Marie Ferrarella

Heart of a Hero


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should have been evident to her, but then that wasn’t factoring in disorientation. “You need to call the police.”

      Dakota’s mouth dropped open. Calling the police was the last thing she wanted to do. There was no doubt in her mind that if she so much as dialed 9-1-1, she’d never see Vinny again.

      She rushed after him, trying to get in front of him, to reach the telephone on the wall before he did.

      She just made it. “No!”

      Dakota quickly covered the receiver with her hand in case the word hadn’t sunk in.

      Rusty looked at the fingers splayed over the receiver. As if her small hand could possibly pose a physical deterrent. A tinge of amusement wafted through him. He banked it down.

      What was traveling through him in far larger waves was curiosity. Why was she so adamant about not calling in the police? Was she a fugitive of some sort? On the run from someone?

      Maybe she was someone’s estranged wife who’d suddenly taken off with her child, snatching him away from her husband. Either explanation would go a long way toward accounting for the wariness he’d perceived each time their paths had crossed.

      He let his hand drop from the air as he studied her. “Why don’t you want to call the police?”

      Her eyes narrowed. She saw no reason to have to explain herself to this man. Not that she would have, anyway. Trusting people was a waste of time and she’d learned a long time ago that depending on anyone just left her open to betrayal and despair.

      “Because I just don’t, all right?” Suddenly aware that she was standing there in nothing but her nightgown, she grabbed a sweater that was draped over the back of a kitchen chair and dragged it on. “What are you, my mother?” She punched her arms through the sleeves. “Who are you, anyway?”

      Rusty shrugged off the hostility directed at him as part of her emotional roller coaster ride she was obviously on.

      “I’m the guy who lives upstairs.” He jerked a thumb up toward the ceiling, his manner matter-of-fact. “The one you woke up with your screaming.”

      She appeared to be more in control of herself now than she had even a minute ago. And with that control Rusty saw the hard shell slip back into place, the one he encountered each time he saw her.

      “Sorry.” She shrugged carelessly. “You can get back to your beauty sleep.”

      He had no intention of leaving her. Whether or not she admitted it, the woman needed someone to stay with her until a search for her missing son could get properly under way. In his experience, bluster and bravado were common smokescreens for fear.

      “Look,” he began gently, placing a hand on her shoulder. She shrugged it off as if his touch had burned her very skin. “What are you afraid of?”

      “My baby’s just been kidnapped, what do you think I’m afraid of?”

      He looked at her for a long moment and watched as her body language grew more defensive. Though it wasn’t completely uncommon to have someone slip into a house and steal a child from their bed, the method spoke of some degree of familiarity with the victimized family. Which brought him back to the feeling that the kidnapping was the work of someone who knew her, someone who specifically wanted her son. He’d seen the boy and although Vinny was cute, the child was no more or less eye-catching than most other children his age.

      No, there had to be more at work here than she was admitting.

      He nodded at the telephone, giving every indication of remaining just where he was for the time being. “If you don’t want to call the police, maybe you should call your husband.”

      What did it take to get rid of this man? She needed to be alone. She had to think. She felt as if everything was closing in on her. First Vincent, now Vinny. She’d die before she’d let anyone keep her from her son. And now she had some misguided Good Samaritan—or worse—to deal with. “I don’t have a husband.”

      Rusty glanced at her hand and saw that it was bare of jewelry. There wasn’t even a tan line where a wedding ring might once have been.

      “Ex-husband, then.”

      What did it take to get this man to leave her alone? “I don’t have one of those, either.”

      She hadn’t conceived her son on her own. “Boyfriend?” He was hazarding guesses now.

      Her brows drew together. Of all the cheap tricks. Was this his way of finding out whether there was anyone else living with her? Her son had just been kidnapped, didn’t this man have any shame?

      “Are you trying to hit on me?” Dakota demanded angrily.

      Rusty was calm in the face of her fury. It was in his nature to remain that way. He’d found out a long time ago that losing your head when those around you were losing theirs never accomplished anything.

      “No,” he told her genially, “just trying to rule out parental kidnapping.” To his surprise, he saw her pale slightly.

      And then she regrouped as she lifted her chin in a gesture that would have been called defiant by the mildest of observers. Striding over to the door, she threw it open.

      “Why don’t you just rule yourself out the door if you want to rule out anything?”

      The angrier she became, the calmer he remained. “Look, you need help.”

      She started pacing. He was making her crazy. For all she knew, he was in on it. Just because he had this lean, trustworthy face and soulful blue eyes was no reason to believe a thing he was saying or to buy into his good-neighbor act. She’d been conned by the best.

      “No kidding, Sherlock.”

      Feeling at a loss, fervently wishing that this was all a bad dream, she nervously dragged her hand through her hair.

      She’d been so careful to hide her tracks. How had this happened? How had they been found?

      When she turned around, she saw the open door and noted the fact that the man hadn’t yet taken the blatant hint and left.

      “You want to help? Okay, help.” She was new in town, without a single friend to turn to. Not that she would have expected any friend to stand by her. Not when faced with the consequences that friendship entailed. “Tell me where I can find myself a good private detective.”

      This wasn’t making any sense. Most people in her position would have immediately wanted the police to take up the search. Why was she so adamant about not calling them in?

      Maybe it was shock, he thought. People in shock did strange things. His sister had handled a case six months ago where the mother insisted on talking to the kidnapped child as if he was right there beside her. There was no question in his mind that if the case hadn’t been resolved positively, the woman might have wound up spending the next few years of her life in an institution.

      He tried again. “The police—”

      How many ways did she have to spell it out? “I said I don’t want the police.”

      “It’s a kidnapping,” he told her gently, “the police and the FBI have the manpower to blanket the area.”

      Oh, God, calling in the FBI would be even worse. Vinny would disappear forever. She couldn’t do any of that. And this guy, whoever he thought he was, certainly couldn’t be allowed to do that, Dakota thought frantically.

      “Stop talking to me as if I were an idiot. I know exactly what’ll happen if I call in the police, you don’t. No police. No FBI. Nobody on public payroll,” she insisted adamantly. “I need someone I can buy, someone who’ll work just for me. If you don’t know anyone like that—”

      Dakota moved to the open front door again, her meaning clear.

      He hadn’t said anything to her earlier because it would have sounded too opportunistic,