Hazardous Holiday. Liz Johnson
knew it was safe to move in.
“Did you see the shooter?”
Kristi shook her head, her curls tickling the back of his neck. “I didn’t see anything.”
Zach tried to sit up a little straighter, but it turned into more of a slump. “He was on the building—” he flopped his good arm in the general direction “—across the parking lot.”
Both the police officer and Kristi whipped their heads around as though they would catch a glimpse of the gunman.
The cop swung back just as quickly. “How do you know?”
“Saw his scope reflecting. On top of the car.”
Shock crossed the cop’s face. Zach guessed that most civilians didn’t pay attention to strange reflections. Well, he wasn’t a civilian.
“I’m a SEAL.”
The surprise was replaced by something that could only be identified as respect. “I didn’t realize.”
Why should he have? Zach was out of uniform and out of sorts. On the ground and mentally fuzzy wasn’t his usual stance.
But his family was safe. At least for the moment.
The cop turned his head and spoke into his radio, relaying Zach’s information. “SWAT’s going in to clear the area. It’ll be just a few minutes.”
“But he’s been shot.” Kristi’s voice cracked under the strain. “Can’t we get him inside?”
“Not without leaving him—and anyone helping him—exposed.” The cop offered a half smile and tried for a little humor. “Besides, he’s probably been hit before.”
“Actually, no.” Zach could remember a whole lot of pain in his years with the teams, but this particular discomfort was new. Getting shot hurt. With a capital H.
The blood loss wasn’t much better. It was making him woozy and far too focused on the gentle slope of the underside of Kristi’s chin. The urge to touch her surged through him. He caught his hand at the last minute and forced it back to his shoulder.
Nope. He wasn’t allowed to do that.
But she’s your wife. Your very, very pretty wife.
Not exactly.
She signed the license.
But she hadn’t agreed to anything more than a marriage in name only. Because she was scared and on her own and he’d offered to help. And he’d rather shoot his other arm than do anything to break her trust. Besides, he wasn’t the kind of man she wanted. He never had been, and he didn’t know how to be.
The cop’s radio squawked, the words a jumbled mess, except for the crucial phrase “All clear.”
In an instant, three nurses pushing a gurney charged into the open, their tennis shoes slapping against the cement and nearly covering the low squeak of one of the gurney wheels.
“Can you get up?” A formidable blonde leaned over him, looking like she’d pick him up herself if he wasn’t able.
Everything in him wanted to stay where he was and fall into oblivion. But a stupid bullet in his arm wasn’t going to keep him down. Not when the shooter was still at large, leaving his family in danger.
As he settled onto the gurney, Kristi grabbed his hand and squeezed it. “We’re right behind you.”
He closed his eyes and nodded but called out just before the nurses pushed him away. “Wait. I forgot...” His voice trailed off, and he sucked in a quick breath, snatching at as much air as he could get before quickly releasing it, trying to remember what he’d forgotten. “Bad shot.”
“What?” The cop stepped closer to him.
“The shooter. Had a scope but couldn’t have been a pro. Was a bad shot.”
Kristi shook her head frantically. “Bad? He hit you.”
“But he was aiming for you.”
* * *
Kristi couldn’t stop pacing after the nurses wheeled Zach away. During the interview with the police officer, she covered a four-foot space innumerable times. While his cardiologist checked on Cody, she marched back and forth across the exam room. When Cody looked up at her with confusion in his wide eyes, she tried to stop. But the pull was too strong, and she took a quick side-to-side step.
“Mom?” Cody’s voice was clear and strong, and she snapped to attention, noticing that the doctor had even halted his charting.
“Yes?”
“Are you all right?”
“Yes.” Her second response sounded more like a question than the first, so she cleared her throat and tried again. “I’m fine. Everything’s okay.”
“No, it’s not.” Cody wasn’t being disrespectful or snide. He was just stating the fact, and it tore at her chest. He was so innocent, and she wanted to keep him that way. But she couldn’t deny that someone had shot Zach, or that that meant everything was very much not okay.
Combing his hair with her fingers, she tried for a smile, but her mouth seemed to have forgotten how to shape it. “You’re right, buddy. I’m scared.”
He was aiming for you.
Zach’s words rang in her head, terrifying and true.
“Not me.”
Dr. Guthrie smiled as he pulled his stethoscope from around his neck. “You’re pretty brave.”
“Don’t need to be.” A smirk fell across Cody’s face. “Zach promised he’d take care of us.”
Zach.
He had the skills and training to protect them, and he cared about their safety. But even a SEAL could be brought down by a bullet.
Any man could be.
In an instant, she was back on the ranch while a uniformed officer, holding his hat in both hands, said, “I’m so sorry, ma’am.”
“Sorry?” She nearly choked on the word.
Cops didn’t come to your front door when the cows got loose. Still...she hoped. She prayed. “We’ve fixed that fence a half-dozen times. Silly cows. We’ll get them rounded up.”
“It’s not your cows, ma’am.”
Her mouth went dry, a fist in her chest twisting everything inside. She could only shake her head.
The cop’s face crumpled. “It’s Aaron.”
She put up both hands as though she could stop him from breaking her heart. “Don’t. Don’t say it.”
He didn’t comply. “I’m sorry to have to tell you, he’s been killed.”
Ice covered her until she was too frozen to even shiver.
“He was shot at the gas station.”
She hadn’t even been able to cry. Instead, she’d sunk to the floor and blacked out. The rest of that day had been a complete blank, not a single memory of her mother-in-law arriving and caring for Cody. Not the endless cups of tea pushed into her hands.
But when she staggered out from that stupor, her nightstand had been full of empty mugs, her bed turned into a cocoon of wool blankets.
She’d dressed in black and held Cody close as Aaron’s casket was lowered into the ground.
It had been a fluke. People didn’t just walk around and get shot. She understood that.
At least she thought she did.
But now her second husband had been shot, too. And men died from bullet wounds.
She wrapped her arms