Hot On His Trail. Kristin Eckhardt
candidate for the job? She looked out over the great room below, noting the massive stone fireplace and the heavy, exposed beams. It looked as if the house had once been smaller, then expanded to accommodate a growing family.
Was that the answer to her question? Family ties? It made sense, considering Dylan and Lily Garrett had chosen to open a business together and run it out of their old family home. Especially when you considered the focus of the agency—to reunite people with their loved ones.
Family ties. That was the key. Something she could use to her advantage.
Even if she believed some family ties had to be broken.
* * *
“WE HAVE TO find Matt Radcliffe.” Lily Garrett Bishop sat propped up in bed, several eiderdown pillows supporting her. “He’s the last beneficiary in Violet Mitchum’s will.” She watched her brother pace across her bedroom floor. He hadn’t even heard her. Not surprising, considering he’d been strangely preoccupied since Christmas.
“Dylan?”
He stopped and looked up at her. “What’s the matter? Is it the baby?”
She placed one hand protectively over her swollen belly. Only six months pregnant, she’d gone into premature labor a week ago. Fortunately, the doctors had been able to stop it.
Her husband, Cole, had been at his ranch, overseeing its sale to his ranch foreman, Manny Peres. He’d rushed home, the ink still wet on the bill of sale.
Both he and Dylan hovered over her, along with her father. Treating her like a fragile porcelain doll. She’d meekly accepted their coddling at first, terrified that she might lose her baby. But she was feeling much stronger now, and though she had every intention of following the doctor’s orders by staying in bed, that didn’t mean she couldn’t still play an active role in Finders Keepers.
If only her overprotective brother would let her.
“Sit down, Dylan,” she ordered. “You’re making me dizzy.”
He immediately complied, his brow creased with worry. “Are you sure you’re all right? Do you want me to call your doctor? Or Cole? He’s at the construction site, going over those changes in your house plans with the builder.”
“I’m fine,” she assured him. “And so is your niece or nephew.”
Dylan reached out one hand and placed it on her distended belly. A small smile tipped up the corner of his mouth. “He’s kicking up a storm in there.”
“Tell me about it,” she said, shifting a little to assuage the slight ache in her lower back. “Although I don’t understand why you’re so convinced it’s a boy.”
“Because with a kick like that, he’ll make first string placekicker on the Texas A&M football team and give his uncle Dylan free season tickets.”
She laughed. “You’ve never heard of a girl making a college team as a kicker?”
“Sure I have,” he said, leaning back in his chair. “But I’d be so busy keeping all those besotted football players away from my beautiful niece that I couldn’t enjoy the game.”
Lily smiled as tears pricked her eyes. It felt so good to talk about her baby’s future. To believe that she’d safely carry this precious child for the next three months. She reached down and squeezed her brother’s hand, silently thanking him for his loving support.
A light knock on the door made them both look up. Carolyn stuck her head inside and waved at Lily, then she turned to Dylan. “Sorry to interrupt, but there is a Calley Graham here for an interview.”
Lily’s brow furrowed. “Interview? What interview?”
“Oops,” Carolyn muttered, as Lily struggled to sit up in bed.
“Oh, hell,” Dylan muttered. “I completely forgot about her.” He turned to Carolyn. “Thanks. Tell Miss Graham I’ll be there in a few minutes.”
Lily waited until Carolyn shut the door before she turned to her brother. “Okay, Dylan, spill it. What are you up to now?”
He set his jaw. “I’m hiring a temporary investigator for Finders Keepers.”
Lily arched a brow, willing herself not to lose her temper. “When were you planning to tell me?”
“I thought you had enough to worry about.”
“Please don’t shut me out, Dylan. If I have to lie here and do nothing for the next three months, I’ll go completely stir-crazy.”
“Well, you can’t go out on assignment, and we have to find Matt Radcliffe.”
“I think I just said that,” Lily observed ruefully. Matt Radcliffe was a beneficiary in the late Violet Mitchum’s will. Widow of wealthy horse rancher and oilman Charles Mitchum, Violet had lived in a Victorian monstrosity in Pinto, Texas, until her death. Finders Keepers had been retained to find the three outstanding beneficiaries among the eight people named in Violet’s will. They’d successfully located Sara Pierce and Jillian Salvini, but Matt Radcliffe had proven more elusive.
Dylan sat on the edge of her bed. “Actually, we do have a lead. Our little gift to his mother finally paid off.”
Lily sat further up in bed, her interest piqued. “Where is he?”
“Somewhere in New Mexico,” Dylan replied.
“That sounds a little vague.”
“Exactly. That’s why we need someone to go out in the field and track him down. I can’t do it because of—”
“Julie,” Lily finished for him. The wife of Dylan’s best friend, Sebastian Cooper, had disappeared after a car-jacking over a year ago. Her brother’s concern for the missing Julie Cooper had almost turned into an obsession, although lately he didn’t seem as tense about her disappearance as he had been for the last few months. Had he gotten a lead on her? Or just finally given up hope of ever finding her?
Dylan gave a short nod. “I also want to stay close to home in case you need me.”
Lily leaned back against the pillows, feeling useless. But maybe there was something she could do. “Let me interview Calley Graham.”
“That’s not necessary. I’ve already hired someone for the job.”
She blinked. “Then why is this Graham woman here for an interview?”
He raked one hand through his brown hair. “Because I forgot to tell Carolyn to cancel the interview.”
Lily wasn’t surprised, given how distracted her brother had been recently. Which was further proof that he needed Lily’s help. “It’s really not fair to send Calley Graham away now. The least you can do is interview her, or let me do it.”
“Why? I’ve already as much as promised the job to a man named Simms. I still need to conduct a face-to-face interview with him, but that’s just a formality. He’s a retired cop with a résumé a mile long.”
“We could send them both out into the field,” Lily suggested. “Double our chances of finding Matt Radcliffe.”
Dylan stood up. “That means we’ll have to pay twice as much, too.”
She smiled as another idea occurred to her. “Not if we make it a contest. The first one to find Matt Radcliffe and bring him back to Texas wins the job. We’d pay expenses, of course, but no salary until the winner is hired.”
Dylan stared at her for a long moment, then grinned. “I see pregnancy hasn’t affected your brain cells. You’re still as devious as ever.”
She laughed. “I believe the word you’re looking for is creative.”
“So what happens if this Graham woman and Simms both decline our not-so-generous offer?”
She