Stephanie Tyler

Beyond His Control


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words of wisdom echoed in her head.

      If anything happens, leave your place for a while. Go anywhere. And don’t tell anyone where you’re going

      Panic washed over her. That didn’t happen often, but the feeling in the pit of her stomach grew worse with each passing minute.

      She wouldn’t worry about packing—she could come back here with the police tomorrow for her things. She shoved the pictures into her bag and opened the front door. And screamed.

      “Jesus, Ava—what’s with the gun, are you trying to kill me?”

      Justin. Justin filled the doorway, his hand poised as if readying to knock. Her breath caught and she was frozen in place at the sight of him.

      He didn’t appear to be having the same problem. Barging past her, he insisted, “Ava, talk to me. Are you all right?”

      Was she all right? No, not by a long shot.

      “Justin, I’m in trouble,” she sputtered, because she couldn’t think of anything else to say, because she was scared and half in shock. The last person in the world she’d expected to find on her doorstep was Justin Brandt, but he might be the only one who could give her what she needed right now.

      “I won’t let anything happen to you, but you have to put the gun down.” His drawl was thick and familiar, comforting, even as she realized the gun was still pointed at his chest.

      “Sorry.”

      Justin glanced behind Ava and then gave her a firm but gentle push aside with one hand. The other held her hand with the gun pointed downward. He kept his hand on that arm, even after he closed the door.

      He was standing so close, and for a second, just a second, she forgot the danger and everything else but the heat of his body. Justin looked even better with some years on him. Bigger, stronger, faster. Her hero. Big and blond, with dark eyes so intense they could melt her. So handsome, he made her ache, and the nine years they hadn’t seen each other disappeared.

      “Did your brother call you?” he asked, his eyes lingering on hers for a brief moment before he was scanning the parts of the house that he could see from the foyer.

      “No. Not for three months. Have you spoken with Leo? Is he all right?” The words rushed out of her and she didn’t bother worrying about putting up a brave front. She never had to do it with Justin. He’d seemed to always understand that she was brave even when she wasn’t in control.

      “He was breathing,” Justin said wryly. It was an old joke the three of them used to share with Ava’s father. Obviously it was meant to calm her. “And he’s just as worried about you. What’s going on here?”

      She’d tell him what she could, as little as possible without having his human lie detector Navy SEAL instincts kick into high gear. “I’m trying to figure that out myself.”

      She shoved the pictures at him and began to pace in the small hallway, which was made much smaller by Justin’s presence. He flipped through them quickly, shaking his head and muttering, nothing she could make out, but she knew when Justin muttered they were usually words that could make a sailor blush.

      “Who is this guy?” he demanded.

      “My informant. He was helping me out on my current case.”

      “Your informant sold you out.”

      “No. He wouldn’t do that.”

      “He’s not a criminal, then?”

      “He gave me crucial information. Why would he do that and then betray me?”

      “Where is he now?”

      “I left him at the bar a while ago. I told him not to tell anyone. To be careful.”

      Justin stared at her. “This picture was just taken?”

      “Yes. That’s why I was leaving. To go straight to the police,” she lied, but Justin was shaking his head.

      “No, not tonight. What happened with your informant tonight sounds like a setup.”

      Until Justin said it, she hadn’t wanted to believe it. Now she was completely unsure whether or not Sammy would have gotten the scoop on the Mercers if there hadn’t been a direct purpose. “If that’s true, then they’ve been watching me.”

      “Any idea why?”

      Several. Nothing, however, that she could share freely.

      “It’s because of my current case. It has to be. Does Leo know about it?”

      “I don’t know what he knows. He called, said I needed to get you out of town, and he didn’t elaborate.”

      Out of town sounded really good, but Justin would expect her to put up more of a fight. “I don’t know if I can leave like this—I have a job. Responsibilities. People who are counting on me.”

      Justin had already opted for the most effective argument. “Leo wouldn’t ask you to do anything if he didn’t have specific reason to. And I know you trust your brother.”

      “Yes. Of course I trust him.”

      Justin stared at her with those dark eyes filled with an emotion she couldn’t put her finger on. “More importantly, right now, you’ve got to trust me.”

      “Trust was never my issue.” She said it before she could stop herself and he blanched visibly, as though she’d physically struck him.

      “I guess you think I deserve that.” His voice was tight as he continued. “Maybe I do, but you shouldn’t ever question my commitment to keeping you safe.”

      She didn’t question that. Justin was the best at what he did, according to Leo.

      Her father had been a dangerous man. Leo was one too, and even though she’d always known, on some level, that Justin was an equal to both men in her family, she hadn’t had the opportunity to see it until then. She could sense the predator in him as he stood before her, fully on her side. But there was nothing to say her heart was safe.

      With Justin, it never had been.

      “So, are you with me?” he asked again. “I’m going to need your full cooperation, Ava. Because Turk didn’t give me much to go on, and I don’t really know what we’re in for.”

      “And still, you came all the way here to save me?” she asked quietly, not sure why it mattered so much. But somehow, it did.

      “I came here to honor a request from one of my best friends,” he said, as if it was no big deal, but his jaw tensed, nearly imperceptibly, letting her know otherwise.

      “Leo told me to call you if I got into trouble,” she said.

      “Then why didn’t you?”

      “The last time…” She trailed off.

      “Yeah, I know.” He closed his eyes briefly, as if trying to ward off the pain of the memory of their history. “We can’t do this now. Let’s do what your brother wants, and then…”

      And then

      She couldn’t think past the next five minutes, let alone that far ahead. “I can do that,” she told him and suddenly she was seventeen and he was eighteen and their future was stretched out in front of them, inextricably linked.

      “Come on, we’ll figure this out from someplace safer.”

      “You don’t think…I mean, you think I’m really not safe here at all?”

      “I think I don’t want to wait to find out.” He put a hand on the small of her back and guided her to the front door. “Stay behind me, all right? And keep your gun low and not pointed at me.”

      3

      WITH AVA A FEW steps behind