“No, you get back home,” Scooner said. “I had orders to make sure you stayed there.”
“Both of you stop bossing me around. I need to eat.” She turned to Anna, who poured coffee for a customer at the counter. “How fast can Lew make me some pancakes?” Lana asked.
She wasn’t supposed to be alone, wandering the streets late at night. She wasn’t supposed to be so…enchanting. He had the urge to jump out of the booth and scold her for not following his order to stay home, but she’d been through enough tonight. She didn’t need a lecture from Garrett. He’d wait until she’d finished her pancakes, then he’d follow her home to make sure she was safe.
Leaning across the counter, chatting with her friend, no one would ever guess Lana Burns had seen a dead body only hours ago. She cracked a full-blown smile that lit up her face. It took Garrett’s breath away.
He pulled out his notebook and fought the distraction of her gentle voice drifting across the restaurant. Maybe it was time to consider dating again, pursuing a relationship that involved more than investigative theories and hunting killers.
Who was he kidding? There was no place in his life for romance. He’d never put someone he cared about in danger again, and as long as he worked for the FBI, that’s exactly where they’d be.
Focusing on his notes, he hoped Lana didn’t decide to join him for a late-night snack. He didn’t have the energy to keep his protective shields up, and for some reason he needed them with this woman. What was it about her that rattled his focus?
She had no pretense. She said what she thought without reservation or censor. There was no guesswork with the petite beauty, no maneuvering to get what he needed. All he had to do was ask, and she’d answer him truthfully and more than a bit directly.
The restaurant door flew open and a teenage boy wearing a torn denim jacket and black baseball cap stormed inside. His bloodshot eyes frantically scanned the restaurant. Garrett’s instincts spiked.
“Table for one?” Anna asked from behind the counter.
Lana turned to him and…
The kid whipped out a knife. “I need money.”
Two
Garrett automatically slid his hand inside his jacket to reach for his gun. The room went suddenly quiet except for the sound of the baby fussing in the booth next to him. He couldn’t open fire, not with all these civilians in the room. The perp could easily use one as a shield.
“Money, yeah, don’t we all,” Lana joked. “I was about to have a plate of Boomer’s blueberry pancakes, but it’s always too much food. Wanna split it with me?”
The kid looked confused. “What?”
“Pancakes, you know, flour, milk, butter, lots of butter. Come on. Anna, put in an order of Boomer’s for me, ’kay?” Lana wandered to the front booth, away from other customers.
Smart girl. One of the men in the booth up front shifted—the navy SEAL. Not good. If he jumped to the rescue, he could spook the kid. The thought of the teenager pressing the blade to Lana’s throat made Garrett grip the Formica table. He had to get up there and diffuse the situation.
Lana sat down and smiled up at the teenager, actually smiled at a kid who was waving a knife in her face.
“Aren’t you hungry? I’m starving,” she said. “Haven’t eaten since scones at lunch. Mom makes the best cranberry nut scones. Spread a little clotted cream on them and you’re a fan for life. You’ve gotta try them sometime.”
As she rattled on, Scooner started to shift out of the booth. Lana glanced at him and shook her head, encouraging him not to come to her rescue. Scooner hesitated on the edge of his seat.
“Anna, how about some tea?” she called across the restaurant, then redirected her attention to the kid. “Or do you prefer soda? They make the best cream sodas, my personal kryptonite. I could drink them for breakfast, lunch and dinner. And gain ten pounds in a week. Not good for someone who’s barely five-three.” She tapped on the table with her fingertips. “Come on, sit down.”
The kid took a step toward the table, clutching the knife. Garrett’s hand tingled with the need to draw his firearm.
“Don’t you like pancakes?” she asked with innocent eyes.
“I don’t have any money,” the kid croaked.
“No problem. I’ve got a little extra tonight. We had a really good week on my tour boat. I take people over to Salish Island. Do you live around here? I’m a lifer but I don’t remember meeting you. Sorry, I was probably your babysitter or something, right?” she joked.
“I’m not from here.” The kid closed the knife and shoved it in his pocket.
Scooner stood.
“Sit down,” Lana said.
The kid joined her in the booth, figuring she was talking to him.
“You, too, Scooner,” she ordered, not breaking eye contact with the teenager.
“Where are you from?” she asked.
He shrugged.
“Well, besides having the best blueberry pancakes in the state of Washington, our state park has awesome trails if you like hiking, and sailing on Puget Sound is a blast. You ever been sailing?”
Was it just Garrett, or was she being incredibly trusting? Either that or he should hire her for his team.
The kid seemed to have calmed down, but Garrett couldn’t be sure he’d stay that way. As Garrett swung his leg out of the booth, the front door opened. Deputy Finnegan stepped into the restaurant and approached Lana’s table.
“Everything okay here?” he asked.
“Great. We’re about to have pancakes, right?” She eyed the teen.
“Yeah.” His shoulders slumped. He took out the knife and placed it on the table.
Deputy Finnegan motioned Lana out of the booth. She took a few steps toward the counter, but she wasn’t far enough away for Garrett’s taste.
“Anything else in your pockets?” Finnegan asked the kid.
The teen pulled his pockets inside out. They were empty. Finnegan pocketed the knife.
“You’d better come with me.”
The kid stood, head hung low, and Finnegan cuffed him.
“Wait, I didn’t get your name,” Lana said.
The kid glanced at her through long bangs. “Michael.”
“Nice to meet you, Michael. I’ll bring pancakes by the police station.” She turned her attention to the deputy. “Is that okay, Scott?”
Garrett leaned back in his booth, his jaw dropping in disbelief.
“Sure,” Deputy Finnegan said, shaking his head.
“Cool. I’ll see you later, okay, Michael?”
Michael glanced over his shoulder, and that’s when Garrett saw the tears streaming down the kid’s face.
“You have something you want to say to Lana?” Finnegan asked.
“Thanks,” he choked.
“Something else?” the cop prompted.
“Sorry.”
“I forgive you,” Lana said.
The deputy led Michael out of the restaurant.
Dead silence filled the restaurant. Lana glanced at the customers. “What?”
“What were you thinking?” Scooner challenged.
“I was thinking you were going to freak the kid out with your macho karate moves, and kick me in the head by mistake.” One of the other guys at the table chuckled.
“Lana, I can’t believe you did that.” Anna darted around the counter and gave her a hug.
The young couple packed up their baby and left cash on the table, the teenagers burst into a frenzied discussion about what just happened, and the man at the counter pulled a small flask from his jacket and poured something into his coffee. Garrett couldn’t blame him.
Nor could he take his eyes off Lana Burns. She went to her table and leaned back against the booth.
Why did she put herself at risk like that?
Anna suddenly blocked his line of vision. “Did you need cream and sugar?” she asked him.
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