Almost Perfect (22 page)

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Authors: Patricia Rice

BOOK: Almost Perfect
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She couldn't let that pervert have Kismet.

Oh, God, what could she do? Matty came first. Matty was her number one priority. The counselor had said she had to list priorities, and Matty was at the top of every single list. He had to have a sane mother, one with a steady job. She wanted him home with her, but Linda's lies could bring the feds to her door, and she might never see Matty again.

If she did nothing, Linda and her bully would go away. If she did nothing, Kismet could be destroyed.

The wind screamed overhead as she frantically grabbed her purse and car keys and headed out. If she was lucky, the school wouldn't release the kids to a stranger like Lonnie. Would they release them to her? What would she do with them after she picked them up?

The roar of Jared's Jeep rocking up the beach drive followed almost immediately on the hiccups of Linda's car bumping in the other direction, to the main road. Relief so overwhelming Cleo almost cried swept through her. Jared. Jared would help. The teachers liked him. They'd listen. Maybe he could call the police, and she wouldn't have to get involved.

In near hysteria, she ran outside to flag down his car. There had to be something they could do to save Kismet.

Jared threw the gear into park and switched off the ignition, leaping out before the engine stopped running. “Why aren't you out of here?”

She nearly threw herself into his arms but stopped just in time. “The kids!” she shouted, wanting to shake him into understanding. “Linda was just here. We've got to get the kids.” The first splatters of rain hit her arms, but Cleo was beyond worrying about the storm as she jerked open his car door and pointed him into it. “She's sent her boyfriend after them. She's shooting up, Jared! She's beyond reason. You've got to go in and save those kids.”

Jared cursed vividly. “Come on, we need to get to the mainland before the storm hits anyway.” He grabbed her arm and tried to shove her into the Jeep.

Cleo balked as the wheels in her mind finally began to click. “What if he already has them? What if he brings the kids back here? They'll try to come here. I can't leave them out in the storm. I can't go with you.”

“Are you out of your freaking mind? There's a hurricane coming! If they're picking the kids up, they aren't coming back here. Come on.”

She dug her heels in. “You're not hearing me. Linda's mainlining. That creep probably put her on the hard stuff. They're not listening to weather reports. They're hearing the shit running through their veins. Stop them, if you can, but I'm staying here in case you can't.”

She jerked free of his arm and headed back to the house. “I'll try calling the school. Hurry!”

“The line is down. I already tried calling you.” Jared ran after her, trying to tug her toward the car. “You can't stay here in a hurricane! This damned island will catch the brunt of it.”

She didn't care. She could ride out a storm. The house
had stood here for decades of hurricanes; it could stand one more. She was terrified of Linda and her threats, but she was more terrified for the kids. “I'll explain it to you in dirty details sometime, McCloud. Just not now. Go see if you can find those kids. I'm staying right here.”

Jared glanced at his watch, looked up at the boiling clouds and dancing palms, then back at Cleo, shivering with her arms wrapped around herself. “I'll be back,” he warned. “I'll take the kids to shelter and be back for you.”

She watched as he roared off, and wished she knew how to pray.

Curling black waves capped by ominous white froth smashed against the causeway as Jared floored the Jeep down the two-lane. Apparently the few tourists in the condos farther out on the island had already evacuated, and the hardy souls who lived here year-round planned on digging in for the duration. There was hardly a car in sight.

In town, traffic lined the streets bumper-to-bumper, heading for the interstate and safety. He switched on the radio for the latest report. There might still be a chance the storm would pass them by. He hadn't lived in Miami more than a few years, but he'd already learned the high fallibility of hurricane forecasting.

Zigzagging through cross streets where he could, he poured his energy into reaching the school. Surely they had dismissed classes. If the kids had sense to hide when Billy-Bob Pervert showed up, he might find them.

The sick feeling in the pit of his stomach said he should have done something about this problem sooner. He should never have listened to Cleo. That's what he got for thinking with the parts below his belt. The kids would be in some safe home by now.

Not according to Cleo. Shit.

He preferred delegating the responsibility to the state. Cleo preferred accepting it as her own. He didn't know who was right.

Orderly chaos surrounded the school. The last of the big yellow buses bounced from the drive as Jared slowed to a crawl in the line of traffic created by parents preferring to pick up their little darlings in person. He listened to the radio report of school closings and hurricane paths while tapping his hand on the steering wheel and scanning the line of cars. What would Billy-Bob be driving?

Maybe the kids were on the bus. He couldn't see them in the milling mob in the yard. They were sensible kids, but even kids would be torn between going home to their mother during a crisis or hiding somewhere safe onshore.

Not that hurricane winds were ever safe. They really needed to go inland with the rest of the traffic. The weather reports still weren't exact enough to give him a time schedule for picking up the kids, racing back to Cleo, and finding safety. He had his computer and clothes in the back, ready for anything, but he doubted if the kids had anything with them except schoolbooks. Should he take them to a shelter like that? How much stuff did
they keep with Cleo? If the island flooded, it could be days before they returned home.

Restlessly, he scanned the crowd of teenagers, the line of trucks and cars, and the street ahead. Why had he thought life would be simpler out here in the middle of nowhere? He was supposed to be working on that screenplay, not hunting down abused children and running from hurricanes. He might as well have stayed in Miami. At least there, he didn't have to worry about anything more critical than where to eat and with whom.

He spotted a frizzy brownish-blond mop of curls behind a hedge at the same time as he noticed a burly man in a John Deere cap arguing with someone Jared assumed to be a teacher. The mop of curls dropped below the hedge as the cap turned in that direction, and he knew instantly what was happening.

Jerking the Jeep out of the line of cars and parking it in the grass, he sauntered casually toward the hedge. If he could act as cover, the kids could jump into the Jeep before Pervert could stop them. It might be a little tricky if Billy-Bob saw them and followed, but he'd kicked the guy in the balls once, he could do it again. Maybe.

Fistfighting in front of the school—gee, that brought back old memories.

“Jared!” a familiar voice called from somewhere past the Pervert's cap. “You're just the one we need. Have you seen Gene and Kismet? They've disappeared.”

Liz. Jared grimaced as Billy-Bob and the teacher turned in his direction. Liz was the queen of bad timing. He was afraid to look toward the kids and reveal their hiding place. What the hell did he do now? With everyone looking in this direction, the kids wouldn't dare run for the Jeep behind him.

“Haven't seen 'em,” he called back. “Cleo was worried, so I came to see that they got home safely.”

“You keep your hands off them kids!” the capped bully shouted, fisting his fingers as he turned toward Jared and away from the teacher. “I'm their father, and you ain't got no right to do nothin' with them.”

“Yeah, right.” Jared rocked back on his heels and grinned, praying the kids could find some way of backtracking to the car. “And my old man is Ray Charles.” He nodded at the worried teacher, then waited for Liz to reach them. “This jerk is an impostor. The kids are terrified of him. That's why you can't find them.”

“He has a note from their mother,” she said worriedly. “He's authorized to pick them up and you're not.”

Shit and other more explicit epithets. How did he get around that one? Tell her their mother was a crackhead? That would go over swell. Well, he'd learned casual and unconcerned at his mother's knee. Stick with what he did best.

Stall. He shrugged and gave the creep the old onceover. “Well, you do what you think's best, but he's already lied to you. Anyone would have to be blind to believe he's their father. Their mother is the blond one in the family, if you haven't noticed. You might want to ask why he would want to lie about something like that.”

“Look, you shit-lickin' asshole …” Pervert took a step toward Jared. “Butt out. Them's my kids and none of yours. Want that nose of yours broke again?”

“Didn't break it last time, Perv. How are the family jewels doing today? Blue?”

Billy-Bob swung. His kind always did. Jared dodged neatly, but the teachers screamed anyway. From the direction of their gazes, though, they weren't concerned with his welfare but had seen the kids. Multiple exclamation points and asterisks, as the comics always said. He jerked around in time to see Kismet running for his Jeep.

“Guess we know who she's with, old boy. Good hitting at you.” Avoiding another swinging fist, Jared dodged the crowd on the sidewalk while keeping an eye open for Gene, but Liz screamed, and he couldn't stay focused. He spun around again.

He almost didn't see that one coming. He ducked, and Billy-Bob swung off balance trying to connect. Jared really wanted to plow his fist into the soft belly now at eye level, but maybe he had grown up a year or two. Fighting in front of the kids didn't seem like a wise choice.

Out of the corner of his eye he saw a policeman hurrying in their direction. Double swell. Cleo would really light into him if he involved the law in this. She'd already read him that lecture. He stepped back out of the arc of the pervert's fighting arm, tried to catch a glimpse of Kismet, but the teachers and the policeman all flocked in at once.

“Them's my kids!” Pervert shouted, as if repetition would make it so. “Kismet, you get your hind end back in the truck where it belongs,” he bellowed over every-one's heads.

“Can you have someone hauled in on assault and battery if they don't connect?” Jared asked thoughtfully as the policeman pulled out a notebook and looked confused.

Both teachers spoke at once, then diverted their topics as Gene reluctantly appeared from behind the hedge. The policeman now looked grim.

“Maybe I'd best haul all of you downtown until we get this straightened out,” he decided, with the air of a man prepared to pass on all responsibility to a higher authority.

“I ain't goin' downtown.” Gene stood belligerently at a distance from all of them.

Jared could see stalemate from a mile away. Catching the kid's eye, he nodded at Kismet, who stood uncertainly beside his Jeep. “I'm going back to Cleo's. I'll be right behind you, all the way, okay?”

Gene shot the policeman a scowl, glanced halfheartedly at his mother's latest boyfriend, and nodded once. “I hear you. Cleo staying if there's a hurricane?”

“Looks like it.” Jared had no idea what she'd planned, but if those kids were out there, he knew she would be there for them. He really had rocks in his head for becoming involved with another do-gooder. His mother made him crazy enough. “And you and Kismet know you can come to me. Just be careful.”

Billy-Bob was too dense or too stoned to comprehend their cryptic conversation. He merely reached out to collar Gene and haul him toward a battered pickup parked haphazardly half on the sidewalk. His curt gesture at Kismet indicated he thought he had the upper hand.

Both teachers watched worriedly as Kismet trailed after her brother.

“I think we better call Social Services,” Liz murmured. “That man's not their father. Should we have detained them? He's endangering their lives taking them out there in this.”

The policeman shrugged. “If the mother sent a note, you ain't got the right to stop him. It's a domestic problem. If you want to report abuse, then I can call in the department.”

No one could report abuse but Jared, and he'd sworn to leave them alone. He lifted his hands helplessly. “I'm out of here, folks. I'm following them home. You do what you have to do.”

He cursed Cleo, himself, and the heavens above all the way through town as he tracked the ramshackle truck
through the intense traffic going in the opposite direction. He didn't want to be on an island in a hurricane. He didn't want to feel responsible for two kids he hadn't known existed a few weeks ago. Most of all, he didn't want to feel compelled to see Cleo again, to ask her what they should do, as if they were a couple who decided things together. He'd quit letting other people guide his life long, long ago. But he desperately needed Cleo's clear-eyed outlook right now. Those kids were headed for trouble.

As they reached the island, the truck shot ahead in the direction of the shack farther inland. Jared slowed and turned down the lane toward Cleo's.

Cleo hadn't bothered turning on her early warning system. No witch flashed across his windshield. No strobe light shot through the growing gloom of heavy clouds and spattering rain. With any other woman, he'd figure she'd had the sense to pack her valuables and be halfway across the state by now. Not Cleo.

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