Her Marine Bodyguard (2 page)

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Authors: Heather Long

Tags: #Always A Marine

BOOK: Her Marine Bodyguard
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“You’re very welcome, just wait and see, you’re going to be a huge hit. I bet you’ll be swimming in orders by tomorrow.”

Laughing at his optimism, she inserted the room key and waited for the lock to flash from red to green before she pushed the door open. One moment she leaned her weight on the door, half-turned to bid Liam a good night, and the next, she fell as the door yanked wide open. Stars burst when her head collided with the wall by the door. A foot caught her in the shoulder, and she bit off a scream at the fresh bruise of pain.

Liam shouted, and she struggled to sit up, wincing as the door slammed into her shoulder. Across the hall, he grappled with a man and then crashed into the wall. Masculine grunts filled the air, along with the sound of fists striking a body. Fumbling with her purse, she got out the mace, but too late—the man in black thrust away from Liam and raced down the hall.

“Shannon?” Climbing to his feet, Liam glanced in the direction the assailant fled and then hurried over to her. Blood trickled from the corner of his mouth, and he braced the door to get it off of her. “Hey? You okay?”

Voices came from the other end of the hall. “Are you all right?”

“I called security.”

Raising a hand to her head, Shannon found a tender spot. She winced and let Liam pull her to her feet. Blood spotted her fingertips. More guests filled the hallway. Apparently, the commotion had garnered some attention.

The expression on Liam’s face became taut, and his mouth compressed. He looked past her, and she turned to find the whole room in shambles. Drawers from the dresser were open and emptied, her clothes scattered everywhere. Her art case tipped on its side on the bed and her sketchbooks lay haphazardly.

Her pulse jackhammering, she stepped toward the destruction. He wrapped an arm around her shoulders and halted her.

“Wait,” he said and rounded toward a fresh wave of voices. “Security is coming, let’s let them go in first.”

But Shannon pulled away, stepping farther into the room despite the flood of panic. Where was it? Where was her—

And then she saw the gleam of silver. Her laptop sat on the floor. It had fallen off the bed. She didn’t use it for much, but she kept all her records on it.

Moments later, security entered and had questions, too.

 

It had already been late when she and Liam left the gallery opening and he’d driven her back to the hotel. Later still after the Boston police took her statement and a paramedic attended the bump on her head. Despite both the paramedic’s recommendation and Liam’s advice, she decided against going to the hospital. The police needed her to inventory the room and determine if anything had gone missing.

Nothing was.

The hotel offered her a different room on a higher floor, with more amenities. Liam wanted her to come back to his townhouse. She elected to move hotels entirely, taking one closer to the airport since she was scheduled to fly back to Dallas the next day. To play it safe, Liam suggested registering under an alias, and she was too tired to disagree.

“I don’t think that’s a good idea.” Liam passed his credit card to the bartender after he brought her a glass of white wine. He had a beer, a split lip, and what promised to be a black eye.

“It’s one glass, and it will settle my nerves.” She didn’t mention her headache or the gut-wrenching churning going on in her stomach.

“Let me buy you something to eat to go with it.” He didn’t wait for her response before he gestured to the bartender. “Sandwiches—Reubens and fries.”

Shannon took a sip of the wine and concentrated on keeping her hands steady. Anxiety attacks were not new to her. “I’m not sure that I’m hungry, Liam. And your eye looks terrible.”

The banker gave her a crooked grin and then held out his phone. “Do me a favor and take a picture.”

Setting the wine glass on the bar, she aimed the phone at him and couldn’t disguise her shaking. “Why am I taking a picture?”

“Brenden,” he said, eyeing the camera steadily until she managed to snap two photos in quick succession. “A black eye is pretty badass.”

“Badass?” Though she appreciated his friendship, she didn’t always understand him.

“Badass,” he reaffirmed with a wry smile. He slipped the phone back into his pocket and held up his right hand. “Skinned knuckles. I did some damage of my own. Black eye says I took a punch. Bruised knuckles said I gave as good as I got. I just wish I hadn’t let the bastard get away.”

“It’s all right.” She meant that, too. “You read about people breaking into hotels all the time. I just didn’t expect it to happen to me.” Reclaiming her wine glass, she took another sip. The bartender returned with the hot sandwiches and fries.

At least she’d changed out of the evening dress. In jeans and the dark gray Marine sweatshirt, she felt safer, shielded. The change of hotels, even the pseudonym, added to her feeling of security. She and Liam said nothing, tucking into their sandwiches, and she was hungrier than she realized.

The food, coupled with the wine, settled her further. “I think I owe you another thank you.”

“For?” He sat sideways after having demolished his sandwich and most of his fries.

“For insisting on escorting me back.” She hadn’t forgotten the fact she’d argued with Liam’s offer initially, not seeing the sense of him paying a valet charge just to take her upstairs.

“Don’t forget my swift defense. Though it would have been better if he hadn’t tried to trample you in the process.” With a wink, Liam gave her another crooked grin, which highlighted his split lip. “But you’re welcome and when you’re ready, I’ll walk you to your room here, too. What time is your flight tomorrow?”

“Evening, after six. I thought I’d do some sightseeing, but since it’s nearly two in the morning, I think I’ll sleep and try to reorganize my sketchbook.” After her sketchbook, the most valuable thing in the room had been her laptop. She’d not brought much in the way of jewelry. What few pieces of worth she owned, she’d worn for the gallery opening. “He tore a couple of pages.” But she had all the pieces—she could put them back together.

“Sketches can be replaced. How’s your head?”

“It aches.” Grimacing, she touched a hand to the tender spot on her scalp. She hadn’t needed stitches, fortunately. Her shoulder twinged, too, but she kept that information to herself.

“I’m going to get the room right next to yours and stay here at the hotel tonight.”

The offer startled her. “You don’t have….”

“No, I don’t.” Liam agreed. “I’ll do it anyway. I’ve had a beer and shouldn’t drive, and if you change your mind and want to do some sightseeing—well, I’ll be here.” He motioned to the bartender then gestured at her near-empty glass. “Want another glass of wine?”

The cramping in her stomach relaxed. She blinked back an unsettling urge to cry and shook her head. “One is enough for me. But I wouldn’t mind sitting here a little longer.”

“Then we’ll sit here.” He fished out his phone and set it on the bar. “Better to remind myself nothing is private. The whole world is connected. While drinking, that stays where I can see it.”

She must have looked quizzical because he laughed.

“Nothing is sacred. Anyone can overhear. Anyone can video you and plaster it on YouTube or social media.” He shrugged. “Seeing my ‘smart’ phone helps me make smarter choices.”

“You’re a very complicated guy.” Still, she found the presence of the phone oddly comforting. A reminder of the real world and it helped to puncture the surreal bubble surrounding her since they’d had the bad luck to interrupt someone trying to rob her hotel room.

The bartender returned with Liam’s fresh beer. When Liam held it up, she raised her wine glass. “What are we toasting?”

“New beginnings. I guarantee you the gallery showing tonight is not going to be your last.”

Shannon hesitated before taking another sip. “Kind of feels like jinxing myself.”

“Then I’ll drink to it, and when it all happens, I can say I told you so.” The smug tease in his tone amused her. “Watch me. I told you so about this, and it only took me six months to convince you to say yes to this show.”

Her face warmed, because he wasn’t wrong. Maybe because of the circumstances of the evening, maybe because they’d actually become friends over the last few months—or maybe she simply missed Brody. Their last Skype call had been limited, and Brody had warned her he could be in and out of touch until he returned to the States.

“Shannon?”

Blinking, she smiled apologetically. “Sorry, I was thinking…anyway…yes, you did tell me it would be successful.”

“But?” he prompted, eyebrows raised.

“But, I’m not cut out for this type of thing.”

“What type of thing?” Liam frowned.

“Traveling, appearing…talking about my work.” God, she wished she’d already flown home and sat in her studio rather than in this hotel. Draining her wine, she put the glass on the bar. She wished Brody were home more—and even that left her stomach knotting. What if his coming home didn’t turn out the way she hoped?
The way we hope. Does he share the same hopes?

A hand came to rest atop hers and squeezed gently. “You’re over-thinking all of this. It’s late, you’re tired, and it’s been stressful day. You don’t have to think you’re going to be fabulous. I can do all of that for you.”

Another laugh broke free, and it sounded an awful lot like a sob, so she swallowed the sound and tugged away from his grasp. Bracing her palm over her mouth, she tried to stifle her seesawing emotions.

“I’m sorry,” she whispered.

“No apologies required.” Always a gentleman, Liam pulled a handkerchief out of his pocket. “Remember, I know fabulous when I see it.”

Accepting the pressed linen, she dabbed at her eyes and gazed at him with curiosity. “Do I dare ask why?”

“Of course you can ask why.” His crooked grin deepened, but so did the kindness in his eyes. “I’m fabulous. Just ask anyone—even better, ask Brenden. He’s known my fabulousness for years.”

This time when Shannon laughed, the emotion felt real.

 

Dallas, Texas

Two days later….

 

Fortunately, the rest of her visit went pleasantly. Liam managed to lure her back out of the hotel for a few hours to return to the gallery. He’d made a game of it and they’d gone
incognito
so Shannon could see how visitors were enjoying her work. With a hat to hide her hair and at Liam’s snarky assistance, she found watching others while they viewed her work far more comfortable than she’d imagined.

Her agent called three times, each with a higher offer for
Her Marine
, the centerpiece of her gallery exhibit. No matter how often she’d told Henry she had no interest in selling the work, he continued to call her with the latest offers. He described it as motivational, and since the most recent one had climbed to six figures, he’d started to lean in favor of the buyers.

She relaxed while the cab weaved through heavy evening traffic. Temperatures were expected to be in the 90s. Unlike most of the nation, Texas hadn’t suffered through a brutal winter, and spring had segued to summer without pausing to take a breath.

The closer to her converted loft she got, the better she felt. Traveling wasn’t easy for her—another symptom of old fears better to be forgotten. She’d made huge strides in the last two years. Brody never gave her a grief about the panic attacks, though those had grown fewer and further between. All she had to do was think about him when things grew tough and the tension winding through her would ease.

At least the headache the bump on the head had earned her hadn’t followed her home. A couple of ibuprofen and a Xanax before her flight and she’d been back to normal. The cab slowed, turned the last corner for her place, and eagerness threaded through her veins.

Home.

She wanted to repair the damage to her sketches, review the ideas she had under consideration, and then get to work. If she immersed herself in a project, she could stop wondering when she’d hear from Brody.
He’s okay. Not hearing doesn’t mean bad news
. They’d gone as long as twelve weeks between contacts, but Brody warned her whenever those lags might occur.

The driver parked in front of her building. “Ma’am?”

“Oh, sorry.” She glanced at the total and counted out the bills, adding a generous tip. After passing the cash to him, she waited while he wrote a receipt. At least she’d remembered to get receipts on this trip. Her agent and her accountant had both reminded her regularly to keep track of her expenses.

Five minutes later, she had the main door unlocked and set her case inside. The best part of her loft was the private entrance and steel security door. Her mail had accumulated inside, so she left the suitcase and scooped all of the envelopes up to carry with her. The main floor sat empty, waiting to be converted into a gallery later. She had a basket elevator to access the upstairs where she lived and housed her studio. The main room of her place included one large work area with plastic sheeting draping half the tables while the others featured smaller practice pieces.

Dumping the mail on the kitchen table, she passed by her work area to say hi to all her guys. Though
Her Marine
remained her most popular work, she’d shied away from doing other military pieces—at least publicly. Six pieces sat on the workbench, and she studied each one…they were all men she’d met thanks to Brody.

A lean, broad-shouldered Marine stood with his arms folded and a remote expression on his face. The face had proved the hardest to capture, scarring had left its mark on his left cheek. It was close, but in miniature, very difficult to detail the nuances. And while Logan scared the hell out of her, he hadn’t been remotely unkind.

Bypassing that work, she went to the next one. The young man stood solemnly, staring down at the dog next to his feet. Squatting, Shannon considered the pair. It had taken her three attempts to get the dog correct and she still didn’t think she’d done Jethro any favors. She’s wanted to capture the beautiful Labrador with his soulful eyes and the sense of his playfulness.

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