Armoured Attraction. Janie CrouchЧитать онлайн книгу.
And I thought it was better to be wrong and have to apologize than her be right and back in her captors’ clutches.” She shrugged. “So we snuck out of the hospital without anyone seeing us.”
He couldn’t disagree with that line of reasoning. Under similar circumstances he probably would have done the same.
“The clincher for me was when I woke up this morning and there was a ‘fugitive alert’ and the police were checking cars trying to leave Nags Head.” She shook her head. “I tried to take Karine to Norfolk last night, but she refused to go. Says she has to stay and help the other girls.”
“She sounds like quite a kid,” Liam said. “Strong.”
“Yeah, but she needs help. I can’t keep her cooped up in this hotel room. She needs a doctor and a counselor.”
“I was wondering about this place. Why are you here? If you were trying to pick a place no one would ever search for Princess Vanessa, you certainly found it.”
Her eyes narrowed. Princess Vanessa obviously still struck a nerve.
Her voice was tight. “I couldn’t take her back to my place. And, yeah, I didn’t want anyone to find me.”
Liam had never been afraid to poke the tiger. “Your dad would probably not be interested in a teenage misfit staying in the Epperson mansion.”
She turned all the way from him then, in the guise of cracking the door to check on Karine again, but he could tell the topic didn’t sit well with her.
“I don’t live in my parents’ house on Duck any longer, so I wouldn’t take her there anyway. But, yes, I’m sure my dad wouldn’t like it.”
Duck, despite its corny name, consisted of mostly million-dollar mansions rather than the much less expensive vacation rentals, restaurants, and putt-putt golf places of the other islands in the Outer Banks.
Elitist in a word.
He shouldn’t be surprised that she didn’t live at home any longer. She was twenty-eight, for heaven’s sake. No one would still live with their parents at that age if they had other options. Especially if Daddy paid for those other options, of which Liam had no doubt.
“So, where’s your place?”
“In Kitty Hawk.”
He raised an eyebrow. “On the beach?”
“No.”
“On the Sound, then?” She had to live on the water. Vanessa Epperson had always lived on the water.
“Look, where I live is not important, okay? I just couldn’t chance taking her to my place. Not if the police are after her and someone at the hospital reports she’s with me.”
He could agree that Vanessa’s suspicions of the police were grounded, given Karine’s fear of the uniform and the car-search tactics this morning. Until they knew for sure, they would keep all actions under wraps.
“Why don’t I go in to the sheriff’s office today and feel things out? I could tell them I’m here on vacation or something.”
Her eyebrow rose. “You really think they’re going to talk to you at all? You have a history with the Outer Banks police. They probably haven’t forgotten that.”
It was true. Liam had been a hell-raiser back in his juvie days. His grandmother had done the best she could with the wild child she’d been forced to raise after both his parents had died suddenly when he was ten. But even her loving yet strict hand hadn’t been enough to keep him out of pretty regular trouble with the law when he was a teenager. Nothing too serious: some fights, occasional vandalism, a few nights of disturbing the peace after he’d been able to talk some poor tourist into buying him alcohol.
He was actually thankful for a lot of his misspent youth. During one of the times the sheriff’s office had handcuffed him to a chair, he’d met Quint Davis, the DEA agent who had taken the time to look past Liam’s rather gruff exterior and talk to the half boy, half man underneath.
Quint had gotten Liam to join the army and then picked him up as a DEA agent immediately after Liam’s discharge, which had eventually led to his job at Omega. Liam owed the man his life.
But, yeah, anybody who had worked at the Outer Banks sheriff’s office for more than ten years was going to remember him. He doubted they would even know he was law enforcement now, unless they ran a background check on him.
“Well, this time I’m not some kid they’ve arrested for stumbling drunk down the beach.”
Their eyes locked. He had met Vanessa on just such an occasion. She had stuck her snooty little nose up at him and told him to go find a bench and sleep it off.
He hadn’t been able to help falling in love with her right then and there.
“I’ll just be checking in as a professional courtesy, as a fellow law-enforcement officer,” Liam continued, ignoring the shared memory between them. “When I heard about the escaped fugitive, I wanted to see if there was anything I could do to help.”
Vanessa was nodding, about to respond, when they heard a cry from the bedroom.
“Miss Vanessa?” The voice was lost. Sorrowful. Frightened.
Vanessa ran to the young girl, but Liam kept his distance. He had no doubt she would not want to be near a man right now.
“I’m here, Karine. I was just in the bathroom.”
Karine all but jumped into Vanessa’s arms.
Vanessa sat on the bed and smoothed the girl’s hair, holding her loosely so she wouldn’t feel trapped.
“Who is that man?” Karine asked.
“He’s my friend. His name is Liam. He’s going to help us get you and the other girls to safety.”
Karine reached over and turned on the lamp next to the bed. Liam just stood there as she watched him with eyes that had seen too much. Even if they got this girl to safety today, away from the horror she had lived through, she would never have a child’s innocence again.
Her childhood had been finished from the moment someone had kidnapped her and thrown her on a boat.
Finally she nodded. “Okay,” she said to Vanessa.
Liam guessed he’d passed the test.
They needed a plan. But first Liam knew that everyone needed food.
“I’ll go grab some breakfast from—”
His words were interrupted by a pounding on the door.
“This is the Outer Banks Sheriff’s Department. Open the door.”
Vanessa stood. The sheriff’s department had found her? How? She hadn’t used a credit card.
This was the problem with living in a relatively small town. There were no secrets. One call from the police to the front desk in a systematic search and the clerk would undoubtedly have remembered her and told them. It was pretty odd for Vanessa to be at a hotel of this caliber, since most people knew her face and reputation—the Outer Banks princess—but didn’t really know anything about her. They assumed she still lived off her parents’ money, just as Liam had assumed in the bathroom.
She didn’t. She hadn’t for more than eight years.
It really didn’t matter how the officer had found her. She had to figure out what to do.
They couldn’t get out the one window of the room; it was right next to the door. There was no window in the bathroom, either.
The pounding on the door came again. Not obnoxiously loud, but firm enough to know whoever was on the