoulder hit the console beside her. She hid, fear consuming her, and waited for Clarke to give the all clear.
âItâs safe now,â he said thirty seconds later. She sat up, glancing at the inside of the secure parking garage underneath his condominium building.
âWhat was that?â she asked, but she knew, her heart beating so loud she could count the beats.
âSounded like a gunshot to me,â he said, looking in the rearview mirror, and off to both sides of them as he pulled out his phone. They were not only underground, but the entry was secured by a guard in a booth, with car admittance only possible with a windshield transmitter that opened the gate. There were security cameras. Theyâd be checked.
And a little while later, a police officer, standing outside her car door, confirmed that a bullet had hit Clarkeâs vehicle just behind and below the window where Everleighâs head had been.
Gathering her things, she got out of the SUV, trying not to notice Clarkeâs solid warmth beside her, or his body practically wrapping around hers as he guided her toward the very private, very quiet elevator up to his home.
She was shaking. Needing a feel-good to get her out of the hell her life had become. And still trying not to remember that she was intrigued by her protector.
That heâd been breathing heavy after heâd kissed her...
Because she was completely serious about not letting him touch her again in that way. About not responding to him. No matter how attractive she might find him.
Or how safe he made her feel.
Chapter 8
The night was easier to get through than heâd supposed. Everleigh made the enchiladas, as sheâd said sheâd do, while he worked in his office, getting reports from officers in the field around Fritz Emersonâs health spa, and from his family at police headquarters, too. So far, no one was talking about any woman Fritz might have been sleeping with. And thereâd been no prints, other than Everleighâs and Fritzâs, found in the Emerson home. Whoever had broken into Everleighâs home had worn gloves. Thereâd been no sign of a shooter, or any shell casings, in the block between the latest attempt on Everleighâs life and his home, either.
He hadnât noticed any vehicles following them. Or any suspicious behavior. The security cameras hadnât caught anything and the police investigation didnât turn up anything, either.
Which meant that whoever was after Everleigh was either damn lucky, or someone who fit so completely into the world around them that Clarke and Everleigh could be looking straight at the criminal and not seeing them acting oddly in any way.
That strengthened his theory that the perp might be one of Fritzâs secret past mistresses, someone who didnât stand out in any way. Nothing else made sense. The Emersons hadnât been in any substantial debt. Thereâd been no gambling or failed business ventures, other than the health club that was no longer supporting itself but had been solely owned by Fritz.