Confessions. Cynthia Eden
into a chair across from his desk. She looked so polished and perfect. Not like the young girl who’d always had her hair streaming over her shoulders and a smile on her face. A smile for him, anyway. A smile that had lit her dark eyes and made—
“Do you recall what you told me? The last time we were—were together?” She fumbled a bit over those words.
He didn’t sit behind the desk. He leaned in front of it, positioning his body a few feet from Scarlett. “I’m afraid you’re going to have to be more specific for me.” He kept his voice controlled. “It’s been ten years.” Ten years, and wasn’t she supposed to be married? His gaze darted to her left hand. No ring.
But she’d been scheduled to get married two months ago. He knew she had. To a lawyer named Eric Turner.
Grant might not be in Scarlett’s life, but he kept tabs on her.
Like that doesn’t sound crazy.
But he’d been out of town for the past few weeks working on a case. He’d just gotten back to Austin last night, and he didn’t know if he was staring at a married woman...or a single one.
“More specific?” Her fingers were white around that black bag. “Right.” She cleared her throat. “Okay, you said that if I ever needed you, you’d be there for me.” Her gaze held his, and was full of hope. “Now do you remember?”
He’d always been afraid that her eyes could see into his soul. See straight into the darkness that lurked there. “Yes, I remember.” He remembered that he’d always been willing to do anything for her.
Scarlett’s breath whispered out. “Good. Because, Grant, I’m going to have to call you on that promise.”
He frowned at her.
“I need you,” she told him as she wet her lips. “I’m desperate, and without your help...I don’t know what’s going to happen.” She glanced over her shoulder, her nervous stare darting to the door.
“Scarlett?” Her fear was palpable, and it made his muscles tense.
“They’ll be coming for me soon. I only have a few minutes, and please, please stick to your promise. No matter what they say.”
He shot away from his desk, his relaxed pose forgotten as he realized that Scarlett wasn’t just afraid. She was terrified. “Who’s coming?”
“I didn’t do it.” She rose, too, and dropped her bag into her chair. “It will look like I did, all the evidence says so...but I didn’t do it.”
He stepped toward her, touched her and felt the jolt slide all the way through him. Ten years...ten years...and it was still there. The awareness. The need.
Did she feel it, too?
Focus. “Slow down,” Grant told her, trying to keep his voice level and calm. “Just take it easy. You’re safe here.” With me.
But that wasn’t exactly true. She was in the most danger when she was with him. Only Scarlett had never realized that fact.
“Say you’ll help me,” she pleaded. Her tone was desperate. She had a soft voice, one that was perfect for whispering in the dark. A voice that had tempted a boy...and sure as hell made the man he’d become think sinful thoughts.
“I’ll help you,” Grant heard himself say instantly. So he still had the same problem—he couldn’t deny her anything.
Her shoulders sagged in apparent relief. “You’ve changed.” Then her hand rose. Her fingers skimmed over his jaw, rasping against the five o’clock shadow that roughened his face. They were so close right then. And memories collided between them.
When she’d been eighteen, he’d always been so careful with her. He’d had to maintain his control at every moment. But that control had broken one summer night, weeks after her eighteenth birthday...
I can still feel her around me.
“Grant?”
She wasn’t eighteen any longer.
And his control—
He heard voices then, coming from the lobby.
“Keep your promise,” Scarlett said.
What the hell?
He pulled away from her and walked toward the door.
Those voices were louder now. Because they were...shouting for Scarlett?
“Scarlett Stone...!”
“They were behind me.” Her words rushed out. “I knew they were closing in, but I wanted to get to you.”
He hated the fear in her voice. “You’re safe.”
“No, I’m not.” She sounded so certain.
Grant opened his office door. Two men were in the lobby. One wore a suit—expensive, well cut. The other was wearing a faded leather jacket and had a badge clipped to his belt.
Why is a cop looking for Scarlett? And it wasn’t just any cop. Grant recognized Shayne Townsend because he and the detective had worked a few cases in the past.
“What’s happening here?” Grant demanded.
The guy in the suit narrowed his eyes on him. “Who are you?”
Grant’s brows rose. He sure didn’t like that arrogant, demanding tone. “Grant McGuire. This is my business you’re in.”
Shayne looked over Grant’s shoulder. His eyes narrowed and Grant knew he had spied Scarlett. “Ms. Stone,” the detective murmured, his face determined. “You need to come with us.”
Us? Was the other guy a cop, too? Because Grant didn’t recognize him.
But when the suit advanced, Grant braced his legs apart and gave the guy a go-to-hell stare. “She doesn’t need to go anyplace. But you two...unless you have some sort of reason for being on my property, a warrant—”
“We’re here for Scarlett,” the suit said. His blue eyes were blazing with fury. “You can’t run anymore, Scarlett.”
She had been running...
Shayne pulled out a pair of handcuffs. “Scarlett Stone...” His voice was heavy, emotionless. Grant knew the detective tried to never let emotion influence him on the job. “You’re under arrest.”
“What?” Grant roared.
Scarlett walked past him then, heading right toward the cop. She’d known the officer was hunting her? That Shayne Townsend was tracking her to Grant’s office?
A cuff snicked around one delicate wrist.
“Are those necessary?” Grant demanded. Sure, he’d seen plenty of criminals get cuffed, but Scarlett was no criminal. She was...Scarlett.
“You can bet they’re necessary!” the suit all but shouted back at him.
The guy was getting on Grant’s last nerve.
“You’re under arrest for the murder of Eric Turner,” Shayne told her, as the other cuff slid into place. “You have the right to remain silent. You have the right to an attorney—”
Grant shook his head. This wasn’t happening. “Scarlett?”
“I didn’t do it,” she said, glancing over at him with tears in her eyes.
“Yes, you did,” the suit snarled. “You killed my brother!”
Oh, hell.
Scarlett was still looking at Grant. “I need you,” she said.
And he nodded.
I need you, too. When Shayne started to lead her from the lobby, Grant made damn sure he left with them.
* * *
SHE