“Sooo,” Mark drawled, when he arrived at work the next morning. Setting a cup of coffee from his favorite coffee house on the desk for Teri, he waggled his brows. “Some pretty intense stuff was going on between you and Erikson last night. He was walking on air leaving the restaurant. Spill already!”
Teri’s eyes flicked up briefly from her coding, fixing Mark where he stood. “I thought you said he stands you up all the time.”
At the hint of annoyance in her tone, Mark’s brows shot up. Though most of what he knew of Jim was from Carla, in his gut he’d been positive he and Teri would hit it off.
While it certainly wasn’t his place to say, between the single-minded devotion to her daughter and the significant investment in at least this work project, Teri left herself little time for a life outside either. With someone as brilliant and beautiful as her, it seemed a terrible shame.
Mark hadn’t intended to offend Teri. What he’d actually hoped would happen was the polite attention of the charming and attractive Jim would flatter her out of her shell, make her see there was so much more to enjoy. Her reaction was confusing.
“Most of the time he does. This is only the second time he’s ever joined us,” Mark replied, qualifying, “He lives nearby that restaurant though, so maybe that’s why he opted in.”
Proximity, Teri thought derisively, breathing deep. Her persistent and powerful nemesis where Jim was involved.
I shouldn’t have called him, she chastised herself. How stupid can I get? What was the worst that would’ve happened? He might’ve called me? Why was it so hard to think clearly around him? What mystical mind-control was he wielding that she couldn’t keep things in perspective the minute she was in visual range of that hunky body and captivating smile?
“I got the impression you two liked each other. Or at least, Jim liked you. That’s not bad, is it?”
Teri’s fingers froze on the keyboard, her eyes staring blankly at the code on the monitor before her.
Proximity.
Maybe it wasn’t her enemy.
After all, she was in charge of her life’s coding. Teri looked up at Mark again. Forgetting his naive comment and rhetorical question if she’d even heard either in the first place, she confirmed, “He lives nearby?”
Again, Mark’s brows shot up, this time at her sudden reversal.
A woman with her IQ, that, more than anything, was a dangerous sign. He shrugged, nodding in a non-committal way. “Well, it’s Moab. Everything’s sort of nearby, but yeah, to my knowledge, yeah. Carla said he lives near the museum. I don’t know exactly where.”
“Museum. Which museum?”
“I took you by it. The one by the sheriff’s station.” He left the doorframe to return a moment later, his coffee in hand, retrieved from his desk. “The Moab Museum.”
The one she and Zoe had visited the same day she’d seen Jim while jogging. “Ah.” Teri's focus returned to her coding momentarily. Skimming the lines rapidly, she typed out the last missing commands, then copied the text into an email. “Would you run this encryption script in the POE test environment, please? Let me know if it triggers any errors.”
“Sure, boss-lady.” Taking a sip from his coffee, Mark turned to take a seat at his desk outside her office, then paused. “I’m sorry if bumping into Jim upset you. I had no idea you two knew each other.”
Teri scanned Mark’s worried face. She smiled comfortingly. “There was no way you could have.”
When Mark disappeared outside her door, Teri switched laptop applications, determined to scope out her mounting suspicions.
Near the museum by the sheriff’s office, she thought, loading a local map inside a different application and quickly pinning the two buildings, letting the app calculate the distance from the hospital to the furthest. She chose a radius from the hospital that encompassed both, then boosted the signal on her little black device.
Across her monitor, multi-colored lines of data began pouring in as the device’s antenna intercepted the Wi-Fi signals sent from the laptops, desktops, smartphones, and tablets in the widened captive area.
Teri needed information for only one. She entered her own phone number as search criteria, expecting her phone and three others as hits. Within moments, her initial search had identified four additional lines besides her own, associated in some way with her number, most likely through contact lists.
Curious, she thought, one brow arched. Another brief command consolidated the data from the four devices into individual quarters on her laptop's touchscreen. One connection was just outside her office. Mark of course, she confirmed easily by checking the number associated with the device. Swiping its feed from the touchscreen, she discarded that one, then paused, staring at the collecting data from the remaining three.
Two, she had anticipated, both of whom she'd reluctantly but voluntarily given her number. One signal from Dr. Johansen was located by the GPS nearby the hospital campus. Probably at some offsite administrative meeting or clinic, and Teri dismissed it without much attention.
The second from Jim Erikson, as Mark had suggested, was near the museum just within her search radius, with the unrecognized third device not far from it.
Momentarily debating disgarding Dr. Johansen’s feed as she had Mark's, Teri paused. Vastly more captured application data was scrolling past from his phone than the other two combined.
Curious, she thought. While any given individual might depend on a particular device more than another-- such as with Jim's two phones-- few would amass the volume of Dr. Johansen's. There was only so much one person could do at one time, even if he was a doctor.
Plus, the accumulating data from Johansen's phone was nothing she might have predicted.
To her surprise, she saw one app sending personal information, location data, various technical specifications, and information about the Wi-Fi network from Dr. Johansen’s phone. Additionally, there were multiple, bizarre internet queries about rekeying or picking a specific type of lock, all of the searches associated with the SLPRN-HOME network she’d seen months ago when she’d bid for this job.
As she watched, a series of instant messages passed between Dr. Johansen and a user on the hospital network. SPREST. Teri made a mental note to check the User ID but was instantly distracted by the messages.
JOHANS: Did you get the key
SPREST: Not yet. That rude charge is on today. She keeps giving me the worst patients
JOHANS: I don’t care how rude she is. You have one job. Keep your mouth shut and do it
SPREST: If you don’t like the job I’m doing, get it yourself
JOHANS: Don’t get smart. Withdrawal will be ugly when I cut your scripts
SPREST: I hate you
JOHANS: Get that key
Teri leaned against the back of her chair, slim arms relaxed along the rests, watching Dr. Johansen’s data scroll up her screen.
‘Cut your scripts’? Did he mean prescriptions? Dr. Johansen was communicating via instant message with someone he was treating? Someone who worked here. Someone personally familiar, by the heated words within the exchange. And key to what? What key might be assigned to a charge nurse that would benefit someone outside the hospital? Why wouldn't Dr. Johansen have access to such a key himself?
Given Johansen’s reaction to Teri's demonstration in April, she’d expected he’d secure his device, but that didn’t appear to be the case. Perhaps he anticipated she would no longer be monitoring the internet traffic, though it hadn’t been prohibited by her original contract, or even the amended one she’d signed for the Board.
Teri ran her finger along her bottom lip, scanning the lines. The touch reminded her of Jim’s kisses and a rush of heat flooded her. He was the reason she’d started this process, not Johansen.
Still, instinctively Teri knew there was something peculiar about Johansen’s internet usage data. She typed a new command, logging the details of his connections into a file on her desktop to deal with later, then focused on the remaining two feeds.
Of the two, the one she knew to be Jim’s— the number he’d given her last night— was actually registered to an archaeological aviation company. Though the name seemed familiar, she couldn’t place where she might have seen it. Regardless, archaeology—a reasonable connection for Jim, even if not a personal one.
There was little happening on the smartphone, just a single app updating periodically. Curious, Teri pulled out her phone.
Good morning, she texted to Jim on that number. Setting her phone aside, she focused on the other feed.
Another smartphone, this one was registered to Jim.
His personal phone then, to which he’d added her number.
Without hacking him, Teri could see this device was much more active, regularly refreshing several apps—one for a local search and rescue, personal and professional email accounts, a social bookmarking website.
The latter made her feel like a voyeur.
In a matter of seconds, she saw Jim’s detailed personal biography—where he was born, where he studied and what degrees he possessed, personal interests and hobbies. Among his personal preferences, the app bookmarked an online page of astronomy photography, recorded that he'd lately visited Thailand and Laos, and showed a recent and remarkable interest in websites offering tips on how to revive a relationship with an ex.
Teri sighed, ashamed of herself, then startled when the text alert chimed on her phone. She glanced at the message preview, unsurprised to see it was a reply from Jim.
Hello Gorgeous. How’s your day starting?
As she reached for the phone to respond, a new app on Jim’s personal device connected to her hostage internet. She recognized it immediately, aghast.
It was a cellphone tracking app that allowed the user to pin a targeted device’s location using the phone number. Stunned, she watched the app connect, retrieving her phone’s GPS location and the hospital’s address.
Jim was tracking her.
An emotional avalanche hurtled over Teri, burying her beneath it. She leaned her elbows on the desk, her head in her hands, lodged and trembling under the impassioned onslaught.
“Hey, so most of it worked but it’s hanging at—whoa. Teri, are you alright?” Mark stood framed in the doorway again, an alphanumeric exception code scribbled on a scrap of paper in his messy handwriting. “You’re pale as a ghost.”
Teri waved a hand dismissively, then extended it with an undisguised tremor towards the paper Mark held. “I’m fine.”
“Uh. Okay.” Mark hesitated, relinquishing the exception code, then staring with increasing concern as Teri set it beside her laptop, swaying slightly. She was not fine. In fact, she was just about as far from fine as she could get, but if she wasn’t going to acknowledge it, what could he do?
With sudden inspiration, he nodded to himself. He could do what he did when Carla was like this. He pulled her door closed behind him as he left, hunkering down at his desk to wait Teri out.
Leaning back in her chair, Teri considered. She could scarcely blame Jim for distrusting her, given their history and plagued by the unanswered questions he’d addressed to her last night, but she wouldn’t have expected a tracking app. From Johansen, perhaps—if he’d been savvy enough to consider it—but not from Jim. Stalking her— or any woman for that matter—seemed beneath him.
On a temporary basis, activating airplane mode would defeat his tracking easily. Long-term, knowing the app he was using, Teri could update protections on her own phone, also effectively blocking tracking if necessary.
But how could she hold Jim accountable for a tracking app when right this very instant she was tracing him in a significantly more detailed personal way? She blanched, nauseated with herself.
Another thought occurred to her then. She typed a command to focus on the app details. The only other phone besides hers Jim located was the one registered to the aviation company. He’d been doing so for the three years he’d owned his second phone. That was odd. Why? Was he prone to misplacing it? Had it or some predecessor device been stolen?
Teri inhaled and exhaled slowly. At least Jim had been using it for something else before. Adding her number was a fresh use, albeit an unethical one.
Then again, who was she to throw stones at glass houses?
Giving herself a mental shake, Teri cleared her search criteria and restored the parameters on her internet hijacking device. Picking up her phone, she responded to Jim.
It’s good. How about you?
Setting the phone aside, Teri glanced at the error Mark had brought her, reopening her earlier code to make edits. A moment later, her phone chimed.
It’s better starting with you. I want to see you tonight, Teri. What time are you off?
Though still bothered about the tracking app, Teri blushed, enjoying the sudden crackling energy that tingled beneath her skin at his words.
What did you have in mind?
If I behave around Carla, I can probably cut out around 3. Care to join me? I have a surprise.
Surprise?
I’ll pick you up at your place.
Wait. Jim’s surprises worried her. Before she could ask for clarification, there was a hard knock on her door, and she dropped the phone with her violent start. Looking up as she retrieved it from the floor, Teri saw her door swing open.
Nick Johansen loomed on the other side.
Beyond him, Teri could see Mark returning to the outer office, chewing a stir stick, a fresh cup of coffee in hand. His boyish face screwed up in a repulsed grimace, and disappointed at the unanticipated visit himself, he mouthed an apology behind the physician.
“Teri! You’re a difficult woman to track down when you’re engrossed in a project. I’m surprised to find you at your desk at all.” Dr. Johansen invited himself in, stopping directly opposite her and Teri had never been more grateful for the physical barrier between her and another person. “I’ve been busy myself lately.”
Behind the doctor, Mark’s expression was a dramatic affectation of agreement. He mouthed: Yeah, right. Teri scarcely kept her polite social mask in order.
“I’ve been hoping to catch you. Let me take you to lunch.” Dr. Johansen stood over her, hands in the pockets of his slacks, waiting, as though Teri would instantly comply.
“Oh. That’s kind of you.” Teri smiled. “I’m actually not hungry right now. Mark brought me a muffin,” yesterday, but what business was it of Johansen’s anyway? she thought, “so I had a late breakfast.”
Unfazed and undeterred, Johansen shrugged. “If Mark has to bring you breakfast to get you to eat, that’s all the more reason you need to join me. I insist.” There was an edge to his voice that brooked no refusal.
Locking her laptop, Teri gathered her phone and clutch reluctantly.
As she came around the desk, Dr. Johansen took her hand, tucking it in the crook of his arm. “I have the perfect place in mind.”
Teri groaned inwardly, expecting a hackneyed comment about her sweet tooth, but Dr. Johansen spoke little as he escorted her through the hospital and to his car. The ride was mercifully short, and she focused on the passing scenery, making small talk about it and the weather.
When the car stopped before another hotel, Teri almost requested they go somewhere else. Once inside, she was relieved to see an open floor plan design, even if their table was in a more secluded part of it.
Though she wanted to wash her hands, Teri was reluctant to allow Johansen the opportunity to order drinks again while she was away. Their waitress brought water and a small basket of bread, then disappeared to get their drink order.
“Thank you for coming with me, Teri.”
She considered him carefully, watching his face for tells. There was a reason she was here. There was always a reason with Nick Johansen. Teri focused on the menu, skimming the options. “It’s generous of you to bring me, but I feel terrible. You’ve already done so much, Dr. Johansen.”
“Nick,” he corrected immediately, focusing almost tenderly on her face. “I’m fond of you, Teri. You know that. You’re a pure spirit. Even when things are the worst for you, you’re kind.” He toyed with the fork in his place setting.
Teri met Johansen’s steely gray eyes over her menu. “Is there something wrong?”
He looked away, then back again. “My wife took our children and returned to her family in Salt Lake.”
Teri let her breath out in a shocked gasp at his personal revelation. “I’m sorry.” Given the circumstances, she struggled to find the right words to say. They all seemed inadequate.
Johansen was staring at her again. “No. It’s entirely my fault. She came from a large family with a lot of support, very powerful in the Mormon church. Moving here, though good for my career, was isolating for her.” He paused, watched as their waitress served a meal at another table. “I took her for granted. I understand now. Too late.”
Finished at the other table, their waitress arrived with their drinks and to take their meal order. Teri winged a thankful prayer for the interruption, the few minutes to think, figure out what to say. She wondered what motivated Johansen to talk to her about it. Though he didn’t seem popular with the other Board members, surely he had other friends.
Their waitress departed with the menus and their orders, leaving Teri feeling starkly exposed. “It’s a small, busy town. Your skills are needed desperately here. I’m certain there was no ill intent. You’re very clever. If anyone can find a way—”
Johansen gave her a weak smile. “I don’t think so. As a man of medicine, I find it difficult to embrace religious beliefs, even if I am tolerant of them. Her family doesn’t like that. It’s a situation I’m certain you’re familiar with.”
A rock dropped jarringly into the pit of Teri’s stomach at his callousness. She nodded, blinking away the hot blinding tears pooling against her lashes. “Yes. I am.” The crippling rush of memories brought a question to her mind. “Did you know Jim Erikson is here?”
Johansen seemed taken aback. “Here? You mean Moab?” When she nodded, he continued. “I hadn’t thought of him in years. Seems like I bumped into him when I was working the ER. He was there with an injured hiker. Part of the local Search and Rescue, I think.”
Johansen's steely eyes bored into hers, hawklike and sharp, divining the impetus for her question. “You didn’t know he was here.”
Fighting another flood of tears Teri licked her lips uncomfortably, then shook her chestnut head.
Johansen collapsed in an uncomfortable slump against his chair, then let out a long sigh. “Your daughter.” He searched Teri's face. “He doesn’t know.”
A slow tear rolled down one smooth pale cheek in answer, but Teri couldn’t look at him.
With a black rage building in him, Nick Johansen rubbed the scruff along his jaw. Teri belonged to him! He had to get Jim Erickson out of the picture post haste.
Once and for all.
Softening the intensity of his gaze upon her, he handed his napkin across the table. “I’m sorry, Teri. You must have felt blindsided. As if there wasn’t enough you’re dealing with after he left you alone.” Johansen rubbed the back of his neck. “If I’d have known, I’d have fought harder with the Board for more for you.”
Distraught as she was, something essential rang false in his words. The Board? Teri had this conversation with the Board, and it had been clear they weren’t aware of what Dr. Johansen had done regarding her contract.
Teri dabbed her eyes with the napkin, then stared at her knotted hands in her lap while she reigned in her emotions and summoned her logic. What kind of cat and mouse game was going on here? “It’s not your job to look after my family. It’s mine.”
“It was Jim’s!” Johansen snapped loudly sitting up in his chair, then lowered his voice abruptly at her stunned expression. “I can’t begin to explain how continually disappointing he is in his care. The man had everything. A woman like you—,” he reached over the table to brush a drying tear along Teri's cheek with his thumb, “no matter what you’d been through, I’d never have let you go.”
His touch had been cold as granite, and though the words were meant to be tender, they were as hard as granite too. Her reptile brain engaged, pouring adrenaline into her circuitry, urging her to flee. Instead, Teri exhaled, unaware she’d been holding her breath at his outburst. “I’m sorry. You came to me for support—.”
“We’re both wounded.” Johansen shrugged. “Perhaps that’s what draws us together.” He leaned as far across the table as he could. “I could be good for you, Teri,” he whispered, his voice menacing and low.
This time it was Teri searching, his expression, his body language, the tone of his voice. 'Be good'? There was more to the words, but she couldn’t understand how.
“I—don’t think—either of us are—in a right state— for that,” she stuttered. Seeing annoyed disappointment on his face, she added quickly, “Right now.”
The sound of dishes rattling preceded their waitress’ return with their lunch. They spoke little after it was served, both processing what they’d learned during this conversation. Teri pushed her food about her plate, barely eating, lost in her own head.
How could Johansen be considering another relationship? If he cared at all for his wife and family, how could he not fight for them? And even if it was over between he and his wife, how could he jump from one woman to the next without any time to recover?
While she understood different people formed attachments differently, it was a serious red flag when someone couldn’t stand to be alone with themselves.
Where were his friends? Now that she thought about it, Teri had never known him to have friends. But perhaps the dissolution of his marriage was part of that. Divorce could certainly polarize people.
Across from her, Nick Johansen ate heartily. Teri couldn’t fathom how. Perhaps stress didn’t affect his appetite, foreign as that seemed to her.
Then again, her problem was two men chasing her, one who knew too little and the other, too much. Johansen had been rejected by two women, one who knew too much, and she, who knew too little.
The thought made Teri's skin crawl and the urge to flee nearly irresistible.
It was just after one when Johansen left Teri at the IT office with a curt nod. After his outburst during lunch, then her rejection, he had withdrawn, bitter cold settling around him like a gyre of frigid deep ocean water rising to the surface.
Teri felt terrible for how poorly she’d handled herself. On top of the anguished feelings Nick Johansen dredged up with his presence already, the bitter cocktail of his callous remarks and his inappropriate revelation about his failing marriage left a foul taste in her mouth and she felt both guilty and relieved when he’d gone.
Though a plethora of unfinished tasks remained, Teri felt exhausted and wholly unequal to the substantial undertaking. Stepping into the department office when Johansen was out of sight, she glanced at Mark and made for her desk. “I’m not feeling very well.” She deftly packed her laptop and internet device. “I’m going home.”
“Sure, boss-lady. Why don’t I drive you?” Mark offered, rising. Worried for her, he cast a brief glance down the hall the direction Dr. Johansen had gone. “I’ll get Carla to help with your car.”
Teri shook her head, halting before him in the doorway. “It’s a short drive. I’ll be fine, Mark. Thank you.”
Evie barked and leapt off the bed, racing into the RV’s family area. Emerging reticently from the blissful haze of heavy dreamless sleep, Teri sat up groggily, a vague impression of noise in her head, though Evie now was quiet.Yawning, she rubbed her fingertips in gentle circles at her temples. At least her earlier headache was reduced to a weak dull pressure and the nausea she’d felt during lunch with Johansen was gone.Still wandering dazedly at the edge of dreamland, Teri gave a startled cry to a knock at the outer door that sent Evie erupting into another brief frenzied round of barking from the other room. Outside, she heard a voice call her name.Jim.An unadulterated confusing mélange of thrilled pleasure and raw fear bubbled up inside her.What was I thinking? Why? Why did I do this to myself? Why did I text him? M
“So how’s this work?” Jim stowed their headsets carefully, then led Teri to the hangar’s secured door, his warm hand dizzingly distracting in the small of her back. “What do you need from me to help with dinner?”“I’ll need to drop by the grocer.”“Okay. I usually shop at the co-op near my house. Will that work?”“That should do just fine.”With twilight’s shadows lengthening fast through the winding red canyons, the warmth of the day was evaporating quickly and in Jim’s Jeep, Teri felt the cool air creeping in much faster than she might have in the Meep. It sensitized her skin, left it prickling faintly, and entirely too aware of Jim’s presence through the warmth of his hand on her thigh. Once returned to the city proper, the paved streets and clustered buildings retained
Teri had no idea anymore of the time. Keeping track with the liquid level in your absurd glass-shaped plastic cup of wine wasn’t particularly precise or accurate, and Jim compounded it when he rose and poured them both a second draught. Well inside her warm and happy buzz, she marveled at the parallel—the more of her wine disappeared, the more of her long solitary years disappeared.Tucked against the warmth and heat of Jim on the uncomfortable RV sofa, listening to the crickets chirp through the opened windows and watching the moonlight drift in creeping patches over surfaces and the floor, it felt not too different from the nights they’d spent together on the cramped little balcony of her apartment, pressed against one another on the cheap, uncomfortable little patio loveseat they’d scrounged to afford, just so they could do exactly this. To listen to the crickets and watch the moonlight make its way across the flo
Engrossed in unraveling a particularly complicated exception occurring in the security protections for medical records, Teri startled when the text alert chimed on her phone, her fingers accidentally adding keystrokes in her code. Glancing at the time as she reached for the device, she sighed, exhausted. It was nearly noon.Hey Gorgeous. Can I escort you to your car?Teri smiled, breathing a sigh of relief. You’re back? Did you find her?Let me take you home. I’ll meet you at the front entrance.Sure. Be just a few. Teri gathered her things gratefully. Jim had left her place just after one that morning so she’d been at the hospital nearly twelve hours on only a couple hours of sleep and a bit of sweetened coffee. At least she’d been indoors, in a comfortable office. She couldn&rsquo
The water was cooler than Teri preferred, and the heat gradient between it and Jim’s hands raised tingling gooseflesh all over her and pebbled her nipples, both of which he noticed immediately. His eyes followed where his hands roamed, the continuous migration of contrasting temperature and slippery caresses soothing and rousing at the same time. Except, she thought, there’s nothing soothing about being at most inches away from Jim’s chiseled body when he’s wearing that ravenous expression.Heart racing already, she closed her eyes, her fingers extended like antennae, taking in only what she could of his intention by touch. The smell of soap—a clean, almost masculine blend of hot metal and rum—drifted around her, suffusing the shower’s mist, as Jim smeared the cleansing suds over himself and her, lingering where it fascinated him to. He lathered her arms and hands, lacing his fingers through hers an
Waking much later to a noisy preview on the TV, the unique fish movie long since over, Jim startled, his body locking and his head jerking up. Glancing about the darkened room, he saw Zoe in the tent, curled around the dog on her sleeping bag, murmuring in her sleep. Locating the remote, he turned the TV off, plunging the room into darkness until his eyes had time to adjust.“Are you alright?” Teri’s disembodied voice whispered breathily across his neck. Resting calmly on his chest, her head on his shoulder, she lay still, but had awakened before him by the TV’s noise. Reassured, Teri settled against his chest, sighing drowsily.As his eyes adjusted, Jim nuzzled her hair. The exhaustion headache he’d had earlier abated with food and sleep and would be gone completely when he woke again. But he didn’t want to sleep. “I’m okay.” He longed to scoop Teri up and carry her to the bedroom, cover her slowly with kisses and
Off-roading was an adventure Teri hadn’t experienced before. At least not of this caliber.The Jeep bucked and skidded, gripping the maintained but primitive road and kicking up a dusty crimson cockscomb behind them where the loose soil congregated. Jim knew the winding trails well and selected the one that had Zoe squealing with thrilled delight bouncing in the backseat and Teri panting to catch her breath when he stopped them to admire the views along the rim.From the mesa top, Moab nestled in an amphitheater of rubicund rock, but the city was nothing compared to the spectacular vistas. Like the indescribable spectacle from the plane, here the sky stretched out towards the horizon as far as the eye could see, hung on the lofty spires of deep purple mountains in the distance. Puffy sunlight-kissed clouds cast shadows along the canyon bottom and were reflected perfectly in the blue ribbon of the river snaking its w
With Independence Day in the rearview mirror and the tenuous relationship between she and Jim growing more comfortable with each passing day, Teri’s internal conflict was reaching critical mass. No matter how much she reminded herself this was a temporary assignment like any other temporary assignment, she knew her thinking was getting turned around and Jim was inserting himself like a cactus barb, deeper and deeper into their lives.Through subtle hints and even subtler actions, Jim kept open the doors Teri tried to close. It was already his habit to go mountain biking in the morning, and without her asking, he tailored that to fit her morning runs with Evie, making certain first that Zoe was either safely at camp or at the Allreds playing with Beth.To Mark’s amusement and her further consternation, Jim appeared almost daily at the hospital to collect her for lunch, and if he left early from the museum
Soon to come from a new story, In Our Midst:Marcus opened the door to the River Oaks apartment he shared with his girlfriend to discover her pacing slowly before the floor to ceiling living room windows, her cellphone pressed to her ear. Beside him, the apartment’s security system beeped a warning, announcing his return, and she glanced over at him, flashing a heart-stopping smile.Closing the door, he silenced the alert, and tossed his keys onto the granite top kitchen island beside an old cardboard storage box with a lopsided pile of papers tipping towards the floor on the other. Miria had brought work home again.Straightening the stack of manilla folders and legal pads next to the box, tucking in misaligned pages and unfolding creases, Marcus waited as she finished her conversation.“No. I’m not getting in the middle of this.”
“We need shelter.” Crouching next to Jim with Teri clutched against his chest, Marcus glanced around, then contacted Frank Shepard. “This is Agent Leigh,” he shouted over the whining wind. “I’ve recovered Teri Munro.”Above the noise, Shepard replied, “Where’s Johansen, Marcus?”“Dead. He fell over a cliff at my current coordinates. I’ll give you the details later. How far are we from an extraction point?”Hearing that question, Jim lifted his head, alert for the answer.“Mile and a half. As the crow flies,” Shepard’s garbling voice grated over the radio. “It’s the closest we can get a vehicle.”“Not in this.” Jim shook his head. “None of us are dressed for it. Tell h
Nick had considered himself fit and healthy, but this was a supreme physical effort for which he was unprepared. Besides that he’d been up nearly twenty-four hours straight in preparation for snatching her, lugging even Teri’s petite body over his shoulders for miles and juggling two backpacks and the shotgun was making it difficult to manage passage on the rough terrain. Especially without leaving much of a discernable trail.Plus, he still had another miserable mile to go just to reach the canyon’s end. Though the climb out was traversable, it was still over steeply sloping topography, slippery with loose rock, pebbles and sand. Over such treacherous ground, he’d be unable to carry the unconscious woman. Since there was absolutely no way he was leaving his prize behind, the sooner Teri woke the better.He’d seen Erikson attempt to land the small aircraft and have to take off again, bu
Jim had hoped to be home before Teri left for work, but the location of one of the undocumented sites had been mapped for them incorrectly by the reporting individual. Unwilling to chance when there’d next be a break in the weather, he’d spent several frustrating minutes searching from the air, circling at decreasing elevations around the given landmark before he’d spotted it.Making a wide circle, he angled the plane northeast towards Moab and the airport, his thoughts wandering. It needled him, what Teri’d done, setting up her own defenses above and beyond what the FBI had. Okay, so it wasn’t that she’d felt she’d needed to, even if that did mean neither of them had much faith in the FBI and other local authorities, he acknowledged mentally. It wasn’t even that she hadn’t told him.It wasn’t any of that.She’d designed her a
Oh, sweet submissive Teri! Nick almost groaned aloud.Timid as a hare, she shambled towards him with hesitant steps, much to his delight, her slim hand still clutching her phone, holding it like a magical weapon between them, her face drawn in a frightened grimace. When she was close enough to grab, he snatched the device, tossing it towards the lifeless contractors.With another trembling whimper, she tried to bolt away, and thrilled with how perfectly Teri fed him his every desire, he gave chase. Through he tripped over the dog doing it, Nick caught her by the slim ankle, bringing her crashing to the ground with a hard whump and pained cry.Releasing the shotgun to catch at her with both hands, he half-dragged half-crawled up her petite body, pressing his crushing weight down on her and pinning her scrambling hands behind her neck.“Attempt to do that again and I’ll kill the next person I see. Do you understand?” he snarled at her ear and beneath him her delicate body trembled fierce
Good morning, Gorgeous.”Jim leaned over Teri and kissed her temple sweetly, dropping a handful of Estelle’s magic morning sickness candy cures on the bedside table where she could reach them and she sighed gratefully. “Good morning. And thank you.”Reaching for one, she unwrapped and popped it into her mouth, eager to have done with the nausea.“I’m walking Zoe over to Patrick and Abby’s. Abby’s going to take her to school with Beth.”Rolling to her back, Teri stared up at him. “What did our oh-so pleasant escort have to say about that?”Shoving his hands in his jean pockets, Jim shrugged, wearing a lopsided grin. “Not much. They were less pleased to find out I’m going out to the airfield.”Teri’s brows lifted inquiringly, promp
They think they’re so smart.Nick’s steely gaze followed the bulky figure of an undercover agent from behind a newspaper as the man left the window bar of the coffee house where he’d been idly staring at his phone and picked up his order at the counter.Three cups in the drink carrier for the second day in a row. That answers that question, he thought, shifting in his seat so he could confirm the license tag on the agent’s vehicle as the man entered it. It was the same as the one he’d seen follow Teri’s white SUV from the hospital to Erickson’s house the afternoon he’d returned to Moab and happened upon her there.His gaze flicked to the coffee house employees behind the counter, recognizing one immediately. The assistant manager, a twenty-something stoner he’d treated more than once in the ER for mountain biking and skiing injuries, the
It took maybe quarter of an hour and two of the tart hard candies, but Teri did feel better. Significantly better than she had in the previous few days and with any of the other morning sickness remedies she’d tried.That Estelle. She’s a wonder, she mused. Still, Teri eased herself first to a sitting position, then to her feet in slow increments.Overnight the mercury had plummeted into the forties, and she shivered padding across the rug-strewn floor to the closet for her terrycloth robe, insulating her body heat against escape, then, chaffing at her arms to increase the warmth and circulation, slid her feet into slippers. The house seemed unnaturally quiet with everyone gone but her, though that would be short lived. Jim would be home long before and by ten, the two-man construction crew would arrive to continue work on the basement and things would get noisy again.Fortunatel
Lay on your left side. Lay on your right side. Ginger. Lemon. Watermelon. Dry biscuits. Peppermint. Magnesium supplements. Gah! None of it works. Why does none of it work? Teri moaned to herself, trying to lie still, breathe, and not vomit. Morning sickness had been nowhere near as ferocious with Zoe as it was now.Or maybe it had. Maybe she’d been so relieved escaping everything else happening in her life with Zoe she hadn’t noticed how bad the morning sickness was. She couldn’t imagine how she’d missed it, but obviously her life had been filled with stranger things at the time.“Mama?” Zoe whispered from the door. “Are you awake?”“Yes, kiddo. Come over here, please.”“Gently,” Jim cautioned as both he and Zoe came around the bed into view. Taking a seat on the edge of the bed beside T