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She hit a button to clear the screen. Her pulse jumped.

It buzzed again.

Is that our mysterious Hunter Garrity?

Did that mean Silver was watching them right now? She cleared the screen again and shoved the phone into her pocket, where it vibrated a third time.

“Someone wants your attention,” said Hunter.

“He’s like a toddler,” she agreed.

Hunter’s eyebrows raised just the tiniest bit. “He?”

“No one important,” she said. But her phone buzzed again.

The emotion in Hunter’s eyes was walled up now, and she could see the tightness in his jaw. He looked so tightly wound that she was almost afraid to leave him alone. “Where do you want to go?” she said. “I’ll go with you.”

He didn’t look over.

She put a hand on his arm. “Come on. Maybe you can show me around—”

He caught her wrist. Not hard, but fast enough that it made her gasp.

“I don’t want to be a jerk,” he said, his eyes shifting to meet hers. “But I can’t do this.”

She didn’t understand. “This?”

His eyes were tired and wary—but also sharp and intelligent. “Yeah. This.”

Kate stared across at him. “What just happened?”

He glanced at her phone. “Boyfriend?”

“What? No.” Then she remembered Silver’s cover story. If she denied it now, would it screw things up later? “It’s not like that.”

But she’d fumbled her words, and she knew exactly what it looked like. Hunter leaned across her body to pull at the handle to release the door. Cool air streamed into the car.

He was throwing her out?

His expression said he was.

“You’re getting this all wrong,” she said.

“I don’t think I am.”

She slid out of the car. Before closing the door, she said, “I just thought we could get to know each other.”

He finally looked at her fully, and he laughed shortly. “If you’re lonely, why don’t you text Nick Merrick? He seemed perfectly willing to stare at you.”

Then, without waiting for an answer, he reached out and grabbed the door, pulling it shut and leaving her out in the cold.

Hunter waited until he couldn’t ignore the hunger clawing at his stomach, then bought two breakfast sandwiches at Dunkin Donuts. He was hungry enough to inhale both, but he’d fed Casper the last of the milk bones this morning, and the dog was staring at him desperately. So he set the second sandwich on the wrapper on the ground.

Eleven dollars left, and a third of a tank of gasoline.

His cell phone remained blank. At least he had a car charger for that.

He’d been so stupid, entertaining the thought of . . . of anything with Kate. Like his life wasn’t complicated enough right now. She’d climbed into his car, he’d almost broken down, and then she’d started texting with some other guy.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
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