'You don't even know me.'
'I know,' he admitted, sliding his lips softly across hers once. The touch electrified him, and her, too, if that husky catch of breath was any indication. 'But I want to. Let me know you, Haley. Trust me.'
She shook her head but still didn't draw back. 'I'm not ready for that. Please…'
'Please what?' He kissed her softly again, biting back his moan at her incredible sweetness.
'I think,' she said shakily, stepping away, 'we should go to town now.'
He smiled past the ache of her inability to trust him, relieved she'd agreed to come. 'On the way you can tell me how much you want in wages.'
She looked uncomfortable. 'I told you. I don't care about that. You're already giving me room and board.'
'You must need money, Haley,' he said gently. 'Come on, you can think about it while I drive.'
'Fine. But I'm only going with you because there're some things I need,' she warned. 'So don't get any ideas.' She pushed him aside lightly.
'What kind of ideas?' he asked, all sorts of wicked ones dancing in his head before he could stop himself.
She blushed. 'Oh, just forget it.'
They were in his truck before she spoke again. 'Since you insist on paying me,' she said in that haughty, sexy voice he loved, 'I think you should know-I don't come cheap.'
He threw back his head and laughed. 'I never thought so, Ms. Williams. I never thought so.'
After that, he let her sit quietly, as she seemed to want to do on the long drive into Colorado Springs. Once there, she refused to accept his company, insisting that he drop her off at a minimall while he went on to the lumber store. Though it roused his suspicions again, he really had no choice. She was entitled to her privacy and distance.
He needed his distance, as well. He had no idea what was happening to him, but it had to stop. There could be nothing between him and Haley. Nothing. At least not until he knew what she was hiding.
Haley glanced longingly at the cash machine outside the grocery store, wishing she could get the money she needed. But fear was a heavy motivation.
It would lead them-Alda?-straight to her.
With a heavy sigh, Haley turned around, trying to decide how far the twenty dollars she had would take her. There were some things she needed she just couldn't bring herself to ask Nellie for. As she moved toward the automatic doors of the store, her wandering gaze collided abruptly with a medium-build, dark-haired man who stood across the way. He leaned against a pole, staring at her.
The man had disappeared.
Breathing a sigh of relief, Haley studied the minimall carefully and spotted a bakery. Surely she deserved a doughnut after that scare. Heading down the walk toward the bakery, she stopped to admire the delicious, flaky- looking croissants in the display case. She was hungry. And she'd forgotten to eat, again. No wonder her head and stomach hurt. Yep, she was going to splurge and buy herself-
A shadow fell across her, blocking out the sun. Reflected in the window, and standing directly behind her, was the same stranger.
With a strangled gasp, Haley moved quickly, racing down the walk and slamming into the first store she came to.
A video store.
Haley dashed down an aisle of videos. Trembling behind a life-size cardboard cutout of Tom Cruise, she looked around. What should she do? What if he came in here and grabbed her? She'd scream like hell, that was what!
No one came. Huddled behind the huge poster, she began to feel relieved. Then incredibly foolish. Of course, no one came-
She had to stop these panic attacks. They did nothing but annoy her ulcer and make her head ache. Her fear was totally unfounded. She'd left no clue, no trace. And who could possibly guess that Dr. Haley Whitfield, head of EVS's team of geologists, was now doing duty as a housekeeper on some ranch in Colorado? No one. Encouraged by that, she straightened and left the store. The man had disappeared.
Eager to be on her way, Haley slipped into the bakery, almost desperate now for food. Her head throbbed, her stomach grumbled and hurt. Nothing like panic to stir an appetite.
'I'll have one of those croissants,' she said politely, bending over the display and pointing.
'Sure thing, ma'am.'
Haley raised her gaze and froze. Behind the counter was her stranger. The man who'd been following her. Their eyes met-his cold, hard and knowing-and she whirled.
Running, blinded by fear, Haley expected to be grabbed any moment. Or shot. Her skin crawled. Her breath escaped her in sobs as she fumbled with the door, and for a second, she thought she couldn't get out, that he'd caught up with her and was holding it shut. As she fought and clawed at the handle, her heart slammed each beat, but finally the door opened. Without looking back, she took off. The prickly feeling at the base of her neck increased. She was being followed. Oh, God. Her feet pounded the cement walk, and as she got to the front of the grocery store, she chanced a glance over her shoulder, still running full speed.
Then, with a sickening thud, she crashed into something as hard and ungiving as a steel pole, and it knocked the sense right out of her.
Cam's first thought from flat on his back, with Haley stretched out over him, was
She reared back, her eyes wide, her face so pale it looked translucent. 'Cameron? Oh, God, he's right behind me.'
Cam managed to pull his wits together after the bone-shaking collision to look over Haley's shoulder, but both the walkway and the parking lot were empty. He held her arms. 'Who?'
Haley glanced around, but when she saw no one, she sagged over him. 'He's gone. Again.' Then she threw her arms around his neck and buried her face in his chest.
Concerned, he sat up, cradling her in his lap right there on the sidewalk. 'Haley?' He pushed the hair from her face, but she only shook her head and burrowed tighter against him. Her arms, still clamped around his neck, trembled, and his alarm grew. 'What happened?'
She shivered.
He looked around them, prepared for anything. An older woman got out of a station wagon, went into the dry cleaners. A teenager came out of the grocery store. Somewhere, a truck started and rumbled away.
Nothing out of the ordinary. 'Haley?' He stroked her chilled arms. '
'I'm okay.' Her voice, muffled against his shirt, sounded embarrassed. But she pushed out of his arms, sniffled once, and avoided his gaze.
He knelt before her. 'Haley, can you tell me-' He stopped abruptly as she went even paler, and her pupils shrank into twin pinpoints of shock. Swearing, he pushed her head between her knees. 'Take a deep breath,' he demanded, sick with worry. 'There you go. No, damn it, don't try to get up yet. You'll faint. Come on now, another