Page 43 of Bullets & Bonfires


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I take the key out of her hand and stare at her for a minute. A slight summer breeze picks up strands of her hair, moving them around her shoulders and across her face. I reach out and tuck a few loose pieces behind her ear. “You’re beautiful.”

“You don’t think it’s too short?” She shakes her head back and forth, letting the ends brush over her bare shoulders.

“Not at all.” I lean in closer. “It’s sexy as hell.”

“Mmm, let’s go inside,” she says, taking my hand. “I have plans for you.”

Inside the house, Liam turns and places his hands on my cheeks, tilting my head back so he can kiss me. I fall back against the door and he follows.

My fingers tug and pull at his crisp white shirt, revealing his tight, flat stomach with the trail of dark hair disappearing into the waistband of his gray dress pants.

“How is it that you’re sexier every time I look at you?”

He presses more kisses to my cheek and down to my neck. “Thank you.”

“Did you dress up for me?” I ask as I undo the buttons of his shirt.

“Yes.” His answer ends in a groan as I lean in and place a kiss on his chest. The frantic beating of his heart beneath my lips says he wants me too.

Being so close, absorbing his woodsy, spicy scent, stirs my hormones. Tipping my head back, I meet his dark gaze.

“Brianna.” The aching whisper speaks volumes.

Kimber nudges us with her cold, wet nose, reminding us of her presence. “Sorry, girl. You need to go out?” Liam asks.

Something about my big, hard sheriff speaking so gently to a dog is so sweet, I press my hand to my chest.

A loud thump against the front door startles me into Liam’s arms. “What the hell was that?”

His face turns to stone and he pulls a small pistol from his waistband.

“You were carrying that all night?” I ask.

“Yes.” His voice comes out clipped and harsh. “Stay here.”

I step to the side, ready to hide in the closet. My legs shake as I hold the door open for Liam.

“What the hell?” he mutters, stepping onto the porch.

Kimber snarls and lets out a thunderous bark. “Holy shit. Calm down, girl.”

Ignoring me, she squeezes out the front door. “Kimber, no!” I call, running after her.

“Kimber, come!” Liam shouts, but she keeps moving, leaping off the porch and landing in the front yard.

“Fuck!” Liam runs down the front steps.

Even though she’s limping, Kimber rounds the house, running into the dark, pursuing hell only knows what.

I take a step forward and my shoe lands on something squishy. I glance down. “Eww.” My stomach lurches when I realize what the thump against the front door must have been.

A dead bird.

CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

Between the bird and Kimber reinjuring herself, Bree hasn’t stopped shaking.

“I’m so sorry, Keegan,” she says for the third time.

“It’s not your fault, Bree. She was doing her job. Protecting you.”

Kimber’s at his feet, panting hard. I had to carry her back from the woods with no idea what she’d been chasing. We’re waiting for a call back from the emergency vet.

“Who would do that?” Bree asks, gesturing toward the front porch.

Keegan catches my eye. “Probably just a sick bird that got confused and flew into the door,” he says.

Bree’s eyes widen. “Oh.” She lets out a nervous laugh. “I didn’t think of that.” Her gaze swings to me. “You think that’s what it was?”

No, I think Chad’s in some way responsible, but no way am I saying that to her. “Could be.”

Keegan’s phone rings and he steps away to take the call. “Hey, Dr. Fischer, thanks for calling me back.”

“Are you all right?” I ask Bree.

“No. I’m upset about Kimber.” She lifts her foot and wiggles it. “And that I have bird goo on my going-out shoes.”

Deep, rumbling laughter rolls out of me. I love her resilience. Only Bree could make a joke about bird guts on her shoes with a smile after such a weird night. Hooking an arm around her waist, I pull her toward me and press a kiss to her lips. “I love you,” I whisper against her mouth.

Her eyes widen and her body melts against mine. “Love you too. You scared me when you took off.”

“Nothing’s gonna happen to me.”

“Hey,” Keegan calls out. “I’m going to run her into the emergency clinic. The doc who’s doing her surgery is on call there and she’s coming in.”

“Do you want us to go with you?” Bree asks.

“Nah. It’s going to be a lot of waiting around.”

Releasing Bree, I help Keegan lift Kimber into the back seat of his truck. “You going to be able to get her out on your own?” I ask.

“Yeah, someone there will help.” He lifts his chin at me. “I’ll text you.”

Taking Bree’s hand, I lead her into the house. She follows me around as I turn on the lamps and check every window and door lock.

Uneasy, I’d rather take her to my apartment, but I don’t want to scare her. She seems exhausted anyway. Tomorrow we’re headed to my place.

After she goes to sleep, I call Brady to come over and help me search around the house.

CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

Brady and Sully show up to help me search the woods behind Vince’s place. Sully stays close to the house while Brady and I check out the woods. On the other side, there’s a parking lot for people to stop and explore the nature trails. We find fresh tire tracks. Judging by the size and tread, they belong to a truck.

I researched everything I could on the Joseph family. No one owns a truck.

Not that it means much.

Frustrated and annoyed, I finally fall asleep as the sun’s coming up, glad I have today off.

Bree’s watching me when I wake a few hours later. Wearing an anxious expression, she questions me almost immediately. “Where were you last night?”

Shit. I thought for sure, she’d been asleep.

“A few buddies came over and helped me search the yard.”

“Did you find anything?”

“Nothing useful.”

She tucks her bottom lip under her teeth. I’ll do anything to ease her anxiety today and make her forget the way last night ended. “Come on, I have the day off and want to spend it with you.”

“Have you heard from Keegan?”

“He texted me last night. Kimber’s okay. They numbed her up and they’re transferring her to the regular vet today.”

“I feel so bad.”

“I do too. She has to stay there for a couple days, but he said we can go visit her in a day or two.”

I have to drag her out of bed—who thought that would ever happen? We make a quick stop at the grocery store, where Bree raises an eyebrow at my purchases.

“So, are you planning to explain all the watermelons?” Bree asks as we leave the store.

“You’ll see.”

The humidity’s already thick in the air this morning. Instead of the air conditioner, she chooses to roll the window down, pointing her face toward the breeze. Her hair swirls around her for a few seconds before she pulls it into a ponytail. Already, she seems more relaxed.

The temperature

cools a couple degrees the higher up the mountain we go.

“You’re sure your parents don’t mind us up there when they’re not home?” she asks as we approach their driveway.

“I promised them I’d check on the house while they were away this weekend.”

“Oh. Okay.”

Today I plan to familiarize Bree with handling a few more guns. Mostly long arms. I even tucked her brother’s old shotgun behind my seat so she can learn to use it.

After a quick look around the house, Bree follows me to the shed where my dad keeps targets and other supplies. Together, we set up a series of spinning targets. They’re all orange and shaped like various woodland creatures.

“This woodchuck looks rabid,” Bree says, flicking her hand against it and watching it spin. “Is that so I won’t feel bad about shooting it?”

I chuckle and kiss her cheek. “Probably.”

“Can you staple the paper targets to the plywood there?” I ask, pointing to the spot.

While she wields the staple gun, I run inside. It feels weird invading my father’s gun safe when he’s not home, but I told him I planned to do this today and he encouraged it.

I return with a Ruger 10/22 rifle and my mother’s .243 deer rifle, so Bree can get comfortable shooting something with a little more recoil.

“You know,” she says as I line the weapons up on the bench. A glint of mischief makes her eyes sparkle and she leans in close, lowering her voice to a hypnotic purr. “Freud said men with a compulsion to own firearms were compensating for small penises.”

Fuck, do I love her. I do my best to hold in my laughter, leaning down to touch my forehead to hers. “Well, it’s a good thing you know that theory is false.”

Pink spreads over her cheeks.

“Besides, aren’t his theories considered archaic and obsolete now?”

She raises an eyebrow. Guess she thought I wasn’t listening when she was telling me about some of her classes. “That’s true, although even I admit his take on memories and defense mechanisms still have some relevance.”

“I’ll let you measure me later. Now, we shoot.”

Jerking her chin at the long arms I have laid out on the table, she comments, “Those guns are much bigger than last time.” She throws her hand up. “Just an observation. Not a penis joke. I swear.”

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