“So I couldn’t call for backup before I hurried in here to make sure you were safe. Do you have a phone?”
Megan shook her head. “Your mom took it from me when I got here,” she said. “She wanted to take all my calls to make sure nobody would bother me.”
But then she’d enlisted Gage Huxton—who bothered her more than anyone else ever could—as her bodyguard.
Why?
What had the older woman hoped would happen? A happy reunion?
Gage hadn’t been happy to see her at all. He was still mad at her. Earlier, that had upset her. But it gave her some comfort now. With as mad as he was, maybe he wouldn’t risk his life to protect her. Maybe he wouldn’t put himself in any danger.
Nikki cursed. “I need to call for backup.”
“Then forget about the dress and let’s get out of here,” Megan suggested.
Nikki shook her head. “You can’t leave this room—not in that wedding gown.”
“You can leave,” Megan said. “Go—call for help.”
Nikki shook her head again. “I can’t leave you in here alone,” she said, “and unprotected.”
Her pride stinging, Megan lifted her chin and said, “I’m not helpless. I can take care of myself.” She was Woodrow Lynch’s daughter. When she and Ellen had barely been able to walk, their father had taught his daughters self-defense maneuvers as well as other ways to protect themselves.
“Do you have a gun?” Nikki asked.
“No,” she admitted. She would have had to carry it in her purse, and she spent too much time at her sister’s—with her young nieces—to risk that. They went in her purse all the time looking for gum. But she gripped the scissors. “I have these. I’ll be fine. You go call for help.”
“A good bodyguard never leaves her subject unprotected,” Nikki said.
A good bodyguard would have made certain the door was locked, too. But they both tensed as the knob rattled and began to turn.
Nikki fumbled with her holster, but she didn’t have time to draw her gun before the door opened. She cursed and stepped between Megan and whatever danger might be coming through the door.
But Megan doubted the petite bodyguard would be able to protect her from a real threat. Was there a real threat?
* * *
Blood had been shed in her wedding chapel before. A groom had been assaulted and abducted. Another man had died.
Brides had been threatened.
Penny’s notorious instincts were telling her that there was another threat. Just as she’d told Gage, Megan Lynch was in danger. When she’d told him that, Penny had thought the only real threat had been of Megan making a mistake—of marrying a man she didn’t love.
Penny’s chapel was so successful because she ran it well. She knew every waiter on the catering staff, so she immediately recognized the one who didn’t belong. She also recognized the guests who hadn’t been invited. It was obvious none of the other early-arriving guests knew them. If they had ever worked for Woodrow, someone else would have recognized them. And they were armed—just like the unfamiliar waiter.
So who were they? And why had they brought guns into the chapel?
She couldn’t tell if any of the other guests who’d arrived early were armed. Most of them were older, though. Probably great-aunts or -uncles of the bride or groom. If any were Woodrow’s agents, they probably hadn’t thought they needed to bring their weapons. Penny wished they would have.
Because the only person she knew for certain was armed was Nikki. She’d seen the holster when she’d helped her into the bridesmaid dress.
And Gage...
But where was Gage? Had he left like he’d threatened he would? He’d claimed he wanted no contact with Megan again. But if he was that angry and bitter yet, his emotions were still involved. Megan still affected him, hopefully too much for him to have just walked away.
Woodrow hoped he had. But he was an overprotective father. Too overprotective for him to not have noticed the people sneaking weapons into the wedding.
So where was Woodrow?
She scanned the foyer of the church, looking for him and for Gage. But before she could find either, a strong hand gripped her arm and a deep voice murmured in her ear, “You’re in danger.”
Feeling like he’d been sucker punched, Gage gasped for breath. He shouldn’t have been surprised. He’d already seen Megan in that damn dress. But it was still a shock—more of a shock than Nikki Payne pulling a gun on him. Everyone knew that Nikki was trigger-happy.
He was damn lucky she hadn’t shot him.
“Just your usual amount of jumpy?” he asked. “Or did you notice the armed arrivals, too?”
Her hand shaking slightly, Nikki holstered her weapon beneath the skirt of her bridesmaid dress. He’d had no idea that she and Megan were even friends. But then he’d been gone a long time.
“I’m glad you noticed them, too,” she remarked. “So you called for help?”
He shook his head. “Did you?”
“When she asked me to step in for a sick bridesmaid, I left my phone in Mom’s office,” she replied. “Where’s yours?”
He held up the useless cell. “No signal. Your mom must have a jammer so her ceremonies don’t get interrupted because someone forgot to shut off their phone.”
Nikki sighed. “What doesn’t she think of?”
“Armed gunmen,” Gage replied.
“No, she has a plan for those, too.”
Gage drew in a deep breath. “That’s good,” he said. “We need a plan.”
“We need backup,” Nikki said as she opened the door a crack and peered out into the foyer. “How many did you spot?”
“I made three,” he said. “But there could be more.” If they were seeking revenge against Woodrow, there would be more. They would know that they’d need an army to take down Chief Special Agent Lynch. “I told Megan’s sister to call Nick.”
Maybe she’d been frozen with fear. Maybe she’d just been confused by the exchange between Gage and Nikki. But Megan finally spoke, her voice raspy as she asked, “Ellen is here?”
“Not anymore,” he assured her. “I told her and her husband and the girls to leave.”
“The girls...” Her soft voice cracked with fear, and she trembled.
He found himself reaching for her, his hands lightly grasping her shoulders so she didn’t fall. “They’re gone,” he said. “They’re safe.”
She peered up at him, skepticism in her dark eyes. “Ellen listened?”
He hoped like hell she had. He’d warned her that if she didn’t follow his instructions, she would put her sister and dad in more danger.
Ellen wouldn’t have wanted that. Gage didn’t want Megan in any danger. Hell, he just wanted her. His palms heated and tingled from the contact with her shoulders. Only thin lace sleeves separated her skin from his. He stepped back and dropped his hands back to his sides.
“She wouldn’t put the girls in danger,” he reminded her. She had definitely left with her husband and kids. But he didn’t know if she’d listened to him, if she’d called only Nick.
If she had called 911 like she’d mentioned, she risked