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worry, you can use my phone,” David assured the teen, handing it to him. “Don’t you have a cell phone?” he asked the boy.

      Zach grinned. “You bet. But Mom wouldn’t let me take it on the boat. Said I might lose it overboard. She doesn’t dive,” he said, as if that explained everything about his mother.

      “Leave it to Seth Granger,” Jay said, and this time, he was clearly audible. “Go ahead,” he instructed Jeb. “You and the captain and Alex get our crew back. David has said he doesn’t mind waiting for Granger.” He turned to David. “You’re sure?” he asked.

      “Sure. We’ll wait,” he said, and he hoped to hell it wasn’t going to be long. Now, more than ever, he didn’t want Alex out of his sight.

      The others rose, stretched and started to file out.

      And that was when they heard the scream.

      Somehow, the instant he heard it, David knew they weren’t going to have to wait for Granger after all.

      Chapter Six

      Everyone came running.

      Alex wasn’t thrilled about that, but after her last experience, she’d had to sound an alarm—she wasn’t letting this body drift away. Before the others came pounding down the dock, though, she dived in. Though the man was floating face downward and sure as hell looked dead, she wasn’t taking any chances.

      The water right by the dock was far from the pristine blue expanse featured in tourist ads. She rose from a misty darkness to grab hold of the man’s floating arm.

      With a jolt, she realized it was Seth Granger.

      By then the others had arrived. David was in the lead and instantly jumped into the water to join her. He was stronger and was easily able to maneuver the body. John Seymore, with Jeb at his side, reached down as David pushed Seth upward; between them, they quickly got Seth Granger lying on the dock, and, despite the obvious futility, Jeb dutifully attempted resuscitation. Alex heard someone on a cell phone, telling a 911 operator what had happened. By the time she and David had both been fished out of the water and were standing on the dock, sirens were blaring.

      Jeb, youthful and determined, kept at his task, helped by John, but Seth was clearly beyond help.

      He still reeked of alcohol.

      Two med techs came racing down the dock, and when they reached Seth Granger, Jeb and John stepped aside. The men from Fire Rescue looked at one another briefly, then took over where John and Jeb had left off.

      “Anyone know how long he’s been in the water?” one of them.

      “Couldn’t be more than twenty minutes,” John Seymore said. “He was definitely inside twenty minutes ago.”

      “Let’s get him in the ambulance, set up a line…give him a few jolts,” one of the med techs said. In seconds, another team was down the dock with a stretcher, and the body was taken to the waiting ambulance.

      Then the sheriff arrived. He didn’t stop the ambulance, but he looked at Seth Granger as he was taken away, and Alex noted the imperceptible shake of his head. He took a deep breath and turned to the assembled crowd.

      “What happened?” Nigel Thompson demanded.

      “Well, he was drinking too hard and too fast, that’s for sure,” Hank Adamson commented.

      “We were at a table together,” Jay told Nigel. He pointed around. “Seth, John, Hank, David and myself. David’s phone rang, and he decided to take it outside. I needed to pick up a few things, so I headed down the street, and then…” He looked at the other two who had shared the table.

      “I went to the men’s room,” John Seymore said, and looked at Hank Adamson.

      “I walked up to the bar.”

      “When did Granger leave the bar?” Nigel asked.

      His answer was a mass shrugging of shoulders.

      “Hell,” Nigel muttered. “All right, everyone back inside.”

      David was already on his feet. He reached a hand down to Alex, his eyes dark and enigmatic. She hesitated, then accepted his help.

      She realized, as she stood, that John Seymore was watching. He gave her a little smile, then turned away. It seemed that day suddenly turned to night. She shivered, then regretted it. David slipped an arm around her shoulders. “You all right?” he asked.

      “Of course,” she said coldly.

      “Alex, you don’t have to snap,” he said softly.

      She removed his arm from around her shoulders and followed the others. She meant to find wherever John was sitting and take a place beside him.

      Too late. Zach was on John’s left, Hank Adamson on his right. There was one bench left, and there was little for her to do other than join David when he sat there.

      She suddenly felt very cold, and, gritting her teeth, she accepted the light windbreaker he offered. She instantly regretted the decision. It felt almost as if she had cloaked herself in his aura. It wasn’t unpleasant. It was too comfortable.

      The sheriff’s phone rang. “Thompson,” he said briefly as he answered it. A second later, he flipped his phone closed. “Well, it’s bad news but not unexpected. He was pronounced dead at the hospital.”

      “Mind if we go over Mr. Granger’s movements one more time?” Nigel asked.

      “He came, he drank, he fell in the water,” a businessman who’d been on the dive said impatiently.

      “Thanks for the compassion, sir,” Nigel said.

      “Sorry, Sheriff,” the man said. “But the guy was rich and being a rude pain in the you-know-what all day.”

      “Well, thank goodness not everyone who’s rude ends up drowning,” the sheriff said pointedly. “I’d have myself one hell of a job,” Nigel commented.

      “Sorry,” the man said again. “It’s just that…we’re all tired. I only met the man today on the dive, and he wasn’t the kind of person to make you care about him. And I’m on vacation.”

      “Well, then, I’ll get through this just as fast as I can. First things first—those of you from Moon Bay. Anyone checking out tomorrow?”

      No one was, apparently. Or, if so, they weren’t about to volunteer the information.

      “Good. Okay, I’m going outside. One by one, come out, give me your names, room numbers and cell-phone numbers, and I may have a quick question or two. Then you can reboard and get going.”

      Squeaky wheels were the ones oiled first, Alex determined. Nigel asked her whining diver to come out first.

      “This is kind of silly,” a woman who had been on the dive complained. “A pushy rich man got snockered and fell in the water. That’s obvious.”

      “Nothing is obvious,” David said, his eyes focused on the woman. Alex felt the coiling heat and tension in his body before he continued. “Nigel Thompson is top rate. He’s not leaving anything to chance.”

      The woman flushed and fell silent.

      Alex felt as if she were trapped, so aware of David in the physical sense that she was about to scream. In this room full of people, in the midst of this tense situation, she found herself focusing on the most absurd things. Like her ex-husband’s toes. His muscled calves. Legs that were long and powerful. When he inhaled, his flesh brushed hers.

      She forced herself to look across the room at John Seymore, instead.

      In the room, conversations began. David turned to Alex suddenly. “You all right?” he asked softly.

      “Of course I’m all right,” she said. He was studying

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