Pulling open the door with what he hoped was an expression that would calm down his drama-ridden ex-wife, he was shocked to see a slender blonde standing on his front porch. Obviously she had the wrong house, but...he suddenly didn’t mind. She was a looker. More than a looker. That body... Those drab pants and shapeless jacket were hopefully hiding some sexy lingerie...
“Mr. Bridges?”
He blinked. What the hell?
Had he just been fantasizing about a stranger on his porch? In broad daylight? With his son just feet behind him?
Clearly time for him to get a little...in an appropriate place at an appropriate time. As soon as possible.
Tressa was generally accommodating... He just usually lost all desire anytime he thought about her in that way these days.
“Jeremiah Bridges?” The woman spoke for a second time. Her hair was pulled back tight in a twist thing on the back of her neck. He actually thought about reaching back there and pulling out the hairpins. He had to know how long it was.
“Yes,” he blurted, embarrassed that he was still standing there like an imbecile, thinking about sex. “I’m Jem Bridges. What can I do for you?”
Was one of his men in trouble? He didn’t know all their wives, but he’d met most of them at one time or another. And couldn’t remember any looking like this.
So maybe she was a girlfriend...attempting to catch someone out in a lie... He gave himself a mental shake. Most of the world was not like Tressa.
“I’m Lacey Hamilton, Mr. Bridges.” She handed him a card. “I’m from child protective services.”
Jem’s chin dropped. His gut knotted over the spaghetti he’d had for dinner.
Not a wife. Or a girlfriend. She was an agent from child protective services. And there could be only one reason she’d come to his house.
Only one child there. Only one child in his life. One child he knew well enough to answer for to any child agency.
With a mother who, on occasion, tried to make Jem’s life hell.
Which meant only one thing to him. The beautiful woman standing on his doorstep wasn’t there to feed his sexual fantasies. She was there to implode his life.
CHAPTER THREE
THE FIRST THING Lacey noticed from her spot on the front porch looking in was a clean home—at least what she could see of it. The father, not so much. He was clean-cut enough, but the red stains on the front of his white button-down shirt were a bit off-putting. His open blue gaze kind of captivated her—until she blinked, and broke the contact, and remembered that the man’s lean, cowboy-type good looks had nothing to do with her reason for being there.
Other than giving her a sign that she wasn’t dealing with someone currently drunk or obviously down on his luck.
Well-to-do, well-dressed, gorgeous fathers abused their kids. And cowboys with stained shirts could, too.
“May I come in?” she asked. If he refused, she’d get a warrant. Then there’d be a strike against him in her estimation.
“Of course.” He stepped back.
Once she was inside, she could see the living room and what looked like a smaller living area with books and a piano off to her right. The home was one of the older, antebellum-type houses that dotted the town of Santa Raquel. But where the big mansions on the beach, and across from the beach, carried seven-figure price tags, Bridges’s home was farther inland. And not quite as large.
“What can I do for you?”
The contractor stood directly in front of her. Arms crossed. Defensive and possibly aggressive posture. Daring her to come in any farther?
She’d followed protocol, had logged her intent to make the home visit and had her phone’s GPS location on. Her whereabouts could be traced. If he tried anything untoward, he’d get caught.
Still, she could have waited for another agent to accompany her. If she’d been so inclined. If she’d have been able to sleep without assuring herself that little Levi wasn’t in immediate danger.
She could also have called the police—they often partnered on child protective services cases that involved anything of a criminal nature.
Looking around, taking her time to answer the man still standing guard over his home, Lacey assimilated as she’d been trained to do.
She didn’t have definitive proof of illegal activity. But Mara had noticed finger-shaped bruising weeks ago.
A broken arm could indicate escalating injury. She wasn’t frightened, just cautious by nature.
“My office received a phone call,” she started slowly, softly, as she heard sounds coming from a room in the back of the house. A utensil dropping on a table or counter?
“Is your son here?”
“Of course he’s here. He lives here.”
“May I see him?”
Frowning, the man studied her. “I need to see some picture identification. Anyone can have cards printed up.”
Reaching into her black strapped leather satchel, she pulled out her badge and handed it to him.
Apparently he was cautious by nature, too.
Or stalling while he tried to figure out what to do?
Nodding, he handed the card back to her. “You said you had a phone call.”
Someone was tapping a rhythm—thump, thump, thump.
She nodded, taking a step toward the sound. “May I see your son?”
“Of course you can. But I’d like to know why first.”
“Clap along...nah nah nah nah das what you wanna do...” The faint sound of the childish voice interrupted them from the distance and Lacey stared in the direction her feet wanted her to go.
“Pharrell Williams,” she said. The song “Happy” was one she played full blast in her car on those days when her job seemed heavier than she was.
The tapping continued, not at all in rhythm with the words. The tune wasn’t bad, though.
“He’s a little off beat,” Jeremiah Bridges said. “And he’s supposed to be eating, so I need to get back to him before I have spaghetti sauce splattered on the walls in line with those beats.”
The sounds continued. And Lacey’s suspicious mind wondered if Mr. Bridges had somehow triggered his son’s impromptu performance for her benefit. Except that he’d have had no way to do so. He hadn’t known she was coming. No one outside the logbook in the office had.
Of course, the boy could be programmed to begin the performance anytime the doorbell rang...
A far-fetched thought even for her.
“Don’t let me stop you from getting back to him,” Lacey said. “I’m here to check on his well-being.”
“His being will be well until I return to him,” the man said with a confidence that could have been endearing if it didn’t make her wonder just what made a grown man so certain that a little boy would stay at the table. “It’s the walls I’m worried about.”
“He’s confined, then?” she asked. Strapped in a booster? Or...heaven forbid, did the man keep a four-year-old in a high chair?
She’d seen it before. A mother who’d lost a toddler, not letting her second baby grow up. One of the saddest situations she’d had to oversee. Because in the end, she’d had to take the woman’s second baby from her, too.
“No.”
“Then how do you know he’ll be okay?” She was being difficult. She knew it even before she said the words. But the man was...bothering her.
“Because he gave me his word he wouldn’t get down from the table.”
Impressive? Or oppressive?
“Now.” Mr. Bridges’s arms were crossed again. “I want to know why child protective services is in my home checking up on my son. What’s this phone call you mentioned?”
“Someone is concerned about Levi’s welfare.”
“Nuh nuh nuh...” came from the distance.
“Someone.”
“Yes.”
“Who?”
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