The Christmas Target. Shirlee McCoy
the house? Boone and Simon might need to get inside.”
“I left the door open.”
“There are police everywhere. Someone might have closed it.”
“There’s probably a key in the flower box outside the kitchen window. If you want to look for it, I can—”
“No.”
“You don’t even know what I was going to say.”
“Whatever it was, the answer is still no. We’re getting out of these woods, and I’m driving you straight to the hospital. No stops for anything.”
“You’re awfully bossy when I’m hurt,” she muttered. There was no heat in her words and no real complaint.
“Awfully worried,” he corrected, taking her elbow and helping her up the embankment.
“Don’t be. I’m fine.”
“You always are. Until you aren’t, and then I have to ride to the rescue,” he replied, baiting her the way he had a hundred times before. He knew how she’d react. Her back would go up, her chin would lift, and she’d march to the house like she hadn’t been knocked unconscious and nearly frozen.
It almost worked out that way.
“I’ve rescued you more times than you’ve ever rescued me,” she said.
Just like he knew she would.
Then she shrugged away from his hold, marching forward with just enough energy to convince him she might actually be okay.
They made it through the trees and out into the yard, white snow swirling through the grayish light. He could see how pale she was, see how much she was trembling. She was cold or in shock or both, and he had about two seconds to realize that baiting her hadn’t worked out the way he’d wanted before her steps faltered.
Just a little hitch in her stride, a soft sigh that he barely heard, and she was crumbling to the ground so quickly Chance barely had time to catch her.
She was in the car again, the beautiful book her grandparents had given her for Christmas in her hands.
“Don’t touch it,” she snapped at Eva. Her sister was only four, and she liked to ruin things—paintings, drawings, schoolwork. Eva was always scribbling on them.
“Be kind,” her mother admonished, turning in her seat and smiling, her beautiful red hair curled, a pretty green Christmas ribbon woven through it.
Matching hairstyles. Stella and Eva had ribbons, too. Even tiny little Bailey had a bow in her fuzzy hair.
That kind of made Stella proud.
She loved her family. Even Eva.
“Okay, you can touch it,” she said, and her sister smiled with Daddy’s dark brown eyes, and then the world exploded in heat and flames and horrible screams.
She was screaming, too. Screaming and screaming, her throat raw, her head pounding. Someone calling her name over and over again.
Stella woke with a start, bathed in sweat, pain throbbing somewhere so deep inside she wasn’t sure where it came from or how to get rid of it.
“Shhhhh,” someone said, hands brushing across her cheeks, wiping away the tears that always came with the Christmas dream.
Christmas nightmare.
She took a deep, shuddering breath, realized she was hooked to something. An IV?
Was she in the hospital?
Suddenly the fog cleared, and she knew where she was, what had happened.
“Nana!” She shoved aside blankets, tried to get to her feet, but those hands—the warm, rough ones that had wiped her tears—were on her shoulders, holding her still.
“Slow down, Stella.”
Chance.
She should have known, should have recognized the hands, the deep voice.
“Where’s my grandmother?” she asked.
“In ICU. Stable.” He was leaning over her, his dress shirt unbuttoned at the neck, his tie dangling loose, his gaze steady and focused.
He was the most handsome man she’d ever seen, the kindest man she’d ever known. She tried really hard not to think about that when they were working together.
Right now, they weren’t working.
For a moment, it was just the two of them, looking into each other’s eyes, everything else flying away. If she let herself, she could drift into sleep again, let herself relax knowing that Chance was there. She wouldn’t let herself. Her grandmother needed her.
Stable. That’s what Chance had said.
It was a good word, but she wanted more. Like conscious, talking. Fine.
“I need to see her.”
“You’re in no shape to go anywhere or see anyone.”
“I’m seeing you,” she retorted, sitting up a little too quickly. Pain jolted through her skull, and she would have closed her eyes if she hadn’t been afraid she’d be in the nightmare again.
“You’re funny, Stella. Even when your skull is cracked open,” he responded, his hand on her back. He smelled like pine needles and snow, and she realized that his shirt was damp, his hair mussed.
Not perfect Chance anymore.
Except that he was—the way he was supporting her weight, looking into her eyes, teasing her because he probably knew she needed the distraction. All of it was perfect, and that made it really hard to remember all the reasons why she and Chance hadn’t worked out.
All the reasons?
She could only really think of one—she’d been a coward, too afraid of being disappointed to risk her heart again.
She shoved the covers off, turned so her feet were dangling over the side of the bed. She was wearing a hospital gown. Of course. Her feet bare, her legs speckled with mud and crisscrossed with scratches. She could have died out in the woods. If Chance hadn’t shown up, she probably would have.
If she’d died, what would have happened to Beatrice? She knew the answer. Beatrice would have died, too.
It didn’t make sense.
The town she’d grown up in was quiet and cozy. Movie theaters, shopping centers, a bowling alley and an ice-skating rink. The nice-sized hospital she was in had been built in the sixties and had a level one trauma center. People hiked and biked and ran, and they generally died of old age or disease. Not murder.
She frowned.
Was that what all this had been? Attempted murder? It didn’t seem possible. Not in Boonsboro. Trouble didn’t happen there. At least, not the kind that took people’s lives. Not usually. Not often. One of the worst things that had ever happened in town was the accident that had killed Stella’s family. It had been the worst tragedy since the old Harman house had gone up in flames at the turn of the nineteenth century. Four children died in the fire. Two adults. The grave plot was still tended by someone in the family, but Stella had never paid much attention to it. She’d had her own family to mourn, her own graves to tend.
She shoved the thought and the memory away, pushed against the mattress and tried to stand. Failed.
“Need some help?” Chance slid his arm around her waist, and she was up on her feet before she realized she was moving.
The room was moving, too, spinning around her, making her sick and woozy. Maybe Chance was right. She wasn’t in any shape to go anywhere.
In