Mallory Kane - The Paediatrician's Personal Protector
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- Название:The Paediatrician's Personal Protector
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“What the hell?” he heard just as a motion-sensing light flared.
“Call 911!” Reilly shouted. “Get the police over here. A woman’s been attacked.”
More lights came on. He saw Bardin standing on his back porch in boxer shorts and a T-shirt, with his phone at his ear.
The door to Cottage Three was standing open. Reilly slowed down and approached carefully, holding his gun and his flashlight ready.
He rounded the door facing and the flashlight’s beam hit a female body sprawled on the hardwood floor.
Christy! Horror turned his blood to ice. Then she moved and gasped, and relief flooded him. Automatically, he swept the room with the flashlight’s beam and called out to no one in particular, “Clear.”
Then he crouched beside the black-haired beauty and brushed her silky hair out of her face. “Christy?” he said softly. “Hey, Christy, talk to me.”
“No—” she moaned, trying to push him away.
“It’s okay. I’m Reilly Delancey—” He took a breath. “The police,” he clarified.
At that instant, crunching footsteps approached. Reilly whirled, aiming flashlight and gun at the doorway. “Hold it right there,” he barked.
“What’s going on?” a voice growled. He heard the unmistakable sound of a shotgun shell being chambered.
“Guerrant? It’s Reilly Delancey. Did you call the police?”
“Hell yeah, I did.” Bardin stepped into the doorway and reached around to flip on the lights. He’d pulled on blue jeans over his boxers. “Oh, crap. What happened?”
“I think she was attacked. Don’t touch anything. Wait out there for the police.”
“Is she alive?”
As Bardin spoke, Christy moved her right arm and cried out in obvious pain.
With the lights on, Reilly saw that her slim skirt was ripped, her stockings were torn and one foot was bare. Beyond her, toward the bathroom, her purse had slid across the floor and spilled. A bottle of wine in a paper bag had rolled into a corner. Her phone lay just out of her reach.
“Guerrant, guard the door. If you see anything, holler. I need to clear the area.” Reilly slipped out the door of the cottage and canvassed the area. He didn’t see anyone. He checked the seashell-and-gravel path that connected the cottages. It ended at the fence that surrounded the inn’s grounds. The fence was green chicken wire, designed to disappear amid the landscaping. It would be absurdly easy for someone to climb it and vault over. He shone the flashlight into the thicket on the other side of the fence. Nothing.
He circled around the cottages, just to be sure there was nobody lurking, then walked up to the door where Guerrant was standing guard.
“Didn’t see anybody here,” Guerrant reported.
When Reilly entered, Christy was struggling to sit up. She looked up at him. There was a scrape on her cheek. She blinked. “Reilly Delancey,” she said hoarsely. “Not the detective.”
“Are you okay? Are you hurt? “
She squeezed her eyes shut. “The scaphoid bone in my wrist is fractured, although it’s not displaced. Please help me up.”
Scaphoid bone? Reilly had no idea what she’d just told him, but he had heard the words wrist and fractured. “No. You stay right there. Don’t move. I’m calling—”
Christy pushed herself up using her left hand and pressed her right hand protectively against her ribs.
“—the EMTs,” Reilly finished with a sigh. Super-confident. Super-cool, even after being attacked. Even with a broken wrist. Did that come from being a physician? Or from what must have been a very difficult childhood? Either way, he was glad she was alive.
Giving up on the notion that she might listen to him, he crouched beside her, ready to steady her if she felt faint or got sick. She looked a little green around the gills.
“Help me up,” she ordered. When she tried to move, her mouth tightened and the tension along her jawline increased.
He had his phone out. “No. You’ll wait for the ambulance—” he started.
Using just her left arm, she struggled to get her feet under her. With a sigh, he slid his hands under her arms and helped her to her feet. “Do you ever listen?”
“I—know my own body,” she replied, putting a notion in Reilly’s head that he quickly banished.
She teetered between one high heel and one bare foot. Earlier at the courthouse, he’d observed that she was just about as tall as his nearly six feet. But now, as she put her weight on her bare foot, she seemed small. Her shoulders under his hand felt bony—feminine—sexy.
She still appeared dazed, and if the situation weren’t so dire, she might have looked comically awkward with one shoe on and one shoe off. He gently pushed her down into the chair, a little surprised when she didn’t protest.
He watched her carefully. She held her wrist cradled against her, protecting it. A large red area on her forehead was swelling and turning purple. Her lips were white at the corners. The scrape on her left cheek blossomed with tiny beads of blood, like early morning dew on a red flower.
She caught him checking out the scrape. “It’s nothing more than an abrasion.” She tentatively pressed it with a finger. “I’ll probably have a mild contusion,” she said, then added, “a bruise.” She frowned. “And a larger one on my forehead.”
“Your wrist—” Reilly started.
“I told you, it’s not displaced. It won’t need setting. I’ll wrap it and get a wrist guard. There’s no need for medical treatment.”
“That’s not your call,” Reilly informed her as he dialed one-handed. “What happened?”
She shook her head as if trying to clear it and touched the bruise on her forehead. “I was hit from behind. Knocked to the floor. I thought—” She stopped.
Reilly ordered an ambulance then hung up. “You thought what?”
She shook her head again. “Nothing. The man said, ‘Go back where you came from or you’re as dead as your sister.’“
The words shocked Reilly. “He said that? Those exact words? Are you sure?”
“Yes.” Although she looked like a frightened, hurt young woman, her reply was confident and smooth.
“What else did he say?”
“Nothing. He got off me and left.”
“Did you get a good look at him?”
She shook her head. “I tried to turn over and get up but my wrist—” Her voice gave out.
“You’re positive it was a man?” Reilly asked.
She looked at him frowning. “Of course.”
“Why ‘of course’?”
But before she could answer, the crunch of heavy boots on seashells and gravel announced the arrival of the police. Two uniformed officers appeared at the door to the cottage, their weapons drawn.
Reilly indicated the badge at his belt. “Deputy Reilly Delancey, SWAT. Dr. Moser here was attacked.” He didn’t know the officers, but both of them glanced his way when he told them his name. He’d long since stopped being surprised by that.
In and around Chef Voleur the name Delancey always drew a reaction. Depending on the situation and the people, the reactions were vastly different. Reilly figured the two officers knew or had heard of Ryker.
One of the officers stepped over to Christy and the other faced him.
“Delancey? Deputy Buford Watts. How’d you get here?”
“Dr. Moser is involved with a case of my brother’s, Detective Ryker Delancey. I had given her my phone number in case she couldn’t reach him.”
The officer’s gaze sharpened. “Moser. Not—the October Killer?”
“There’s no reason to get into that,” Reilly responded, knowing as soon as the words left his mouth that he was wrong. Given what her attacker had said, there was definitely a reason to get into that.
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