“You know what. You could write. And eat all the damn donuts you want.”
She just looked at him for a long moment, until he nearly squirmed. “What?”
“I’d have thought you’d be holding open the door for me to get the hell out of Dodge.”
“Yeah, well, that was the old me.”
“Well the new me is here to get Blake’s name cleared. That’s it.”
“And also to stomp on my heart. Don’t forget that part.”
“I won’t.” She sighed. “Except I’d really rather get out of here without hurting you at all.” With no idea that she’d just stunned him to his core, she leaned in close to see the screen better. A strand of her hair got stuck to the stubble on his jaw. It smelled good.
She smelled good.
It was all he could do not to bury his face in the rest of her hair and say things that would lead her back to his bed but not really get them anywhere. In fact, he’d opened his mouth to do just that when she spoke.
“Look.” She pointed to where Blake had entered another note:
Kenzie frowned and turned her head to look at Aidan, who had gone still in sudden shock. “The Tracy who…”
“Died.” Aidan managed to find his vocal cords. “Yeah. They dated a couple of times. He really liked her.”
“Really? He told me he’d gone out with Tracy, but he never said how much he liked her.”
“Maybe he didn’t tell you everything.”
“He did,” she insisted. “We told each other everything.”
“Kenzie, you didn’t tell him when
“No.” She shook her head. “You’re going to say he kept secrets. That he kept the arsons a secret, but he wouldn’t have-He wouldn’t have done this, Aidan. Tracy being killed, well that’s got to be a terrible coincidence.”
“I’m beginning to believe that nothing’s a coincidence. Look at the next entry.”
The next entry didn’t clear anything up, but made it all worse.
Kenzie’s fingers dug into Aidan’s arm. “What does that mean, ‘blood
Aidan frowned and shook his head. “I wish I knew.”
“
And if
Aidan’s cell phone chirped with a message that he was needed at work, ASAP.
“Go,” she murmured. “It’s okay. I’m just going to go through all of this and see what else I can find.”
“Stay here.”
Her gaze slid to his.
“Kenzie…” How to say this without sounding like a complete idiot? There was no way to sugarcoat it, so he decided to just let it out. “I have a bad feeling.”
She arched an eyebrow. “You, the most pragmatic, logical, cool person I know, have a bad
“Go with me on this.”
“You think I’m in danger,” she said flatly.
He didn’t just think it, he knew it. Only he couldn’t explain how or why, and that was going to drive him crazy, along with worrying and wondering where she was and if she was okay.
And safe.
And alive.
“Aidan, I’m not going to hole up here. That’s ridiculous. Besides, no one knows what I’m doing.”
“You were arrested, Kenzie. Everyone knows what you’re doing.”
“I’ll be fine.”
Short of tying her up, which had a
She looked at him for a long moment, her hair still crazy from his fingers, her shirt crooked, her feet bare, looking like a hot mess.
A hot mess he wanted in his life.
“I thought we weren’t going to do the promise thing,” she said. “Not ever again.”
“Promise me,” he said again.
“Don’t worry.” She backed away from him, her face so carefully blank. “I intend to be careful and smart, and I intend to get out of here unscathed, on all counts.”
What the hell did that mean?
“See you, Aidan.”
Okay, that was no simple
Which didn’t bode well for his heart, the one that in spite of himself, had gotten attached. Again. More attached, if that was even possible. “I’ll be back.”
“Okay.”
“I will.” He paused. “Will you be here?”
She met his gaze. “I don’t know.”
15
IN BETWEEN CALLS, Aidan slipped into the office of the fire station. He’d never spent much time in there, always preferring to be outside or working, or just about anywhere else.
But he made himself comfortable now. He told whoever gave him a strange look that he was working on his taxes, and given the sympathetic grimaces that got him, it was a genius excuse. Left alone, he went through the daily fire reports and employee schedules, pulling the dates that matched the arsons.
Which is where he discovered that those schedules did not match the ones Blake had saved on his computer.
In fact, according to the office reports, Blake
Had he been the arsonist, or simply trying to stop him?
The door to the office opened and Aidan turned around, the excuse already on his lips about being late getting his receipts together-
“Save it,” Tommy said, and dropped a disk on the table.
“What’s that?”