âIâm sorry,â he said. âI donât know who you are.â
She sighed. âI hoped you wouldâthat you might â¦â
âWhy?â he asked.
âBecause it wouldâve made this easier if you were expecting me,â she replied.
Expecting her? He hadnât been expecting anything elseânot the bombs or the shootings being meant for him. Why the hell would he have expected her?
âMake what easier?â he asked.
Was she a hit woman? A hired assassin?
He glanced around for his holster and weaponâbut it, like his clothes, were nowhere in sight. Neither was any of his damn family.
Heâd thought they werenât going to leave him alone.
âWhat I have to tell you,â she said. Then she drew in a deep breath, as if to brace herself, and continued, âThat this is your son.â
Bestselling, award-winning author LISA CHILDS writes paranormal and contemporary romance for Mills & Boon. She lives on thirty acres in Michigan with her two daughters, a talkative Siamese and a long-haired Chihuahua who thinks sheâs a rottweiler. Lisa loves hearing from readers, who can contact her through her website, www.lisachilds.com, or snail-mail address, PO Box 139, Marne, MI 49435, USA.
Chapter One
Someone put out a hit on Parker Payne.
The statement echoed inside Parkerâs head, but it wasnât the only echo. His ears rang yet from the blast of the explosion that had sent him to the hospital and two Payne Protection Agency employees to the morgue.
Guilt and pain clutched his heart. He was supposed to have been inside that SUV, not Douglas and Terry. But, totally unaware of the bomb that had been wired to the ignition, they had jumped inside his vehicle for a lunch run. Heâd been rushing out to catch them to change an order, but he had been too late. Doug turned the key, and the SUV exploded into bits of glass and scraps of metal. Two good men died, leaving behind wives and children.
It should have been Parker. Not only did he have no wife or child to leave behind, but he was actually the one whom somebody wanted dead.
He fought against the pain and confusion of the concussion that had his head pounding and his vision blurred. So he closed his eyes and tried to focus on the conversation swirling around his hospital bed.
His mother fussed. âWe should take this conversation into the hall so that Parker can get some rest.â Her fingers skimmed across his forehead, like they had when heâd been a little boy with a fever or a scraped knee or when his father died. She had always been there for her kids even though she hadnât had anyone to be there for her.
He caught her hand and gently squeezed her fingers in reassurance. She had to be scared at how close she had come to losing a child. In the past two weeks, there had been several attempts on his brother Cooperâs life and on his twin Loganâs life. But most of those attempts had really been meant to end his life.
Logan bossed. âWe need to find out who the hell put out the hit.â Then his tone turned suspicious, so he must have been addressing one of his new in-laws, when he added, âUnless you already know. Your contacts must have told you who when they told you about the hit.â
The guy cursed Logan, so he must have been the hotheaded Garek instead of the milder-mannered Milek Kozminski. âIf I knew who the hell it is, I would have told youâthe monster put my sister in danger.â
Parker forced open his eyes, but he had to squint against the glare of the overhead lights and the sunlight streaming through the blinds. His head pounded harder, but it was more with guilt than pain. Stacy Kozminski-Payne had been through a lot recently, most of it because of him. He focused on his new sister-in-law. The tawny-haired woman stood between her husband and her brother, as if ready to stop a brawl. It was probably a position in which she would find herself for most of her marriage.
But then his twin did something Logan rarely did; he apologized. âSorry, man. I know you would do anything to protect your sister.â
Garek nodded in acceptance of the apology and continued, âThe only thing I know for certain is that itâs somebody who has a lot of money and influence.â
âYou and Milek need to reach out to all your contacts and see what you can find out.â Logan resumed his bossing. As CEO of Payne Protection Agency and the oldest Payne sibling by ten minutes, heâd gotten good at giving out orders.