Critical Praise for
HANNAH ALEXANDERâS Hideaway Novels
GRAVE RISK
âThe latest in Alexanderâs Hideaway series is filled with mystery and intrigue. Readers familiar with the series will appreciate how the author keeps the characters fresh and appealing.â
âRomantic Times BOOKreviews
FAIR WARNING
âThe plot is interesting and the resolution filled with action.â
âRomantic Times BOOKreviews
LAST RESORT
âThe third novel in Alexanderâs Hideaway romantic suspense series (after the Christy Award-winning Hideaway and Safe Haven) is a gripping tale with sympathetic characters that will draw readers into its web. The kidnapped Clarissaâs inner dialogue may remind some of Alice Seboldâs The Lovely Bones.â
âLibrary Journal
SAFE HAVEN
âSafe Haven has an excellent plot. I was hooked from the first page and felt like I was riding a roller coaster until the last. Ms. Alexanderâs three protagonists kept my adrenaline-racing. But Fawn stole the showâwho could resist a sixteen-year-old running for her life? This writer is a crowd pleaser.â
âRendezvous
HIDEAWAY
âGenuine humor and an interesting cast of characters keep the story perking alongâ¦and there are a few surprisesâ¦an enjoyable read.â
âPublishers Weekly
In loving memory of June James,
born July 16, 1922, passed on to heaven January 29, 2005. Aunt June was filled with the life and laughter that inspired the character of Ginger Carpenter.
Joan Marlow Golan, executive editor of Steeple Hill, runs a tight ship and is a constant encourager. This attitude infects the rest of her staff, and we are the ones who benefit. We appreciate you all!
Also going above and beyond the call of duty yet again is Lorene Cook, mom extraordinaire, who supports, encourages, runs errands and markets like a pro. Thanks, Mom.
Thanks to retired Battalion Chief Fred Baugher, who knows fire and doesnât mind his niece picking his brain from time to time.
Thanks to Captain Powell of Branson Police Department for great information about the station and protocol.
Thanks to Susan May Warren, fellow novelist and former missionary to Russia, who gave us some great insights.
Thanks to Barbara Warren for your word-slashing ability, and to Jackie Bolton for personal insights.
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
W illow Traynorâs eyes opened to the blackness of deep night as the noise and flash of an overbusy dream receded into the mist of her subconscious.
She held her breath as her eyes adjusted to the square edges of the dresser across the room, the dim reflection of light in the mirror, the ghostly drift of gauzy white curtains above the heat register. Something had awakened her.
She knew the dream had not been a nightmare, because in the past two years it seemed as if nightmares had become her constant companions. She would have recognized the aftereffects. She didnât feel them nowâno racing heart, no night sweats, no rush of relief upon waking to discover that she was still alive.
Something else, then. A noise? Perhaps a passing car, or a boat on the lake? The neighbors in the apartment complex? Sometimes the two little Jameson girls got rambunctious late at night, and Mrs. Bartholomew in the unit next door called to complain.
Willow sat up and peered toward the small digital numbers on the nightstand clock. Two-thirty, April 1. Probably wasnât the children.
It might be something as insignificant as the unfamiliar silence. Even after two weeks she hadnât yet adjusted to the moveâor rather, the escapeâfrom bustling Kansas City to her brotherâs rural log cabin six miles south of Branson in the Missouri Ozarks. Major change.
She had never lived this far out in the country. Although the eight-unit apartment lodge her brother managed meant they werenât exactly isolated from civilization, it was nothing like city life. Living in the cabin, situated on the shore of Table Rock Lake, was more like being on permanent vacation. Willow still struggled to come to grips with the comparative solitude.
As she stared into darkness, the square of sliding glass door at the far end of her room seemed to emit a pulsing glow. She blinked to clear her vision, but the glow increased. Headlights from a boat on the lake, perhaps? Except she heard no sound of a boat motor.
She turned her back to the light and plumped her pillow. âNone of my business anyway,â she whispered into the darkness.
Her brother, Preston, certainly didnât want her help keeping track of the renters. As heâd told her several times in the past two weeks, she needed to take a break and heal.