Dangerous Pursuit (The Protectors) (24 page)

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Authors: Margaret Daley

Tags: #Harlequin author, #Debra Webb, #Carla Cassidy, #Romantic suspense, #Rita Herron

BOOK: Dangerous Pursuit (The Protectors)
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The announcer ended his description and was giving out the number to dial. Seconds ticked by and all Anna could do was stare at the phone.

Anna, you never take chances. You're afraid of life,
her ex-husband Richard had told her just before he left her for another woman.
I need more than a quiet, dull home life. I need someone who wants excitement.

“Anna! Call!” Molly exclaimed, pulling Anna away from her painful memories.

Slowly Anna reached for the receiver. She knew why she was hesitant. Richard had been right about her. She wanted this trip badly and hated facing the disappointment if the line was busy or she got through at the wrong time.

Anna punched one number, then two. The announcer on the radio answered the seventeenth caller. Anna’s hand froze in midair. Molly shook Anna’s arm, and she snapped out of her daze to quickly punch the last five digits.

Her heart stopped beating when she heard the phone ringing.

“Hello, this is KLUV. You’re caller…" there was the slightest, suspenseful pause and Anna’s lungs burned with her bottled breath, “number twenty. Congratulations! You’ve just won yourself a trip to Austria for two.”

Suddenly the phone began to slip from Anna’s nerveless fingers. Her body was thrown into automatic control and her hand tightened about the receiver.

Someone was going to wake her from her daydream. Things like this didn’t happen to Anna Stanfield, schoolteacher and single mother.

“Who am I speaking to?” The man’s question sounded far away, as if he were shouting through a tin can.

She swallowed several times and tried to say something. Never in her life had she been speechless, but her vocal cords seemed to be paralyzed.
Woman loses chance of her dream vacation because she couldn’t say her name
, flashed across the screen in her mind.

“Hello? Anyone there?”

“This is—Anna Stanfield,” she finally answered in a squeaky voice.

Everyone in the lounge clapped and shouted. The disc jockey laughed and said, “I hear your cheering section. Who are they?”

“My coworkers.” Her voice, thankfully, was stronger. She inhaled deeply to ease the constriction in her lungs.

“Where do you work?”

Anna gave him the name of the elementary school she worked at.

“Are you a teacher?”

“I teach in a class for students with special needs.”

“Well, Anna Stanfield, you’re on your way to Austria for two glorious weeks. Have you ever been there or to Europe?”

“No.” Usually it wasn’t this hard to pull information out of her, but shock still held her in its grip.

“Have you got someone in mind to go along with you?”

Austria for two.
She hadn’t thought about that. She hadn’t allowed herself to think about any of the details.

Who would she take? “Not yet,” she replied, shifting the receiver to her other ear. Her heartbeat was beginning to slow down and her bodily functions were returning to normal—well, as normal as possible considering she had just won the trip of a lifetime. “I can’t believe this is happening to me. Thank you.”

“Anna Stanfield, it’s definitely happening to you,” the announcer said. “In a short time you’ll be in Austria.”

As the disc jockey played another song, he took down all the information he needed, then asked Anna to stop by the radio station the following day for the necessary documents.

When Anna hung up, she looked up to find five pairs of bright eyes on her. A barrage of questions was fired at her until she held up her hand, overwhelmed, shaking her head as though still trying to grasp what had just happened.

“I’ll know more tomorrow. I’m still trying to recover,” she said to the disappointment of her fellow teachers.

After the excitement died down, Anna and Molly left. Molly had been unusually quiet in the lounge, but that hadn’t fooled Anna. She knew her best friend was just waiting until they were alone. Molly didn’t disappoint Anna.

The second they were snugly sheltered in the warmth of Anna’s car Molly asked, “When are you going?”

“I guess at Christmas. That’s the only time we have a two-week vacation, and if I go to Austria, I’ll go when I can ski.”

“Who are you going to take?”

“My boyfriend,” Anna quipped.

“You don’t have one,” Molly instantly shot back. “You haven’t dated once since Richard left two years ago.”

“You’re forgetting about that blind date you fixed me up with a few months back.”

Molly chuckled. “He was definitely forgettable. I was hoping you’d forget about my little mistake.”

“Little?”

“Okay, big. I should have checked him out first, but my dear, sweet husband felt sorry for the man since he had just moved to Denver. And Roy’s description was kind, to say the least.”

“I didn’t know people our age parked anymore. I thought that was for teenagers. I think that man had been frozen in time and was just thawed out this year. He was still living in the late sixties.”

“Sorry about that one. That will be the first and last time I arrange a blind date. But you haven’t answered my question. Who will you take?”

“Todd.”

“Your son has to spend Christmas with his dad this year.”

“Maybe Richard will let me have him again for the Christmas holidays since this trip is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity."

This time, when Molly laughed, there was no humor in the sound. “Richard? Do you a favor? I personally think you’re better off without that two-timing man.” Her disgust was evident in her expression and voice. “Don’t count on Richard doing it. He’ll want to get his hands on Todd to make sure you haven’t filled your son’s head with the truth. Your husband never did take the time to get to know you or he’d know you couldn’t do that.”

“Richard doesn’t get to see his son very often since he lives in Alabama,” Anna said in defense. Richard might not have been a good husband, but he was a good dad—once he had finally decided to take on his responsibilities as Todd’s father. He did more for his son now than when he was living with them.

“And whose fault is that? He’s the one who walked out and moved away from his son because his new wife didn’t want to live where it was cold.”

“Okay. Then, who? You?” Anna gave her friend a hopeful glance. She hated these minor details spoiling her dream vacation.

“I have a great husband, but I’m not sure he’s that great. Any other time and I think I could go, but it’s Christmas, and with three children that’s the most important time of year. How about your mother?”

“Mother’s visiting my sister in Florida this Christmas. She wanted me to come along. Besides, Europe never appealed to her. She’s one of those people who thinks she should see the United States first before globetrotting to parts unknown.”

“Then how about Emily? She’s single.” Emily Mason was a fellow teacher whom Anna had been a friend with ever since she started teaching after her divorce. Emily was easygoing and fun. “I’ll ask her after I find out the details tomorrow.”

“If I know Emily, she’ll be foaming at the mouth to go. I’m jealous already.”

“You don’t have to be.”

When Anna gave Molly another hopeful look, her friend laughed. “No chance. I’d be drummed out of my family.”

Anna turned her full concentration on the heavy traffic. When she had married Richard eight years before, she had envisioned them having three or four children. After Todd was born, however, Richard had declared that Todd would be it. A child curtailed his freedom too much.

She still wanted more children. Well, then start dating, an inner voice chided her.

Anna realized she should get back into the action, as Molly was always telling her, but never again would she allow herself to be swept off her feet. The next time she would take it slowly and become friends first. She had no intention of losing her heart quickly only to have it broken again.

 

* * *

 

“Emily, I’m so sorry,” Anna said, sinking down onto her bed next to her suitcase.

“I think I’m dying.” Emily began to cough and covered her receiver. Moments later she returned to the conversation, her voice hoarser. “After five years of teaching I’ve finally caught a whopper from one of my students. The doctor says it’s a combination strep throat and pneumonia. Oh, Anna, I hate letting you down like this. I hate letting myself down like this.” A half chuckle/half squeak came through the line before Emily began coughing again.

“Please don’t worry about me. Just take care of yourself.”

“Have a great time. But don’t send me any postcards. I might cry.”

After hanging up, Anna stared at the floor, her hand still on the receiver.

“Anna! Where are you?” Molly called out from the living room.

Anna blinked, looked up at the door, and shouted, “I’m in my bedroom—packing.” The last word faded into the silence.

For a few seconds she was transported back in time, as though her struggle for independence had never taken place. Though she knew there had been nothing Emily could do about her illness, Anna felt as she had two years before when Richard had abandoned her. Until her ex-husband had walked out on their marriage, Anna had never had to stand on her own two feet, let alone try to raise a child by herself and be responsible for all the small things that Richard had taken care of. But she had learned over the last two years. She wasn't the same person.

Molly appeared in her doorway. By the expression on her friend’s face, Anna knew that Emily had called her first.

“Todd let me in before running out the door to make a snowman with Buddy.” Molly moved into the room and sat on the other side of the suitcase. “I gather that Emily has called you.”

Anna nodded, tears threatening to escape her eyes.

“What are you going to do?”

Anna shrugged, a knot in her throat.

“I wish I could go, but I don’t even have a passport.”

Anna sensed her dream crumbling around her and felt helpless to stop it.

“How about your mother?”

“She’s already in Florida. She doesn’t have a passport, either.”

“And no one can get one in a day. Do you know anyone who has a passport?”

“Not anyone who’s available. Christmas is a time for family.” Anna swallowed her tears and straightened, snapping her suitcase closed. She couldn’t give up her dream. She had come to a decision. She was no longer the helpless woman she had been two years before. It was time to take chances and prove her was own person. “I’m going to Austria alone.”

 

* * *

 

Someone was watching him. Mark Prince sensed it in his bones. He was being followed—something that wasn’t unfamiliar to him. He quickened his pace and slipped into a store, pretending to examine a stein while his steely blue eyes were trained on the window. A man passed the store and slowed his step. He looked into the shop and their gazes locked.

Every muscle in Mark’s body grew taut as the man stepped into the Austrian store. Mark wasn’t fooled by the casual way the stranger browsed about the quaint little shop, also pretending to examine the collection of steins.

“I need your help. Do you think this stein would be a nice gift for my sister, Sam?” The stranger held up a pewter one.

Mark’s body tensed.
His
sister was named Sam. He didn't believe in coincidences. He was sure the stranger’s sister wasn’t called Sam, if he even had one. Instead, this was some kind of a coded message from a man Mark had known in South America.

“I don’t know. Let me look at it,” Mark replied, taking the stein from the stranger, who also slipped Mark a folded piece of paper. Mark went through the motions of inspecting the mug before handing it back and replying, “Without knowing her, I wouldn’t be able to say.” Mark left the shop, certain the man wouldn’t follow him anymore. The stranger had given him what he had been sent to deliver.

The chiming of the bells of the cathedral permeated the crisp December air. The wind swept through the Salzburg street like a large broom clearing away debris. But Mark didn’t feel the cold bite of the wind. His thoughts were on the note in his hand. He found a private place and read the invitation to meet with an old friend. A chill having nothing to do with the cold temperature encased him.

Out of habit Mark turned his head from side to side, inspecting the narrow street near the Alter Markt. Whenever Michael Rutledge was around so was trouble. The street was nearly empty. Only an old couple stood beneath a trade sign of stained glass and wrought iron.

Satisfied no one was following him, Mark went through the stone archway and into the tavern, allowing his eyes to adjust to the darkened interior before moving toward the table. The tavern offered warmth, privacy, and a good selection of food and drink. Mark had to commend Michael’s choice of a meeting place.

As Mark made his way across the room toward a table in the back corner, his gaze darted about, alert and gauging. He knew something big was about to happen.

Mark paused at the table and stared into the shadow that concealed his friend’s face from his view. Michael Rutledge lifted his hand and indicated that Mark should take a seat. There already were cups of coffee on the table.

“Have you heard from your sister and brother-in-law lately?” Michael asked, nothing revealed by the tone of his voice.

Mark smiled. “Is that why you went to all this trouble? To inquire about my family?” His grin took on a mocking twist. “You could have saved yourself a lot of time by phoning, texting, emailing, whichever you prefer.”

“Those means can be intercepted.”

Mark took several sips of his coffee, his eyes completely accustomed now to the dim lighting in the tavern. He could make out the expression on Michael’s face, a half grin that Mark was very familiar with. It hid a troubled countenance that confirmed Mark’s feeling that something big was about to happen.

“Sam and Brock are fine. I believe they returned to New Orleans a few weeks ago. Sam has finally decided to sell her bookstore since she’s rarely there anymore. Is that enough information for you?”

“Always did like your sister. Too bad she met Brock first.”

Mark was surprised by Michael’s admission. He never thought Michael would allow himself to like anyone—it would be too dangerous. That was why Mark never let Michael recruit him into the “business.” He didn’t want to cut himself off from people as Michael had. Mark vividly remembered how he had gotten his sister involved in a perilous situation in the Amazon. The mad man who had been after Mark had nearly killed her. He would never again put someone he loved in such a position.

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