it necessary to show the world, by her presence, that she would not be intimidated by Buck Stansell and his gang of hoodlums. Of course, none of them were in attendance. They would stay away, keeping up the pretense that they were not involved, when the whole county knew they were.

One by one, the prosecution called their witnesses. First, the Leighton police, then Charlie Blaylock and two of his deputies. The day's proceedings moved along quickly, Deborah sitting tensely, Ashe at her side. At five o'clock, the court session ended, the judge announcing a recess until the following morning. Would they get to her that soon? Deborah wondered. Would the trial actually come to an end in a week's time? Unless the defense dragged things out, Deborah couldn't imagine the trial lasting much longer.

When Ashe touched her, she jumped. Standing, he offered her his hand. 'I'll get you to the car as quickly as possible. Just stay right by my side. Don't look at or respond to the reporters.'

'Some of them kept watching me during the trial proceedings.' She accepted Ashe's assistance. 'I saw them looking at me during the testimony. Especially when Jerry Don Lansdell told how I came running into the Leighton police station that day. The defense lawyer, that Mr. Prater, had Jerry Don practically admitting that I was too hysterical to know what I was talking about, that I was a raving lunatic.'

'Don't worry about it. The jurors aren't stupid. They saw through what Sparks's lawyer was trying to do.' Ashe slipped his arm around her. 'When you're on the stand, you'll convince the jurors that you saw Lon Sparks murder Corey Looney. These people are not going to doubt your word, Deborah. You're a respected citizen with nothing to gain by lying.'

Deborah glanced at her diamond-studded wristwatch. 'It's too late to make Allen's soccer game. It should be ending about now.'

'Then let's go home and let him tell us all about the game.' Ashe led Deborah out of the crowded courtroom.

In the hallway, the same horde of insistent reporters swarmed around her. Deborah squared her shoulders. Ashe kept her protected, holding her close to his side.

'Ms. Vaughn, are you disturbed by the defense's accusation that you were too traumatized by the murder you witnessed to make a proper identification of the killer?' A lanky young reporter stuck a microphone into Deborah's face.

Ashe pierced the man with a sharp look, then shoved his way through the semicircle of inquisitors. They followed in hot pursuit. When Ashe and Deborah reached the stairs, he halted, turning around sharply.

'Ms. Vaughn has no comment, ladies and gentlemen, other than she will be in court to testify when called upon.'

Ashe hurried her down the stairs, the reporters following, bombarding them with questions—everything from 'Is it true Ms. Vaughn's ten-year-old brother had been attacked by a stranger on the school playground?' to 'Is she romantically involved with her bodyguard?'

By the time Ashe and Deborah made their way to her Cadillac, parked across the street in the adjacent parking lot, Deborah wanted to scream. How on earth did celebrities endure their every move being a media event?

Ashe drove the Caddy out of the parking lot and headed up Water Street, making a right turn onto Main Street. Laying her head against the back of the leather seat, Deborah closed her eyes and let out a deep breath. Her face would be spread across the morning newspapers and appear on the evening newscasts. Right then and there, she decided not to turn on the television or even look at the paper.

A train caught them before they entered Sheffield. Ashe shifted the car into Park and glanced at Deborah. She looked like she was ready to scream or cry, maybe both. If only she had taken his advice and not gone to court today. Maybe now she would wait until time for her testimony before returning. She was so damn stubborn, so determined to show him and the rest of the world what a strong woman she was.

'When is Allen's next soccer game?' he asked.

'What?' She opened her eyes. 'Oh. Day after tomorrow.'

'If you're not on the witness stand, I think we should go to Allen's game.'

'I try to make it to as many of his games as I possibly can. Except when she was very sick, Mother's never missed one. She's Allen biggest supporter.'

'You haven't been worrying about Allen, have you?' Ashe noticed the last train car pass and the guard rails lifting. 'I can assure you that Simon Roarke will guard him and your mother with his life. He's a good man, and highly trained.'

'I'm sure you're right.' Deborah rubbed her forehead with her fingertips. 'But even good men who are highly trained can be taken out No one, not even you, Ashe, is invincible.'

Shifting the gears into Drive, Ashe followed the line of backed up traffic over the railroad tracks and up Montgomery Avenue. 'It's all right, you know, if you want to cry or scream or hit something. I won't think you're weak if you do.'

'Thanks for your permission, but I don't need to do anything except get home and show my mother and my … my brother that I'm fine.'

'Hey, they already know you're strong and capable and in control. You don't have to try to be a paragon for them. My God, Deborah, what are you trying to prove by this woman of steel routine? And to whom?'

To you, she wanted to scream. To you, Ashe McLaughlin. I want you to know that I'm not the same silly little girl who threw herself at your feet I want you to see me for the woman I am now. The woman your rejection helped create. A woman in charge of her own life. A woman capable of caring for others, without any help from a man.

Ashe turned into the Vaughn driveway and saw Simon Roarke pulling Carol Vaughn's silver Mercedes in right beside them. He parked in the three-car garage behind the house. The moment Deborah emerged from her Cadillac, Allen, in his gold-and-blue soccer uniform, raced around the cars and directly toward Deborah and Ashe.

'We won. I scored the winning goal.' Allen jumped up and down in a boyish frenzy of triumph. 'Tell them, Mr. Roarke. Tell them, Mother. I was awesome, wasn't I? You should have been there.'

'Yes, I should have been,' Deborah said. 'Ashe and I will be at Wednesday's game if I don't have to testify that day.'

Deborah caught the quick exchange of glances between Ashe and Simon Roarke. She wanted to ask them what was going on, but didn't dare in front of her mother and son. Besides, it might have meant nothing more than a coded recognition that all was well.

'Allen is quite an athlete,' Roarke said in his gravelly voice. 'They wouldn't have won the game without him.'

'See. See.' Full of youthful exuberance, Allen bounced around in the driveway. 'Boy, Ashe, I wish you could have seen me make that goal.'

A twinge of guilt tugged on Deborah's heartstrings. How was she going to handle Allen's growing dependency on Ashe? How would she be able to keep Ashe from disappointing their son? And that's the way she thought of Allen—as their son.

'Miss Carol should have videotaped it for us.' Ashe winked at Carol, who stood near the entrance to the side patio.

'Oh, I could never watch the game and videotape it at the same time. I get too excited at these games,' Carol said. 'I'd end up dropping the video camera and breaking it.'

'Hey, what's Mazie fixing for supper tonight?' Allen asked, running around the side of the garage, Roarke following him. 'I'm starving.'

'Pork chops, I think,' Carol said, opening the gate to the side patio.

'I gotta go get Huckleberry out of the backyard now that we're home. I'll bet he's hungry, too.' Allen bounded out of sight, Roarke on his heels.

Ashe and Deborah followed Carol through the gate and onto the side patio. A cool evening breeze swirled around them. Carol shivered.

'I think autumn weather is here to stay,' she said.

'Yes, it seems—' Deborah said.

A loud scream pierced the evening stillness. Allen's scream! 'Allen!' Deborah cried, gripping Ashe by the sleeve, then breaking into a run.

Ashe grabbed her by the arm, stopping her. 'You and Miss Carol go into the house and lock the patio door. I'll

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