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Tool Belt Defender




  “It’s party time.”

  That’s the “invitation” shoved under her door. It’s got Brittany Grayson fearing for her life…and her sanity. She’s sure the monster who once held her captive for months is dead, so why his chilling words in the note? His menacing face in the window? And why won’t anyone—even her lawmen brothers—believe that somehow he’s after her again?

  Brittany just wants a normal, independent life in Black Rock. Romance is out of the question…although she’s okay as friends-with-benefits with Alex Crawford, her hunky, marriage-phobic contractor. Alex, a single dad, has his own good reasons not to fall for Brittany. But none of them matter when the race is on to find the killer who’s kidnapped her!

  She relaxed against him, for the first time in eight months feeling one hundred percent safe.

  Neither said a word, and she was grateful for the silence that revealed more than words.

  She was almost asleep when Alex finally stroked a strand of hair away from her face and spoke. “This has been wonderful, but it doesn’t solve anything.”

  With that simple sentence reality slammed back in. Somebody had been at her window. Somebody had given her a note that terrified her with its implication. Was it all just a silly prank or did it imply something more dangerous?

  “I guess my next move will be to go see Luke.”

  “I don’t want you going to talk to him alone,” Alex said.

  She started to protest, but he placed a finger against her lips. “You need somebody on your side, Brittany, and I want to be that man.”

  * * *

  “Like” us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/RomanticSuspenseBooks and check us out at www.Harlequin.com!

  Dear Reader,

  There’s something about a man wearing a tool belt low on slim male hips that I find attractive. Maybe it’s because the tool belt implies a man who can get a job done, somebody you can depend on to fix whatever is broken.

  When sexy Alex Crawford shows up at Brittany Grayson’s front door to build a deck on the back of her house, the last thing he’s looking for is romance, especially with a woman who had barely escaped being one of the victims of a serial killer.

  All he wants is to build a nice life for him and his six-year-old daughter, Emily. But when danger grows near, it will take everything he carries in his tool belt and much more to save the woman he’s grown to love and the daughter who owns his heart.

  Yes, there’s definitely something about a handsome man in a tool belt. I know. I married one years ago and he’s still getting the job done and fixing the things that need to be fixed, including my heart.

  Happy reading!

  Carla Cassidy

  Carla Cassidy

  Tool Belt Defender

  Books by Carla Cassidy

  Harlequin Romantic Suspense

  Rancher Under Cover #1676

  Cowboy’s Triplet Trouble #1681

  *Tool Belt Defender #1687

  Silhouette Romantic Suspense

  †Man on a Mission #1077

  Born of Passion #1094

  †Once Forbidden… #1115

  †To Wed and Protect #1126

  †Out of Exile #1149

  Secrets of a Pregnant Princess #1166

  ‡Last Seen… #1233

  ‡Dead Certain #1250

  ‡Trace Evidence #1261

  ‡Manhunt #1294

  †Protecting the Princess #1345

  †Defending the Rancher’s Daughter #1376

  †The Bodyguard’s Promise #1419

  †The Bodyguard’s Return #1447

  †Safety in Numbers #1463

  †Snowbound with the Bodyguard #1521

  †Natural-Born Protector #1527

  A Hero of Her Own #1548

  †The Rancher Bodyguard #1551

  5 Minutes to Marriage #1576

  The Cowboy’s Secret Twins #1584

  *His Case, Her Baby #1600

  *The Lawman’s Nanny Op #1615

  *Cowboy Deputy #1639

  *Special Agent’s Surrender #1648

  †The Delaney Heirs

  ‡Cherokee Corners

  †Wild West Bodyguards

  *Lawmen of Black Rock

  Other titles by this author available in ebook.

  CARLA CASSIDY

  is an award-winning author who has written more than one hundred books for Silhouette Books and Harlequin Books. In 1995, she won Best Silhouette Romance from RT Book Reviews for Anything for Danny. In 1998, she also won a Career Achievement Award for Best Innovative Series from RT Book Reviews.

  Carla believes the only thing better than curling up with a good book to read is sitting down at the computer with a good story to write. She’s looking forward to writing many more books and bringing hours of pleasure to readers.

  This book is dedicated to my very own tool belt defender, Frank.

  After all these years you still know exactly what tool to use to keep me feeling safe and protected and loved. Thank you and I love you.

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Epilogue

  Chapter 1

  He was a hot hunk in a tight white T-shirt, a pair of worn jeans and a tool belt riding low on his lean hips. He was nothing like what Brittany Grayson had expected.

  When she’d called Chad Warren, one of the local carpenters in the small town of Black Rock, Kansas, to see about him building a deck on the back of her house, he’d told her he was already booked for the spring but would send an old college friend of his who had recently moved to town.

  Chad was a good old boy, fifty pounds overweight, who believed beer pong should be a nationally recognized sport. It was silly, but she’d just assumed his college buddy would be like him. But the man standing on her front porch didn’t look like a peer of Chad’s; rather he looked as if he’d stepped off the slick pages of some hot-hunk calendar.

  “Brittany?” His voice was deep and pleasant and made her realize she’d been staring at him openmouthed through the screen door.

  “Yes, I’m Brittany and you must be…” Her mind suddenly went blank.

  “Alex. Alex Crawford, Chad’s friend. You called him about a deck?”

  “Yes, I did.” She hesitated before opening the screen door to allow him inside. There had been no men except for her brothers inside her home since she’d moved back in a little over a month ago.

  As she unlocked the screen, she realized she wasn’t quite ready yet to allow a stranger inside, especially a male stranger. Instead she stepped outside where the late April sun was warm and the air smelled of newly bloomed flowers.

  “It’s nice to meet you, Alex. Let’s walk around back and I’ll show you what I have in mind,” she said. She frowned as she realized there was no car in her driveway. “Did you walk here?” she asked.

  His eyes were a warm blue that stood out against his tanned face and were complemented by his slightly shaggy dark hair. “I live three doors up.” He pointed up the street to the Walker home that had been on the market for a while.

  “How long have you lived there?”

  “I moved in about six weeks ago,” he replied as they walked around the side of the house toward the back.

  That explained why she didn’t know the Walkers had moved out and Mr. Hardbody had moved in. Six weeks ago she’d still been living at her brother Benjamin’s house trying to heal from the trauma she’d lived through.

  As they reached t
he backyard she motioned toward the small broken brick patio that existed just outside the back door. “What I’d like is a wooden deck big enough to hold a barbecue pit and an umbrella table and maybe some plants and, of course, lots and lots of people.”

  He nodded and pulled a tape measure from his tool belt. “An outdoor entertainment area,” he said.

  “Exactly,” she replied and watched as he began to walk the site. The last thing Brittany had wanted to think about over the past eight months of her life was men. But looking at Alex Crawford definitely gave her a slight flutter of pure feminine pleasure.

  When she’d been held captive by a serial killer for four long months, she’d spent her time thinking about all the things she would do if she escaped, if she managed to live.

  She hadn’t fantasized about love or having babies. She hadn’t thought about men or hot sex. Rather she’d thought about a deck where she could invite all her friends and family to share good times with her. And now she was finally going to see those fantasies come to fruition.

  “I’d say what you want is about eighteen by twenty-four,” Alex said as the tape measure zipped back into its metal case.

  “And I’d like a railing around it with an opening to step down into the yard,” she said.

  He nodded and smiled. “I can do that.”

  The man had a smile with the capacity to stop time. A wave of warmth washed over Brittany as she tried to stay focused on the matter at hand. “How long will it take?”

  He frowned, the gesture doing nothing to detract from his attractiveness. “It will take maybe a week once we get started. I work weekdays from about eight in the morning until about three-thirty and I have a couple of young men who help out, but I don’t work on the weekends.”

  Probably he took the weekends to spend with his family, she thought. A man who looked like Alex Crawford probably had a wife who looked like a supermodel. “So, you’ll call me with a bid?”

  “If you give me just a few minutes I’ll have a bid for you now.” He pulled out a small pad and a pencil.

  His dark hair shone richly in the overhead sunlight and Brittany suddenly felt the need to get some distance from him. “Why don’t I go get us each a glass of lemonade?” she suggested.

  He looked up and smiled again and another rivulet of warmth swept through her. “That sounds great.”

  She escaped back into the house and went through the living room to the kitchen. For a moment she stood at the window and watched him as he once again walked off the area where the deck would be built.

  Surely her response to him was nothing more than a healthy awakening of emotions that had been dormant for far too long. She moved away from the window and poured the lemonade into two tall plastic tumblers.

  She would be twenty-six in two months—it was only natural that she might appreciate the sight of a good-looking man. She should be glad that normal feelings were finally beginning to return to her.

  For the past several months she’d alternated between numbness and an irrational fear as she’d tried to reintegrate back into the life that had been stolen from her for four agonizing months. Nightmares, panic attacks—she’d had them all and had begun to believe she’d never have a normal moment again. It was nice that this normal moment was a healthy dose of lust.

  She walked out the back door and motioned him to one of the four chairs at the old table that was on the broken brick patio. “Thanks,” he said as he took the drink from her. “I’ve got some figures for you.” He handed her a piece of paper that had his bid written on it. “If you agree, then I’ll write up a contract for you to sign.”

  The figure was about what she’d expected. “Looks good to me.” She leaned back in her chair and offered him a tentative smile. “Chad mentioned that the two of you went to college together.”

  “We did. I went on to law school and got a job in Chicago and Chad came back here.”

  “From lawyer to carpenter? Quite a leap,” she observed. “What brings you back to Black Rock?”

  “My wife’s family is from here and after several years of doing the high-powered, high-stress corporate thing, I decided I was ready for a change of pace.”

  A small laugh escaped Brittany. “The difference in pace between Chicago and Black Rock, Kansas, is like the difference between a pit bull and a stuffed dog.” She wasn’t surprised that the man was married.

  He laughed. “You’ve got that right, but Black Rock is just what I needed.” He tilted his glass up and drained it and then stood. “If you agree with everything I can start work tomorrow, given I can get a lumber delivery.”

  She got up from her chair and took his empty glass and together they walked around the side of the house to the front.

  “Is it your birthday or something?” he asked.

  She looked at him in confusion. “No, why?”

  He pointed to her mailbox where a bright red balloon was tied and bobbed and danced in the slight warm breeze. Shock ripped through her and the glasses slid from her hands, crashing to the grass at her feet.

  It’s party time. The nightmarish voice whispered in her brain as memories attacked her. The cell where she’d been kept, the promise of a party when all the cells were filled with helpless women, the final moment when red balloons had danced up to the ceiling of the old shed. It’s party time.

  “Brittany, are you all right?”

  Alex’s voice pulled her back from the dark abyss she’d nearly fallen into and she tore her gaze from the balloon and looked into his concerned eyes.

  “I’m fine,” she replied, aware that her voice was shaky and hoping he didn’t notice.

  “Are you sure?” He bent down and picked up the glasses.

  She nodded, even though she wasn’t at all sure that she was fine. Thank God the glasses were plastic and hadn’t shattered when she’d dropped them. She took them from him, hoping he didn’t notice the trembling of her hands. “Silly me. Just a touch of clumsiness. You’ll call me and let me know if you’re coming tomorrow?”

  “I’ll head home now and order the necessary lumber and other supplies. If they can deliver tomorrow then I’ll give you a call.” He eyed her worriedly, but she forced a cheerful smile to her lips.

  “Do you need me to write you a check now for the materials?” she asked.

  “That’s not necessary.” His eyes gleamed with a teasing light. “I know where you live.”

  “Thanks, Alex. Hopefully I’ll see you tomorrow.” She turned on wooden legs and headed for the house, an urgent need to get inside and lock the door filling her.

  She didn’t wait to watch him walk down the sidewalk toward his place; rather she turned on her heels and half ran toward her front door. Once inside she slammed it shut and locked it.

  Leaning heavily against the solid wood door she told herself she was overreacting, that maybe there was a child’s birthday party someplace on the street or a graduation celebration and somebody had just tied the balloon on her mailbox by accident.

  Surely there was a logical reason for the balloon. It had nothing to do with the man who had called himself The Professional. He was dead. She’d seen his body after he’d been killed. He was no longer capable of having a “party” complete with red balloons and death.

  Still, the legacy he’d left behind sickened her and even though she knew it was totally irrational, that balloon tied to her mailbox made her fear in her heart that somehow The Professional wasn’t done with her yet.

  As Alex walked back toward his house his head was filled with thoughts of Brittany Grayson. She was something of a celebrity in the small town. Last fall a serial killer had held the town of Black Rock hostage when he’d begun kidnapping women. It had taken all four of Brittany’s brothers, who were the law in Black Rock, to figure out that The Professional was actually the town vet, Larry Norwood. They’d managed to rescue the women and Norwood had been killed.

  It was discovered that he’d committed the same crime in Kansas City, but unfortunately
authorities hadn’t been able to catch him before he’d tortured and killed the women he’d held captive there.

  Brittany had been the first woman kidnapped and the one who had been held the longest. Still, it wasn’t the crime that was uppermost in his mind—it was the woman herself.

  Brittany Grayson was stunning and something about her had instantly struck him right in the solar plexus.

  Her long dark hair had shone richly in the sunshine and although initially her chocolate-brown eyes had been wary, they’d warmed as she’d talked about the deck she wanted.

  The gold, sleeveless blouse she’d worn had emphasized intriguing golden flecks in the very depths of her dark eyes and her jeans had hugged her slender frame and showcased her long legs.

  As he approached the two-story house he now called home, he noticed it was time for the first lawn mowing of the season and reminded himself that he wanted to plant flowers in the bed along the porch and down the walkway.

  Coming from a high-rise condo in Chicago where there had been no outside maintenance or yard work for him to be responsible for, moving into this house had been daunting but would definitely be worth it in the long run.

  As he opened the door he heard the sound of little feet running and before he could prepare himself completely six-year-old Emily launched herself into his arms.

  “Daddy!” She placed her hands on both of his cheeks, making it impossible for him to look at anything but her, which of course he didn’t mind. The pint-size blonde with her bright green eyes and long pigtails was the most important thing in Alex’s life.

  “What?” he asked as he carried her into the living room and then leaned down to place her on the floor.

  “Grandma said I’ve been so good while you’ve been gone, I should get ice cream after dinner tonight.”

  “She did, did she?”

  “Guilty as charged,” Rose Tyler said as she walked into the living room.

  Alex smiled warmly at the older woman. She was an attractive woman, her short gray hair perfectly coiffed, clad in a pair of navy slacks and a tailored white-and-navy blouse.