An hour later everything was in place, including his airline ticket and a rental car. Within twenty-four hours, they would be in Bliss.
Rafe just hoped Bliss was ready for a little scandal.
Deep in the night, he watched. It was easy to blend into this particular part of the city. All he had to do was look hungry.
That wasn’t hard. He was always hungry.
That little meal he’d had the week before hadn’t even begun to take the edge off what he needed. The whore had gone down far too easily. A few taps and she’d knelt at his feet. The fight she’d put up had been halfhearted, as though she hadn’t really minded dying.
Oh, she’d minded the pain. She’d howled, but even that had been sad compared to…
When he closed his eyes, he saw her blonde beauty stretched out on his rack. He saw her eyes filled with rage. She wouldn’t have gone down easy. He could have played his game with her for days and never gotten bored.
Oh, the plans he’d had for her until the clever little bitch had managed to escape.
She’d won that session. She wouldn’t win again.
He’d known all he had to do was follow the idiot men. They would do the work for him. The rabbit had run, but she couldn’t hide forever.
Now all his plans were coming together. It was fate. He hadn’t actually meant for the feds to find his latest kill, but he wasn’t upset about it either. It would throw them off.
He adjusted the device in his ear as he took another long drink of the green tea he’d placed in a forty-ounce beer container. There he was. Just another bum looking to get drunk on a Thursday night. He pulled the hood over his head despite the heat.
He’d listened in on Cameron Briggs’s completely worthless life for years. Now he finally had something to show for it.
Bliss, Colorado.
He got up, and by the time he reached his car three blocks away, he’d shed his bum persona. No one would know him now.
He’d found his little rabbit. It was time to go hunting again.
Chapter Two
Laura Niles looked at herself in the mirror. She had to admit the peach color Brooke Harper had selected for the bridesmaids’ dresses looked nice.
“I don’t think there’s enough fabric in the world,” a sad voice said beside her.
Laura looked over at Callie Hollister-Wright. She was almost eight months pregnant, and she was lovely to Laura’s eyes, but she was also very, very large. “You look beautiful. Brooke just needs to let it out a little bit.”
Callie sniffled as she looked at herself in the mirror. She hadn’t been able to zip up the back of her dress. “Maybe I should let someone else take my place. Brooke can’t keep letting the dress out.”
“Yes, I can,” Brooke said with a vibrant smile. “For what Stef’s paying me, I will happily let that sucker out twice during the ceremony if I have to.”
Brooke patted Laura on the shoulder. She leaned in. “I need to take up your hem, but I’d like to get Callie done first. Do you mind?” Callie needed to be off her feet. Laura took a step back. “Not at all. I don’t have to be at work today. I’ll sit down with Nell and Holly.
You let me know if I can help.”
Laura couldn’t miss the way Callie gave her a once-over as she stepped away. She could guess what Callie was thinking. Callie was wishing she had Laura’s body. How could Laura tell her that she would change bodies with her in an instant? She would do it without ever missing her own body because despite her perfect size-six figure, she would never be round and full like Callie was now. She would never complain about swallowing a beach ball or how she waddled or how often the baby growing inside her kicked. She could never be pregnant, and Callie couldn’t know how that made her ache inside.
“I think it is so nice of you to write that man,” Nell was saying as Laura made her way from the makeshift dressing room through the souvenir aisle. Laura walked into the teeny-tiny tea room at the Trading Post that overlooked Main Street.
“Well, I figured he must be a little lonely. He’s in a foreign country after all,” Holly said, taking a sip of tea as she looked over a letter.
Laura banished her sad thoughts and felt a smile crinkle her lips.
Holly was such a bullshitter. “Are you seriously trying to pass off your prison love letters as some community service project? Nell, she and Alexei have been trading flirty letters. She’s not trying to save his soul.”
Nell looked up and smiled that ridiculously brilliant smile of hers.
Whenever Laura got in a bad mood, all she had to do was get Nell to smile to force one of her own. Nell genuinely believed all the crap she pushed. She believed in the good of man. She believed in saving the Earth. Nell believed, and Laura thought it was a lovely thing. “Well, it wasn’t like Alexei did something terrible. I mean the ‘killing people’
thing was awful and all, but have you heard about what the Russian mob does? It’s horrible. And they don’t recycle.”
“And it’s not prison love,” Holly said with a prim little sigh. “It’s witness protection friendship. He’s in witness protection while the trial is going on. I have no idea if it’s going to go anywhere once the trial is over. It’s just friendship. With a little flirting. I don’t know if he’s flirting. I still can’t tell half the things he says to me. He doesn’t write English any better than he speaks it. Like this—‘Holly, you are very cold woman. I wish to see you once more to spend the times with you, not to do hooking thing, but to talk, to know the real womens inside you.’ Seriously? I think he might think I’m a cold-blooded prostitute with multiple personality disorder.”
Laura let her head fall back, the giggle coming from a place deep inside her. It was easy to let go of the pains of the past when she was surrounded by her friends. “Oh, I don’t think so, sweetie. Let me translate for you. He thinks you’re a very cool woman. He wants to spend time with you, but not to hook up. He wants to know who you are inside. He’s crazy about you.”
Holly flushed, her skin turning almost as red as her hair. “I doubt that. I’m almost forty. I have a teenager.” Nell reached across the table, her hand rubbing over Holly’s.
“You’re a wonderful woman, Holly. Any man would be lucky to be with you.”
“Speaking of men,” Laura said, reaching for the sugar, “has the doc finally gotten past the stuttering stage?” Doctor Caleb Burke had been circling around Holly like a socially awkward shark.
Holly folded the letter and put it in her purse. She let her head sink down to her hand. “Well, he manages to start sentences, but then he always just asks for coffee. I don’t know what to do with him.
Everyone says he likes me, but he never talks to me. It makes me sad.
I have one man who can’t get two words out around me and another who barely speaks my language. I’m going to die alone.”
“Nope,” Laura said to her best friend. “I’ll be right there with you.”
Nell and Holly both sat forward.
“Did the stud turn out to be a dud?” Holly asked.
Nell shook her head Holly’s way. “He has a mind, Holly. It’s not a good thing to sexually objectify the man.” The man in question chose just that moment to walk across the street. Wolf Meyer was a stud. Nell was just flat wrong. There was no way to not sexually objectify that hot hunk of man. The former Navy SEAL stood long and lean in his jeans and a T-shirt that hugged his strong body. His hair was dark, but there was very little of it. He looked like a military man.