startled when he set a hand over hers. Pinpricks of sensation seemed to leap like fire across her flesh, pass into her bloodstream and balloon at the center of her being like a flow of lava. She was tempted to pull her hand away, then realized that would be far too indicative of her feelings.
She stared at him instead, slowly arching a brow.
Suddenly his expression grew serious, and his tone matched it when he spoke. âPlease, you may think Iâm insane for saying this, but I promise you, Iâm not. Iâm afraid that you and your friends are in danger here.â
Yes, there had been more to his earlier question.
âOh, please,â she said, closing her eyes for a moment against her disappointment that heâd turned out to be a loon. âNot this again.â
All she wanted now was for him to go away. Sheâd been far too tempted to give in to the appealing fact that he seemed to find her interesting, attractive. To be pursuing her. Because she wanted to be pursued.
What she didnât want was this feeling that something was lying beneath every word he said, that he didnât actually want to be with her and was just plain crazy.
âAgain?â he asked sharply.
Irritation filled her, along with an uncanny sense of fear. âThe fortune teller gave me the same line of bull. Weâre here for a bachelorette party, Mr. Davidson. Pure and simple. Heidi is about to get married, and the three of us have been planning this trip for ages. I canât imagine why youâa strangerâwould want to ruin it for us.â
He was quiet, leaning back. She could read little from his expression, because his sunglasses suddenly seemed as dark as night. She knew she should just ask him to leave her alone.
Somehow, she couldnât.
He was still touching her hand, but that wasnât what was stopping her. It was simply his presence that she couldnât resist.
âI swear to you,â he said very softly, âI want nothing more than your complete safety.â
âIâm not in any danger.â
âYes, you are. You saw this morningâs headline.â
She shook her head, a chill snaking through her. âDoes that mean every single woman anywhere near the Mississippi River is in danger?â
âYes.â
âOh, please!â
âThereâs a killer working the area,â he said with such assurance that she felt an ever greater sense of being encompassed of ice, despite the heat of the day.
âAre you a cop?â she asked sharply.
âNo.â
âFBI?â
âNo.â
âSo exactly what are you?â
âI told you. A writer and a musician.â
âOh, well, that answers that, then. Iâm sure you know all about serial killers, not to mention exactly how and why my friends and I are in danger.â
She was stunned when he replied calmly and in a tone of such level and deep authority that it was the scariest part of it all. âI do.â
She just stared at him.
The waitress brought his tea, and he thanked her, bringing Lauren back to the moment.
âIâm going to leave now,â she said. âAnd you are going to leave my friends and me alone,â she told him firmly.
He ignored her words when he spoke. âI know who the killer is. Iâve known about him for a very long time now. He was responsible for the death of my fiancée.â
Lauren couldnât believe it of herself, but she didnât move. She remembered what he had said when she crashed into him the night before. The name he had spoken.
âKatie?â she said, then hesitated before going on. âThe woman you think I resemble.â
âYes.â
âIâm not your Katie,â she told him.
A rueful smile curled his lips. âI know that,â he said.
âBut you think this manâ¦killed her?â
He hesitated, then nodded.
âShe died here, in New Orleans?â Lauren
Phil Jackson, Hugh Delehanty