why didn’t you leave with Nikki when she took your sister home?” he asked.
She uttered a mirthless chuckle. “Do you really think I would have been any safer with my sister?”
“She wouldn’t have tried to run you over with a car,” he pointed out as he helped her to her feet.
She stumbled as if her legs were still shaky. But instead of leaning on him again, she steadied herself. “No,” she agreed, “but she might have tried to shove me out of one.”
He couldn’t argue that, not after the way Rochelle had attacked her in the church.
“Cooper!” Logan called out to him as he ran between the houses and joined them in the backyard. “I couldn’t catch the car.”
He had forgotten that his brother had been right behind him when he’d left the church. His order for Logan to stay with their mom had been overruled—by their mother. She’d reminded them that the police officer was still in the parking lot and even if he wasn’t, she could take care of herself. She was armed, and their father had taught her how to shoot very well.
Logan was huffing and puffing for breath. “I could barely keep up with you.”
When Cooper had heard Tanya scream, he had taken off running. He reached for his cell phone now. “Did you call the police?”
“Called ʼem,” Logan said, which was confirmed with sirens whining in the distance. “Did you get a better look at the car than I did?”
“Long and dark,” Cooper replied. “With the windows too darkly tinted to see inside.”
“What about the plate?”
“There wasn’t one.”
This hadn’t been some drunk driver whose car jumped the curb and veered into a yard. This near-miss hit-and-run had been planned.
Just to scare her or to kill her?
* * *
TANYA HELD HER breath, pressing down the fear that threatened to choke her. She stared up at the dark windows of her apartment, wishing she could see inside, but she stood on the sidewalk three floors below. Light flashed behind the arched window in the peak of the attic where she lived.
Was it the beam of a flashlight or the flash of gunfire? She gasped, and the breath she’d held escaped in a rush of fear.
“You shouldn’t have let him go inside alone,” she admonished his brother. “The driver of that car could be in there, waiting...” For her. And Cooper would step into the trap her stalker might have laid for her.
She should have had one of the police officers who’d taken the report for the near hit-and-run bring her home. They had offered a ride and protection. But the Payne brothers had assured the officers that they would make sure she stayed safe.
How? By putting themselves at risk?
Logan chuckled. “Cooper can handle himself and whoever he might encounter.” His slight grin slipped into a frown that furrowed his brow. “He wouldn’t have survived three deployments in Afghanistan if he couldn’t.”
But how many soldiers had survived war only to come home and die in an auto accident? Or some other freak crime—like a shooting? She kept her gaze trained on those third-floor windows and saw another flash of light.
Reaching out, she clutched Logan’s arm. “I see something! Something’s happening up there!”
Logan’s gaze rose toward the third floor, too. “I don’t see anything...”
But he must have been concerned, too, because he pulled out his cell phone. He pressed a button for what must have been a two-way feature and then he called out, “Cooper?”
Not even a crackle of static emanated from his phone, it remained dead.
She shuddered as the horrible thought occurred to her that Cooper might have been dead, too. She hadn’t heard any shots, but some guns had silencers. She knew that from watching TV. The person who might have been waiting in her apartment could have had one.
She tugged on the sleeve of Logan’s wool overcoat. “You need to go upstairs and check on him!”
“He needs to stay with you,” a deep voice coming out of the darkness corrected her. “Like someone should have stayed with you at the church so you didn’t go running off on your own.”
She hadn’t started running until the car had jumped the curb to chase her down. But she didn’t bother pointing that out since the sharpness of his voice showed he was already angry with her.
And Logan was already asking, “Did you clear the apartment, Cooper?”
“No.”
Logan snorted derisively. “Why not? It doesn’t look that big.”
The studio apartment had formerly been a ballroom, so it was bigger than it looked—with a bathroom tucked into a wide dormer. If the attic space didn’t have issues with being too hot in the summer and too cold in the winter, the rent wouldn’t have been affordable enough for her.
“I cleared it for intruders, but there were other threats,” Cooper explained.
Logan tensed and held up his phone, his fingers ready to press buttons. “What do we need? Bomb squad?”
“If it was a bomb, I would have taken care of it,” he assured his brother. “No, it was literally other threats.” He passed his brother the desecrated engagement announcement.
While Tanya sucked in a breath of indignation that Cooper had gone through her things, his brother released a ragged breath of relief.
But Cooper wasn’t relaxed. His jaw was clenched so tightly that a muscle twitched in his cheek. He was obviously mad as hell, his dark gaze intense as he stared at Tanya.
She glared back at him. He was only supposed to make sure her place was safe. The thought of him going through her boxes and drawers and closets reminded her of all the things he might have found, like her weakness for silk and lace underwear.
“There are more of those,” he told his brother. “Did you know about the threats?”
“No,” Logan replied.
“Now you know,” Cooper said. “Get on it. Check out her ex-boyfriends, her cases at work—”
Logan grinned. “Are you forgetting which one of us is the boss, little brother? I’ve been doing this for a while. I need to talk to the client first to get the names of those ex-boyfriends and difficult cases.”
Cooper shook his head. “I’ll do that.”
If she were actually a client, she would rather talk to Logan. She could be more honest with him because she suspected he would be less judgmental. But she wasn’t actually a client and needed to remind the protective Payne brothers of that. “I haven’t hired—”
Cooper interrupted her as he spoke to his brother. “Tanya and I need to talk.”
As if Logan, too, had forgotten he was the boss, he nodded his agreement. “I need to touch base with Parker...”
Probably to see if he had found Stephen. But if he had, he would have called. Even if he’d found him dead, he would have called. She shuddered now, so forcefully that she couldn’t stop trembling.
“If you completely cleared her place, get her inside,” Logan, as the boss again, ordered. “She’s freezing. Or in shock...”
“Or getting pissed off that she’s being ignored,” Tanya suggested. “Yes,” she continued, ignoring them as they had been ignoring her, “she’s definitely pissed off.”
Logan patted his brother’s shoulder before heading toward his car parked at the curb. “Good luck. You may be the one needing protection now.”
As