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Tempting the Bodyguard

Tempting the Bodyguard (Gamble Brothers #3)(5)
Author: J. Lynn

He was suddenly beside her, his hand on her shoulder. “Alana?”

She couldn’t tear her eyes away from the piece of paper he held in his other hand. There had been a tiny part of her that had hoped it was a random coincidence, but now she knew it wasn’t. She hadn’t noticed when it had been wrapped around the brick, but in the faint light and unfolded, she recognized the one-sided design—the black and white lines that crawled up the sides of the ivory sheet and the tiny flowers in each corner.

Fingers appeared under her chin, guiding her head up with surprising gentleness. “Are you okay?”

Not really. Her heart was beating way too fast again. Dizziness swept through her as her eyes locked with Chandler’s. A fine sheen of sweat dotted her forehead. There was a good chance she was going to be sick.

“Alana?” Real concern colored his tone as he slid his hand to the side of her neck, as if he was about to check her pulse. “Come on, baby, say something.”

“The paper the note is written on—that paper is mine,” she said. “It’s from my home.”

“Back in California?” he asked, his thumb doing its magic again, but this time on her neck.

“No—my apartment. Here in the city.”

Chapter Four

Chandler was officially worried.

Alana hadn’t spoken a word since he’d gotten the directions to her apartment out of her. Considering how mouthy and absolutely frustrating she usually was, silence from her had to be a bad thing.

He glanced at her as he came to a stoplight, the red from the light glaring across her profile. She was staring out the window, worrying her bottom lip. Her arms were folded, keeping the file tight against her chest like a shield.

She hadn’t protested when he called Murray to get a tow truck out here. And she also hadn’t questioned why he hadn’t contacted the police.

He knew they’d probably treat her the same way he had when she’d asked for his help. Well, with the exception of the “wanting to f**k” comment. Sure, they’d go to her place and check it over—at some point tonight. The city was teeming with crime¸ and vandalism and a possible break-in wouldn’t be high on their list of concerns.

God, he felt like a giant ass for outright dismissing her.

He wasn’t convinced that her life was in danger—letters and a vandalized car didn’t equal deadly intent—but something was definitely going on. What exactly and how far this was going to go, he wasn’t sure yet. The note was folded in his pocket, practically burning a hole in it. He wanted to look at it again, see if there was anything else except the one word. His initial assumption could still be spot-on. Nothing too serious—maybe a pissed-off ex-boyfriend or client, and not something to hire a bodyguard over. But if her apartment really had been broken into, then that was a different story.

There was a part of Chandler, he recognized, that just wanted this all to be a bunch of nothing. The thought of someone seriously wanting to hurt the woman sitting quietly next to him twisted his gut in ways he didn’t want to consider. It was much better for his peace of mind to figure this was the prank of some disgruntled ex-client than something far more dangerous.

Chandler pulled his truck into the parking garage attached to the high-rise apartments. His immediate observation of the building noted several security hazards. It was a good district, not known for a lot of serious crime, but there was no doorman that he saw, which meant anyone could come and go as they pleased. There didn’t appear to be any security cameras at the garage entrance or inside, at least none that was obvious and would deter potential perpetrators. The lighting sucked in the garage, making it easy for anyone to be hiding. He didn’t like any of it.

As he parked the truck and killed the engine, he looked over at her. “You doing okay?” The question made him strangely uncomfortable.

She finally met his gaze and nodded curtly. “I’m fine.”

That was debatable.

Clearing her throat, she reached for the door handle. “Thank you for taking me home, but I can call the police and let them handle it from here on out.”

“I came all this way, so I’m going to check out your apartment.”

She was out of his truck with surprising quickness, slamming the door.

He cursed under his breath and climbed out, finding her standing near his side, hand extended.

“I’m going to need the note, please.” Her voice was clipped, professional, and cool.

His eyes narrowed. Instead of handing it over, he walked around her and headed toward the elevator entrance. “I’m checking out your apartment and then we’re going to talk. And I’m serious. I’m not arguing with you.”

There was a moment when he thought she was going to stand there and he was going to have to go back and drag her to her apartment.

“Damn it, you’re annoying.” She huffed, catching up to him. “Pain in my ass.”

His lips twitched as he fought the smile. “I would love to be in your—”

“Don’t even finish that statement,” she snapped.

He chuckled, happy to see a little color returning to her cheeks. “What floor?”

“Sixteen.” She was quiet as they stepped into the elevator. “Are you taking me seriously now?”

Chandler didn’t immediately respond, and she made a sound that reminded him of a disgruntled animal—a small, helpless animal. When they reached her floor, she told him her number. “Stay by the elevator until I give you the okay,” he said.

Her eyes narrowed. “Why?”

“Because I say so.” He started toward her door but stopped. “I mean it, Alana. Stay here.”

She inhaled deeply. “Fine. Staying.”

He held her stare for a moment and then headed toward her door. Trying the handle, he found that it was locked. That was a good sign. “Throw me your keys.”

Reaching into her pocket, she pulled out the keys, smiled, and then threw them.

Right at his face.

He caught them a second before impact. She smirked when his eyes narrowed. He had a feeling that if he were in her presence for another fifteen minutes, she was going to end up over his knee.

Grappling for patience he typically didn’t afford people, he unlocked her door and then slipped the keys into his pocket. He needed his hand free for something else. Reaching around to his back, he withdrew his Glock.

“You have a gun?” she hissed, eyes wide.

He shot her a droll look. “My job sort of requires that, and I said, stay by the elevator.”

She opened her mouth, but then clicked it shut as she backed away, holding that damn file to her chest. He sent her one last look of warning and then edged into her apartment. It was doubtful that anyone was still here, but he wanted to make sure before she stepped one annoying foot into the apartment.

Moving silently down the short entryway, he checked out the kitchen. A sliding glass door led out to a balcony, which was attached to a fire escape. Not good. The door was latched from the inside, but he knew from experience that anyone could strong-arm one of these mothers right open. He then shifted his attention to the living room.

A small lamp was on next to a couch, casting a soft glow. He wasn’t surprised by the simple, minimalistic design and how there didn’t seem to be a pillow out of place on the couch or a single piece of anything on the floor. Ms. Stick-up-her-ass probably never had a shoe out of place.

Ruling the living room and kitchen empty, he proceeded down a hallway, checking out a bathroom and an office before entering the master bedroom. The room smelled of Alana. Lilac and vanilla, he realized, spying the small bottles of lotion on her dresser. And then his gaze fell to her bed.

“Christ,” he muttered.

Lying across the neatly tucked comforter was a black nightie. A barely there slip of material that he imagined wouldn’t cover much.

He forced himself toward the adjoining bathroom and then the walk-in closet. Both were clear. He’d just faced that damn bed when a voice came from the recesses of the hallway.

“Did you find anything?”

“Jesus!” Chandler whirled around, shoving the gun in the holster along his back. “Didn’t I tell you to wait outside?”

She ignored that question as she peeked her head into the bedroom. “Did you?”

Walking past her, he caught her by the arm and ushered her back into the living room. “Did you leave the lights on?”

“Yes.” She wrenched her arm free in a move so dramatic, he wondered how she didn’t yank her own arm out of its socket. “So, there’s nothing out of place?”

“You tell me.” He watched her look around, totally picturing her in that nightie. Yep. His c**k was hard again.

“Everything looks fine to me,” she said.

Her lips pursed, and then she stalked off down the hallway. He lingered for a moment and then followed her, finding her standing before a medium-size oak desk. The file was still clenched in one hand, and she was holding a pad of stationary in the other as she faced him.

“See,” she said, and gestured as though she were holding the shredded files from Watergate. Her glasses were slightly askew on her nose. The urge to fix them came out of nowhere, and what the f**k was up with that? “This is my stationary. I had it specially made,” she added.

Wondering who actually took the time to get personalized stationary made, he pulled out the note and unfolded it. It was definitely a match. The word was written in childish, blockish handwriting.

His eyes met hers. Part of him wanted to tell her that it could be coincidental. Obviously he hoped that was the case. Even though Chad believed that the publicist was the antichrist, Chandler didn’t like the idea of this being anything more than a harmless, run-of-the-mill lunatic.

But he was a logical man. Unless Alana wrote the note and threw the rock through her own windshield, someone had slipped into her apartment at some point and retrieved the stationary from her desk.

That had to be taken seriously.

Alana fixed her glasses, her bottom lip trembling as she spoke. “Someone’s been in my apartment.”

His chest tightened as real fear snaked up his spine. “I think it’s time that I look at those letters.”

So many different emotions swirled through Alana as she sat in her living room, watching Chandler pore over the letters in her kitchen. Anger. Frustration. Fear. They mingled together, causing her to go from furious to terrified in seconds and giving her one fierce headache.

Someone had been in her apartment.

Her heart dropped at the thought. When? While she had left to go find Chandler or before then? How many days could’ve passed and she’d never known? Better yet, how had someone gotten into her apartment?

“How long have you been receiving these?” Chandler asked, drawing her attention.

She took off her glasses, placing them onto the bar. The clock on the stove said it was after midnight and her eyes felt full of grit. “For about a year.”

“Any idea who it could be? An ex-boyfriend?”

A dry laugh escaped. “No.”

“You’ve never had an ex-boyfriend?”

“Not anyone in the last couple of years who hates my guts.” The look of disbelief on his striking face irked her. “All my breakups have been amicable.”

“Husbands?”

“No,” she said.

“Girlfriends?”

She rolled her eyes.

A brief grin appeared, and she was surprised to see it. Something about it told her that a lot of people probably lived their whole lives without seeing that grin. “What about clients?”

Rubbing her temples, she shook her head. “There have been people…upset with me in the past.”

Chandler snorted.

Lifting her lashes, she felt a nasty retort forming on the tip of her tongue, mostly out of habit, but it died off before she could open her mouth. Their gazes locked, and she could easily recall how much Chad had loathed her existence. No doubt Chandler felt the same out of association. It bothered her.

“I’m not a terrible person,” she said, her voice low. “I know that’s hard to believe.”

He blinked. “I didn’t say you were.”

“I take my job seriously,” she continued, drawing in a shallow breath. When she spoke again, her voice was hoarse. “I’ve built a—a stellar reputation in a very short time. And if that means I have to make people do what they don’t want to do and they’ll hate me for it, so be it. But in the end, everyone—everyone—is in a better position after I leave them.”

Something flickered across his face, and then he looked away, a muscle working along his jaw. “Obviously someone doesn’t feel that way.”

An old, familiar ache pierced her chest at those words. Alana loved her job and it meant everything to her, but sometimes it required her to do things she didn’t want. During her short career, she had hurt and used people. Most thought she was apathetic about it all, but that was the furthest from the truth. The things she had to do kept her awake at night. As a publicist, there were times when she had to climb into the muck and drag her clients out of it, ensuring that they came out all shiny. That wasn’t easy. And some of her clients didn’t want to be dragged out.

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