“Stay there, okay?”
“But…”
The thud of footsteps sent Lauren’s heartbeat into a spike. “I’ll call you!” she whispered urgently and snapped the phone shut. It slid into the tote just seconds before Henderson loomed in the doorway.
“Well?” she asked with what she hoped was credible nonchalance.
“I’ve verified that a Lauren Smith lives at 2205 Crescent Drive,” he growled. “That doesn’t necessarily prove you’re Lauren Smith.”
She pushed off the bed, her relief at making contact with her sister shoved to the background by this flint-edged cop’s unwillingness to accept the facts in front of his face.
“If I’m Becky, what am I doing with Lauren’s wallet?”
“If you’re Lauren,” he fired back, “what are you doing with Becky’s?”
“She left it here. I just picked it up for safekeeping.”
“Right.”
“I don’t believe this.”
Totally frustrated, Lauren speared a hand through her hair. Her closest brush with the law was a parking ticket three years ago. She’d paid the fine promptly and always maintained a healthy respect for police officers. But Henderson’s subtly veiled threats and flat refusal to accept her assertion that she wasn’t her sister punched all the wrong buttons. She had rights, didn’t she? So did Becky. Lauren was still formulating those rights in her mind when Henderson blew them away.
“I’m going with the hard evidence here,” he said on a tight note. “You walked into Becky’s house like it was your own. You’re wearing the pin Becky’s boyfriend shelled out two thousand dollars for. You’re carrying Becky’s ID. You’re Becky Smith, lady, unless or until someone says otherwise.”
“All right,” she fumed. “What if I am Becky? That still doesn’t mean I have to go anywhere with you.”
“Guess again.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“I’d prefer your cooperation,” he said, his voice flat and uncompromising, “but we can do this the hard way if necessary.”
“What are you going to do?” she scoffed. “Slap on some handcuffs and haul me in?”
“If I have to.”
Lauren brought her chin up. “On what charges? Since when is getting involved with the wrong man against the law?”
A mistake, maybe. A big mistake if you ended up married to the cretin. But against the law? She didn’t think so.
“Try obstruction of justice,” he shot back. “Hindering a law enforcement officer in the performance of his duty. Being a material witness in an ongoing criminal investigation.”
That got her attention. So did the acerbic observation he tacked on.
“You know, you ought to be more careful about who you get ‘involved’ with. You seem to have a propensity for the wrong men.”
Her chin came up another notch. “Been checking into my sister’s colorful past, have you?”
“I’ve been checking into Becky Smith’s past,” he countered. “She’s left a string of broken hearts all across the Southwest.”
As he reeled off a list of her sister’s recent affairs, Lauren’s temper came to a slow boil. She knew how deeply their parents’ acrimonious break up had scarred her sibling, and how gun-shy Becky’d grown about commitment. With the sting of her own divorce fading but not forgotten, Lauren wasn’t exactly anxious to jump off the deep end with another male any time soon, either. Her jaw tightened as Henderson issued another of his brusque orders.
“Pack enough to get you through the next few days.”
“Let’s try this again. You’ve got the wrong woman.”
“Is that so? Then where’s the right one?”
“She’s…she’s safe.”
He crossed the room in three swift strides. Lauren felt her heart thud against her ribs as a suddenly, startlingly dangerous man towered over her.
“Where is she? With Jannisek?”
“No!”
“How do you know?”
Lauren decided not to reveal the fact that she had a phone tucked in her purse. “I just do.”
“So you’ve been stringing me along here, is that it?”
He looked so fierce, she almost caved and told him she’d sent Becky to Aunt Jane’s. But Lauren wasn’t going to offer her sister up as anyone’s sacrificial goat. Her mouth clamped shut.
Another silence stretched between them. Henderson finally broke it, his eyes like chips of ice.
“Pack what you’ll need for a few days,” he ordered again.
“But…!”
“If you’re Becky Smith, you’re not safe here. If you’re not Becky Smith, you’re still not safe here. We have to assume the guys looking for your boyfriend are looking for her, too. They might make the same mistake in identities you say I did.”
Lauren was beginning to appreciate how Alice in Wonderland must have felt after tumbling down the rabbit hole. She wasn’t sure of anything anymore—except that the idea of spending the next few days in the protective custody of Special Agent Henderson sent a nervous ripple across her skin.
“I’ll get my car,” he informed her tersely. “Meet me out back in five minutes.”
He turned away, took two strides, swung back again.
“If you’re thinking about trying to run out the front door, don’t. I’d be on you like mud on a mustang before you got a half a block.”
Lauren’s back teeth ground together. “I’m going to say this one more time. You’re making a mistake.”
“Maybe. Maybe not.”
Still fuming, she listened to his footsteps retreat down the hall. Only after her anger cooled did the awful reality of the situation sink in. The idea that some thugs might be searching for her sister left a sick feeling in Lauren’s stomach.
Poor Becky! She’d have to stay in hiding indefinitely. Unless…
Unless someone drew the dogs off her scent. Someone like her sister.
Lauren gulped. Marsh Henderson had mistaken her for Becky. Others often did, too. Maybe…maybe she could stand in for Becky. Take Henderson up on his offer of protection while his associates hunted down this mobster who was supposedly after her boyfriend.
Biting on a fingernail, she tried desperately to think of other options. There weren’t any that she could see. With a sigh of resignation, she dug in her purse for her cell phone again. Every beat of her heart sounded like thunder in her ears as she punched in her assistant’s home number. He answered on the third ring.
“Josh, this is Lauren.”
“Are you home?”
“No. I’m in Phoenix.”
“I take it Becky’s in a jam again.”
“Sort of. I need you to wire her two hundred dollars. Send it in care of Joe’s Joint, Gallup, New Mexico.”
“What’s she doing in Gallup? No, let me guess. She’s taken up with a trucker this time.”
Lauren let the caustic remark pass without comment. Josh still hadn’t recovered from the time Becky had seduced him into a brief affair during one of her intermittent stays with Lauren. Beck had breezed off again a week later with a smile and a wave. Josh hadn’t quite reached the smiling stage yet.
“Just wire the money, okay?”
“Okay, okay. Anything else?”
Lauren clenched the phone. “Yes. Cancel my appointments for the next few days.”
“What?” His squawk jumped across the air-waves. “You’ve got that meeting with the museum director tomorrow afternoon! You know how important that is. And we promised some prototype note cards to the Breckinridge Group by Friday, remember?”
“I know.”
She thought furiously. She’d spent hours on various sketches that incorporated world-famous art with the stag antlers that symbolized the equally world-famous Breckinridge Resort. Josh could start the process that would transform her sketches into polished products.
“I’ve worked up a dozen or so preliminary designs for the Breckinridge account. Scan them into the computer tomorrow and start working the color screens, will you? I’ll get back as soon as I can.”
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