Hide the Child

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Hide the Child Page 1

by Janice Kay Johnson




  A terrified little girl is the only witness

  to the murder of her family...

  And the killer won’t stop until she’s silenced, too. So when army ranger Gabe Decker is asked to protect the orphan and her psychologist, Trina Marr, he doesn’t hesitate. Hidden in a remote cabin, Gabe experiences a taste of family life...something this brawny ranger never dreamed possible. When bullets start flying, Gabe puts everything on the line—and vows to do whatever it takes to protect his family.

  Trina nodded, but he wondered if she’d taken in what he said. “I suppose I should go to bed.”

  But her tone wasn’t firm, and she stayed sitting on the edge of his bed.

  “That would be a good idea.” But he didn’t move, either. He couldn’t tear his gaze from hers, stupid as it was to keep staring at her. He’d used up his reserves of willpower in that last retreat. What he needed was a cold shower, although he knew any effect it had would be temporary. Finally, he heard himself say her name. “Trina.” Nothing more.

  She rose to her feet as if he’d tugged at an invisible string. Took a step. Then another. His heart pounded so hard, he heard it. The blood it was pumping was heading south, not to his head.

  She whispered, “This isn’t...”

  “A good idea.” He knew that, but no longer cared, not with her in touching distance.

  HIDE THE CHILD

  USA TODAY Bestselling Author

  Janice Kay Johnson

  An author of more than ninety books for children and adults (more than seventy-five for Harlequin), Janice Kay Johnson writes about love and family, and pens books of gripping romantic suspense. A USA TODAY bestselling author and an eight-time finalist for the Romance Writers of America RITA® Award, she won a RITA® Award in 2008. A former librarian, Janice raised two daughters in a small town north of Seattle, Washington.

  Books by Janice Kay Johnson

  Harlequin Intrigue

  Hide the Child

  Harlequin Superromance

  A Hometown Boy

  Anything for Her

  Where It May Lead

  From This Day On

  One Frosty Night

  More Than Neighbors

  Because of a Girl

  A Mother’s Claim

  Plain Refuge

  Her Amish Protectors

  The Hero’s Redemption

  Back Against the Wall

  Brothers, Strangers

  The Closer He Gets

  The Baby He Wanted

  The Mysteries of Angel Butte

  Bringing Maddie Home

  Everywhere She Goes

  All a Man Is

  Cop by Her Side

  This Good Man

  Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com.

  Join Harlequin My Rewards today and earn a FREE ebook!

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  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  Gabriel Decker—His US Army Ranger unit is the only family he’s ever known. Recuperating from a possible career-ending injury on the ranch he co-owns, he takes on the task of protecting a teammate’s sister...and the little girl who threatens a killer.

  Trina Marr—A psychologist who works with traumatized children, she takes on Chloe’s safety as well as her emotional recovery from the tragedy she witnessed. Trina never expected to have to defy the police, run for her life or put her complete trust in a stranger, a man who understands loyalty but not love.

  Chloe Keif—Three-year-old Chloe is the only witness to the murders of her parents and brother. Trauma leaves her mute...but can she name the killer if she regains her voice?

  Boyd Chaney—Retired army ranger, now, along with Gabriel Decker, owner of an eastern Oregon ranch. Still a ranger at heart, he’s ready and willing to provide backup.

  Michael Keif—The brains behind Open Range Electronics and half owner. Was he murdered for control of his company? Or did he uncover a dark secret?

  Ron Pearson—“Uncle Ronald” to the Keif children, Pearson is co-owner of Open Range Electronics. He doesn’t seem to have anything to gain by the death of his friend and partner. Or does he?

  Philip Risvold—Lead detective investigating the horrific murder of businessman Michael Keif and his wife and young son. With the investigation stalling, he wants control of the sole witness to push her to speak...or does he have something else in mind?

  Daniel Deperro—A dedicated police detective, he is uneasy about a leak from his police department that endangered a woman and child. When he finds the answer, he might have to make a life-changing decision.

  For Jeff Hill, consummate woodsman, reader and generous friend.

  Contents

  Prologue

  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

  Chapter Fourteen

  Excerpt from Wyoming Cowboy Protection by Nicole Helm

  Prologue

  Squeezed into the tiniest space, Chloe tried not to look through the narrow crack where the cupboard door hadn’t completely closed, but sometimes she couldn’t help herself. Daddy was lying there right in front of her. All she had to do was crawl out and—No, no! Mommy said she had to stay here and not make a sound. Not even a teensy sound. Mommy said to wait, no matter what she heard or saw.

  But she could see Daddy’s face, and the face of the man who bent over him, too. Except... No! Mommy said.

  Hugging her knees to squeeze herself into the smallest ball possible, Chloe closed her eyes. Tears wet her cheeks and she could taste them. She shuddered, trying to hold back a sob.

  “Shh. Stay right there,” Mommy had whispered. “Don’t move a finger or make a sound. No matter what. Do you understand?”

  She didn’t understand at all, but she was scared, and she was almost doing what Mommy said, even when tears dripped off her chin onto her bare arms. Chloe peeked. Daddy’s eyes were open, but she could tell he didn’t see her. Or anything.

  Now she couldn’t see anybody else, but she heard the man talking. There weren’t any other voices, but she didn’t move. She didn’t whimper, even when the house became quiet and stayed quiet for a long time. She had to wait until Mommy came or Daddy woke up.

  She didn’t move, didn’t make a sound, even when different people came. They all had the same color of blue pants. Now she saw a man crouching beside Daddy, and even though she didn’t move, she didn’t, he lifted his head and saw her.

  Her teeth chattered and she shook all over, but he stepped right over Daddy and opened the cupboard door all the way. He bent low, his face nice, and held out a hand.

  “You’re safe now, honey. I promise.”

  As he reached for her, the sob burst out, but not another sound.

  Mommy said.

  Chapter One

  “Shall we leave the frosting white?” Trina Marr had already mixed up a cream cheese icing to go on the cupcakes cooling on a rack. “I might have some sprinkles. Or let’s see.” Being obsessive-compulsive neat, she knew right where she kept the small bottles of food coloring. “Green? Red? Or if we use just a tiny bit, pink?”

  The little girl looking up at her no
dded vigorously. The pigtails she’d started the day with sagged crookedly.

  “Pink?”

  Another nod.

  Trina had become accustomed to the lack of verbal response. As Dr. Katrina Marr, she specialized in working with traumatized children. Three-year-old Chloe Keif had started as a patient but was now her foster daughter. Chloe still wouldn’t talk, but she relaxed with Trina as she didn’t with anyone else. She’d remained stiff and unresponsive in the receiving home where she was first placed. An aunt and grandparents both were hesitant to take Chloe when she had such problems. Offering to foster had seemed a natural step for Trina, if a first for her.

  “Ooh,” she said now. “You know what we could put on top?”

  Chloe waited, bright-eyed and expectant.

  Trina rose onto tiptoes to reach a jar in a high cupboard. “Maraschino cherries. Have you ever had one?”

  A suspicious shake of the head.

  “They’re super sweet, like candy. The flavor just bursts in your mouth when you bite into one.” Trina wrinkled her nose. “Don’t tell anybody, but every once in a while when I’m feeling mad or sad, I open a jar and eat every single cherry.” She winked. “Which makes me sick to my stomach, but I don’t care.”

  Chloe laughed, then clapped her hand over her mouth, eyes wide with astonishment and...fear? Yes.

  It was the first sound to come out of her mouth in the two weeks Trina had known her. She crouched and tickled Chloe’s tummy. “It’s okay, cupcake.”

  That almost earned her another smile.

  “It was really smart of you to stay quiet when the bad men were in your house, but you’re safe now. Anytime you’re ready, you can start talking. You can make all kinds of noises.” She blew a noisy raspberry. Neighed, like a horse. Revved, like a motorcycle engine.

  And Chloe giggled again.

  Heart feeling as light as a helium balloon, Trina swung Chloe up to sit on the kitchen counter. “Here, try your first maraschino cherry.” She opened the jar, stuck a fork in and popped one into her own mouth. “Yum.” She offered the next one to the little girl, who sniffed it cautiously, then touched the tip of her tongue to the cherry.

  Chloe’s face worked as she savored the taste before she opened her mouth and snatched the cherry off the fork.

  Trina waited for the verdict.

  “Yum!”

  Trina grinned and said, “Then let’s make our frosting pink.” Her mouth fell open. “Wait. You talked.”

  Chloe’s freckled nose crinkled mischievously.

  Laughing exultantly, Trina swung her to the stool she’d pulled up to the counter. “Now you’re just teasing me.”

  The little girl nodded. It was all Trina could do to concentrate on how many drops of red food coloring she ought to add to the bowl of icing to turn it a pretty pink.

  Her delight was quickly dampened by the sobering knowledge that once Chloe really began to talk the police would be ready to pounce.

  If investigators had a clue who’d murdered her mother, father and older brother in their home, they hadn’t confided as much in Trina or even hinted when pressed by reporters. Admittedly, the crime was not only horrific, it was puzzling. Chloe’s mother hadn’t been raped. Expensive electronics weren’t stolen. Neither was the nearly thousand dollars in Michael Keif’s wallet that had been left on the counter of the island in the kitchen. His Piaget watch, which according to the detective sold for over ten thousand dollars, remained on his wrist. If Michael, a wealthy businessman, had been the target, why had the rest of his family been killed, too?

  Chloe wouldn’t have been mute and terrified when she was found if she hadn’t seen her father murdered within feet of her hiding place. With the investigation seemingly going cold, the detectives had latched on to the hope that this preschool girl could crack the case. It was making them nuts that so far, Chloe hadn’t been able to answer a single question.

  Trina worried about what the weight of their expectations might do to Chloe. What if she was never able to tell them anything, and had to live with that failure for the rest of her life?

  But there was another really scary possibility. Somehow reporters had learned that the three-year-old survivor of the massacre couldn’t say a word. On the local TV news, they’d even flashed a photo of Chloe as the anchor talked solemnly about the mystery and the devastating impact witnessing the horror had had on a little girl. Chloe had said her first word today, and Trina didn’t want anyone else to know. Because...what if this incredibly vulnerable child became a threat a killer couldn’t ignore?

  Trina shivered. Pay attention, she told herself. She had to be careful not to turn this frosting bloodred.

  * * *

  GABRIEL DECKER SWUNG his rope with practiced ease. The loop settled on the ground just in front of a calf’s hind legs, tricky to do in such tight quarters in the temporary corral. The second the calf stepped into the loop, Gabe pulled in the slack, wrapped the rope around the saddle horn and drew the calf toward the fire. Once a pair of wrestlers tossed the struggling calf to his side and pulled off the rope, Gabe would coil it up and go back for another one. Today, four ropers and four teams on the ground were moving things along well. They aimed by the end of the week to have every spring calf branded, dehorned, castrated and vaccinated.

  His eyes stung from the dust cloud raised by bawling calves penned in the corral and their mothers milling outside it. Unpleasantly reminded of a dust storm in Afghanistan, Gabe had to keep pushing the memory back. The work demanded focus. At least he felt useful, which he hadn’t much lately. He was irked that he couldn’t be one of the men tossing the calf and holding it down, a task he’d performed by the time he went to live on a Texas ranch when he was fourteen. Size and muscle were appreciated for that job, since even two-to-three-month-old calves could weigh up to two hundred pounds.

  Now he was lucky to be able to sit astride for hours at a time, although he’d suffer for it later. Actually, he was already suffering but refused to let anyone else suspect. He’d been wounded before but never taken so long to heal.

  This had been a bad one, though. An IED had thrown him into the air and he’d landed poorly, breaking his femur on top of the damage done to his pelvis by the explosion. The doctor had suggested age might be an issue. A twenty-two-year old healed faster than a man closing in on forty, he’d said with a shrug. Gabe knew that, at thirty-six, he was close to aging out of active duty with his Army Ranger unit. But damn it, he wasn’t ready to hang it up yet!

  He’d tightened his legs in a signal to his gelding and gripped the rope in a gloved hand to start swinging it, when his partner waved him over to the side of the temporary corral.

  Boyd Chaney rested one booted foot on a lower bar and his forearms on the top one. “If you’re hurting, take a break.”

  Gabe stared expressionlessly at his friend. “What makes you think I hurt?”

  “I know you,” Boyd said with a shrug.

  He did. They’d served together for a decade and become best friends. On recent deployments, Gabe had missed Boyd, who had been shot and crushed beneath his jeep when it rolled two years ago. He’d spent the next year in rehab and conditioning, trying to achieve the state of fitness required for their elite ranger unit, but had finally accepted that he’d never pass the physical. Unwilling to accept a desk or teaching job, he’d retired to the Oregon cattle and cutting horse ranch the two men had bought together with an eye to the future.

  “I can manage,” Gabe said now, tersely, and reined his horse back into the melee. Even over the bellowing cattle, he heard Chaney call after him.

  “Stubborn bastard.”

  Yeah, so? Since that was the working definition of a man tough enough to make it as a spec-ops soldier, Gabe didn’t bother responding. He’d make it back. He told himself that every day. Two, three more months, tops. But right now he could contribute here on the ranch.
A little pain had never stopped him before, and it wouldn’t now.

  * * *

  “I’LL BE THERE in ten minutes,” Detective Risvold said.

  “No!” Trina was in her office, seizing the chance to make the call between patients. In the past week, Chloe had made enough progress that Trina felt obligated to report that there was hope she’d soon be able to talk about what she’d seen.

  Trina was thankful she’d been careful not to tell either of the investigators who called her on a regular basis where she “stashed” Chloe during working hours. That had been Detective Deperro’s word. When he used it, Trina had almost said, Oh, when I’m not home, I keep her in the third drawer to the right of the sink but had managed to refrain. If either of the men possessed a sense of humor, she had yet to see it.

  “What do you mean, no?” Risvold snapped. “She’s talking, and you know how much is riding on what she can tell us.”

  “I wanted you to know she’s begun speaking.” Already regretting she’d made this call, Trina leaned on the word begun. “She’s not back to natural chattering, and if I even tiptoe toward asking about that morning, she goes silent again for hours. Anyway, how is a three-year-old’s description going to clinch anything for you? If I asked her to draw her father, it would be a stick figure. You do know that, don’t you? What little she can tell you would be useless.” She paused. “Unless you have a suspect?”

  The answer was slow coming. “We’re looking at a possibility,” he said grudgingly. “Several 911 calls had come in from that neighborhood in the week before the attack on the Keifs. Someone may have been casing houses.”

  “But you told me nothing was taken.”

  “The guy may not have had robbery on his mind. He might have been a nutcase looking for the right opportunity.”

  Making it a random crime. It happened, of course, but rarely. So rarely she had trouble buying it now. “Do you even have a good description of him?”

  “One of the homes he wandered around had security cameras. We have footage. If we have confirmation from the girl about what he looks like...”

 

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