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Hiding in plain sight

Sending his family away years ago was the hardest thing FBI special agent Garrett Drake ever did. But it was the only way to shield them from a case turned terrifyingly personal. Now a serial killer has come to town. To safeguard his estranged son—and the entire Port Whisper community—Garrett needs help. And that means reaching out to Lana Burns, a captivating woman who cuts through his defenses. Garrett would willingly risk his life to uncover the killer. But to get a second chance at happiness, Lana has to convince the wary agent to risk his heart....

“I’m impressed by how you handled that teenager.”

“Wow, can I get a junior FBI badge or something?”

“Don’t push it.”

Garrett looked surprised, as if he hadn’t meant to utter the playful retort. Lana thought he might have even cracked a smile but couldn’t be sure. It would be a vast improvement on his permanent frown, his lips stretched into a thin straight line.

“I’d like to ask a favor of you,” he said.

“Sure.”

“Promise me you’ll never do that again?”

“You mean…”

“Insinuate yourself into a dangerous situation like that.”

Lana dunked her tea bag in the hot water and sighed. He was asking the impossible. She couldn’t turn her back on someone who was in so much pain they were blinded to the beauty of life and the grace of God. She knew how precious life was, and how short it could be.

“I’m sorry, I can’t make that promise,” she said.

HOPE WHITE

An eternal optimist, Hope was born and raised in the Midwest. She began spinning tales of intrigue and adventure when she was in grade school, and wrote her first book when she was eleven—a thriller that ended with a mysterious phone call the reader never heard!

She and her college sweetheart have been married for thirty years and are blessed with two wonderful sons, two feisty cats and a bossy border collie.

When not dreaming up inspirational tales, Hope enjoys hiking, sipping tea with friends and going to the movies. She loves to hear from readers, who can contact her at hopewhiteauthor@gmail.com.

Small Town Protector

Hope White


www.millsandboon.co.uk

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Faith is the substance of things hoped for,

the evidence of things not seen.

—Hebrews 11:1

For my dad, Lou,

who is practically perfect in every way.

Contents

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

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

DEAR READER

QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION

EXCERPT

One

The night cruises Lana offered to Salish Island were usually her favorite. But something felt off tonight.

Maybe it was the confrontation with a tourist who tried to bribe his way onto her boat, even after she’d explained they’d reached their capacity. Or maybe it was the sudden breeze that sent goose bumps down her arms. A sign of an unexpected storm and they should head back?

Yet right now it was so peaceful out here. She and her teenage staff had set up the tiki lights, food and hot beverages. Her guests were having a great time toasting hot dogs and marshmallows over the crackling campfire. A little girl climbed onto her daddy’s lap and he handed her a stick to wave over the fire.

Lana hated to cut the visit short, but safety was her number one priority. She’d call Anderson Greene for an update. The sailing fanatic was obsessed with the weather.

“Hello,” he answered, a bit out of breath.

“Hey, Anderson, it’s Lana. You okay?”

“Yep, just harder to get around with the sciatica acting up.”

“I’m sorry.”

“What can I do for you?”

“What’s the scoop on the weather tonight?”

“You’re not scheduling a trip to Salish, are you?”

“We’re already on island, why?”

“There’s a front coming in from the north. Last I heard…fifty-mile-an-hour—”

The line went dead.

“Anderson?”

Loss of communication, not a good sign. She decided to play it safe and head back. She’d give her customers coupons for her snack shop, Stone Soup, to make up for having to leave the island early.

Glancing across the group, she caught sight of her teenage helpers, Ashley and Sketch. They held hands as Sketch dangled a marshmallow over the flame.

Melancholy washed over Lana, but only for a second. She’d made herself a promise not to let the darkness consume her like it had years ago after Dad died.

Taking a deep breath, she forced a smile and wandered to the group of tourists.

“Hey, guys. This will have to be your last marshmallow. The weather’s a little quirky so we’re going to head back.”

A middle-aged couple stood, ready to go; a mom and dad with three kids encouraged them to finish their toasting; Ashley and Sketch shared a quick kiss and then started packing up supplies.

Lana did a quick head count. Odd. They were two short. She counted again. Sixteen, including herself. The boat’s capacity was seventeen plus Lana, which meant two people had wandered off. She checked her list of tourists on her smartphone. Yep, just as she thought: the teenage couple must have wandered off. Although she’d asked the guests to stay within sight of the campfire, she knew that some teens suffered from selective hearing.

She motioned to Sketch and Ashley. “We’re two short. Sketch, come with me.”

She grabbed a lantern and motioned him toward the trail leading to the north side of the island. Sketch glanced over his shoulder. The full moon illuminated the playful smile he shot back at Ashley.

“You guys are adorable,” Lana said. And truth be told, she was a bit envious.

She missed being in a relationship, having someone join her for a movie or hiking adventure in the nearby state park. Yet being in the wrong relationship was worse than being alone. She’d learned that the hard way during her eight months with Vincent.

“Why are we going this way?” Sketch asked.

“I’m guessing they went to Lover’s Point.”

“Why?”

“I was a teenager once.” A regretful smile played across her lips at the memory of young love. She often wished she hadn’t pushed Gregory away back in high school. But then, she’d fallen into a dark place after Dad had died and had pretty much pushed everyone away.

“If you and Ashley were out here alone, basking in the glow of a full moon, wouldn’t you head for the most romantic spot in the Pacific Northwest?” she teased.

A shrill scream cut through the air. Lana froze for a second. Did she really hear…?

A second scream echoed from the north end of the island. Lana and Sketch instinctively rushed toward the source of the sound. They zipped around Quinault Rock and spotted the two teenagers standing at the shoreline. The boy held his girlfriend in his arms, patting her back. Maybe they’d just had a fight?

“You guys okay?” Lana asked, out of breath.

Sketch poked Lana’s shoulder, then pointed at the water.

Lana glanced down…

Into the face of a bloated dead body.

* * *

What a fool. The man actually thought he could swim five miles back to Port Whisper from the island? In his shape?

It had been a mistake to hunt so close to home. I realize that now. But I couldn’t help myself. I saw how Rick Washburn bullied his female, how they fought, how he made her cry….

Adrenaline had surged through my body. It had been a month since I deleted Lars Gunderson. Too long. So I lured Ricky to the island for a private tour.

Unfortunately he didn’t enjoy my game of control and defeat.

He ran. Dove. Drowned.

And now the Feds will invade my charming little town.

A pleasant, boring town. Just the way I like it.

But not anymore, not with the FBI sniffing around, trying to find me.

I’ll have to take care of that; redirect their attention.

Not so close to home this time.

* * *

FBI agent Garrett Drake couldn’t believe his current case had led him back to Port Whisper where the memories still burned fresh in his mind, and even more painful in his chest.

He’d think God was playing a trick on him except he didn’t believe in God. Not after everything he’d seen. Not after everything he’d lost.

Shove it back, way back.

His escort, Scooner Locke, pulled the motorboat up to the dock, and a man tied them off. Garrett didn’t like involving civilians, but the chief and his staff were all at the scene. Garrett jumped out of the boat and started up the dock. If the body was really Rick Washburn’s…

It was a game changer.

The killer had altered his pattern, which meant either he’d made a mistake—which would put Garrett that much closer to nailing him—or the killer was escalating.

Which made him less predictable and twice as dangerous.

“Special Agent Drake?” A man approached him. “I’m Chief Morgan Wright.”

They shook hands. The chief, mid-thirties, wore black jeans, a denim jacket and a Mariners baseball cap. He was probably off duty when he got the call.

“It’s up that hill on the left.” The chief led him along a trail.

“Who found him?”

“Two teenagers.”

“What were they doing out here at night?” Garrett asked.

“They were part of a tour group.”

“People tour the island at night?”

“Yep, they roast hot dogs and marshmallows around a campfire, tell ghost stories, that sort of thing. Lana started it about a year ago. It’s very popular.”

“Lana?”

“My sister-in-law, Lana Burns. She runs boat tours to the island out of her snack shop, Stone Soup. She’s the one who called in the body.”

The body. Possibly the latest victim of the Red Hollow Killer, a name inspired by the type of rope he used to strangle his vics.

The minute Garrett got the call that a floater looked a lot like his missing person, he’d busted tail to get to the scene. He didn’t want it to be Washburn, and not just because it meant Red Hollow went off script. It would also mean the killer had been here and maybe still was.

In the same town as Caroline, Garrett’s former mother-in-law.

Garrett’s ex-wife and son had lost enough thanks to his job. He wouldn’t allow them to lose a loving mother and grandmother, as well.

“If it’s Rick Washburn, the killer’s victimology has changed,” Garrett explained. “Which means he’s escalating, making him unpredictable and potentially more dangerous.”

“Changed, how?”

“Up to now, the victims are kidnapped and a ransom note is sent to the family, giving them, and us, the illusion that the victim can be saved. But before the ransom drop takes place, he leads us to the body, which is posed with very specific items. An empty bourbon bottle, cigar and black leather belt. The victim has been strangled with red hollow braided rope. Lab results indicate he’s been drugged with an oxy cocktail. I’m assuming, since Washburn floated up on shore, you didn’t find a bourbon bottle, cigar or belt near or on the victim?”

“No, sir.”

“Were there signs he’d been strangled?”

“Not that I could tell.”

“We know he was the next victim, yet he wasn’t posed or strangled. Do you have any idea why Washburn was in Port Whisper?”

“He checked into the Blue Goose Motel alone, but was seen around town with a female, brunette, mid-forties.”

“Probably a mistress. He has a history of cheating on his wife. Why didn’t she report him missing? We got the ransom email two days ago.”

“A witness saw them fighting, and later that night another witness saw her convertible peel out of the parking lot. They came in separate cars.”

“You’ve gathered a lot of information in the last hour.”

“Small-town grapevine. Sometimes it comes in handy.”

As they approached the scene, Garrett noticed a young woman sitting on a rock, a wool blanket draped across her shoulders. Long, light brown hair floated down her back. Garrett thought she was trembling, but couldn’t be sure.

“Is that one of the teenagers who found the victim?” Garrett asked.

“No, it’s Lana. You want to talk to her?”

“I’d like to see the body first.”

Garrett strode to the body and the chief introduced him to his deputy.

“Deputy Finnegan, this is Special Agent Drake from the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit.”

They shook hands.

“Good to meet you,” Finnegan said.

“Likewise.” Garrett snapped on a pair of gloves and crouched beside the body. Resignation washed over him. “It’s Washburn.” Fully clothed in a dress shirt, khaki pants and windbreaker. “Did you find red braided rope anywhere in the vicinity of where you pulled him from the water?”

“No, sir.”

Garrett turned Washburn’s head slightly. No ligature marks. Washburn was the next victim, yet at first glance this looked like an accidental drowning.

“I’m assuming your forensics team processed the scene before you pulled him out?” Garrett asked.

“Not yet.”

Garrett glanced at Chief Wright for an explanation.

“We’re a small town,” he said. “A county forensics team is on the way.”

Garrett didn’t want inexperience to mess up this investigation, but he knew things would go more smoothly if he worked with local law enforcement instead of being at odds with them.

“I’d like to speak with the forensics team as soon as they arrive.” Garrett stood and snapped off his gloves. “Where are the teenagers who found the body?”

“They went back to town with the tour group,” a light voice said.

Garrett turned to its source: Lana Burns. She rolled her neck and looked up at him with round, tired eyes.

“Who authorized that?” he asked the chief.

“I sent them back,” Lana answered, standing. “The kids were completely freaked, so I figured the sooner they went home, the sooner they’d calm down. They’ll be more helpful if they’re calm, right?”

She stepped up to him, a little too close for his taste, and he noticed her eyes were a remarkable shade of golden-green; her skin was flawless.

“What’s your email address?” she asked, focusing on her smartphone.

He didn’t answer at first, trying to figure out how someone who saw a dead body—he assumed her first—could be so calm, so…lovely.

Man, he needed about a week of sleep.

She glanced up, expectant. “I’ll email you the contact information for everyone on the tour tonight.”

He handed her a business card, then pulled a small notebook from the breast pocket of his suit.

“How about you?” he said.

She reached for his notebook and he found himself handing it to her. “Here are all my numbers. Cell, landline and the snack shop.”

“Are you too freaked to answer some questions?”

She handed him back the notebook. “Nope. Go for it.”

“Is this a usual thing, bringing people out here late at night?”

“It was only seven.” She planted her hands on her hips in self-defense. “I would never bring people out here if I didn’t think it was safe.”

“I wasn’t inferring—”

“I mean, I’ve been hosting the night cruises for a year now and we’ve never had any problems. People love sitting around a campfire and singing songs, roasting marshmallows and telling stories. I guess it reminds them of childhood or something. Happier times. Well, that and it’s breathtaking out here, quiet and peaceful, usually peaceful, but not so peaceful when a couple of teenagers find a dead body and—” She stopped midsentence. “Sorry.”

“For what?”

“Rambling. I do that when I’m nervous.”

“Am I making you nervous?”

“Of course you are.”

Garrett glanced up from his notepad, puzzled, and waited for her to continue her rambling. He found it…endearing. Focus, Drake.

“You’re tall and intimidating and your tone is, well, accusatory,” she said.

“Sorry.” Now she had him apologizing. “Back to my questions, do you usually bring your group to this part of the island?”

“Why shouldn’t I?”

“Miss Burns, I’m not accusing you of any impropriety.” However, he sensed that, no matter how politely he phrased his questions, he’d already put her on the defensive. He’d try a different tact. He refocused on his notebook. “Do people sign up for the tour in advance?”

“Usually, yes, although tonight I had some guy try to muscle in at the last minute.”

“Can you give me a description?”

“About sixty, five-nine or -ten, on the rotund side, with thinning brown hair and thick sunglasses. I never trust a person who won’t look me in the eye.”

Garrett instinctively looked up. “You have good instincts.”

“Wow, thanks.”

He ripped his gaze from her striking eyes and jotted down the description. “What was his demeanor?”

“Bossy, rude, maybe a little desperate.”

“Desperate?” Garrett’s hand froze on the page.

“Yeah, he had that look like if he didn’t get over here his world was going to end.”

Could it have been Red Hollow? Did he fear he hadn’t securely anchored his victim and knew he’d float to the surface prematurely? If this was the case, Lana Burns had seen him, up close.

“What’s wrong?” she asked.

He glanced up and found her studying him with wide, golden-green eyes like she was reading his thoughts.

“What’s the schedule once you dock?” he asked, changing the subject.

“On day trips we spread out blankets and have a picnic, and for the night tours we roast wieners and marshmallows to make s’mores. I tell stories about the island and its history, the Nahali myth about an Indian girl who was saved from a freak storm by a fisherman and how they fell in love even though there was no way they could be together. Sometimes I’ll take the group up to Lover’s Point, usually not at night. The teenagers who found the body couldn’t resist, I guess.”

Of course not, they were young, romantic and naive.

As she rambled on, he put her in the naive category by the tone of her voice: hopeful and innocent. She had no idea of the danger she could have encountered tonight. He wasn’t sure how to tell her, or if he even should.

No, knowledge was ammunition.

“Miss Burns—”

“Lana.”

“Lana, I don’t want to alarm you, but I’m here because we’ve been tracking a serial killer.”

“I know, Morgan told me.”

Garrett glanced at Chief Wright and back to Lana.

“He’s my brother-in-law,” Lana explained.

“That’s great, but I’d rather the whole town not know about our case.”

“Uh, it’s probably too late. Small towns.” She shrugged.

Garrett took a deep breath. “At any rate, we have to consider the man you turned away tonight as a suspect.”

“You mean the serial killer?”

“Yes.”

“I doubt it.”

“Why’s that?”

“Aren’t serial killers supposed to be smart? He didn’t seem very smart, or very organized….”

Garrett sensed anxiety inspired her new round of rambling. She’d possibly been inches from a murderer. That realization would make anyone nervous.

Making direct eye contact, he touched her shoulder. “It’s okay. I’m not going to let anything happen to you.”

“Really,” she said, cynicism lacing her voice.

Not the response he expected. He removed his hand. “I’m sorry, I’ve offended you again?”

“No, it’s fine. I’ve had people make promises lately and, well, never mind. What else do you need from me?” She eyed his notebook.

“Tell me about tonight, when you found the body, if it’s not too upsetting.”

“We were going to head back because of a change in the weather, but were missing two teenagers, so Sketch and I went looking for them.”

“Sketch?”

“The teenager who helps me out. I figured the kids headed up to Lover’s Point, so we came up here and heard a scream and found the couple and the dead body. That’s pretty much it.”

“You don’t seem that upset by the sight of a dead body.”

“It’s not my first.”

“Excuse me?”

“My dad. I was twelve.”

“Oh, sorry.”

Man, he kept stepping into trouble with this woman.

“But it’s weird, ya know, I mean, first the hole, then a dead body,” Lana said.

“What hole?”

“Up by Quinault Rock. Some animal or person digs a five-foot hole in the middle of an uninhabited island. What’s that about?”

Garrett glanced in the direction of the rock. “Interesting.”

“Not so interesting when you’re stuck down there for hours.”

He snapped his attention to her.

“Yes, I fell into a hole. Literally. No jokes, please.”

“I don’t joke.”

“Doesn’t surprise me.” She slapped her hand to her mouth. “I can’t believe I just said that. Sorry, I’ve been up since five and haven’t eaten anything substantial since, I don’t know, noon?”

“Why don’t you go on back to town? I’ll find you if I have more questions.”

“Great. Here’s my card.” She dug a colorful card out of her jeans pocket and passed it to him.

“Hey, Morgan,” she called. “Can I catch a ride back?”

Garrett motioned to the chief. “I’d like you to have one of your deputies escort Miss Burns back to town. I’m concerned about her safety.”

“Why?”

“She may have seen the killer.”

“Lana, you didn’t tell me—”

“It was some guy I turned away earlier tonight. It’s probably nothing.”

“Scott,” Chief Wright motioned his deputy over.

“No, Morgan, don’t,” Lana said. “I’ll be safe with Scooner.”

“I’d rather not involve civilians,” Garrett said.

“He’s a former SEAL and Town Safety captain. She’ll be safe with him.”

Garrett acquiesced. “Please ask him to escort her all the way home,” Garrett suggested.

“Will do,” the chief said. “Forensics just docked.”

Garrett nodded at Lana. “Thank you, Miss Burns.”

Lana pulled the blanket tighter around her shoulders. “Good night, Agent Drake.”

With an arm around her shoulder, Chief Wright walked her past the forensics team, who made their way up the hill to the crime scene. Garrett fought the urge to call out one last warning, to ask if she had pepper spray or suggest she stay with a family member tonight.

Not good. He had to stop letting his protective instincts distract him and focus on finding Red Hollow. He could still be here, in Port Whisper, a threat to innocents like Lana.

A threat to his son’s grandmother.

The pain of losing his family rushed to the surface. Being back in Port Whisper where he’d asked for Olivia’s hand in marriage, where they’d planned a future they’d never have, was messing with him. Big-time.

It was distracting his focus from tracking a killer and protecting a fragile innocent, Lana Burns. The best thing he could do for her and everyone in town was leave the past behind and focus on the case.

Yet he needed to stop by his former mother-in-law’s place. He owed Caroline more respect than to have her find out about his presence in town through the gossip mill.

The experience wouldn’t be a pleasant one. He was sure she hadn’t forgiven him, and he couldn’t blame her. His ambition, his workaholic nature inherited from his father, put his wife and, at the time, three-year-old son in danger fourteen years ago.

“Agent Drake?”

Garrett snapped his attention to Deputy Finnegan.

“This is our forensic investigator, Oliver Marsh,” he introduced. They shook hands.

With a slow, deep breath, Garrett shoved his personal connections to this town away, locking the door. Analyzing his mistakes and regrets would only distract him from his most critical goal: finding the elusive killer before he struck again.

* * *

An hour later the forensic investigator offered his preliminary opinion: time of death was between 3:00 and 7:00 p.m.; there was dirt and blood under Washburn’s fingernails as if he had tried to claw his way out of something; and he’d most likely drowned. He wasn’t strangled like the rest of the victims.

That change in pattern disturbed Garrett the most. His team relied on the profile, designed to help them determine what the killer might do next, to whom and where.

They docked at Port Whisper and the forensic techs took the body to the lab where they’d continue their analysis. The chief took Garrett to meet with the teenagers who found the body, but they couldn’t offer anything helpful. They were still traumatized by the image of the dead man’s eyes staring up at them.

It was quarter past eleven. Garrett was tired, hungry and frustrated.

“I don’t suppose anything’s open this time of night?” he asked as the chief drove Garrett back to his car.

“Actually, the Turnstyle is open until midnight. Up Main Street about four blocks.”

“Thanks.”

The chief pulled over. “I’m assuming you’ll come by the office in the morning?”

“Yes.”

“Do you have a place to sleep tonight?”

“I’ll find something.”

“You could always try Caroline Ross’s place, the Port Whisper Inn. It’s quiet and homey.”

And loaded with land mines.

“Thanks.”

“See you tomorrow.” The chief shook Garrett’s hand.

Garrett sensed the man was honorable and had decent instincts for a small-town cop. “Good night.”

Walking through town to the restaurant, Garrett called team member Georgia Hunt and told her to send a forensic artist to Port Whisper, but there was no reason the entire team should join him just yet. They should stay in Tacoma and continue to work leads from the previous murder.

Garrett, on the other hand, wasn’t going anywhere until he felt confident his former mother-in-law wasn’t in danger.

He could swing by the inn now, but it was late and he didn’t want to alarm her. Like a morning visit would be any less alarming? She probably never expected to see or hear from him again, maybe even hoped…

But he knew in his heart that sending Olivia and Steven into protective custody had been the only way to protect them from the serial killer that had made Garrett a target.

A year later, Olivia had filed for divorce. Truth was, their marriage started to crumble about the same time his career took off, shortly after Steven was born. Garrett threw himself into work to provide for his family, and Olivia accused him of being a workaholic, absent, aloof.

Like his old man.

Garrett hadn’t planned to become a workaholic like his father, but the job quickly consumed him. They’d solve a case, and another would pop onto the radar. They’d save a victim, but lose three more.

His work ethic intensified once the divorce was final and Garrett had no one to think about but himself.

That wasn’t true. He thought about Steven. Every single day of his life.

Three years after he’d put his wife and son into the program, the killer who’d targeted Garrett was shot eluding police. The threat gone, Garrett could safely see his son, who’d just turned six. Yet Olivia said if Garrett truly loved Steven, he’d let her new husband raise him as his own. Garrett couldn’t walk away that easily.

Heart pounding, he’d swung by Steven’s baseball game and stood by the fence, watching as his son scored the winning run. The little guy was swarmed by teammates and when he broke free he rushed to his stepdad, Kurt, and slapped him a high five.

At that moment Garrett knew it was selfish to insinuate himself back into Steven’s life. Steven had a new dad, one who’d always be there.

Garrett’s son was better off without him, without a workaholic father unable to give him the time, guidance and love he so desperately needed. Garrett retreated, as Olivia had requested.

It was the right thing to do. His former mother-in-law had to respect him for putting Steven’s needs first, right?

“This town,” he muttered, shutting off the flow of memories, questionable decisions and regrets. He couldn’t let his emotions distract him from finding a serial killer.

The glow of florescent lights spilled onto the street from the Turnstyle Restaurant up ahead—a lot of activity for a small town this late at night. Then again, if they’d heard about the murder, they probably needed to get together and process. More like gossip. Garrett knew how small towns worked.

He pushed open the door to the restaurant and hesitated, fearing someone would figure out he was the federal agent and ask him questions. A few people glanced up.

A female server with a name tag that read Anna approached him. “Table for one?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“Ma’am? So formal.” She smiled and he tried to offer one in return but couldn’t. She was not quite thirty with long, auburn hair tied back.

“Do you have a booth in the back?” he asked.

“Sure.”

He followed her to the rear of the restaurant, slid into a booth, and she handed him a menu.

“Are you serving breakfast this time of night?” he asked.

“You bet. Boomer’s blueberry pancakes are amazing.”

“I’ll keep that in mind.”

“Start you off with something to drink?”

“Coffee would be great.”

“Regular or decaf?”

“Regular, please.”

She breezed off and he glanced at the menu, trying to look like a tourist in town for some R & R, something he’d rarely experienced in his adult life. Dressed in his crisp navy suit, starched white shirt and maroon tie, he looked nothing like a man on vacation.

From this vantage point he could see everything: a man in workman’s clothes seated at the counter; Scooner Locke and two middle-aged men deep in conversation; a table of four raucous teenagers; and a young couple in the booth next to Garrett, blindly eating while an infant slept in a baby carrier next to them.

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