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The Adair Legacy
The Adair Legacy

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The Adair Legacy

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“You are interested.” He looked down at his hand on her arm as though only then realizing he held it and then let go. “We just talked about some things that should have waited. You’re interested.”

No didn’t mean no to this man. “If I ever see you outside this hospital again—or anywhere near me—I’m calling the cops!” She turned to her Subaru once more.

“Don’t you turn your back on me,” he growled, pure evil spitting from him.

She began to get scared. This situation was beginning to feel as if it was headed toward becoming a crime. She prepared herself for a fight, ready for him to grab her again, vowing to slap or punch him, only he didn’t get the chance. She heard him grunt. Looking back, she saw Thad pushing him against his car, slamming his back over the rim of the back window.

“I’m only going to say this once. If you don’t leave now and stay away from her, I’ll have you arrested.” Thad’s tone was calm but ferocious as he leaned over Cam, a good three inches taller than him.

“Who the hell are you?” Cam grabbed ahold of Thad’s wrist that clamped over his throat.

“Someone you don’t want to mess with,” he answered.

“He’s a cop,” Lucy said, happy to provide that piece of information.

That got Cam’s attention. He stopped struggling to be free and stared at him. Thad let him go, and Cam smoothed his suit jacket.

Then he looked at Lucy. “If we could just talk sometime...”

He kept saying that. And tonight he’d attacked her. “What makes you think I’d ever want to talk to you again?”

“You know. We really do have something special. I don’t understand why you’re fighting it. We just have a misunderstanding. We can get past this. I promise. You won’t regret it.” His sick, pleading face unnerved her.

“You’re the one with the misunderstanding.” Thad reached out and shoved Cam, jabbing his fingers on the man’s chest. “She doesn’t want to see you anymore. Didn’t you hear her? She should only have to say it once. How many times has she told you now?”

“This is none of your business.” Cam’s lightning temper flared again. It didn’t take much.

“It is now.” Thad moved closer, intimidating and fearless.

“I don’t have to take this from you.” Cam took a swing at him.

Thad easily deflected that and slammed his fist to Cam’s jaw. Then another punch drove into his sternum.

Cam gasped for air as he went down onto his knees.

“That’s it. You’re under arrest for assaulting an officer of the law.”

Lucy put her hand on his shoulder. “No, Thad. Let him go.” This was bad enough. Arresting him would only escalate things and prolong her dealings with Cam.

Leaning down, Thad pushed Cam’s head back, forcing him to look up at him. “Leave her alone or I’ll make you.”

Cam met Thad’s fierce eyes and didn’t say anything—for once. Finally, he was forced to accept that he could not control this situation, that he could not control Lucy, a woman he’d imagined in his crazed mind belonged with him.

Giving Cam’s head a harder shove that sent it banging back against the Honda, Thad rose and stepped back.

Cam glared at Thad as he stumbled to his feet. Thad had given him one more chance than he deserved.

Standing up, Cam walked around the front of the black car. Over the hood of the Honda, he looked at Lucy with such resentment that it gave her a shiver.

When Cam drove away, Thad went to Lucy. “Are you all right?”

“Yes.” She was now, thanks to him.

He touched her arm where Cam had grabbed her. She might be bruised. She’d never had anyone defend her the way he had tonight, never had a reason to need that from anyone. But tonight she had, and Thad had been there for her. Appreciation mushroomed into more, warmth that her undeniable attraction fueled.

“Maybe you should stick to the traditional method of meeting someone,” he said.

His logical solution to her scary encounter chased the rest of her tension away. She stepped closer to him. “Okay, Officer. Traditional it is.” She played with the collar of his shirt. He wasn’t wearing a badge. She never saw him actually wear it. “Does this qualify as traditional?”

“We’re in a parking lot, and I almost arrested someone.”

Hardly traditional. Just then she realized he must have waited for her in the parking lot. “What are you doing here, anyway?”

“I’m a cop.” Giving her a grin, he stepped back and then headed toward his blue Charger.

That was the reason he gave her, but Lucy was certain there was another reason he’d waited. He’d been concerned. And more than the cop in him had compelled him to stay and keep an eye on her. He liked her, and he’d protected her. And, strangely, she loved that he had. Not only because he’d saved her from whatever Cam would have done. If anything, he’d cared enough to ensure she made it home safely.

“Hey,” she called.

Thad stopped at his fast car.

She was going to take a plunge headfirst. “I have to volunteer for a literacy program tomorrow night. Would you mind going with me?” She had two motives for this. One, she was afraid of what Cam would do, and two, she wanted to torture Thad with children. What better way to see just how interested he was?

There went that grin again. He had a really nice grin. “Not at all,” he said. “What time?”

“I have to be there at six.”

“I’ll pick you up.”

“But you don’t know my address.”

“I have your address.”

Cop. He was starting to sound like Cam, except there was no comparison. Thad’s reasons for hanging around and looking up her address were completely different from Cam’s. They were two completely different men. Still, she couldn’t let Thad’s boldness go without at least a little teasing...

“You’re not a stalker, are you?” she asked. “Should I be worried?”

He took her seriously. His grin went flat. “No, not you. But Cam should be real worried, because if he ever comes within ten feet of you again, he’ll have to answer to me.”

Sexy, handsome, protective cop...

The way her heart thumped gave her second thoughts about inviting him to one of her most cherished pastimes.

Chapter 4

Darcy wiped the coffee that had dribbled onto his lavender dress shirt with a damp napkin. “He’s got a rap sheet.”

Thad leaned against Darcy’s desk, looking at the mug shot of Cameo Harmon that Darcy had brought up on the screen. Cam’s mouth drew a defiant line, eyes gleaming hatred and reddened from the consumption of alcohol.

“Surprise, surprise,” Thad murmured.

“Domestic violence. His former wife pressed charges after he beat her for the last time. Put her in the hospital.” Darcy reached for the small printer on his desk and handed a few pages to Thad.

Thad took them. “Does somebody have to die before this guy gets sent to jail?”

“Yeah, he’s a real dream date,” Darcy said. “Two restraining orders. One DUI. Robbery when he was a juvenile.” Standing up from his desk chair, Darcy pointed to the line on one of the printed pages. “Stole a camera from a Walmart.”

Thad had seen sheets like this before, and many worse.

“Amazingly, he has a good job,” Darcy said. “Nice house. Decent car. He puts up a good front.”

“Lures them in and then the beatings begin, huh?” Thad could see how Lucy might have missed what a loser Cam was. “His online dating profile is a real smoke screen, too.”

“Guys like that have to fool women into getting close to them,” Darcy said. “This one’s probably on his way to doing something that will land him in prison for a few years. I wouldn’t be surprised if he winds up with a life sentence someday.”

As in murder. That didn’t sit well with Thad. Domestic violence usually escalated in men like this.

He flipped through the printed pages until he found what he was looking for and put it back in front of Thad. “Lucy met this piece of work online a little over a week ago.”

“What are you onto?” Darcy asked, looking at the page. When nothing there clued him in, he met Thad’s gaze. A few seconds later he caught on.

“Kate was shot around then.”

“But not killed.” Thad pointed to the page.

Darcy looked down and read the part about Cam having a military background. Gunnery sergeant.

“He was a sniper,” Thad said. “According to this, he has an NRA membership. Gun permit. And I’ll bet if we got a search warrant, we’d find all kinds of weapons in his house.”

“Guys like that feel big and powerful if they own a bunch of automatic weapons and a few Rambo-style hunting knives,” Darcy added. “Do you really think this could be the gunman who shot your mother?”

“I’m not saying anything, but let’s not leave any stone unturned.”

“He drives a Honda.” Darcy chuckled cynically.

“Smoke screen.”

“His favorite movie is probably some gory slasher film.”

Thad nodded along with Darcy’s dark humor and checked his watch.

“Going somewhere?” Darcy asked.

“I’m on my way to pick up Lucy.”

“Lucy?” Darcy cued in on that. “You have a date?”

“It’s not a date.” Some might argue that it was...like Darcy...and his mother.

“Where are you taking her?”

“Not dinner.” He headed for the door. “Thanks, Darcy.”

“Where are you taking her?” Darcy called after him.

Thad just looked back with a grin. Out in the hall, he didn’t escape Chief Thomas. Like the rest of them, he worked too much.

“Hey, Winston,” Wade shouted from across the room of desks, wiggling his finger and not looking happy. He stood in the doorway of his office.

Thad looked back at Darcy, who’d stepped out of the conference room carrying a folder with the photos inside. “Good luck,” he mouthed.

Reluctantly, Thad started toward Wade’s office. Once he reached it, Wade let him in and then closed the door.

“What’s with the background on Cameo Harmon?” Wade asked.

He had found out. Thad stopped before Wade’s desk as the chief of police walked around to his chair. “How—”

“Don’t ask me how I know.” Wade sat down. “Answer the damn question.”

Thad knew he’d have no choice, given the sound of his tone. He explained about Lucy and her date Cam, leaving out his hunch that Cam may be connected to his mother’s shooting.

Wade scrutinized him like the hardened chief he was. “Is she your girlfriend or something?”

“No.” Why did everyone keep making references to that?

“Who is she to you?”

“My mother’s nurse. She’s an acquaintance.”

Thad suffered more scrutiny. “Why are you involving yourself in her affairs? She’s an adult. Nothing’s been reported yet. If she decides to report something about this man she met, she can do so on her own.”

“I can’t stand aside and do nothing. The man nearly assaulted her in the hospital parking lot.”

“Then let her report it.”

There was no reasoning with him, so Thad stopped trying.

“Taking matters into your own hands?” Wade asked.

“No, sir.”

After another lengthy scrutiny, Wade pointed his finger at Thad. “I don’t like how sneaky you’ve been lately.”

“It’s not intentional. It’s a personal matter. My mother’s been shot and her nurse was attacked. I want to protect them, that’s all.”

Wade seemed marginally placated by that.

“Maybe I should take a leave of absence,” Thad offered. “My mother is going to be released from the hospital soon and I’d like to be home with her while she recovers.”

Wade didn’t believe him. He thought Thad would run his own investigation on his mother’s shooter. He was, but that didn’t have to be confessed.

“I need you here,” Wade said.

Where he could keep an eye on him. “I need to be with my mother. She’s got a long recovery ahead of her. She needs me.”

He watched Wade consider it. Would he really stop him from being with his mother—especially when she was almost murdered? Employees were entitled to take time off. Wade could find a way to get rid of him for it, cover up the true reason with other documented infractions, but Thad didn’t think he’d take on that fight. And fight Thad would.

“You have one month. You start snooping around on the Kate Winston investigation, I’ll find out about it.”

Maybe he would, maybe he wouldn’t. Thad decided it didn’t matter. The only thing that did matter was putting the shooter behind bars.

* * *

Thad picked Lucy up five minutes early. Punctual. Lucy liked that. She liked too many things about him, a man who didn’t agree with marriage. Not that she meant to set out to marry him. He was disqualified from the start. And that’s what ruined all of the fun. Cam had looked good on paper but in person he’d done nothing for her. Thad was different. He’d probably look good on paper and he definitely did something for her in person.

Thad parked in front of the Westside Library, an old, two-story building on a quiet street corner. After performing his job to make sure Cam wasn’t following them, he lifted the box of children’s books Lucy brought along out of the backseat of his car.

Walking beside him toward the library, she was so glad he was here. Last night, she’d been afraid Cam would find out where she lived and come to her house. She hadn’t slept very well.

She opened the library door for Thad, who easily carried the box of books inside. This was her favorite part about volunteering for a literacy program. She’d gotten the books from a local festival that had gathered donations for tonight’s event. Lucy was supposed to read a short story to the kids, but she had her own idea. Besides, she wanted them to do the reading. That’s how they learned.

Inside, she led Thad to one of the meeting rooms. She could hear the kids already. It was playtime until her program began.

She checked on Thad, who looked ahead to where the noise was coming from, his brow low with dread.

“Kids aren’t complicated,” she said. “Just go with it. Be a kid again yourself if that helps.”

“I’m okay.”

She smiled at his false bravado and then led him into the room. It wasn’t a large room. There were four round tables and a small platform where she was supposed to sit on a stool and read while they followed in their own copies.

Thad put the box down on the nearest table, and Edith noticed their arrival.

“All right, everybody,” Edith said, an older, plump woman in a pink dress who was in charge of this event. She clapped her hands. “Take a seat.” Parents sat talking at one of the tables in the back. Some of them dropped their kids off and picked them up after the two-hour session was over.

Edith was a retired schoolteacher who inherited a comfortable sum from her mother and who wasn’t ready to stop teaching.

The yelling and running around slowly calmed. Boys and girls scurried for seats at the tables, swinging feet and fiddling with the books in front of them.

Lucy had to stop a quick laugh when she saw how Thad stiffened and watched out for small torpedoes with feet.

Lucy spotted seven-year-old Sophie charging toward her. She crouched for the impact of the girl’s hug.

“Lucy! Lucy!”

Lucy’s heart soared with affection. Why this youngster had taken to her so tightly, Lucy couldn’t guess, but it warmed her to the nth degree.

“Hey there, Sophie.” Sophie Cambridge was a special little girl. Recently orphaned after her mother was killed in a car accident and her father hadn’t stepped forward to take responsibility for her, she’d been thrust into the hands of the state. Her studies in school had rapidly declined, as anyone would expect.

She ruffled the child’s thick head of shoulder-length light brown hair. “How’s my girl?”

“I read a book!” Her golden-brown eyes were alight with innocent pride.

“You did? Which one?” Sophie reached out for approval whenever she could.

“A red dog.”

“A Clifford book? Good for you!” Sophie was behind the others in her class in reading. Lucy was sure she’d struggled with the book. “Did Rosanna help you with it?”

Sophie’s face fell, and she shook her head. “She had to do dishes.”

Housework was more important than a child’s ability to read? Rosanna seemed like a good foster mom. Lucy searched for her in the room and didn’t see her. “Where is she?”

Sophie shrugged.

Rosanna had dropped her off and hadn’t stayed for the program. Something must have come up. “Well, that’s okay. At least you’re here. Are you ready for a story?”

The child’s face beamed once again, and she nodded vigorously.

Lucy steered her to the table where Thad stood. Sophie grew shy when she saw Thad towering over her, but she sat down as Lucy guided. She’d be good for him. Nothing like a sweet seven-year-old to melt a few cubes of ice around a heart.

“Take a seat here.” Lucy pointed to a chair and waited for Thad to register her command. He looked from the girl to the chair and then Lucy.

“She won’t bite.” Wow. Was he really this awkward with kids? The hero cop had a handicap.

He saw how Sophie eyed him uncertainly and sat down. “Hi.”

Sophie glanced up at Lucy. “Thad is a police officer, Sophie. You’re safe with him.”

Sophie wasn’t convinced, staying in her shy shell that had probably intensified since her mother had died.

Edith came over and Lucy introduced him to her and Sophie. The old woman studied the handsome man and then turned speculative eyes to Lucy. Lucy never brought anyone to her literacy volunteer job and Edith was well aware of her hunt for a husband. Helping kids read better was a deep part of her, a part that meant a lot to her. She didn’t share her love of written words and belief that all children should be able to read them with just anyone. Reading was intelligence, and with intelligence, kids could make their dreams come true.

Lucy held up the book to Edith. “We aren’t going to start with this. I have a story I’m going to tell first.”

Edith smiled with her good-humored reproach. “In one of your moods, huh?”

Every once in a while she broke free of the expected and went with whimsy. She began to pass out the box of books, and Edith helped, announcing to the room of kids, most of whom hadn’t settled down yet, “Quiet down now. It’s time to start.”

Lucy took a seat on the stool and waited for the buzz of children’s voices to go silent.

“Before we read from the book you each have in your hands, I’m going to tell you a story,” Lucy began, capturing the attention of ten young faces. Stirring their imagination was her favorite part. “It’s a true story about a girl from New York. She lived a long time ago, long before any of you were born. She was an orphan who wanted to learn all she could about the world.” Lucy saw Sophie listening with wide eyes, immediately connecting to the girl in Lucy’s story. It’s what Lucy had intended. “Imagene Evertine ran away from her mean stepmother and went to live in a library. At the library, she could read all the books she wanted and could learn about the world. She taught herself how to read, and read she did. She read and read and read.”

Lucy paused and met each one of the children’s faces. “Imagene lived a long and happy life. She got married and had kids of her own, who she taught to read and took to the library where she grew up. Like all people, one day Imagene became old and, at last, God said it was time for her to come to Heaven. He had a calling for her. A job. So after she passed here on Earth, she took over as Heaven’s chief librarian. She’s still there today, happily making sure all children have books to read.” Lucy held up the one she was going to read tonight. “That’s where these came from.”

Murmurs spread across the tables, and some of the parents exchanged knowing smiles. Thad sat back on his chair and smirked at her.

“Did she give them to you?” one of the boys asked. He was about six.

Lucy nodded. “Yes. I know Imagene very well.”

“Does she really give you books for us?” a little girl asked.

“Oh, yes.” Lucy nodded.

“She was an orphan?” Sophie asked.

“Yes, except she grew up in a library, not a foster home. And no one adopted her.”

Sophie mulled over that, too serious of an issue for a child.

“But she was very successful and happy her whole life,” Lucy said, giving the girl more to ponder.

She didn’t let her ponder too long. She began reading from the book. On words she suspected would be difficult for this crowd to read, she spent extra time pronouncing them and used a whiteboard to write them out and explain what they meant and why they were spelled the way they were before moving on in the story.

* * *

Two hours later, Lucy’s mouth was dry and she sipped from a bottle of water Edith had given her. After closing the book, she looked up to see Rosanna sitting at one of the tables in the back with all the other parents. Kids dispersed, meeting up with their parent or both parents, depending on who’d brought them here. Rosanna went over to the table where Sophie sat. She hadn’t gone to her foster mom.

Lucy went over there.

Rosanna smiled. “You do such a fantastic job with these kids.”

“Thank you. I enjoy teaching them.”

Thad stood. “I especially liked the true story.”

Lucy didn’t miss the way he said “true story” and smothered a smile and introduced him to Rosanna.

“What do you think, Sophie, you ready to go home?” Rosanna held out her hand to the girl.

Sophie didn’t take it and stood, turning to Lucy. “I was thinking. Imagene lived in a library, why can’t I live where I want?”

Rosanna looked at Lucy, perplexed. She hadn’t been here when she’d told the story.

“Where do you want to live?” Lucy asked, keeping her wariness out of her tone.

“Well...” Sophie hedged. “I was thinking maybe I could live with you.”

“Me?” Lucy was shocked. Where had this come from? Her story about Imagene? Lucy checked on Rosanna, who seemed hurt.

“The people who brought you to me won’t let her, honey,” Rosanna said. “Let’s go home and make chocolate milk.”

That worked to lift Sophie’s spirits some.

As Rosanna met Lucy’s gaze, Lucy wondered if she’d imagined the somber self-awareness in the foster mom. Was something bothering her and had Sophie picked up on it? Sophie had never behaved this way before, as though she dreaded going home with Rosanna.

“Come on.” Rosanna took Sophie’s hand.

Sophie looked sullenly back at Lucy, whose heart melted with the sight.

Thad moved to stand beside her.

Lucy shook her emotions back into line and gathered her purse. “Ready?”

“Everything okay?” he asked.

“What do you mean?” Had he noticed what she had?

“Is Sophie okay? Is there something going on with her mother?”

“That’s not her mother. Rosanna is a foster mom. Sophie’s mother died in a car accident almost two years ago, and her father wouldn’t take responsibility for her. She doesn’t have any other family. Her mother had no siblings and her parents aren’t alive anymore.”

Lucy waved to Edith and walked with Thad out of the room.

“That’s tragic,” Thad finally said.

He seemed at odds with learning that news, as though it had touched him but he wasn’t sure what to do with how it made him feel. Lucy suspected he needed to feel more when it came to kids and love. He probably hadn’t been exposed to much of either.

“Is anyone going to adopt her?” he asked.

“I’m sure someone will come along. She’s an adorable little girl.”

They left the building and walked to Thad’s car. He opened the passenger side for her and she got in.

“My mother is being released from the hospital on Monday morning,” he said when he sat behind the wheel and started driving.

“I heard.” Why was he bringing that up now?

“It would mean a lot to her if you’d go with her,” he said.

Lucy wasn’t so sure that was a good idea. It wasn’t in her plans. And she never liked it when people made plans for her.

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