reached out, taking the badly crinkled letter from Rusty. 'Information that possibly links the man who tried to kidnap Addy last Friday night to Gerald Carlton.'

'What did Johnson tell you?' Rusty asked.

'The man who tried to kidnap me was named Linc Hites,' Addy said. 'He worked for a janitorial service that New Age Aerospace uses.'

'Damn!' Rusty turned his attention to Nick. 'Is there any evidence that Carlton and this Hites fellow actually knew each other?'

'None, but Johnson's keeping tabs on Carlton. If he's our man, then all we need is for him to make one little slip.' Nick had gone over the list of suspects time and again. Unless the man behind the kidnap plot was someone unknown to the McConnells, then all the circumstantial evidence pointed to Gerald Carlton.

'Not much can be done without some hard evidence to back up our suspicions.' Rusty slumped down on the sofa, his enormous body dwarfing the small couch. 'All right. You and Addy go into hiding. When M.A.C. wins the NASP contract—' he smiled at Addy, and she smiled back '—you two come back to Huntsville. The threat will be over. He will have lost and we'll have won.'

Nick wished things were that simple, and they just might be—if the person or persons behind the threats really did want to keep M.A.C. from acquiring the government job and this person or persons didn't seek revenge when things went sour. But what if they did seek revenge, or what if the contract bid was a smoke screen? It never paid to rule out any and all possibilities.

'Let's hope that's the scenario,' Nick said. 'We'll work under that assumption for the time being.'

'Addy said you two were leaving in the morning.' Rusty held out his hand and Addy accepted it, seating herself beside her father.

'Yeah. Before daylight.' Nick picked up the infamous box. 'I'll go wait for Ned Johnson and give you two some time alone.'

'Thanks.' Rusty put his arm around Addy. She rested against him, her head on his shoulder. 'Oh, yeah, Nick, why don't I send some of Dundee's men with you? They could ride shotgun on your trip.'

'Bad idea,' Nick said. 'An entourage will call attention to us. A man and woman traveling alone is commonplace. Trust me on this, Rusty.'

Neither man said anything else, but they stared at each other for several silent moments, weighing each other, sizing up one another. Two strong men with the same singular purpose—protecting Addy from harm, no matter what the cost.

Nick turned, leaving the room. Addy had sensed the unspoken exchange between her father and her … her what? Her bodyguard. Her protector. Her defender.

'He told me he wasn't interested in getting married.' Rusty leaned back so he could get a clear view of Addy's face.

'What?' Addy gasped, glaring at her father with startled green eyes.

'I asked him about his intentions,' Rusty said with mock seriousness, without a hint of a smile.

'Oh, Lord, Daddy!'

'He said he intended staying a bachelor for another forty-three years.'

Addy wondered what Nick had thought of her father's questioning. Had he resented Rusty's interference or had he simply found the notion that D.B. McConnell wanted him to marry Addy amusing? 'He told me the same thing.'

'The right woman could probably change his mind.'

'You hadn't known the man twenty-four hours when you decided you wanted him for a son-in-law. How can you be so sure?' Addy pulled away, giving her father a questioning stare. 'You liked Gerald when you first met him, too, remember?'

'Hell, don't remind me! That jerk had us both fooled. He was a charmer. Silver-tongued, smooth and—well, he was a man's man, or at least I thought he was.'

'Nick Romero is all those things, too, you know.'

'Nick's the genuine article. He's not pretending to be anything he isn't. And he's not pretending his interest in you, either. He knows that I'm aware of how much he wants you, and yet he told me honestly that he isn't interested in marriage.'

'Are we both acting like fools again, Daddy, putting so much faith and trust in a man we hardly know, a man who came into our lives because of Dina?' Addy wanted to tell her father about Dina's real relationship with Nick, that the two had once been lovers, but she didn't want to add to the problems already plaguing him.

'You know about Nick and Dina, don't you?' Rusty's faded green eyes darkened, his gaze searching her face.

'She told you?'

'Nope. Dina didn't tell me anything, except how fond she's always been of Nick, but I read between the lines.'

'Doesn't it bother you, knowing she slept with her husband's brother?' It certainly bothered Addy. Every time she thought about Nick and Dina, naked, hot and sweaty, in Nick's bed, she wanted to scratch out the other woman's eyes.

'Dina is very insecure. She thinks money is the answer to all of life's problems.' Rusty took Addy's hand, patting it gently. 'I know what Dina is, but I still want her. Hell, baby girl, I'm in love with the woman. Besides, I'm not lily-white pure myself. You know that.'

'Then it doesn't bother you, knowing … knowing—'

'When Dina and I make love, I don't waste my energy thinking about who else she's been with.' Rusty laughed, deepening the heavy lines around his eyes and mouth. 'Damn, this is hardly a subject a man should be discussing with his daughter!'

'If I were your son, you'd discuss it with me, wouldn't you?'

Rusty laughed louder. 'You've got me there!'

Addy joined his laughter. He hugged her to him again. 'Daddy, I think I'm falling in love with Nick.'

'I'm not surprised. There's a chemistry between you two. I felt it the night you met. Romero doesn't know it yet, but I'd bet my last million that he's falling for you, too.'

'I—I've decided to have an affair with him.' Addy didn't look directly at her father, uncertain of his reaction.

'Good idea! Try him out and see how he performs.' Rusty held back the hardy chuckle straining his lungs.

'Daddy!'

The chuckle burst loose from Rusty, filling the room with his good humor, releasing the tension that hung in the air like a dark rain cloud. 'Don't think about the other women he's been with, not even Dina. Those women are a part of his past. You, Addy McConnell, could damn well be his future.'

'I hope you're right, Daddy. I hope I have a future—' hastily she added '—with Nick.'

* * *

He stood just outside the open door of Addy's bedroom, watching while she packed. She was very neat, every item folded and placed with precise care. On top of her slacks, blouses and sweaters lay her lingerie, skimpy little tidbits of silk and lace and sheer nylon in colors from the palest flesh tone to the most lush, vivid purple. He couldn't help but imagine what sort of frothy satin temptations she was wearing beneath her walking shorts and cotton pullover.

The antique grandfather clock in the hallway struck ten times. In less than seven hours he would take Addy away from her home, away from the familiar routine of her daily life. Only four people knew where they were going—the two of them, Sam Dundee and Elizabeth Mallory, the woman who owned the cottage where they'd stay for the next two weeks.

Nick wondered what would happen when they got to Sequana Falls, Georgia. How was he going to spend two weeks alone with a woman he desperately wanted, without seducing her into his bed? He'd never been in this predicament before, wanting a woman who needed more than temporary pleasure from him. Addy wanted him to prove himself to her, and the only way he could bed her and walk away without feelings of remorse and guilt was to give her what she wanted. Somehow, some way, he had to prove to Addy that she and she alone meant more to him than anything else on earth. Since he was fast coming to feel that way about her, he figured there had to be a

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