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couldn’t get it going. Why do you think you can fix it now?”

      “No, I said it stalled and I parked here,” she said, quickly elaborating to cover her tracks. “I didn’t get to finish and tell you that sometimes, if you let it rest for a bit, it’ll start.”

      Damn it, he was going to laugh, really laugh. She could see it in the failing light. “So, it’s pouting, and won’t go until you make nice-nice to it?”

      She didn’t smile. “No, it’s got a problem with the electrical wiring, and sometimes it reconnects and restarts.”

      “Let her try,” the woman said as she came up behind Duncan and grabbed his arm. “It’s freezing and we have to get back.”

      He pushed his hands into his jacket pockets and nodded to the car. “Go ahead and talk to it nicely and make it understand that we need to have a ride out of here.”

      Lauren didn’t wait to be asked twice. She hurried to the car and made a show of tinkering under the hood before reconnecting the wires. Standing, she turned to look at the other two. “That should do it, if we’re lucky.”

      “A lady who can fix her own car,” the woman said approvingly. “I love it.”

      Lauren reached up to pull the hood closed, then she went around to get behind the wheel. She waited a moment, then turned the key and the strong engine kicked over immediately. Her brother had completely rebuilt the engine and it worked perfectly. She turned on the headlights, drove slowly forward and came even with Duncan as she rolled down the window. “You two need a ride?”

      “You’re terrific,” the woman said.

      Duncan said, “Annie, get in, and I’ll get our things from the car.” He headed back to the disabled SUV while the woman, Annie, ran around the front of the car and pulled the passenger door open.

      She scrambled into the back seat. “Duncan would never fit back here,” she said as she sank onto the white tuck-and-roll upholstery.

      “Sorry it’s so small back there,” Lauren said and saw the emergency flashers of the SUV click on. Duncan got back out, closed up the car, then headed back to them with a small bag in one hand and a large envelope in the other. He went around and climbed in, taking the other bucket seat and quickly closing the door after him. He gave Annie the small bag and kept the envelope. “Got everything?” she asked.

      He glanced at her and skimmed off his watch cap. His hair spiked slightly around his face, and she could see the beginnings of a beard at his jawline. A rough version of his father, very rough. “I left the luggage. We can get it later,” he said, then asked, “Is it going to keep running?”

      “I hope so.” She eased out onto the highway.

      “This is a great car,” Annie said, sitting forward to lean between the bucket seats. “And I’m Annie Logan.”

      “I’m Lauren,” she said and waited for Duncan to chime in. He didn’t.

      Instead, he asked, “Where were you heading, Lauren?”

      She started her cover story. “Up the road a ways.”

      “Is that a gypsy thing?” he asked.

      “Do I look like a gypsy?” she asked.

      “I don’t know.”

      She pushed back the hood of the lime-green jacket she’d chosen to make an impact, then glanced at him. “I’ve got freckles and red hair. Gypsies don’t usually have either trait.”

      He was studying her intently. “I guess not,” he murmured.

      “Now, where am I taking the two of you?”

      “Up the road.”

      Annie jumped in. “Don’t pay any attention to him. Getting information out of him is like pulling teeth. We’re going to Silver Creek.”

      The fact that Duncan Bishop was with a woman shouldn’t have surprised Lauren, not after what his father had told her and what she knew from the checks she’d done into his romantic history. But the type of woman surprised her. Annie Logan seemed warm and friendly, and unassuming. Lauren doubted anyone would have called Adrianna Barr unassuming. She shot Annie a glance in the rearview mirror and said, “Silver Creek it is.”

      “Have you ever been there?” Duncan asked.

      “No,” she lied. “Why?”

      “I thought you looked familiar, but I guess not.”

      She looked familiar? He couldn’t remember her from that flashing moment in the diner. He’d barely looked at her, and she’d done everything to be invisible, down to wearing dark clothes and that stupid knit hat. “I guess I’ve got that kind of face.”

      “What kind?”

      “The kind where you think you saw me before, but you couldn’t have, because I was never where you thought I was, so you couldn’t have seen me.”

      “Whew, I can’t argue with that reasoning,” he said.

      The car surged slightly, mostly because her foot jerked on the gas. “Sorry, sometimes it’s a little—”

      “I know, temperamental,” Duncan finished for her.

      Lauren nibbled on her bottom lip as she drove up the grade. Okay, so instead of him doing the rescuing when her car broke down, she’d been the one to rescue him…sort of. She regretted that his SUV was the worse for wear, but she’d made so certain she’d pulled over in a safe spot. Lots of shoulder area. And he should have seen her in this car with its red paint and the parking lights on.

      Even though she didn’t know how he could have almost hit her, she took the blame to get talking again. “I’m sorry I parked where I did and almost got you both killed.”

      She felt him shift, and she knew he was looking right at her. “I crashed because I was trying to miss your car, but then again, if the car hadn’t been there, I might have kept going and gone right over the rail. I’d say this is the better scenario.”

      She shivered at the thought of that happening, and for a moment she thought of her job, of the consequences that came from every action she took to do things right. Thank goodness the consequences this time were relatively minor. And she was with Duncan Bishop. “Much better.”

      “Thank goodness we didn’t go over,” Annie said. “And thank goodness you got your car going.”

      “So, how did you get this car going?” Duncan asked.

      “There’s a wire that goes to the coil, and it…it can come out pretty easily.” She’d barely had to tug to free it after she’d parked on the shoulder.

      “It just slipped out of place?”

      “I guess so,” she lied. Being the youngest in a family with three brothers had been rough, but it did have its advantages when it came to disabling a car.

      “And this happens a lot?” Annie asked.

      “Off and on,” she said, looking ahead intently, and not chancing a look at the man close to her.

      “Why haven’t you had it fixed?” Duncan asked—the same thing she would have asked.

      She took a breath, taking her boss’s advice and sticking to the truth as much as possible when you weave a backstory on assignment. The theory was, you had less to remember, and less to fabricate. “The car was rewired when the engine was rebuilt, and I guess that the new wires were just that, new. And the car’s old. The match isn’t perfect.” He didn’t comment, so she guessed he bought the explanation. Her hands tightened on the steering wheel and she tried to reroute the conversation. “You live in Silver Creek?”

      “We both do,” Annie said before Duncan could say anything.

      Annie was making

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