had to come up with explanations, fast. And if he knew Dillon, he wasnât about to tell her that the old factory was haunted by the ghost of her murdered cousin .
No, infested by rats was a preferable explanation. And it was. The rat of a man whoâd betrayed his best friend and sent him to his death. And the King Rat himself, Nate Kincaid .
You canât keep a good man down .
4
J amie searched, of course. It had been there when she woke up, hadnât it? Dillon couldnât have taken itâheâd been with her the entire time. And there was no way up to the second floor except that dark, rat-infested stairway, and no one had passed them while they sat arguing at the kitchen table.
Or maybe whoever had dumped her suitcase in the room had taken the purse. She wasnât carrying a lot of cash, though her small supply of sleeping pills might appeal to some teenage druggie. And hell, what was Dillon but an overgrown teenage druggie? It had to be him.
She sat down on the mattress. She should go downstairs and confront him, demand that he return her purse. Heâd deny taking it, of course. She was going to have a hell of a hard time getting out of here without her license and credit cards. No one would rent her a car, much less a room, without ID and credit. If he didnât give it back to her she was stuck.
She stretched out on the thin mattress, staring at the cracked ceiling. He didnât want her here. Why the hell would he do something that would keep her trapped here? Why, when heâd never liked her? If he even remembered that night so long ago, all heâd remember was what an idiot sheâd been. What an embarrassing, pathetic idiot.
Twelve years ago
âIâve changed my mind,â he said, and the soft breeze of early summer riffled through his too-long hair. âCome here.â
Jamie sat frozen in the front seat of the old Cadillac, practically wedged between the seat and the door. The beer bottle in her hands was empty, and in the gathering dusk Dillon Gaynor looked like every good girlâs worst nightmare. And secret, shameful dream.
Sheâd had her share of them. They all had, all the good girls of Marshfield, Rhode Island. He was wicked, he was sexy, he was as pretty as sin. Just the sort to daydream about. Just the sort to keep away from. And she was sitting in the front seat of an old Cadillac convertible with him, alone in the woods, and sheâd been fool enough to bring up the subject of kissing.
She didnât move. âI was just kidding,â she said, unable to keep the thread of nerves out of her voice.
âI wasnât.â He took the empty beer bottle out of her hands and threw it into the woods. And then he reached for her, pulling her across the broad front seat. The old leather was so soft and smooth she slid easily, until she was touching him, thigh to thigh, and he was looking down into her breathless face. âSo where do we start?â
âYou drive me home, then come back and get Nate and his girlfriend?â she suggested in a nervous voice.
âI donât think so.â He picked up her hand and looked at it for a long, contemplative moment. âBaby-pink nail polish. Did that match your prom dress?â
Sheâd chosen the shade just for that purpose, but she wasnât about to admit it. He wasnât expecting her to. He just held her delicate hand in his large, callused one, rubbing his thumb over her palm, slowly, sinuously. âSuch an innocent hand,â he said. âWhat naughty things have you done with it?â
âNothing.â
âI can believe it,â he murmured, pulling her hand to his mouth. He put his mouth against her palm, and she felt a shiver run through her body.And then he licked it, and the feel of his tongue against her skin shocked her. âTime you learned,â he said. And he put her hand against his chest.
It wouldnât have been so bad if heâd
Shauna Rice-Schober[thriller]