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Wild Rain




  Wild Rain is a work of fiction. Names, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  A Loveswept eBook Edition

  Copyright © 1995 by Donna Kauffman

  Excerpt from Escape Diaries by Juliet Rosetti copyright © 2012 by Patricia Kilday.

  Excerpt from The Devil’s Thief by Samantha Kane copyright © 2012 by Nancy Kattenfeld.

  Excerpt from The Magic by Juliana Garnett copyright © 1996 by Juliana Garnett.

  All Rights Reserved.

  Published in the United States by Loveswept, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

  LOVESWEPT is a registered trademark of Random House, Inc.

  Wild Rain was originally published in paperback by Loveswept, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc. in 1995.

  eISBN: 978-0-345-53790-4

  www.ReadLoveSwept.com

  v3.1

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  The Editor’s Corner

  Excerpt from Juliet Rosetti’s Escape Diaries

  Excerpt from Samantha Kane’s The Devil’s Thief

  Excerpt from Juliana Garnett’s The Magic

  ONE

  The wind screamed in his ears as a burning pain sliced across his thigh. But then, alligators weren’t known for their light touch.

  “Bloody son of a bitch!”

  The moment he’d caught sight of the dark shape hurtling at him in his peripheral vision, Reese Braedon had leapt instinctively into a diving roll. The fierce wind slowed him just enough for the alligator to snag his jeans … and his flesh. He came swiftly to his feet, ignoring the heat shooting up his thigh, not taking even a second to examine the extent of his wound. Eyes trained on his attacker, he dropped into a crouch and raised the handgun he’d palmed from his ankle strap while rolling. Needing both hands to steady the weapon in the high wind, his aim nonetheless remained dead center. Right down the throat of the alligator. A very big, very agitated, hissing alligator.

  It looked about nine feet long, but Reese was having a hard time getting past its mouth. It was wide open and lined with rows of vicious-looking teeth.

  “What’s your problem, old bugger?” he asked under his breath. He moved a slow step back. The alligator remained where it was. He took another small step. No movement. But that open mouth and the speed with which the reptile had overtaken him earlier made him more than a little wary.

  “Just a simple job,” he muttered. “Grab the tart and get her off the island.” He took another step. “No one told me she kept an overgrown suitcase with fangs as a watchdog.”

  When he was a good twenty feet away, he carefully began to straighten. His aim did not waver. “There’s a good battler,” he cajoled, knowing the alligator couldn’t possibly hear him, though he’d let the damn thing eat him alive before admitting the soothing tone was for his own benefit.

  When he’d driven over the rickety bridge from Sanibel Island to Caracoles Key, his only concern had been whether Jillian Bonner was going to fall down in gratitude and thank him for saving her from certain death, or whether he was going to have to cart her bodily off the tiny spit of land as her mother seemed to believe would probably be the case.

  He didn’t much care how he carried out his job. Either way he’d get paid and Mrs. Ravensworth would sleep easy knowing her only child hadn’t been swept into the Gulf of Mexico by Hurricane Ivan.

  Predictions were flying fast and furious, but no one seemed to question that the storm touted as Ivan the Terrible would live up to its advance billing.

  No one except Jillian Bonner. And her damn pet.

  The alligator changed things. Now Reese was mad. And when he lost his temper, someone always paid.

  He straightened a bit further. “You don’t want me, you old codger,” he called out, keeping his tone even and grinding his teeth together in what he hoped passed for a smile. “Even the meanest crocs in Australia didn’t eat me when they had the chance.”

  He straightened his legs an inch and took another step back. The alligator maintained its aggressive stance.

  Suddenly, out of nowhere, a heavy weight blindsided him, driving into the side of his knees. He hit the ground hard on his chest, but quickly regained his senses. His first thought was that another gator had nailed him from behind, but those were definitely human hands gripping his thighs. A quick glance over his right shoulder showed that the alligator had backed away, as if unsure what to make of this new intruder.

  Dismissing that threat for the one literally on his back, Reese expertly flipped up and over, pinning his assailant to the ground between his thighs and leveling his gun on him in one swift move.

  Only his attacker wasn’t a him.

  “What the bloody hell do you think you’re doing?” Even though his captive was less than a foot away, he yelled his question at the top of his lungs. Partly to be heard over the howling wind, and partly in complete frustration.

  He’d been taken down by a woman! And judging from the fact that he’d barely had to spread his legs to straddle her, not much of one either. He assessed what he could see of her with a swift glance. Short dark hair, smallish dirt-smeared features, bony shoulders, no boobs. Hell, she was more boy than woman.

  She grimaced, then surprised him by tugging her hands out from where he’d pinned them to her sides with his knees. She immediately grabbed his thighs and began shoving. He didn’t budge.

  It belatedly occurred to him that being considerably bigger than she was, he was crushing her. He still didn’t move, but his temper curbed. Slightly.

  Until her frantic grasping caught him directly on his fresh wound. The hot slash of pain shot up his leg and went straight to his brain. He tossed the gun to the ground, grabbed her hands and pinned them above her head, bringing his own face within an inch of hers. He gave her his fiercest scowl.

  “Jillian Bonner?”

  She stopped her ineffective attempts at escape and blinked up at him. He was distracted for a split second by her eyes. If asked, he couldn’t have said why. They were a nondescript gray. The moment passed as she treated him to a scowl of her own. It was a damn good one too.

  For a sheila.

  “Yes, I am. Now could you get off me?”

  The mouse that roared, Reese thought, fighting the sudden odd urge to smile.

  “Please?” The request came through gritted teeth.

  Reese continued to stare down at her. Stubborn and tenacious were two of her more obvious traits. Yet it was something else that held his complete attention. There, in the depths of her eyes, was a trace of something … Not entirely hard and cold, nor soft and vulnerable. Just the enduring essence of battles fought. Some won. Too many lost. It wasn’t blatant or world-weary. But it was there. He knew so, because it was the same thing he saw when he made the mistake of staring too deeply into a mirror.

  Like his, hers were the eyes of a survivor.

  Maybe they weren’t so nondescript after all.

  Enough, he decided abruptly. He changed his grip so he could hold her slender wrists in one hand, using the other to scoop up his gun. Tucking it in the waistband of his jeans, Reese lifted his body off her and stood, pulling her to her feet as he went. He paused to run a quick visual check for the alligator, the descending gloom of the stor
m making it difficult.

  “Did you hurt Cleo?” she yelled over the wind.

  He jerked his gaze around to her. “What?”

  “My alligator. Is she hurt?”

  “Who the hell—? Your alligator?”

  She didn’t wait around for him to ask questions. In the next instant, with a hard yank, Jillian sprang free and took off racing across the yard.

  “The damn thing almost had my leg for lunch and you’re worried about how it’s doing?” he roared after her. His words were swallowed by the wind. She didn’t slow a step in her dash to the rear area of the compound.

  Swearing under his breath, he took off after her, ignoring the daggers in his thigh as he closed the distance between them. She slowed as she neared a pond. Across the small expanse of water, Reese could make out the hulking shape of the alligator as it hovered near a huge pile of what looked to be earth, leaves, and twigs.

  Reese stopped about two feet away. And palmed his gun.

  “Jillian!”

  She spun around, her expression changing from concern to anger when she spied him. Or rather when she spied his gun.

  “Put that thing away! You’ll scare her.”

  “I’ll—What? Scare her?” Reese knew he was sputtering. He never sputtered. “She’s a nine-foot alligator with a bad attitude,” he yelled back. “This barely makes things even. No way.”

  “Did you hurt her?” she demanded again.

  “No!” His patience unraveled to its last thread. He could barely believe what he was hearing. She hadn’t once asked if he’d been hurt. Not that he intended to tell her. It was obvious she cared more for the damn mutant reptile than she did about a human being. Namely him.

  “Let’s get the hell out of here before she comes back.”

  “You sure you didn’t shoot her?” She turned her back to him without waiting for his reply. Using her hands to keep her bangs from whipping into her eyes, she squinted as she looked across the pond.

  “We haven’t got time to waste,” Reese shouted.

  “Don’t let me stop you.”

  The last thread snapped, and Reese closed the short space between them and grabbed her arm. “Let’s go.” Without another word, he turned and started toward the house, not bothering to alter his long-legged gait, which, even wounded, kept her trotting beside him to keep up.

  Now that he was no longer under attack—from woman or beast—he turned his thoughts back to his original plan. Getting Jillian Bonner off this island and to safety before the hurricane hit. He didn’t spare a thought as to whether she’d go along with that plan. He’d promised Regina Ravensworth he’d get her daughter away from danger. And he kept his promises. All he had to do was get a few of her things packed and they were out of there.

  He’d gone about five yards when she abruptly dug in her heels and yanked hard at the hand gripping her wrists. He stumbled, sending a fresh rush of pain up his leg, but didn’t let his hold on her wrists slacken enough for her to break free. Biting back several oaths, he spun around to face her but she cut him off before he’d uttered his first word.

  “Excuse me,” she yelled, “but just who in the hell do you think you are?”

  “The only idiot stupid enough to risk his life to save your scrawny butt,” he yelled back, wondering just how he’d lost control of this supposedly simple operation.

  “Well, nobody asked you to! Let me go!”

  Any other time he’d have admired her grit. Now it merely frustrated the daylights out of him. Didn’t she know that one hundred and fifty miles per hour of rage and fury were about to come down on her?

  “When we’re in the house,” he shouted back, and turned toward the front door.

  She dug in her heels again, making him drag her awkwardly for several feet. “You’re not going into my house. This is private property!” When he didn’t slow down, she tugged again and yelled even louder. “I’m not going anywhere with you. I demand that you leave immediately!”

  That snapped it. He whirled on her so fast, she smacked against his chest. He bent low and shoved his face right into hers so there would be no doubt she would hear what he was about to say.

  “I intend to. Just as soon as you grab whatever you plan on saving.” She opened her mouth to speak, but he talked right over her. “Don’t push me or I’ll throw you over my shoulder and the hell with your precious mementos.”

  “Aren’t you taking this evacuation thing a bit far?” Her glare proved she wasn’t the least bit intimidated by his threat. “I told the guys who came by yesterday that I wasn’t leaving. Last time I checked, it was my choice.”

  “Yeah, well, you hadn’t checked with me. Now let’s move.” Reese didn’t wait for a response. He swung around and pulled her—dragged her really—toward the porch. It wasn’t until he’d gone halfway up the steps of the Victorian-style home that he realized the front door had been shut off with galvanized steel sheets. As he backtracked to the gravel pathway, he noticed the same measures had been taken with the upper-story windows.

  Well, at least she’d had enough sense to take some decent precautions. Not that it was going to help. Hurricane Ivan was likely to turn her house into a pile of kindling—with or without steel window covers. He headed around the side of the house, figuring she must have come out that way.

  “I really must insist,” she tried again.

  Reese ignored her as he spied the small screened-in sun porch. He went straight through, not stopping until they were standing in her kitchen. He turned to face her. With the door shut, the howling wind was substantially muted, and the sudden lack of noise made his ears ring. He ignored that too. He’d blanked out far worse in his life.

  Still holding her wrists, he said, “You have five minutes. Important papers, family stuff, some clothes. I’ll turn off your utilities. Where is the fuse box?”

  She stood there, gaping at him.

  He fought the urge to shake her. From her mother’s description, he’d expected some mousy professor type. He realized he hadn’t believed Mrs. Ravensworth, a high society matron with the sort of timeless beauty that had men decades younger drooling.

  But Jillian was all that her mother described and worse. The only unexpected element being her fierce reaction to him. Quiet, very reserved, a loner, were the adjectives Regina had used. She’d also said her daughter could be very stubborn about certain things. Namely, her home and the animals in her care.

  After all the yelling and glaring, he wasn’t certain he agreed with the first part, but he’d been given ample proof of the latter.

  Not that it made any difference. Her mother had been right about the most important thing. Her size. Negligible. And last he checked he was still a steady one ninety-five.

  No contest.

  “I’m not—”

  “Four minutes, thirty seconds.”

  “Leaving,” she finished stubbornly. She pulled her wrists free and massaged them, glowering at him with those plain gray eyes.

  He felt a strange twinge, like he should apologize or something. He ignored it. It wasn’t his fault she was making it difficult on herself.

  He looked down at her. She was a good six or seven inches shorter than he, hardly filling out the jeans and T-shirt she wore. She suddenly seemed too small and fragile to have withstood hardship or suffered adversity. And with the wealth her mother had, it would seem there was no reason she should have. But Reese knew money and suffering weren’t mutually exclusive. You could have an abundance of one and still not find a way to escape the other.

  Under his brief scrutiny her shoulders stiffened and her jaw tightened another notch.

  After all the shouting, her quiet voice took him off guard. “Listen, I’m sorry you came all this way, that you risked … anything. But as I told the gentlemen who came by yesterday, I’m not leaving. I can’t.” The last was added on a somewhat defensive note, her sudden blink telling him she hadn’t planned on saying it out loud.

  “Won’t,” he countered. “No
t the same thing.”

  “It doesn’t matter. The result is the same. I’d suggest you find whatever vehicle you drove here in and leave quickly. I have to finish securing the house.”

  He saw her gaze dart nervously over his shoulder to the door and spacious yard beyond. The area surrounding her small house was more of a compound. Reese knew she rehabilitated marine and local wildlife in conjunction with several refuges in the area. But other than the alligator, he hadn’t seen any signs of other animals. The assorted pens and cages near the rear building appeared empty.

  So what was keeping her here? He’d pegged her a survivor. Survivors didn’t put their lives on the line without a damn good reason. And as far as he could tell, there wasn’t one in sight. He gave a mental shrug. He didn’t care, because it didn’t matter. She was leaving now. And despite how angry it made her, he doubted she’d hold that grudge when she realized he’d saved her life.

  And yet something about her compelled him to try to understand. Not bothering to examine the urge, he simply asked her, “Why?”

  “Because if I want a scarecrow’s chance in hell of living through this, I’m going to need to do a bit more work.”

  “I meant, why aren’t you going? All the securing in the world won’t keep this place from going up like Dorothy’s house on its way to Oz. Only I doubt you’ll be so lucky.”

  “Why do you care?” She held up her hand. “Never mind, stupid question. You obviously take your job as part of the evacuation effort very seriously. I respect what you’re trying to do here.” She gestured around her, but Reese knew she meant the entire evacuation zone that encompassed the lower half of Florida’s gulf coastline. “But I think your time would be more wisely spent helping those people who want to be rescued.”

  Her voice had taken on a gentle, soothing quality. He imagined wounded animals responded very well to it. Lucky for him he was a man and immune to such precarious things as a woman’s soft voice.

  “Time’s up.” He took her arm, though a bit more gently this time, grabbing a box of trash bags off her kitchen table as he moved toward the office he could see through the open door behind her. Once inside, he let her go, blocking the door with his body, then pulled a couple of bags free. “Here. Just the most important things. I’ll be back in five minutes.”