Danger in a Small Town. Ginny Aiken
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Tess had just left the church when someone called her name.
She turned and smiled at Ethan.
“Let me walk you to your car,” he said.
Tess met his gaze and couldn’t look away. Was it more than polite friendship she found there?
Ethan reached out and tucked her hair behind her ear. “I’ve wanted to do that since I first saw—“
Brakes squealed.
An engine roared.
“Run!” Ethan yelled as he pushed Tess behind his back.
A black van flew over the curb, hit the brakes, backed up and made for Tess once again.
She froze in the headlight beams. She couldn’t breathe, couldn’t think. She could only feel more fear than she’d ever known before.
GINNY AIKEN,
a former newspaper reporter, lives in Pennsylvania with her engineer husband and their three younger sons—the oldest married and flew the coop. Born in Havana, Cuba, raised in Valencia and Caracas, Venezuela, she discovered books early, and wrote her first novel at age fifteen while she trained with the Ballets de Caracas, later known as the Venezuelan National Ballet. She burned that tome when she turned a “mature” sixteen. Stints as a reporter, paralegal, choreographer, language teacher, retail salesperson, wife, mother of four boys and herder of their numerous and assorted friends—including soccer teams and the 135 members of first the Crossmen and then the Bluecoats Drum and Bugle Corps—brought her back to books in search of her sanity. She’s now an author of more than twenty-eight published works and a frequent speaker at Christian women’s and writer’s workshops, but has yet to catch up with that elusive sanity.
Danger in a Small Town
Ginny Aiken
MILLS & BOON
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But let all who take refuge in you be glad; let them ever sing for joy. Spread your protection over them…
—Psalms 5:11
To two classy ladies and excellent editors,
Melissa Endlich and Emily Rodmell.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
EPILOGUE
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
ONE
“So they kicked you out,” Tess Graver said into her cell phone, her breath labored from jogging.
Uncle Gordon sputtered, “I tell ya, I’m fine. And now that I got ’em to put a cast on my leg, I’ll prove it. You didn’t have to quit your fancy-pants job in Char lotte just to come babysit me.”
Tess slowed; she’d run close to three miles. “Let’s talk about that later. I’ll see you after supper, once I’ve showered, and then tomorrow morning I’ll spring you from the hospital.”
After a few more “Hmphs!” Tess’s great-uncle hung up. She’d have to tell him about the thefts at Magnus son’s Department Stores soon enough, but not over the cell phone while jogging. The situation at her last job had affected her more than she would have thought. She’d been under suspicion for a few weeks. Even after she was cleared of all wrongdoing, her fellow workers had withdrawn, and the odd looks had kept on coming her way.
She could no longer manage the Finer Footwear department under those conditions. Uncle Gordon’s accident had given her the push to quit the job she’d once loved, and come back home—
“Oooof!”
Tess flew when a body hurtled out of the dense woods on the side of the road and crashed into her. She held her hands out to brace for the fall, then landed in a muddy patch, the ooze sliding between her fingers.
“Hey, come back and help me up!”
Footsteps pounded down the road toward town.
Disgusted, Tess took stock. Nothing hurt more than what she could expect from the fall. The worst part of her predicament was the thick mud on her legs, belly, chest and hands. Fortunately, she’d kept her face up and only felt muck on her chin.
With slow, measured movements, she got to her knees. As she rose to her feet, she heard a rustling in the woods, more than the balmy, breezeless day warranted.
What was going on?
First a jerk had knocked her to the ground, and now…now she heard what sounded like a whimper. A shiver ran through her.
Should she go check? She had no idea what she might walk into.
Should she call the police? She might look like a fool if the sound came from an injured squirrel or something? Did squirrels cry?
Another whimper. More thrashing leaves.
Something was there. Maybe the guy who’d hit her had dumped a dog.
Maybe a child was hurt.
Tess couldn’t just walk away. She eyed the heavy layer of vines, fallen twigs, branches and last fall’s blanket of leaves.
She shivered again. “Lord? If you could somehow manage it, can you make sure there’s no poison ivy or worse—a snake—in there?”
Taking a deep breath for courage, she stepped over the ground cover and parted the tall weeds, then made her way toward what sounded like a whimpering pup.
But as Tess rounded a massive tree trunk, she stopped. “Oh, no!”
A woman lay sprawled against a fallen tree, her too-thin face shiny with perspiration. As Tess watched, the slender body went into a spasm, her arms and legs twitched and sweat poured off her face.
“What’s wrong—”
Tess cut off her question when a major seizure seemed to grip the stranger on the ground. She tried to remember anything and everything she’d heard about helping someone through a seizure. From the hazy, cobwebby depths of her memory, details of a college first-aid class floated up. The most important thing was to try and keep breathing passages unblocked.
Her heart pounded. Lord, help! I need you here…now.
Tess hurried over. “Easy,” she murmured. “Let me help you.”
When