Conard County--Christmas Bodyguard
“Allie? There are a million reasons I shouldn’t touch you.”
“Yeah,” she said a bit sharply. “Naturally. Hale Scribner, the man who won’t let anyone close. God forbid a mere woman should penetrate your armor.”
“Hell, you’re not a mere woman. I’ve told you things I’ve never told anyone else.”
“So. Just save your precious isolation and go away.”
Quite to the contrary, he leaned over her, caught her chin gently in his hand and turned her face upward so he could kiss her. No light brushing, but a strong, determined kiss.
“Allie,” he breathed. “I want you. I want all your fire, all your stubbornness, all your fear and bravery. You take my breath away.”
She wanted a snappy comeback, but it wasn’t there. Instead, her arm, as if it had a mind of its own, reached up to wrap around his powerful shoulders.
“Are you sure?” he asked against her lips, his breath a warm whisper.
“Yes.” A quiet reply.
“Then I’d better get rid of this holster.”
CONARD COUNTY: CHRISTMAS BODYGUARD
New York Times Bestselling Author
Rachel Lee
Rachel Lee was hooked on writing by the age of twelve and practiced her craft as she moved from place to place all over the United States. This New York Times bestselling author now resides in Florida and has the joy of writing full-time.
Books by Rachel Lee
Harlequin Intrigue
Conard County: The Next Generation
Cornered in Conard County
Missing in Conard County
Murdered in Conard County
Conard County Justice
Conard County: Hard Proof
Conard County: Traces of Murder
Conard County: Christmas Bodyguard
Harlequin Romantic Suspense
Conard County: The Next Generation
Undercover Hunter
Playing with Fire
Conard County Witness
A Secret in Conard County
A Conard County Spy
Conard County Marine
Undercover in Conard County
Conard County Revenge
Conard County Watch
Stalked in Conard County
Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com.
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Allie Burton—Accountant on the run from a tycoon with multinational connections. He has threatened her.
Hale Scribner—Allie’s bodyguard, who owns a private security company. Military background.
Detective Max Roles—Allie’s adopted uncle, who is investigating the tycoon and tells Allie to hire Hale and go on the run.
Jasper Ellis—The tycoon who lets no one get in his way and makes troublesome people “disappear.”
Stu—Hale Scribner’s chief of intelligence.
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Epilogue
Excerpt from Texas Abduction by Barb Han
Chapter One
“You need a bodyguard.”
Allie Burton’s jaw dropped as soon as her dad’s old friend, Detective Max Roles, spoke the words.
It took a few beats for Allie to reply. “Oh, come on, Max. That’s over the top. I’m sure Mr. Ellis was talking about all his international businesses, about protecting his companies. He said he’d put the auditing firm on it.”
Max was getting up in years. His jowls made him look like a bloodhound with a bald head. Allie had known him all her life, thanks to his friendship with her father, who had died years ago. She trusted him, but this?
“What were his exact words, Allie?”
She pulled them up from recent memory. She’d mentioned it lightly to Max, but he wasn’t taking it lightly.
“He said, exactly, that I shouldn’t tell anyone anything about what I’d found in the books.”
Max shook his head. “And the rest?”
She shrugged. “He said, and I quote, Bad things can happen. Well, of course they could. He’s a tycoon with companies all over the world. Any irregularity in the books could cause big problems.”
“Right,” Max said. He sipped on his perpetual coffee. “I want you to think about that. Bad things can happen.”
“Well...”
“Don’t ‘well’ me. Just listen.”
Allie frowned. “I guess you’re one of the people I shouldn’t have told about this. I thought you’d laugh and wouldn’t tell anyone.”
“I won’t tell anyone except the bodyguard you’re going to hire.”
“Damn, Max. How am I supposed to afford that anyway?”
Max shook his head again. “Your grandfather left you a pile, didn’t he?”
Allie rolled her eyes. “And I’m supposed to waste it on this?”
“It’s not wasted if it saves your life,” Max said sharply. “Now will you just listen, or are you going to be like my damn dog who only listens when he feels like it?”
Allie could have smirked at the thought of Max’s stubborn mastiff, a dog bigger than Max, but she resisted the urge. Folding her hands primly in her lap, she gave in. “I’m listening.”
“About damn time.” Max reached for his cigarettes, a habit Allie often tried to get him to break. She pointedly waved smoke away.
“Cut it out,” he said mildly. “You won’t get cancer from half an hour.”
She sighed. “Just tell me what you think I need to know.”
“Gladly. Or unhappily. You’ve been on the inside of Jasper Ellis’s business. You know he’s like an octopus with a whole lot of tentacles.”
“He’s successful. So what?”
Max leaned forward. “I have nothing against the man’s success. One of the things I can tell you is we’ve been investigating him for years, and we’ve never found a thing we could hang on him. He’s good at covering evidence. Hell, he’s better than good. The government could take lessons from him. Not that his methods would be legal.”
“Investigating him for what?”
Max blew a cloud. “For the unexplained disappearances and supposed suicides of a number of his employees.”
Allie felt a chill run down her spine. She could tell that Max wasn’t joking. Her own dismissal of the situation began to feel naïve. “You’re kidding,” she murmured.
“I wish I was. Here’s the thing. At first it could be dismissed. But then the numbers really caught our attention and we started looking into it. Nothing traces directly back to Ellis except he’s at the top of the pyramid. Or the head on the octopus, to round out my original analogy. You may remember I fought against you going to work for him.”
Allie did. Max had strenuously argued with her, something he never did. He was doing it right now. That worried her as much as what he was saying because Max believed it.
He was not a man given to conspiracy theories. A hard-nosed detective, he stuck to the facts. He seemed to have some facts right now.
“Allie, the cops can’t protect you. We wouldn’t have justificat
ion since his threat was so indirect. But you tweaked the tiger’s tail, evidently with something that he needs to hide. Jasper Ellis is not a man to cross.”
Allie’s voice was growing thin. “I only told him so he could fix it. So there’d be no trouble for him or his businesses.”
“Does he care? You have knowledge that could harm him. He takes care of those threats. Somehow.”
Forgetting the perfect posture her aunt had drilled into her, Allie slumped back in the chair. “Really, Max?”
“Really. So I’m going to call that bodyguard. I’ve known him for years since he was still in the Marines. I trust him with your life. And you’re not leaving my house before he gets here.”
“God, Max!”
“Just go make yourself a cup of whatever. Or have some orange juice. But you are not going anywhere.”
He punctuated those words like bullet shots. Truly shaken, Allie rose to get that orange juice. Could this possibly be true? But she trusted Max. Completely. He’d been like an uncle to her for most of her life. If Max said it, it was true.
As she passed through the short hallway, she saw her reflection in the full-length mirror. Max’s wife had placed it there years ago, before she had passed from a stray gunshot.
Allie paused, staring at her reflection, wondering who that woman in there was. She felt so changed that she shouldn’t look the same. Neat dark blue business slack suit, a blue striped button-down shirt, collar open. Her ash-blond hair in a fluffed loose short cut because she didn’t feel like fussing with it. A trim every couple of weeks solved that problem.
A bodyguard? The thought sent a tendril of ice creeping along her spine. Seriously?
Before she continued along the hall, Max called to her. “Get that frozen key lime pie out, will you? Never met anybody who didn’t like it. Hale will be here in about an hour and it takes that long to thaw.”
The juxtaposition of a threat and a key lime pie seemed absurd. Except she couldn’t smile at it or laugh about it. Her face had grown as frozen as her spine. “Sure,” she called back, glad that her voice didn’t shake while everything inside her felt as if an earthquake had begun.
She pulled the pie from its box and left it covered on the counter to thaw. Then, deciding she couldn’t possibly swallow orange juice, she returned to the small living room with empty hands.
She asked, “You really think I’m in danger?” The war inside her still had not quit.
“Jasper Ellis is not a man I’d want to screw with.”
“But if I don’t tell anyone...”
Max repeated himself slowly, firmly. “You have dangerous knowledge. He only wants you to keep your mouth shut until he can deal with you.”
Allie’s world was tilting off its axis. She vaguely wondered if life would ever appear the same again. If life would ever be the same again. A whole new reality bore down on her and she hated it.
Her wonderful Max was about to entertain a bodyguard with pie. Seriously?
“For heaven’s sake, Max...” For heaven’s sake what? Fix my world for me?
“I know,” he said. “It’s a shock. Kinda like the first murder scene a cop goes to. Nothing’s ever the same again.”
Max fell silent, lighting another cigarette. This time Allie didn’t make a show of waving away the smoke. What harm could it do her if her life was truly threatened?
“God,” she muttered. “I can’t believe this.” But she did. Max’s words had pierced her like an arrow. An internal ache began, twisting her stomach painfully.
“Just listen to Hale,” Max said presently. “He’s tuned in. He’ll know.”
Allie could only stare at him. Belief still warred with the conviction that this was impossible. “Mr. Ellis could fix the problem I found.”
“He could. But consider that the man has been under constant IRS audit and they still haven’t nailed him. You might well have found the irregularity that could blow the whole thing open.”
She hadn’t considered that. She could scarcely imagine the back taxes and penalties that might ensue. It would damage the share price, costing him additional wealth. Or worse.
“God,” she whispered again.
Max let her ruminate in silence.
She could just get up and walk out of here now. Continue at work tomorrow as if nothing had happened. Except it had. Max was right about that.
The protection guy arrived a bit earlier than projected. When Max opened the door, the first thing Allie noticed was his height. Wearing a loose windbreaker and jeans, he didn’t appear muscular, but that probably wasn’t necessary for what he did.
At least he didn’t appear muscular until he greeted Max, stepped inside and twisted to look at Allie. As the windbreaker moved, it outlined wide shoulders and powerful arms. In shape.
First impressions and all that. Okay, he was intimidating and trying to conceal it. His face was as impassive as rock, some of it hidden behind a scraggly beard. His hair was long and shaggy, nearly inky. Eye color indeterminate in the inside lighting although it, too, appeared dark. In all, not very reputable in appearance.
Max made the introductions. “Alicia Burton, Hale Scribner. Take a seat, Hale. Allie’s run into a problem with Jasper Ellis.”
Both of Hale’s eyebrows lifted as he settled onto an edge of the couch, the only place remaining with Max in his favorite, battered recliner. He splayed his denim-clad legs and rested his elbows on them. Allie already perched on a gooseneck chair. All the upholstery was dark in color. It probably concealed a lot of spills from over the years.
Hale spoke, his voice deep and carrying something like darkness. “Jasper Ellis, huh? How much trouble?”
Max replied. “He said bad things can happen.”
Now the great stone face darkened. “Not good.”
“Which is what I keep trying to get Allie to believe. I can understand why she’s finding it so difficult.”
Hale nodded, a sharp movement of his head. “Jasper Ellis is bad news. Very bad news.”
The chill dripped down Allie’s spine again. “You both really think he’d kill me?”
Hale answered, his voice calm and steady. “Absolutely. You wouldn’t be the first.”
Allie gave up. She put her head in her hand. “God, Max.”
“She’s not going to help. Ellis sold his soul a long time ago.”
Allie had always liked the way Max referred to God as she. Turned out that was okay in their Catholic religion. She’d checked the first time he’d used the gender. But that didn’t help at all.
Hale remained silent. Allie looked at him again, finding nothing reassuring in his nearly immovable face.
She spoke. “So what do you do? Keep an eye on me in my apartment?”
“No.”
The single word was unilluminating. “What, then?” she demanded.
“You’re going to leave that apartment. I’d need a whole phalanx of guards to protect you, and there’d still be a way to get to you. Even the best group is permeable.”
Allie’s insides tightened again, enhancing the ache that was already there. “Then what?”
Max spoke. “How about we have some key lime pie, then discuss this in more detail.”
Max was not to be deterred. He disappeared into the kitchen and returned with three white pie plates, each decorated with a fork and a wedge of pie. He passed them around.
“Eat,” he said. “Food always helps.”
Allie doubted anything would help, but she obediently took a small mouthful of pie. Hale was not so delicate. Clearly he was a man who enjoyed his food.
Allie still waited for answers.
At last Hale set aside his plate on the end table and wiped his fingers and mouth with a napkin. Finally he settled his attention on Allie.
“We’re going on the run.”
Now her
stomach dropped and her brain sought a way to deny what he was suggesting. “Isn’t that overkill? Run how far?”
“As far as it takes until I can find Ellis’s goons. Until I can be sure you’re safe.”
“Oh, come on,” Allie retorted, feeling stubbornness rise in her. “That’s not necessary.”
“It is if you want to be alive in a week.”
Allie could no longer contain her growing anxiety. Her stomach twisted until she wanted to vomit. Her breath came raggedly, fast.
“Put your head down,” Max said amiably. “If that doesn’t work I’ll get you a paper bag.”
Why did she have the feeling that he wasn’t as distressed by this as she was, then realized, because Max. He never let anything disturb him too much. Maybe to help her calm down.
At last she was able to lift her head, her breathing stabilizing even if her stomach didn’t.
“I don’t understand all of this,” she said weakly. “I don’t. He didn’t threaten me.”
Hale spoke. “He did. I’ve heard enough indirect threats to recognize one. I also know enough about Ellis. Max isn’t exaggerating. We go on the run.”
A nice dark hole sounded good right then. A cave. A storm drain. She wasn’t feeling picky.
“What good will that do?”
Hale answered. “It’ll keep you out of the line of fire until I can take care of the threat.”
“How can you do that if you’re running with me?”
“I have contacts.”
As if that explained anything. Maybe it did. She was having trouble wrapping her mind around all this. She wanted more in the way of explanations, but suspected she wasn’t going to get it. She looked at Max.
“Do it, Allie,” he said. “I love you. Just do it for me.”
That was a plea she couldn’t ignore. Again she looked at Hale. “How do we do this?”
“First we go to your bank and withdraw enough cash to cover my retainer and our expenses. Cash can’t be traced.”
Her stomach lurched. “And then?”
“I’m taking you back to your apartment. I’ll give you a couple of duffels, easier to manage than suitcases. You’ll pack for a time in rough areas. Like you’re going camping. None of those business suits.”