Page 64 of The Harmless Series


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“Not on my watch.” He sits down and observes as I pat the ice cream and hot fudge off my pants.

“Quit staring.”

“It’s my job to look at you.”

“You sound more and more like a creepy stalker.”

The waiter comes over and asks Drew if he’d like something to drink. Drew orders coffee.

“You can get your own table.”

“I have something to say.”

“You’ve said more than enough, Drew. You’re my bodyguard. I get that. I have to tolerate it, because for some screwed up reason, Daddy decided to hire you and your company. But I do not have to agree to let you break into my personal space and sit here like we’re old friends having a lovely afternoon lunch.”

“If this were a normal client relationship, I’d agree.”

“I don’t need you to agree. Just follow my orders.”

He leans back in the chair, unbuttoning his suit jacket. As he stretches his arms along the chair, I see his gun holster on his left. Drew’s right-handed.

“That’s the first time I’ve ever seen the resemblance in you to your father, Lindsay.” His mouth twitches with amusement. I look at his lips. Those were on mine yesterday. The memory of his heavy, muscled arms around me, my body curled in his lap, makes me warm.

“Why are you doing this?”

“Doing what?”

“Tormenting me.”

He arches one eyebrow. “I’m protecting you.”

“You’re making my life so much harder.”

“Why?”

The tears start in the base of my throat, a tightening I know will turn into a full-blown crying jag if I don’t do something. One giant scoop of ice cream later, and at least my mouth is shocked by the cold.

“Need a shovel?” he jokes. I know he’s trying to navigate the landmine of this mess. But the comment just makes me swallow and set the spoon aside.

“Take care of the bill for me. I’m leaving.” I stand and coldly walk away. Security teams often do handle these details, though I’ve never acted like this before. Drew’s ease and familiarity with me drives me insane.

And then there was that kiss.

A kiss I want more of.

By the time he catches up to me, I’m walking along a side street where the water laps at the shore. Mom loves this part of our sleepy little exclusive town, where it’s a crime to be homeless but an even bigger crime to be out of fashion. I’m sure crying and blubbering with hot fudge stains on your white pants is worse than either of those.

Drew stays ten feet behind me.

I ache for him. I ache for answers—real answers—to questions I’m pretty sure I can’t ask. And if I ask them, I won’t get a straight answer anyway, so why bother? Has it really only been two days since I’ve been home? How can two days be so jam-packed full of so much horror?

“Mom just told me the rape counselor at the emergency room sold a bunch of lies to a tabloid for six figures,” I say, staring at the water. It rises up and catches the sunlight, then glimmers off the hull of a boat docked to the little marina beside the set of shops.

“I know.”

“You know everything, don’t you?”

“No. I don’t. I wish I did.”

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