"This is an exhilarating
romantic suspense that grips the audience with the
opening scene from sixteen years ago and never lets up
on the tension while also providing a fascinating
star-crossed romance between two people who should be
beloved enemies. The story line is fast-paced as not
only has Gabe arrived, but so has a psychopath tied to
the original murder incident. Readers will relish Maggie
Shayne’s latest tense thriller (see
Kill Me Again)." --
Harriet Klausner,
Genre Go Round Reviews
Zero Tolerance Policy In Effect
Copying this material in any way, shape, or form,
without the express consent of the author will be
prosecuted to the full extent of the law, including via
civil suit. The author has had enough.
KISS ME, KILL ME
Maggie Shayne
Secrets of Shadow Falls Trilogy, book 3
On
Sale August 30th
Prologue
Sixteen-plus Years Ago
Carrie Overton had known her life was about to change
forever. She just hadn't known how drastically.
But when her headlights picked out the shape of lone
woman, standing beside her car on the roadside, she knew
something was wrong. It was the dead of night, in the
middle of nowhere. The woman was leaning on her rusty,
lopsided car, one arm braced on the hood, the other,
encircling her swollen belly. Her face bore a grimace
of pain, and no small amount of fear. And, in fact,
when Carrie flipped on her signal light—though there was
no one other than an army of raccoons to see it, she
thought—some of that fear changed to visible, almost
palpable relief. The woman—no, she was really
little more than a girl, Carrie saw as she drove
closer—held up a hand, as if to signal her to stop.
Carrie had already decided there was little else she
could do.
She pulled over behind the girl's car, a
primer colored breakdown-waiting-to-happen, shut her own
engine off, and got out. The silence of the night
struck her as she walked quickly to the girl. Her shoes
crunched over gravel, crickets chirped as if nothing was
wrong, and nightbirds called out noisily every fourth
step or so.
"Car broken down?" she asked, almost hoping
it was as simple as that. Even while every instinct in
her body was telling her otherwise. And those instincts
were probably better than most, seeing as how she was a
doctor. A new one, yes, but a doctor, all the same.
The girl met her eyes, and Carrie saw that
they were wet. "No," she said. "I think I
might be in labor."
Carrie felt her own quick gasp, but just as
fast, grabbed hold of her nerves, and replaced them with
the quiet calm she had learned patients needed from
their MDs. "Lucky for you I came along, then.
I'm a doctor."
"Are you kidding me?"
"Nope. I'm on my way to start a new job at Shadow
Falls General Hospital."
"That's where I'm going, too!" she said, but
then she whimpered, and closed her eyes and hugged her
middle. "God, that hurts."
"Okay, breathe through it," Carrie told
her. "Like this." And then she demonstrated, puffing
short bursts of air from pursed lips.
The girl obeyed, and in a moment, as the
pain eased, Carrie opened the rear door of the girl's
car, and helped her in. "Come on, lie down on the
back seat where you can be more comfortable until I get
us some help."
"I think comfortable is impossible at this
point." The girl said, but she moved anyway. Not
far, though. She took two steps, and then bent double
again, almost falling to her knees this time. She began
puffing those short breaths, and Carrie felt, for the
first time, some real alarm. Hunkering down to
be at eye level with the now crouching mother-to-be, she
asked, "How far apart are the pains?"
"Almost constant," she whispered between
puffs.
"Okay. Okay." Carrie waited for the pain
to pass, then quickly moved the girl into the back
seat. Another birth pang came and went before the girl
even got her lower half undressed. Carrie had to leave
her just long enough to race to her own car and grab her
bag. Then she was back, kneeling on pavement, beside an
open car door, looking at a woman who was going to give
birth momentarily.
"The pains only started an hour ago. I thought I'd
have time to get to Shadow Falls."
"Most women would have," Carrie told her. "You're
being an exception to the rule today. But don't
worry. I can deliver your baby right here just
fine. There's nothing to be afraid of."
"Then why am I scared shitless?" the girl
asked. "Unhh! Oh, God."
Carrie tried to project confidence and hide
her own nervousness—she'd delivered babies before. Not
on deserted country roads in the back seats of broken
barely road-worthy cars, but she didn't imagine many
doctors had. She laid a calming hand on the girl's
bulging belly and felt the baby move inside. It
instigated a wave of sadness but she tamped it down.
"It's a miracle, you know. It's a miracle you're
experiencing right now."
"Miracles hurt!" Pant, pant, pant.
"Have you ever – oh, hell – delivered a baby before?"
"Dozens of them," Carrie lied. She'd
delivered three—exactly three--during her residency, but
she'd never had to fly solo, without a nurse or sterile
tools or gloves or a backup neonatal team standing by.
"I'd give anything not to have to do this!"
the girl moaned.
"I'd give anything to trade places with you
right now," Carrie told her.
"You must be nuts, then—oh hell oh hell oh hell!"
"Not nuts, just broken. I . . . I'll never
be a mom." Maybe telling her that would make her realize
what a blessing this event was. How important. How
special.
The contraction passed and the girl's face
eased. She studied Carrie's. "You can't have kids?"
she asked.
Carrie met her moist eyes. "Nope. I was born
with defective fallopian tubes and—"
"Oh, shit! Something's happening. I
have to push. I have to—"
"Go ahead, push." Carrie got low, flattened
her hands against the bottoms of the girl's feet so
she'd have something to brace against, and as she
pushed, the top of the baby's head appeared
immediately.
The contraction eased, and the girl fell
back, blowing a sigh.
"Relax until the next contraction," Carrie
told her. "Then we'll push again."
"It's odd, me meeting you out here like
this," the girl said, her eyes moving over Carrie's
face.
"We haven't actually met, though," Carrie
said. "I'm Carrie. Doctor Carrie Overton,
that is. And you are--?"
She didn't answer. She was gripped by
another contraction, and then another, and most
opportunity for conversation was gone, aside from the
necessary bits. Breathe through it. Push harder.
It
wasn't long before the baby's head came into sight. And
with the next push, it began to emerge. "God, you're so
strong," Carrie said. "This is going to be over in
no time, hon. Two more pushes, maybe three."
"I want it to be over with now!" she
whined.
"I don't blame you. Come on, push with me now."
The girl pushed, and Carrie talked and
comforted and within short order, she was holding a
tiny, wriggling baby boy in her arms. He released a
series of congested bleats, making her laugh softly.
"A
boy," she said. "And he's got a great set of lungs on
him, too."
"Is
he okay?" the girl asked. "I want him to be okay."
"He's
fine. He's absolutely . . . beautiful. God, look at
him. He's perfect." Carrie sniffled, then tied off the
cord, cut it, and wiped the baby down as best she could
with gauze and sterile water. She suctioned his nose
and mouth with a small blue aspirator, wrapped him in
her own jacket, and for just a moment, held him in her
arms, smiling down at his tiny face. When tears burned
in her eyes, she blinked them away and gently placed the
baby in his mother's arms.
"You
should try to nurse him," she whispered. She couldn't
speak much louder than that for the tightness in her
throat. The idea of never being able to have a baby of
her own—it was a constant, twisting blade in her heart.
She knew she would be a far better mother than her own,
volatile, passionate, hot-tempered mother had been.
"I
can hardly wait to see what he weighs," she added,
mentally trying to change the subject.
She
helped the new mother clean herself up, got her upright,
watched her trying to nurse the newborn, and then
nodded. "Okay, listen. I passed a house a
few miles back. I'm going to drive back there, see
if I can use their phone to get an ambulance out here
for you, and we'll get you and your little guy to a nice
clean hospital where you can recover properly.
Okay?"
The
girl lifted her face, her expression, oddly detached.
"I thought doctors all had those mobile phones
nowadays."
"Not this one. Not yet, anyway.
I doubt it would work out here if I did. But I'll
be quick."
"And
you'll come right back here?" she asked.
"Right
back. I won't be more than ten or fifteen minutes.
And you'll be fine, I promise."
"And the baby too? He'll be fine
too, alone for that long?"
Carrie tilted her head. "He won't be alone, honey.
He has you."
"I could fall asleep, or—"
"He'll be fine. I promise." She started to back
herself out of the car, but the girl reached out and
gripped her hand. "This was supposed to happen.
You finding me here. It was meant to be, I know it
was."
"Maybe so," Carrie said.
"For sure. I knew a man once.
He always said everything happens for a reason.
And that if you want something bad enough, it can
happen."
"Well, I'll bet you wanted help pretty badly.
Maybe he was right."
She
nodded slowly, her gaze turned inward. "Please
hurry back."
"I promise, I'll be just as fast as I
can."
The
girl nodded. "Thank you," she whispered, and she
squeezed Carrie's hand before she let her go.
Back
in her own car, Carrie held her tears in check until she
got the vehicle turned around and was headed back in the
direction she'd come from. But then the dam broke, and
the insistent tears spilled over. And she knew it was
stupid, because there were other ways to get children
besides giving birth to them. There were lots more
babies in the world than there were suitable homes or
deserving families for them.
She
drove through the darkness, her eyes peeled for the
house she'd passed, squinting to see better through the
stupid tears. She was starting a new life, a new job,
fabulous career, in an idyllic New England town. She
was buying the cutest little house she'd ever seen, and
she had every intention of raising kids there, someday.
The adoption process was slow, slower yet for a single
parent with a demanding job. It would take a long
time. But someday—someday she would have a child and
she'd give it the kind of solid, stable home she'd never
had. No way was her child going to have to be uprooted
and move from place to place every time its father got
itchy feet. The Overton home would be a permanent home,
a solid one, and it would always be calm and quiet. No
loud screaming matches. No physical altercations with
the neighbors. No temper tantrums. None of the drama
she'd grown up with.
No. Her child would have a quiet, loving,
peaceful existance, and a hometown. She'd always wanted
a hometown.
And she was on her way to the one she'd
chosen, she reminded herself. Part One of her dream,
all but complete. And even though the waiting lists
were long, and even though adoption agencies tended to
give preference to married couples over single women,
she would get her baby someday. She would.
There! There was the house she'd passed!
She flipped on her signal light and prayed
it was only entirely dark because it was two a.m. But
there was no car in the driveway, and after about five
minutes worth of pounding on the door and jabbing the
doorbell repeatedly, she realized no one was home.
That poor girl back there. Well, all
right. She would just bundle the mother and baby into
her car and take them onward with her, until she found a
phone. Or maybe she would just drive them the rest of
the way to Shadow Falls herself. It couldn't be more
than two hours away.
Returning to her car, she backed out of the
empty driveway, turning back in the direction she'd left
the young woman and her son.
When she got to the spot, however, the
rust-colored sedan was gone.
A jolt of alarm shot through Carrie as she
drove nearer, wondering if she had the right spot, but
she was sure she did. There was her jacket, the one
she'd wrapped the baby in, lying in the grass along the
roadside, right near where she was sure the other car
had been parked. Her headlights picked out the pale
green fabric. Carrie pulled over and stopped. Surely
that young woman couldn't intend to drive the rest of
the way on her own, could she? She'd just given birth
for heaven's sake. She needed rest, and the baby
needed—
The jacket was moving.
"No," Carrie whispered. "No, tell me she
didn't—" She wrenched open her door and got out,
hurrying around the front of the car, hopping the slight
ditch to where her jacket lay, still wriggling.
Almost afraid to look, she bent and opened
the jacket. The tiny newborn lay inside, pink and
healthy and squirming.
"Oh,
God, she left you. How could she—how could anyone?"
Carrie gathered the baby, jacket and all, into her arms,
then felt the rustle of paper as she rose again.
A note, written on the back of an old
envelope with the address torn off, was pinned to the
jacket.
Carrie,
His name is Sam. I hope you'll let him keep
it.
We
were supposed to meet, so I could give him to you.
That's what I meant by what I said before. You've been
wanting a baby—and you got one. I've been wanting a
solution, and you were it for me. This was meant to
be. That man I knew was right. I always knew he was
special. My Sam is all yours now. And don't worry. I
won't change my mind about this.
Ever.
The
note was unsigned. Carrie folded it and tucked it into
her jeans pocket.
Then,
snuggling the baby close to her chest, she walked back
to the road, to her car. She looked up and down the
deserted stretch of pavement, but she didn't see any
sign of the girl or her car. No headlights approached,
announcing that the new mother had come to her senses.
And then she looked up at the sky, silently
asking the stars overhead, what she was supposed to do
next. As she stood there in the night, a star shot in
an arcing path, right over her head.
Like an answer. Like a wish.
He
cried softly, and Carrie stared down into the open,
unfocused blue, blue eyes of a newborn baby boy. And
softly, she smiled.
"Hi,
Sam," she said softly. "I think maybe . . . I think
maybe I'm going to be your mommy. What do you think
about that?" She was almost trying out the notion,
testing the words as she said them. But they felt so
good she could barely believe it.
She
didn't now how she would pull this off—find the mother
and make it legal, she supposed. Somehow, she would
find a way. Somehow, she could make this work. Somehow
. . . .
Somehow, in one night on her way to her new life, she
had found her dream come true. Whoever that man was,
who'd told the girl that if you wanted something badly
enough, it could happen, he must have been wise. A guru
or a holy man or something. Because this felt like a
gift. Like it really was meant to be.
Bending, she pressed her lips to Sam's forehead, as
tears, happy ones this time, rolled down her cheeks.
"I'll find a way to make this work, Sam. I
promise. And I will be the best mother you could
ever wish for."
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