Fahrenheit

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Fahrenheit Page 1

by Capri Montgomery




  Copyright © 2011 Shunta Montgomery

  All Rights Reserved

  Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.

  Publisher’s Note:

  Fahrenheit is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, event or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Special Thanks

  Thank you, Barb, for catching the mistakes I missed. Your assist with editing has been wonderful.

  Thanks to all of my readers for showing your support for my work by buying and reading my books.

  By Capri Montgomery

  Secrets and Lies

  Returning Sheba

  Saints and Sinners

  The McGregor Affair

  Dream Walker

  The Geneva Project

  The Admiral’s Daughter

  Dangerous Obsessions

  Watch Over Me

  Educating Australia

  Maid for Hire

  Murder Unveiled

  The Thirteenth Floor

  Ride a Cowboy

  And Many Others…

  Coming Soon:

  In February Seducing the Bodyguard, book seven in the Men of Action Series.

  In January the Shadow Hills series kicks off with Shadow Hills: Fallen Hero.

  Fahrenheit

  by

  Capri Montgomery

  Chapter One

  Eve McGregor heard the pounding on her door, as if somebody was trying to pound right through it. It was still early, almost lunchtime and since she had been craving the usual dinner food she decided to make it for lunch. She was in the middle of making roasted potatoes and tilapia fish, both of which soon needed to come out of the oven, but given the urgency of the beating on her door she abandoned the kitchen for the front door.

  What she saw when she opened the door nearly knocked her off her feet. He was dressed in the standard fireman’s getup, had striking blue eyes and a rather handsome face if she did say so herself. He wasn’t super gorgeous, or even somebody she would expect to see in one of those sexy firemen calendars, but he was still very handsome. In her opinion he was sexy in his own way. Even the scar over his right eye was sexy. He had a certain wow factor for her; one she didn’t need to be distracted with right now. She needed to focus on her career, not a man.

  When she took her eyes off him long enough to look behind him she saw other men dressed in uniform, also running around her community. There couldn’t be a fire; no alarm had sounded.

  “You have to evacuate!”

  She wondered why he was yelling at her. “I—” She pointed behind her.

  “Now!”

  “Look I have food on if I leave it going you’re going to have a really big fire on your hands.”

  He obviously hadn’t been listening to her because he reached inside her open door and pulled her out by her arm.

  “My Shoes!” She walked swiftly trying to keep up with him until she stepped on what felt like a razor sharp rock. “Ouch!”

  Before she could fully process the pain he lifted her off her feet. He lifted her as if she weighed nothing at all, and cradled her in his arms. Seconds later he took off running for the bushes and trees that hid the complex from those walking on the sidewalk.

  He dashed through the area as if he weren’t carrying a one hundred seven pound woman in his arms, as if her weight meant nothing to him at all.

  They were barely across the street when she heard a loud explosion, felt herself falling to the ground. He shifted their position to take the full force of the fall and not a second after hitting the ground he rolled over on top of her, shielding her body from the falling debris.

  In any other situation the position would have been inappropriate, her legs spread wide with a strange man between them; but this wasn’t any other situation, this was life or death. As a photojournalist she knew about danger, about surviving, but this was different. This was her home destroyed. This was her life protected only by the man on top of her. And in this moment she was surprised that she could feel any sense of arousal by their position, but she did. This was so not good—on every level.

  It wasn’t until pieces of building stopped raining down around them that he lifted his head to survey their surroundings. As she looked up at him she accessed how young he looked. He had to be closer to her age, or at least she thought he might be. He didn’t look as old as either of her brothers, but she had long since learned not to judge the proverbial book by its cover.

  She could hear panic and chaos around her. The panic was from the other residents of the apartment complex. The chaos must have been the emergency personnel jumping into action. But when the man on top of her looked down into her eyes everything else seemed to melt into nothingness. Deep blue pierced her, seeming more striking from this distance than they had just minutes earlier.

  Neither of them moved, although she was sure they should have. If she had had her camera she would have been up in action, but unfortunately her camera was in the apartment, along with the rest of her belongings, that were no doubt now blown to smithereens. There had to be something more than just a fire to cause that. They were on electric, not gas so that couldn’t have been the issue. She had never known a fire to explode an entire complex—what felt like the entire complex anyway, she wasn’t sure because from her position on the ground she couldn’t see much more than the blue sky above and the hot firefighter on top of her.

  She pushed away the thoughts starting to run wild in her head, thoughts about the hot man with the deep blue eyes, and replaced those thoughts with thoughts about the here, the now, the problem she was now going to have to explain to her brothers. Florida was always on fire, and never before had she seen this type of drama hit this close to home. Once her brothers found out they would surely use this event as another reason to convince her to go back to Massachusetts, but she wasn’t going. She was a grown up now.

  She had finished her Masters in art and journalism, and she landed a rather fabulous gig down in Florida with Beyond Flagler News. It wasn’t a huge press, but they thought of themselves as the CNN of the south. They brought stories to the public to mirror their opinion of themselves. If she were being honest, even with herself, it wasn’t the biggest job she could have obtained, but it wasn’t the smallest either. Their paper, though based in Flagler County, was widely distributed on the East coast. That market meant when the uprising happened in Egypt, thanks to her fluent Arabic, she was the photojournalist chosen to accompany Mitch Decker, world famous reporter who had a keen eye for a story and the tenacity to follow it no matter where it took him. She had worked with Mitch often, but he still had the right of refusal if he thought she shouldn’t go into a situation. “Into the jaws of hell,” he had said. “That’s where you have to be willing to go if you’re going to work with me.” If he thought he was going to scare her he was wrong. She wanted the danger, the adventure, the chance to prove to herself and her family that she was more than just the baby sister. She was a woman, one who was more than capable of taking care of herself. She had already proven herself to Mitch, which meant that no matter the assignment, he never thought about using another photojournalist. He had specifically requested that she be assigned to him, and so she was.

  “Are you all right?”

  “Yes,” she nodded. “Thank you for saving my life.”

  He looked at her, appreciatively she would say,
but then again she had never had a man look at her that way while he was sober. Why should one start now? It never really bothered her that she wasn’t the type of woman men flocked to. In the past she was always working full-time and going to school full-time, which meant she was too busy for relationships anyway, so she didn’t care that she had never really had one—the occasional date in high school didn’t count.

  “I’m Adam,” he brushed a strand of hair from her forehead.

  “You’re kidding me right?”

  “No. Should I be?”

  She laughed. “I’m Eve. Eve McGregor.”

  Now it was his turn to laugh. “Well there you go. We’re perfect for each other.”

  She wasn’t sure about the perfect part. She didn’t remember much about her brief childhood brush with bible studies but she did remember that Adam plus Eve equaled disaster for humankind.

  “Are the two of you all right?” She looked up at the big body that was now hovering over them.

  Adam helped her to her feet. She brushed dirt off her jeans before nodding affirmatively. The uniformed officer looked her over once, then twice before telling her she should get behind the safety line like everybody else. He, not so delicately, reminded Adam that he had work to do.

  She had her own work to do. This many people suddenly homeless would need a place to stay, as would she. She smiled sweetly at an attending officer and he let her use his phone to make one call. She called her sister. Alyssa would be able to help her. While she had her license and her bank card in her back pocket due to an early morning grocery store run, she didn’t have anything else, and she needed a hotel room—preferably before the hotels filled up.

  “Yeah, the Marriott on Old Kings Road,” she confirmed. “I’ll pay you back as soon as I can.”

  “You’ll do no such thing,” Alyssa refused repayment. “You’re my little sister and I don’t mind helping you out.”

  “I want to pay you back. I’ll need at least a few weeks—”

  Alyssa nearly screamed into the phone. “You’re so stubborn. Miss “need to be independent” can’t take an assist from your favorite sister.”

  Alyssa was her only sister, but now was not the time to point that out. The officer standing over her looked as if he were ready to call time on her phone call.

  “Fine, just think of this as my repaying you for all the money you loaned me while I was getting this business off the ground. Or for all the times you covered for me when I didn’t want Gavin and Thomas to know what I was doing and where I was. Speaking of our brothers…”

  “Yeah, I know. I’m on a cop’s phone right now. He’s let me make one phone call, so I can’t call them. Maybe you can call them before they hear about it on the news.” She could already see the trouble today’s events would cause. Her brothers would probably want to come rescue her. They would start in on her about moving closer to family again. No offense meant, but she didn’t want to be closer to family. How on earth was she going to learn to be her own person, to take care of herself, if she had her brothers still treating her as if she were six? “Alyssa, tell them not to come.”

  “That’s probably going to be the hardest part about the phone call,” she assured her. “I’ll start with Thomas. He should be easier than Gavin.”

  “Okay. I won’t be able to call you back until I’m at the hotel. Oh and Alyssa,” she looked around at the people who already seemed to be on their phones. “Hurry. I have a feeling everybody on their phone is booking a room.” She ended the call and handed the phone back to the officer.

  “You’re going to need a ride,” he smiled at her. Well shoot, he was right; she would need a ride. She could walk—if she had her shoes. The hotel was about four, maybe five miles away, but she could still make it on foot, if only she had her shoes.

  She thought about the fact that all of her clothes, her papers, everything was still in the apartment. She could see the top of her building. Parts of it seemed to be blown off, but she could still see the building and it appeared that most of the two-story structure was still standing—for her set of units anyway. She couldn’t see the roof of the building next to her building, or the one next to that one.

  “I don’t suppose you would let me use your phone again,” she smiled sweetly.

  “I’ll take you. But I have to stay here a while longer,” he grinned. She wasn’t sure she liked that grin—but she did need a ride, and they were supposed to protect and serve, so she would take him up on his offer. Maybe he could take her by a shoe store on the way. She was seriously going to need shoes if she planned on going anywhere.

  She found a spot on the sidewalk under a shaded tree and watched the chaos around her. The ground was hot—too hot to be shoeless. She looked around at some of the other residents. At least she had on clothes. She had noticed a trend lately for people to shop in their nightclothes, but the array in front of her was just unfathomably embarrassing. One man had a towel wrapped around his waist. She figured he had been in the shower, or just getting out of it, when the emergency evacuation started. There was a woman in her bra; at least she had her jeans on so she wasn’t completely without clothes.

  Eve shook her head. She didn’t think there were enough emergency blankets to go around for the people who either hadn’t bothered to get dressed this morning, or hadn’t bothered to dress in much. It was Saturday, a non-workday for most people, unless they worked retail or the office was open. For her, being a photojournalist she worked whenever and wherever, but today was her day off—the first day off she had had in months. Boy, what she wouldn’t give to have her camera on hand right now.

  She felt something tickling her foot and she looked down to see what that something was. “Ants,” she cringed as she kicked one off her foot and then moved away from the spot she had been standing in.

  Adam jogged up to her. “Hey, I thought you might need something from your apartment.” He pulled a pair of shoes from under the blanket he had been carrying.

  “Oh my gosh, how did you—”

  He shushed her. “Don’t tell anybody or they’ll all decide they want something. It’s still not safe to go in, but I have my ways,”’ he winked at her.

  “Do any of your ways include getting my purse and camera?”

  He shook his head. “Women and purses,” he nearly laughed. “I can’t get back in right now, but when I can I’ll see what I can do.”

  “Thanks,” she wanted to hug him, but she didn’t. “I’m going to be staying at the Marriot. My sister is making the arrangements for me. Speaking of sisters,” she leaned in close to him. “If you can get my cell phone off the dining room table, that would be great too.”

  He nodded. “Marriot; got cha. I’ll come by if I can get your stuff. In fact, I’ll come by even if I can’t. I can buy you dinner, or something.”

  She could just think of what the “or something,” could be. He was cute. She wouldn’t mind getting to know him a little better. But he was a firefighter and he had just saved her life; she didn’t want him to think she had some form of hero worship syndrome or something like that.

  She slipped the high heeled red sandals on her feet. At least now she had shoes, and a place to stay; everything else would have to wait. She really, really, hoped they caught this guy—although she wasn’t holding her breath on it. It wasn’t that the cops were completely inadequate; the guy was just smarter than all of them. He had been several steps ahead for the past few months—and since they had a feeling it was the same guy who started the fires last year as well, she figured he was going to be several steps ahead of law enforcement for quite some time.

  She was near enough the officers to hear another call come through, another fire, this time a house fire. She had heard the dispatcher say the occupants were snowbirds and shouldn’t be in the house, but that there was still a possibility that somebody was in there. Apparently it was a hot burn and from the description relayed, Eve wasn’t sure the fire department would be able to salvage anything.r />
  “Boy,” she mumbled. “These guys are going to be busy today.” She didn’t envy the firefighters who seemed to be needed all over the city at the moment. And she certainly didn’t envy any of the investigators trying to figure out what had just happened at her complex. She had already heard the officers linking the apartment bomb to the arsonist. She didn’t realize bomb making and starting fires were linked, but she wasn’t a criminologist either so maybe they were.

  “You ready to go?”

  She looked up the length of the green uniform in front of her until her eyes met his. “You’re finished here?”

  “I am; they’re not.” He pointed to the slue of other emergency personnel.

  “Then I’m ready,” she smiled. “Thanks for the ride.”

  “You can ride me anytime,” he grinned.

  “With,” she gritted her teeth to hold in her growing hostility. “You mean I can ride with you anytime.”

  “That too,” he snickered. She was starting to rethink her decision to let the deputy take her to the hotel. Did she really want to be alone in the car with this guy? But what choice did she have? If she were in her stiletto boots she could probably pull the walk, but in these sandals, there was just no way her feet would carry her to the hotel. It was just a car ride, she told herself. What could possibly go wrong during a car ride?

  Chapter Two

  “What are you all doing here?” Eve frowned when she saw Thomas and Gavin standing outside her room door. They, clearly not fazed by her agitated expression, pushed past her and into the room. They both looked angry—very angry, but that’s not what held her attention. Thomas had brought somebody with him—a woman. Now this was an interesting development. She was unaware that he was serious about anybody. She had been busy with work, but they had talked every week. She knew he had mentioned a woman, but he never gave her the impression that this woman was “meet the family” special. She hoped this was a sign that maybe he was giving up on his pursuit of Sabian. She didn’t want to go through wondering if Thomas would survive again.

 

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