“Zack was kidnapped,” she said, when he didn’t ask.
Will told himself he didn’t really want to hear this. The less he knew, the better.
“I was hired to bring him back with the least amount of fanfare.”
He stared at her. “In other words, without the authorities knowing anything about it?”
“Something like that.”
Her evasiveness made him suspect there was a whole lot more he didn’t want to know.
He’d seen this sort of thing on late-night TV. People who specialized in stealing back children. Usually, though, the kidnapper was the parent who’d been denied custody. And the private investigator—Well, none of them looked like Samantha Murphy, that was for sure.
“And your plan?” he enquired against his better judgment. Mostly, he just wanted her to have a plan. Any plan. Just some common ground between them.
“Get him back to Seattle as quickly and safely as possible.”
He eyed her askance. “That’s it?”
She shrugged. “It’s the best one I have right now.”
It was obvious she went through life flying by the seat of her pants. And although she had one very fine seat, the whole concept appalled him.
“What if those two guys show up again?” he persisted.
“It’s unlikely they will, but I really didn’t expect them to chase us in the first place,” she said, and frowned. “Kidnappers routinely run the other way.”
He supposed she should know. “But still—”
“I’ve found you can’t really plan for most things, anyway.”
He would have argued that point twenty-four hours ago. Now he just studied her, wondering about the note of regret in her voice. He wondered who had let her down. Probably a man.
He knew he wasn’t getting the whole story. About the kidnapping. About Samantha. He hated to think just how much more there was to the story. And to this woman. He felt as if he’d only skimmed the surface, and that was terrifying enough.
“Why you and not the police?”
She dropped her gaze. “It’s complicated.”
He’d just bet it was. He reminded himself he didn’t want the whole story. But it did make him wonder. Who was he kidding? Everything about this woman made him wonder, when he should be concentrating on how he was going to get back to his own life. His birthday was rapidly approaching, and he hadn’t found what he was looking for yet.
Well, not exactly.
He watched her cook for a moment, liking the image she made. “What about the boy’s family?” he asked, unable not to. Zack had said the men who’d kidnapped him claimed they were friends of his “birth mother.” Odd words coming out of the mouth of a five-year-old.
She took a breath. “In a nutshell? He’s been living with his father in Seattle. There was a burglary at the computer company where Lucas worked. Now Lucas is missing and wanted for questioning by the police. Zack was at a friend’s house when he was abducted.”
“Where’s his mother?”
She stirred at the pot on the stove. “Cassie?”
He raised a brow. “How many mothers does the kid have?”
“Just Cassie, his birth mother who left when he was a baby, and his ex-stepmother Mercedes, who left after less than a year of marriage.”
This could explain the kid’s budding criminal career. It sounded as if the boy had been left more times than a Greyhound bus station. Will felt bad for him, knowing what that kind of instability did to a kid.
Well, at least Zack had Samantha now. And as unconventional as her methods were, she’d obviously go to any extreme to keep the boy safe.
But Will still couldn’t help worrying about her and the kid. “Is it just me, or isn’t it a little strange that first you have the burglary at the computer company where the father works, then the father’s disappearance, then the son’s kidnapping? And where do the kidnappers take the kid? To a rest home in Wolf Point, Montana.”
She wiped her hands on the apron around her waist and looked over at him. “Like I said, it’s complicated.”
“Right.” And none of his business. “What can I do to help with dinner?”
He followed her sudden glance to the doorway. Zack was peering around the door frame, looking as sweet and innocent as any child Will had ever seen. Except, it was obvious the kid had been eavesdropping, hovering there long enough to hear most—if not all—of their conversation.
He checked to make sure he still had his watch. And his wallet.
“We were just talking about the men who abducted you,” she said, no doubt assuming, as he did, that Zack had been listening for some time. “Do you have any ideas why they did that?”
Zack shrugged.
“Not a clue, huh?” she persisted. “What about your dad? Any ideas where he might be?”
He shook his head and looked away. “Is dinner almost ready?”
She eyed the boy but didn’t push it. “Just about. Why don’t you help Will set the table.” She glanced in Will’s direction for consent.
Will realized he was hungry. Whatever she’d cooked up smelled wonderful. “Just point us to the dishes.”
They ate a surprisingly delicious casserole at the kitchen table. He was a little in awe of her ability to throw something this good together so quickly and with only a few ingredients. The woman did seem to have some burgeoning spousal talents. It was her other talents that concerned him.
Zack ate without a word, nodding or shaking his head when Samantha tried to draw him into a conversation. Finally she gave up.
After dinner and dishes, Will went into the living room while she put the boy to bed.
Leaving the bedroom door ajar, she joined him in front of the fire. He’d been staring into the flames when she approached. He found himself still very aware of her. And very curious. More curious than he should have been, considering she didn’t fit into his plans.
“How did you get into a profession like this?” he asked, still wishing she did anything else.
She warmed her hands in front of the fire, her gaze on the flames. The light played on her face. She really was beautiful in an innocent, wholesome sort of way. The irony of it didn’t escape him.
“My father and uncle and some of my cousins are cops, some others are private investigators.” She shrugged. “It was that or become a mortician.”
He knew she was joking, but a mortician sounded good to him right now. He watched her glance toward Zack’s bedroom, and saw the worry in the little furrow between her brows, in the slope of her strong shoulders, in the depths of her bottomless blue-green gaze. He warned himself to stay out of it.
He’d interfered enough just getting into her Firebird, refusing to get out and asking a lot of questions. Samantha knew what she was doing. She did this sort of thing all the time, right? And the kid, well, she’d find the boy’s father. Or get Zack to one of his mothers.