A Hero for All Seasons
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THE DETECTIVE'S TEMPTING, TEMPORARY ASSIGNMENT
Something in Savannah King's crystal-blue eyes spoke to Sam as she desperately pleaded for his help in finding her child. Detective Sam Walters knew he was this frightened woman's last hope, but he vowed not to get too close. Until she made a spot for herself on the investigation and in his life. No woman had ever affected this loner so instantly as Savannah. But once Sam found her daughterand he wouldhe knew he would face his toughest case yet: winning Savannah's heart, so he could be her hero for all seasons!
When a child is missing and a heart need mending, it's time to call ChildFinders, Inc.
Marie Ferrarella
This USA TODAY bestselling and RITA ® Award-winning author has written more than two hundred books for Harlequin Books and Silhouette Books, some under the name Marie Nicole. Her romances are beloved by fans worldwide. Visit her website at www.marieferrarella.com.
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A Hero for All Seasons - Marie Ferrarella
Chapter 1
He knew her.
The minute Sam Walters looked up to see who Alex, the agency’s secretary, had brought into his office, he knew her. Knew the tall, vivid-looking blonde who had come seeking his help—even before he actually recognized her and put a name to her face.
With the investigative agency almost a year, Sam nonetheless had more than a few years of law enforcement experience to fall back on. He was well acquainted with the aura of just barely controlled panic that he saw around the woman’s mouth, with the edgy nervousness in her gait that was just a hair away from being visible and overpowering. And with the fear that was eating away at her and vying for possession of her soul.
He’d seen it all before, in every shade, every size. Victims who were struggling not to be.
Just the way Savannah King was.
He absorbed details as quickly, as unconsciously, as he breathed. It came that naturally to him.
She was a stunning woman by anyone’s reckoning, but Sam still didn’t miss the fact that Savannah King was pale beneath her suntan, pale and shaken.
But it was her eyes that caught his attention. There was something there, something within the crystalblue eyes that spoke to Sam. That told him that she wasn’t going to break down here in his sunny corner office, dissolving in a flood of tears the way so many others who’d come to ChildFinders, Inc. had done. Those people had recited their stories in the halting bits and hurried pieces that reflected the shards of their once orderly lives.
She had guts, he thought. He’d bet on it. It made his job easier.
On his feet now to greet her, Sam rounded the desk that always seemed to be in an eternal state of clutter.
Hello,
he said warmly, his hand out. Behind them Alex withdrew unobtrusively.
After a beat, the willowy blonde extended her hand to him. It felt icy against his flesh, even though it was the middle of August. That didn’t surprise him.
Savannah pressed her lips together before allowing herself to utter a single word. This man before her—this tall, rugged-looking man with the quirky smile on his lips and the shock of dark blond hair dipping down just above his eyes and rubbing against the collar of his blue shirt—was her last hope.
Last hope.
The words felt as if they were digging into her chest. Branding her. She drew a long breath to dislodge the talons.
I’m—
Sam wrapped his fingers around her hand, a mute promise in the strong gesture. She might not fall to pieces here, he guessed, but she was close. Damn close.
Savannah King,
he completed for her.
Releasing her hand, he softly closed the door behind her and locked out the extraneous noise. Except for the soft whoosh of the air-conditioning system, the office became incredibly quiet.
Yes, I know.
For a split second, Sam studied her face. She looked just as classy in person as she had on the broadcast yesterday, and only a shade less composed. I saw you on TV last night.
The TV. Her father had pulled strings and called in favors to make sure that the story wasn’t just lost in the waves of sound bytes that crossed the air every night. An influential man, Perry King had gotten her prime air time on every news channel Southern California carried. She’d had less than three minutes to make her plea. To turn a stone heart into something human.
By eight this morning, she’d known that she hadn’t succeeded.
Savannah nodded, slowly taking in a measured breath and then letting it out again. Everything seemed like such an effort now: putting one foot in front of the other, trying to think, keeping herself collected. She felt like a mouse, trapped in an overwhelmingly huge maze, desperately searching for the right door. Not to get out—but to find what had been so brutally snatched away from her.
To find her child.
Despite all the help coming her way, Savannah had never felt so completely alone in her life. Lost and alone.
She tried to smile. Her mouth barely curved. Hopefully, you weren’t the only one who saw me.
Sam knew exactly what she was saying. The three-minute spot, carried on all the local networks at five and then again at eleven, had been directed at the person who had taken her four-year-old daughter, Aimee, from her. He’d watched the first segment, wedged into the news between a human interest story and a story about a narrowly avoided midair collision—immediately alerted because this was what he did: he looked for missing children.
No, Sam amended silently, he found missing children. That was the difference. It was what they all did at the agency. ChildFinders, Inc.’s unequaled track record was their personal contribution to the world. His, and Megan’s and Cade’s. Cade Townsend was the heart of it. Without Cade, there would have been no contribution. No agency.
Sam pulled out the chair that stood in front of his desk, the indication clear. Savannah made no move toward it.
Would you like to sit down?
He noticed that she looked at the chair as if she hadn’t noticed it before. He understood that, too. Only things that had some connection to her daughter’s disappearance were probably filtering in. The rest existed somewhere just outside the perimeter, unnoted, unimportant.
Yes, thank you.
The words came out in a whisper. Savannah felt drained and just this side of hopeless, although she was struggling not to give in to the feeling. She couldn’t. Defeat meant losing Aimee. She was ready to die before she allowed that to happen
But it was an effort not to collapse into the chair. An effort not to give in to the darkness that was hovering around the edges of her world these last five days. The sensation was appallingly new to her. Savannah wasn’t the type to collapse; she was the type to forge ahead, no matter what. This was the greatest test she’d ever faced, a thousand times worse than the heartbreak she’d endured before.
Savannah tried to hang on to her spirit, her feeling that Aimee would be found, with fingers that were growing increasingly tired, increasingly lax.
Maybe it was superstitious—absurd even—but she had this terribly uneasy feeling that if she let go, she’d never be able to find Aimee. Somehow, some way, she had to find her.
Which was what had brought her here to ChildFinders, Inc. An agency begun by a man who’d had his own son snatched out of his life.
Funny how things you read in passing turn out to be the very things you wind up bartering your soul on. She remembered reading about Cade Townsend three months ago—reading about him and feeling sorry for what he had to be going through.
And now she knew how he felt.
The sad irony of it was that Darin Townsend remained the only missing child ChildFinders had not been able to recover.
Savannah felt a flutter in the pit of her stomach
Oh please, let them find Aimee. Let her be safe. I’ll do anything, anything—just let her be safe.
Savannah turned to watch Sam as he came around to stand before her. He moved with a confidence that she found encouraging. No bravado, just confidence. And there was sympathy in his eyes. Not pity—sympathy. She couldn’t have handled pity.
I’m Sam Walters,
he told her, realizing that the introduction had been interrupted. And I’m familiar with your story.
His tone was soft, gentle. She’d struck him last night as an intelligent, well-educated woman. To talk down to her would be an insult, but he knew the value of kindness and patience, even though he did without them as a rule in his personal life. He didn’t need them. Other people did. Especially victims.
Sam took a micro-tape recorder from his drawer and placed it on his desk. Cade’s rule. Everything at the initial session was recorded. It saved time and avoided discrepancies.
But just for the record—
he moved the machine closer to her —why don’t you tell me what happened in your own words?
The slight click as he turned on the tape recorder on his desk echoed in her brain. Savannah drew herself together, to attempt to stay just ahead of the words she was going to recite. Words that had sharp points on every letter, every syllable. Words that told how her life had gone from being wonderful to abysmal in the space of a heartbeat.
An elbow on each arm of the chair, unconsciously seeking support, Savannah knotted her hands together. The tension she was experiencing had breadth and depth. Instinctively, Sam laid his hand on top of hers, just for a moment, the slight pressure conveying to her what words couldn’t.
A covenant.
She looked at him, their eyes meeting in a frozen instant in time. He couldn’t read anything there—not gratitude, not anger. It was the gate to a fortress that was sealed.
Drawing back his hand, Sam leaned a hip against his desk, waiting. She’d begin when she was ready. There was no sense rushing her.
Savannah took a deep breath. It didn’t help. Nothing helped. Her lungs ached from the tears she refused to shed.
Tears were for mourning, and she wouldn’t mourn. Aimee wasn’t dead, she was alive. Her daughter was out there somewhere, and they were going to find her. No matter what it took.
Her lips felt dry as she pushed out the words that she’d already said so many times before. With effort, Savannah tried to keep the story fresh, for Walters’s benefit. He had to see, to hear, something the others had not.
He had to.
Every word cost her.
I was shopping with Aimee—
When?
he cut in. Despite the tape recorder, he was already making notes in his notebook. Writing it all down helped him remember. Helped him sort.
She looked at him as if he hadn’t been paying attention, then realized that she hadn’t mentioned the day.
Thursday. Last Thursday.
A hundred years ago. I’d taken the day off from my work because I’d promised Aimee an outing.
Why hadn’t she broken it? There’d been so many other promises she’d been forced to break or temporarily bend—why couldn’t this have been one of them? Aimee would still be with her if she had. We were in Lenard’s—I had stopped to get a new dress.
She paused, upbraiding herself. There’d been no real need for a new dress. It had been purely a whim on her part. One she was paying dearly for. I told Aimee if she behaved, we’d go to the toy store next. She loves stuffed animals.
She was babbling, Savannah thought. She could feel the tears welling up in her throat and pushed them back. She wasn’t going to cry. She didn’t want this man to think of her as some fragile woman, on the cusp of shattering. He’d use that as an excuse, and she would give him no excuses to use as a roadblock. He had to let her do what she wanted to do. He had to.
Savannah focused on steadying her pulse, on being coherent.
My back was turned for a minute. Maybe ninety seconds,
Savannah amended, trying very hard to be as specific as was humanly possible. It hadn’t felt that long, but maybe it had been. She wasn’t sure any longer. It was just long enough to read the sizes on three tags—no more.
Just long enough to make the difference. The accusation beat a heavy tattoo in her brain.
When I looked down to ask Aimee what she thought of the color—she loves being consulted—
A half smile played on her lips as she thought of the way Aimee tried so very hard to behave like a grownup. And then the smile vanished. Just the way Aimee had. When I looked down,
Savannah repeated with effort, Aimee wasn’t there.
Sam saw the glint then, the almost imperceptible shimmer of tears gathering. He wanted to say something, to comfort her. But he knew that there was nothing to be said. All the words would sound empty to her. She must have heard them all before. So instead, he waited in silence for her to continue.
Savannah shifted in her seat, knowing there was no way she was going to get comfortable. Not until the ordeal was finally over.
I didn’t think anything of it at first. Aimee has a weakness for climbing into circular racks of clothes and popping up in the middle, giggling. Drives the saleswomen crazy. I’ve told her not to, but...
Her voice trailed off.
And then, raising her chin, Savannah rallied right in front of his eyes.
Sam had the distinct impression that he was watching Joan of Arc trying not to think of the straw pyre standing just outside her cell door.
Savannah concentrated on reciting the series of events in the order they occurred. Whether her heart was breaking ultimately made no difference in finding Aimee.
I looked everywhere for her. The two saleswomen in the department helped me search. One of them called security. We couldn’t find her.
She’d felt so brittle, so fragile, calling Aimee’s name over and over again, trying not to even remotely entertain the thought that someone had purposely taken her little girl.
But in the end, there was nothing else she could think.
Her voice deadened. The police were called in half an hour later.
Half an hour. The difference between finding a child and not. Sam closed the spiral pad. Every second counted against them And now it was five long days later.
Sam kept his thoughts from his face as he nodded. Do you have a photograph of Aimee with you?
It was a rhetorical question to keep things moving. She’d stopped talking.
Savannah wanted to snap at him. To ask him what kind of a mother he thought she was—not to have a photograph of her child with her.
But there was an answer for that. She was the kind of mother who lost her child in a department store. She had no right to snap at anyone.
Savannah’s hand shook as she took out her wallet. She was consumed with a rage, with a desire to hit something, to vent and scream. It wouldn’t do any good, but at least she could discharge some of these feelings that were bouncing around inside her, clawing away at every inch of her.
Sam pretended not to notice the slight tremor in her hand as he accepted the photograph from her. There had been a photograph flashed on the screen along with the broadcast, but he wanted to study the child’s features himself.
She was a beautiful child. A blond like her mother, the little girl’s lively smile immediately jumped out at him. She was a child to notice, not to overlook. The kind that modeling agencies catering to television commercials prayed for. That all worked in their favor, he thought.
He placed the photograph on his desk beside the tape recorder. May I keep this?
Savannah nodded stiffly. Would you like something to drink? It’s kind of hot today.
The air-conditioning was doing more than an adequate job of keeping the office cool, but he thought she needed to have something to do with her hands. To steady them. Sam moved toward the door, opening it.
No, I don’t want anything to drink. I want my daughter back. I want my life back. Savannah bit back the edgy retort, and just shook her head.
No, I’m fine.
The irony of the words struck her instantly, and she laughed. It was a hollow, raspy sound. When he turned to look at her quizzically, she merely shook her head at the unwitting phrasing. No, I’m not,
she amended firmly. Her voice grew more steady, steely, even as she opened up this tiny window into the chaos her world had turned into. I am not fine. I’m going out of my mind, Mr. Walters.
She couldn’t remain seated any longer. She rose and began pacing through the sunny office, but she saw only darkness. I can’t eat, I can’t sleep, I keep going around in circles, forgetting what I’m supposed to be doing.
Of the three of them in the agency—if he didn’t count Alex, who worked part-time—Sam was the best at putting people at their ease. But he felt as if he was out of his element here. Still, he had to say something. He had the feeling that he was at a missile site three minutes before liftoff. A disastrous liftoff.
That’s perfectly normal, Mrs. King—
he began to assure her.
Fairly or unfairly, Savannah lashed out at the patience she heard in his voice. She didn’t want patience, or sympathy or any one of a myriad of emotions she’d been accosted with and tendered in the last one hundred twenty-one endless hours.
She wanted action.
Results.
Most of all, she wanted this to be over, and Aimee to be in her arms again.
No, it’s not normal,
she contradicted vehemently. "It’s hell. My own personal hell,