Guardian Kaitlyn O'Connor (good books to read in english .txt) đ
- Author: Kaitlyn O'Connor
Book online «Guardian Kaitlyn O'Connor (good books to read in english .txt) đ». Author Kaitlyn O'Connor
He missed. By the number of paper wadsaround it, he hadnât perfected the shot yet. âFruit cake,â he saidsuccinctly. âTotal kook. Which is a damned shame if you ask me.That was a fine looking woman. I always did have a thing forredheads.â
Roddyâs brows shot to his hairline.âSeriously? You ainât messing with me?â
Dillard grinned. âSeriously kooky.Still a fine looking piece, if you ask me.â
âI didnât get a goodlook,â Roddy admitted, his expression and tone relaying hisdisappointment. âYou need to watch what you say, though, âcause ifit gets back to your old lady sheâll de-ball you.â
Warming to his theme, Dillard ignoredthe comment about his wife. âA real lady, too. Canât remember thelast time I saw a woman with that much class in thisplace.â
Roddy was intrigued. âYou think sheâsrich?â
Dillard gave him a sour look. âNotshopping at Cheap-mart. I said classâhighly educatedâlike ateacher, you know. All prim and proper.â
âDamn,â Roddy muttered.âAnd nutty as a fruit cake. What a shame! I thought I heard her saysomething about library?â
Dillard nodded. âSayâs sheâs alibrarian.â
âSo, you thinking sheâsjust invented the whole suspicion thing to entertainherself?â
Dillard shrugged, but he frownedthoughtfully. âWhy would a woman like that, librarian or not, haveto invent something to entertain herself? I mean, if she was oldand single I could see it.â
âI donât know,â Roddy saidand shrugged himself. âI didnât catch the whole tale. Did sheactually give you anything to work with? You want me to check itout?â
âNot a lot.â Dillard shookhis head. âI have a duty to check it out, but Iâm betting itsnothing.â
âHow you going to dothat?â
Dillard thought it over. âShe said shewas a librarian. How many libraries could there be?â
Roddy grinned. âCareful.If youâve got a mind to check her out your old ladymight get wind of it.And then youâll be up shit creek.â
Chapter Two
The more Marilyn thought about theincident at the police station, the guiltier she felt and the moreembarrassed and anxious she became.
Sheâd ratted on herneighbor because she thoughthe might be up to something and she didnât knowthat heâd done anything at all.
In vain she kept reminding herselfthat he had behaved in a suspicious way or it would never haveoccurred to her to do anything like that. And that the governmenthad harped on âsee something, say somethingâ to stop violence andlawlessness and terrorism until they had eroded her confidence inher judgment. And then she reminded herself that they werenât goingto just walk up and arrest him because of something sheâd said.Clearly, they hadnât believed a word of it. They probably wouldnâteven investigate.
It was along about that time that itdawned on her that she hadnât actually given them any information.Nothing they could use to track her, she didnât think.
Except her name.
God! Why had she given her name? Shecould have reported anonymously!
By phone, stupid, she chastisedherself, wishing sheâd done that instead, but the only landline sheknew of was in the library where she worked and she was afraidtheyâd trace the call.
She should haveknown she didnât havethe skill, or the sneakiness, to carry off something like this, shethought irritably.
And it was about that time that sheslammed into something she was sure shouldnât have been therebecause she was on the sidewalkâslammed into something and bouncedback and was grabbed.
Someone.
It was a bodyâa personâsheâd run into, she realized when the shock lifted enough for it to filter intoher brain that it was hard but yielding and warm. âOh my god!â shegasped, struggling to regain her balance and stepping all over thefeet in the process. âSorry, sorry!â
Whoever it was stepped back the thirdtime she stepped on his feet and, since she hadnât regained herbalance, she shifted forward and wallowed her face all over hischest and belly as gravity took over.
Thankfully, he grabbed her upper armsand set her away before she face planted his gentileregion.
Marilyn looked up to see who sheâdwallowed all over and discovered it was her neighbor.
The one sheâd just narcedon.
She felt her jaw go slackâmostly athis proximity because he really was drop dead gorgeous. That wasnâtjust imagination.
But also because sheâd just narced onhim and guilt sent her shocked mind into a spiral. âOh! I am ⊠I amso sorry,â she stammered. âYou should have looked where âŠ. I mean Ishould have. Excuse me. Pardon me.â
She discovered sheâd dropped herpurse. She squatted to grab it at the same time he spotted it anddropped to a crouch to grab it and they slammed heads together hardenough her ears rang.
And his sunglasses were knockedaskew.
And she got a glimpse of the strangesteyes she had ever seen.
He righted the glasses and tried tohelp her up.
âNo! Iâm fine,â Marilynsaid absently. âI have to âŠ. Everything fell out of mypurse.â
He shoved her back anyway, held herarm until he was sure she wouldnât fall, and then grabbed the purseand the contents and began shoveling quickly and efficientlyâandwithout any regard for what he was grabbing and stuffing into thepurse.
When heâd finished, he shot upwardagain, shoved the purse at her chest and waited till she grabbedit. âYou ok?â
Marilyn gaped at him and finallymanaged to nod.
He nodded back, stepped around her andleft at a brisk, purposeful, ground eating strideâcompletely unlikethe stride sheâd seen beforeâwhich was generally slow andmeandering with a not infrequent stumble forpunctuation.
Still struggling with shock at thecollision, Marilyn wandered inside and made it to the elevator. Shewent all the way to the top floor before she thought to punch thebutton for her floorâthe second.
She usually took the stairsâfor theexerciseâbut she was addled. Sheâd just walked into the elevatorbecause it was sitting there, waiting, with the dooropen.
The forced wait went a long way towardscaling down on the shock. She was still in emotional turmoil whenthe cubicle reached her floor, dinged, and the doors opened, buther brain was functioning on a higher level than animalinstinct.
She wandered down the hallway for alittle bit, because she wasnât used to arriving via elevator, andfinally found her doorâwhich looked like every other door in thebuildingâunlocked it, went inside and then collapsed,
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