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“I can give it to him.”

Her fingers tightened around the bottle. “He was clear I take it to him.”

“Let me check.”

Frustrated, she turned and waited. The clerk’s phone started ringing just as an ambulance crew showed. They had a teenager with alcohol poisoning, the paramedic shouted to a harried doctor. All this offered just enough distraction for her to slip past the desk and down the hallway toward the elevators. She punched the Up button and waited, as if she had every right to be there. The doors opened and she slipped inside.

Seconds later, she approached Alex’s door. A television buzzed conversations as the light from the screen flickered and cast shadows on the wall. She knocked gently.

“What?” He sounded angry and annoyed.

She pushed open the door. “Good to hear you’re in such a good mood.”

Gripping the remote control, he turned from the screen. For a moment, he didn’t say anything, as if he wasn’t sure she were real.

“Better let me in your room. There’s a nurse out there right now paging security to have me thrown out.”

He clicked off the television. “Breaking and entering.”

She closed the door behind her, moving toward his bed. “That would be correct. The hospital has a thing about visiting hours.”

He pushed himself up into a sitting position and winced. Without a word, she came behind him, fluffed his pillows, and settled him in a comfortable position.

She sat on a chair beside his bed, not sure why she’d come to his side. He’d returned her text an hour ago, saying he’d been delayed by a minor injury. “So what happened?”

He tossed the remote control aside. “Someone confused me with a piñata.”

Carefully, she set her purse on the floor. “You were hit with a bat?”

“That’s correct.”

His even tone belied the jolt of panic shooting through her. “Did you see the guy?”

“No. Too quick. That’s what I get for not paying attention.”

“Do you think it was Philip?”

“That’s one guess.” His gaze lingered on her face, as if searching. “But I’ve made more than a few people angry lately.”

“Imagine.”

A smile flickered. “Why’d you come?”

She shrugged off her coat. “I was worried.”

“Why?”

She shook her head. “I don’t know.”

“You have any trouble?”

“No. But I’m now counting the minutes until Wednesday.”

“He’s not going to hurt you again.” So much confidence. So certain.

She traced a pale finger along the handrail of the bed. “I’ll do whatever it takes to catch him. Whatever. You just need to let me know how to help.”

“I’ll come up with something, Leah. I promise.”

Her gaze caught the darkening bruise on his forearm. “I had a bruise like that once. I was blocking a blow.”

He frowned. “That’s what I was attempting to do.”

“Not as easy as it looks in the movies, is it?”

“No.”

She reached over and brushed his dark bangs away from his eyes. “Tonight, you sleep. Tonight, you let yourself heal, and tomorrow we’ll worry about Philip.”

“We?”

“The way I see this, we’re in it together.”

“Yes, we are.”

She laid a hand on his. “Nothing is going to happen tonight. Sleep.”

His brow furrowed, as if he were weighing and arguing a dozen points at once. “I’ll try if you try.”

“Deal.”

She rose, leaned forward, and kissed him softly on the lips. His hand came up, resting at the small of her back and coaxing her forward. She deepened the kiss, savoring his taste and the feel of his lips against hers.

Outside, she heard a sharp voice, a nurse, and, grinning, pulled back. She touched her fingertips to her lips. “That would be my exit cue. See you soon, Agent Morgan.”

“Count on it.”

Music pulsed from the jukebox as he elbowed his way into the crowded all-night diner. He flexed his fingers, still annoyed that he hadn’t caved in Alex Morgan’s skull. He’d had a clear shot, had moved fast, but the son of a bitch had heard him coming at the last second and whirled out of his way. He’d heard the crack of the bat against bone and the agent’s thud to the ground. Before he could take a second swing, Morgan had drawn, and he’d been staring down the barrel of a gun.

He’d underestimated Morgan. Roughing him up should have been an easy job. Don’t think I forgot you, Agent Morgan.

He spotted the woman sitting at the counter and forced himself to push aside his disappointment. He’d failed with Morgan, but he wouldn’t wither. Shrugging off the anger, he straightened his shoulders and adjusted his jacket as he stepped up to the hostess stand. “I see my wife at the bar. You mind if I scoot in the seat beside her?”

The young woman smiled. “Sure.”

He moved through the crowd of people and took the seat beside the woman. After ordering a coffee, he grabbed a laminated menu. “What do you recommend?”

He spoke loud enough for her to hear but was careful not to lean toward her or even look at her. A smart predator always moved slowly and carefully until he pounced.

Her gaze flickered toward him, as if she wasn’t sure he’d spoken to her.

He smiled, knowing the dimple in his right cheek could charm the hardest of hearts. Carefully, he sipped his coffee as he closed the menu. “I see you like breakfast for dinner.”

Grinning, she held his gaze. “It’s the cheapest and best dinner there is.”

“I hear ya.” When the counter waitress came up to him, he handed her the menu. “Whatever she has looks great.”

“Two eggs over easy, pancakes, grits, and bacon.”

“It’s a winner.” He liked the taste of fresh eggs. Not the powdered crap most places served these days but cracked fresh from the shell. And he liked bacon crisp with lots of fat. “Do you remember me?”

She leaned back a fraction as she studied his face. “We met at the church last week. And you dropped Charlie off at the vet.”

He produced a sheepish grin. “Gail, right?”

“Good memory. You never came back to get Charlie.”

He nodded. “My mom died within an hour of my dropping off Charlie. I only just got back into town. Is she doing all right? You didn’t send her back to the shelter, did you? Poor thing hated the place.”

Her gaze warmed a degree. “No, we didn’t send her back. Fact, one of our vets wants to adopt her.”

“Really?” He shook his head. “I was gonna call first thing tomorrow and ask about her.”

“Good luck getting her away from Leah.”

“Leah?”

“The vet.”

“Does she really love the dog?”

“Crazy about her. Crazy in love with that dog.”

A smile quirked his lips. “That’s good for Charlie. Real good. I need to settle up with the clinic for my bill.”

“You gonna take Charlie?”

“This Leah really does love her?”

“Yes. Loves her.”

He shook his head, low and slow. “Don’t know if I have the right. And I want the dog to be happy.”

“She is.”

“Tell Leah I’ll be by tomorrow to settle up, and if she’s really loving that dog, well, she can have her. The pound’s got plenty of dogs that need a home.”

She leaned in a fraction. “The dog reminds Leah of one she had as a kid.”

“That’s good. Real good.” He set the salt shaker close to the pepper shaker. “It’s been a week for losses.”

She cocked her head. “You lost your mom.”

“Yeah. Sudden.” His grin was watery, vulnerable. “Let’s talk about something else.”

“Like what?”

He shrugged, sensing he’d dropped just the right bait in the water to catch this fish. “I don’t know, what’s got you eating dinner so late tonight?”

“I work some evenings at the animal hospital. I just got off and I’m starving.” She reached for a crispy piece of bacon and carefully snapped it in half.

He’d chosen her. Not because she was pretty or because she was remotely his type. He’d chosen her because she knew Leah. And he wanted to show Leah how close she was to dying.