Loe raamatut: «Security Measures»
He burst into her life in an explosion of passion and she’d fallen for him instantly and hard
Images from the past became so real, Janice could almost touch and taste them. Vincent, tanned and gorgeous, just home from college for the summer. She’d become infatuated with him at first sight, mesmerized by his dark eyes and the cocky confidence that characterized his every move. He’d been so different than the boys she was used to, he could have come from another planet.
He’d kissed her that first night in the moonlight. How he’d kissed her! She’d thought she was simply going to die when he pulled away. Impulsively her fingers went to her lips. But that was all before that night fifteen years ago, before she was pregnant….
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Janice Stevens/Candy Owens —Forced to change her identity after testifying in a murder trial, she will do anything to keep her daughter from ever knowing her biological father.
Vincent Magilinti —He’s a wanted man, but his only concerns are for the daughter he’s never met and the woman he can’t forget.
Kelly Stevens —At fourteen, she’s a typical adolescent—spunky, curious and wants to do everything her friends do. She can’t understand why her mother is so paranoid.
Byron Hasselbeck —A friend that Kelly met in an Internet chat room.
Ken Levine —The U.S. Sheriff in charge of protecting Janice and Kelly.
Tyrone Magilinti —Vincent Magilinti’s cousin who was recently released from prison.
Vincent Magilinti, Sr. —Head of the mob, who was murdered in a massacre in his house on St. Charles Avenue over fourteen years ago.
Joel Pinanski —The one man Vincent thinks he can trust.
Rico —An ex-mobster who worked with Vincent’s father.
Mush Face —One of the kidnappers.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Joanna Wayne lives with her husband just a few miles from steamy, exciting New Orleans, but her home is in the perfect writer’s hideaway. A lazy bayou, complete with graceful herons, colorful wood ducks and an occasional alligator, winds just below her back garden. When not creating tales of spine-tingling suspense and heart-warming romance, she enjoys reading, traveling, playing golf and spending time with family and friends.
Joanna believes that one of the special joys of writing is knowing that her stories have brought enjoyment to or somehow touched the lives of her readers. You can write Joanna at P.O. Box 2851, Harvey, LA 70059-2851.
Security Measures
Joanna Wayne
MILLS & BOON
Before you start reading, why not sign up?
Thank you for downloading this Mills & Boon book. If you want to hear about exclusive discounts, special offers and competitions, sign up to our email newsletter today!
Or simply visit
Mills & Boon emails are completely free to receive and you can unsubscribe at any time via the link in any email we send you.
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Epilogue
Chapter One
“You never want me to have any fun. Never. You’re so paranoid, you hardly let me out of your sight. If my father were living, I bet you wouldn’t be so mean to me!”
Her daughter’s words echoed through Janice Stevens’s mind, searing a path straight to her heart. She could blame a lot of Kelly’s outbursts these days on adolescence and the surge of hormones coursing through her ever-changing body, but tonight’s blowup had hit too close to home.
Janice buried her toes in the sand as the cooling night breezes kicked up her skirt, then plastered it to her thighs. She’d looked forward to this week on North Carolina’s Outer Banks for months, envisioned it as the perfect opportunity for her to spend some quality time with Kelly.
The week had gone fairly well until tonight, though occasional sparks had flown. Tonight had started out well. They’d gone out for burgers and shakes, then taken a long walk on the beach before settling in to watch a movie from the extensive collection in the rented beach house.
Kelly had capitalized on the camaraderie by pleading her case to go to New Orleans one more time. Her school swim team had done exceptionally well this year, and they’d qualified for a Super Regional Meet in New Orleans. Her coach was taking eight of the top swimmers to the meet, preceded by a five-day sightseeing visit to New Orleans and the surrounding area.
All the other parents had giving their permission. Janice would sooner have let Kelly take a trip to Hades than to have her set one foot inside the city limits of New Orleans, especially now that Tyrone Magilinti had been paroled.
Janice hugged her windbreaker tighter and studied the shimmering band of moonlight that danced across the surface of the water. The setting was peaceful; her emotions were anything but. All she had to do was think of New Orleans, and the terrifying memories started riding roughshod over her nerves.
But she couldn’t explain that to Kelly. She’d spent her life protecting her daughter from the lingering horrors of that long-ago night. She certainly wouldn’t toss her to the demons now.
She started back to the house. Her cell phone rang. The caller ID said Ken Levine. Her already low mood took a nosedive. The U.S. Marshal in charge of her protection never called with good news.
“Hello, Ken. Tell me you called to see how my vacation was going.”
“I wish. I hate to hit you with this tonight, but I knew you’d want to know.”
Dread swelled in her chest. “Is it Tyrone?”
“No. It’s Vincent Magilinti.”
Vincent. She swallowed hard, hit by a new wave of dread and a tangle of confusing emotions that all but stole her breath. “What about Vincent?”
“He broke out of Angola last night.”
She exhaled slowly and shuddered. “How did that happen?”
“He was on kitchen duty. Some guy making deliveries had a seizure. In the commotion, Vincent sneaked into the back of the guy’s panel truck and hid in a big crate of sweet potatoes. The guard didn’t miss him until it was too late.”
“What do I do?”
“Nothing yet. As far as we can tell, both Vincent and his cousin Tyrone bought the story that you and Kelly are dead. You’ve been living peacefully for twelve years. No reason to think you can’t go on that way.”
“We lived peacefully when Tyrone and Vincent were in prison. They’re out now.”
“You’re right, but like I said, we have no reason to believe they think you’re alive. Even if they did, I doubt they’d have the money or the inclination to seek revenge at this point in their lives.”
“But their cronies might do it on their behalf.”
“Not likely. When Vince Sr. died and Tyrone and Vincent went to prison, the Mob fell under new leadership, and that’s been evolving over the past few years. Word is the new kingpin doesn’t want anything to do with the Magilintis.”
“More reason for Tyrone and Vincent to nurse their grudge against me.”
“Their grudge is against Candy Owens. She’s dead.”
Ken made it sound as if the prison break was no reason for concern, but she wasn’t buying the story. “I know you too well, Ken. If you were convinced there is no chance of danger, you wouldn’t have called.”
“Just a precaution.”
Yeah. Like a tornado watch or a hurricane warning is just a precaution. If it doesn’t hit, you’re fine. If it does, heaven help you.
“I’ll keep you posted,” Ken continued. “The authorities will probably have Vincent back in custody in a matter of days.”
“A lot can happen in a matter of days.”
“But no reason to think that it will.”
His voice was smooth and calm, no doubt designed to keep her from flying into a panic. Ken was good at that. If she’d had a father, she’d have wanted him to be like Ken. Instead, she’d fashioned Kelly’s fictional father after the genial marshal, only she’d made him much younger, of course.
Ken was in his mid-fifties with salt-and-pepper hair, receding in front and thinning on top and always needing a trim. He was six feet plus of muscle and very little excess fat. He was a man’s man, but he had a gentle way about him when she least expected it.
She trusted his judgment implicitly. If he said go back to Illinois, she’d go to Illinois. If he said stay at the beach, she’d stay. If he said run for the hills, she’d run.
“How is the vacation going?” he asked.
“Fine when my daughter isn’t lashing out at me for being controlling and paranoid. And that was before I had Vincent Magilinti to worry about.”
“You don’t know how I hated to make this call.”
She sank into herself, feeling as vulnerable as the grains of sand being tossed about by the wind and washed away with the tide. “I have another week off,” she said. “I’d planned to spend it at home. Should I risk that?”
“Unless I get back in touch with you and tell you differently. Just go on with your life as usual. And ease up on Kelly. She’s a good kid and once she gets past adolescence, she’ll be human again.”
“I’m counting on that.”
“Now, try to enjoy the rest of your vacation. If there’s anything you need, give me a call. I’m always here.”
“How about making Kelly and me invisible for a few weeks?”
“I did. Candy and Nicole Owens are dead and buried. You are the beautiful widow Janice Stevens who has resettled in Chicago with your daughter Kelly.”
“You make it all sound so workable.”
“Making it work is my job. Yours is to enjoy your vacation.”
“You got it.”
“Later.”
And that was that. But the nebulous dread continued as she trudged back to the beach house. Dread and the frightening premonition that she hadn’t seen the last of Vincent Magilinti.
THE FRENCH QUARTER looked the same as it had fifteen years ago. Even the wino sleeping it off on the street across from Jackson Square could be the same. A group of college-age guys and girls crossed the street and walked past him, laughing and talking loud as if it were three o’clock in the afternoon instead of three in the morning. Fifteen years ago, Vincent might have been one of the revelers; tonight, he was a man on the run.
It was risky to be here in the Quarter, but he was in desperate need of money and a vehicle. Vincent staggered as if he were drunk, then ducked into the dark corner bar and took a seat near the back. In less than a minute, another drunk, this one tall and burly, joined him at the table.
“Buy me a drink, buddy?” He hiccupped loudly and almost missed the chair as he slid into it.
“Sure.”
A couple at the bar started singing “Blueberry Hill.” A few other patrons joined in, all off-key.
“You look good for an escapee,” Rico whispered as he passed Vincent a key under the table. “Car’s a late-model, black two-door Ford parked on Rampart across from the Saenger. Money, car registration and an ID are in the glove compartment.”
“Did you get the tools?”
“They’re in a blue duffel in the trunk.”
“Thanks.”
The waiter walked by but ignored them, probably figuring they’d had enough to drink.
“You’re not driving to Chicago to look up Candy and the kid, are you?”
“Not a chance. As far as I’m concerned, they really are dead.”
“So where are you heading?”
“As far away from Angola as I can get.”
“You going to see Tyrone before you leave town?”
“Why should I?”
“He’s your cousin.”
“He didn’t do me any favors at the trial. I’m cutting out of here as soon as I walk out that door. I’m starting a new life.”
“I hope you make it. One drink before you go?”
“Yeah. Coffee. I’ve got to stay alert.”
Rico slammed a fist into the top of the bar. “What do you have to do get service in here?”
The waiter ambled over. “Name your poison.”
“I’ll take a scotch on the rocks,” he said, letting his voice slur a bit. “Give my buddy here a coffee. He’s had a few too many.”
“You have, too, if you’re driving.”
“Hell, no, I’m not driving. I got me a room right on Bourbon Street.”
“Good for you. Drinks are coming up.”
The waiter looked to be about twenty, a couple of years younger than Vincent had been when all hell had broken loose and life as he’d known it had exploded in a burst of machine-gun fire and flowing blood.
Now he was thirty-seven and felt as if he were a hundred. Prison did that to you. Yanked those rose-colored glasses of youth off your nose and crushed them under the feet of hundreds of brawny, tattooed thugs who all wanted to prove they were tougher than you.
The coffee was thick guck, heavy on the chicory. Vincent drank it quickly, then nodded and headed for the bathroom. When he came out, Rico was gone. Vincent put a few bills on the table and slipped out the door. Fifteen years had been a long time. He wondered if Candy Owens would recognize him.
He’d find out soon enough.
Chapter Two
Janice glanced at the clock on the dashboard as she pulled into the driveway of her home in the Chicago suburbs. Seven-thirty. Not bad timing, considering that they’d sat in stalled traffic for over an hour after a wreck on the interstate.
Kelly roused herself from the rap-induced coma she’d been in for the past hour, pulled the headphones from her ears and had the car door open by the time Janice came to a complete stop.
“Grab some luggage,” Janice reminded her.
“Mom.”
Kelly managed to stretch the word into three syllables, registering her irritation. “Why do we have to unload the car this minute?”
“Surely you can walk into the house with a couple of suitcases.”
“I will, but I was going to see Gayle first. I haven’t seen anyone in a week.”
“You’ve seen me, and I was someone last time I checked.”
“You know what I mean. Besides she’s leaving for New Orleans first thing tomorrow morning.”
“Okay, but don’t be too long. Gayle’s mother picked up our mail for us this week, so bring that home with you.”
Janice watched her daughter barely skim the grass in her haste to visit her best friend and next-door neighbor. The two girls would have had to have been joined at the hip to be any more inseparable. Janice was thankful Gayle lived so close and that her mother was almost as protective of Kelly as Janice was.
In fact, Gayle’s mother was as close to a real friend as Janice dared to have. She and Joy Ann didn’t actually do anything together, but they chatted at the mailbox and occasionally shared a cup of coffee discussing the trials of living with a teenage daughter.
Reaching back into the car, Janice grabbed her keys from the ignition. She unlocked the back door to the house, then retrieved a box of grocery items from the SUV. The odors of coffee and overripe bananas mingled in her nostrils as she carried the box inside and set it on the counter.
Only there shouldn’t be a smell of coffee. They’d used the last of the grounds that morning and she’d thrown the empty bag away. She glanced at the coffeemaker. The light was on. Apprehension swelled on cue.
“Hello, Candy.”
Damn. She lunged for one of the kitchen knives in the wooden block. Vincent caught her from behind before she could. His fingers tightened around her wrists. “Don’t do anything stupid.”
She tried to jerk away from him, but he held on tight, pulling her to him so that her back was pressed into his chest and his breath was hot on the back of her neck.
He released his grip slowly, and she turned, gulping in a quick breath of air as she got her first look at what almost fourteen years in prison did to a man.
He’d been so young before, Hollywood handsome and boyishly seductive, with his mischievous smile and dark, dancing eyes. He was still handsome, but the lines in his face were hard and his chin looked as if it had been carved in granite. The muscles in his arms were more pronounced and his dark hair was cut so short, it barely covered his scalp. A scar ran from just below his left ear to under his jaw.
Only his eyes were still the same. Piercing. Mesmerizing. She shuddered and looked away.
“How did you get here?”
“I drove. The car’s parked in your backyard.”
Out of sight because he knew she’d have noticed a strange car parked in the driveway. “How did you know where to find me?” Her mind was already jumping ahead, thinking of how she could protect Kelly.
“Anybody can be found if someone really wants to find them.”
“They had my funeral.”
“I know. That was a smart move. I didn’t buy it, but then prisoners tend to be a cynical bunch. And here you are, sweet little Candy Owens, alive and kicking in Illinois.”
“The name is Janice Stevens now. How did you get in without setting off the alarm?”
“Alarms only keep out honest people and stupid burglars.”
“And you’re neither.”
“Right. So where’s my daughter?”
She’d never told Vincent she was pregnant, but the investigation and the pretrial hoopla had been in full swing while she was carrying Kelly. News reporters had dogged her every step, asking her if the baby she was expecting was a Magilinti. She’d denied it vehemently.
“If it had been your daughter I was pregnant with, I wouldn’t have kept her.”
His muscles flexed; for a second, she thought he was going to slug her, but he exhaled slowly. “I’ve been here for two days. I’ve seen her room. I’ve seen snapshots of her. Nicole, or whatever you call her now, is a Magilinti.”
“I call her by her name. Her name is Kelly Stevens.” She’s pretty. Smart, too, and a good swimmer. I saw her academic achievement awards on the wall of the den and the swimming trophies in her room. You’ve done well with her.”
The compliment got to her. So did his voice. It had deepened some over the years, but she’d have recognized it anywhere. Old memories rushed into her mind and she went weak.
She couldn’t let him do this to her. No matter what they had been before, he was the enemy now. She’d testified for the prosecuting attorney at his trial. She’d seen the gun in his hand the night of the bloody massacre that had left his father dead.
The fear hit again, like a white-hot pain searing into her heart. “If you’re here to kill me, then do it, but don’t hurt Kelly. She never did anything to you. She doesn’t even know you exist.”
“Why would I kill you? As far as I’m concerned, the woman I knew fifteen years ago is dead. I’m here for my daughter. That’s it.”
“If you want to do something for your daughter, walk away. She thinks her father is dead, Vincent. She thinks he’s a hero.”
“And I once thought her mother was an angel. People get over those early illusions.”
“How will you explain to her that you’re an escaped convict?”
“I won’t. Not yet. You’re Janice Stevens. I’m Vincent Jones, a friend of her father’s.”
“You can’t stay here. This will be one of the first places the Feds look.”
“That’s a chance I have to take.”
“Why? Why take that chance? You’re out of prison. Keep running, just don’t stay here. Don’t put Kelly in danger.”
“Look at me, Janice.”
She turned away.
His grip tightened. “I said look at me. I’m not here to hurt Kelly. I’m here to protect her.”
“The only danger comes from you, Vincent.”
“No. It comes from my cousin, Tyrone Magilinti. He knows where you are, and he has plans to kill the both of you.”
His tone was deadly serious. Icy chills snaked up her spine. “He’s been out of prison for three weeks.
He’s made no move to hurt us.”
“But he will. He’s planned his revenge for years.”
“If that’s true, we have to tell the police. I work with a U.S. Marshal. He’ll know how to handle this.”
“You can’t call the police and you can’t tell the marshal. Get them involved, and he’ll put this off until you think you’re safe again. The police will let down their guard. They always do. He knows that.”
“Okay, you stay here. But let me take Kelly away. Please, let me take her somewhere safe.”
“Listen to me. If I wanted to hurt you or Kelly, I’d do it now.” He slid a gun from a holster under his shirt. “All I’d have to do is fire this. I’m here to protect Kelly. If you run, he’ll find you. If you stay with me, I can protect her. I know Tyrone. I know how he thinks. He’s evil to the core, but I know his weaknesses.”
She looked up and met his burning gaze again. He was deadly serious. She didn’t want to believe him, didn’t want to believe Tyrone had already planned her and Kelly’s execution. But there was no way to look into Vincent’s eyes and not believe he was telling the truth. And if he was, did she dare send him away and trust the police to save her from Tyrone?
“Let me save my daughter, Candy. Then I’ll walk out of your life and never bother you again. I promise.”
“And you won’t tell her that you’re her father?”
“No. Your identity is safe with me.”
“Then don’t call me Candy. The name is Janice.”
“Janice it is.”
There wasn’t time to say more. Any other night, Janice would have had to call and ask Joy Ann to send Kelly home, but tonight she was at the door that led to the garage with both hands wrapped around a towel encased casserole dish. A plastic grocery bag was hooked over her wrist, mail spilling out the top.
“I could use some help here.”
Vincent went to her aid. Janice stood frozen to the spot, paralyzed as Kelly came face-to-face with her father for the first time. Kelly stared at him critically; Janice held her breath, waiting for the worst, half expecting that Kelly would feel some kind of weird bond and figure it all out. But she handed him the food and went right back to talking.
“Mrs. Givens made an extra chicken potpie so you wouldn’t have to cook tonight. It’s still hot.”
“That was thoughtful.” Her voice was too shaky. If she didn’t get some control, she’d never be able to pull this off.
Kelly tossed the mail to the kitchen table, then looked from Janice to Vincent. “So, who are you, anyway?”
“He’s a family friend,” Janice said, this time managing to keep her voice more steady.
“We have family friends? News to me.”
“Actually I’m a friend of your father’s.”
“Shut up! For real?”
“For real. I’m Vincent Jones, and you must be Kelly.”
“That’s me. Well, my name is Elizabeth Kelly, but everyone calls me Kelly.”
“It fits.”
“Did you really know my dad?”
“Very well. We grew up together.”
“How come I never heard of you before?”
“Good question.”
“Was my dad as handsome as Mom says he was?”
“Your mother said he was handsome?”
“Yeah. A hunkster.”
“Kelly, why don’t you bring in the rest of the luggage,” Janice said.
“I’ll help you,” Vincent said.
“Fantastic! And you have to stay for dinner. Mrs. Givens makes a to-die-for chicken potpie, not like that frozen junk you buy at the market.”
“Sounds delicious.”
Janice just stood there watching the two of them connect like old friends. She’d spent the past fourteen years praying Kelly would never know the monster whose blood ran through her veins.
Now the monster had escaped from prison and was moving in. Heaven help them all.
KELLY’S CELL PHONE RANG. She answered it, then left Vincent and Candy alone in the kitchen. Only she wasn’t Candy anymore. She was Janice Stevens, a legal secretary and widowed mom living in Chicago, Illinois. But it wasn’t only her name that had changed. She acted different, talked different, even looked different.
His chest tightened as the familiar image of her the night they’d met filled his mind. He’d walked out the back door of his father’s house on St. Charles Avenue, and there she was, dancing in the moonlight.
There was no music, and she’d had no partner. She was just pirouetting in a white halter dress that swirled about her shapely legs and slender hips. Her curly, blond hair had flown about, wild and tousled and… His body hardened, and he struggled to push the memories away.
“I liked your hair blond—and curly,” he said, letting the comment slip out before he thought about it.
“Janice Stevens never had blond hair. Her hair is mousy brown and posterboard straight.”
The kind of woman who’d fade into the back ground. That must be what she was going for. That explained the long skirt that hid her great legs and the loose blouse that camouflaged her full breasts. “Does Janice Stevens have a significant other?” Not that he gave a damn, except that it would com plicate what he had to do.
“No, she’s devoted to the memory of her late husband, a firefighter who died in the line of duty.”
“The hunkster?”
She knotted her hands into fists. “This may sound like some big joke to you, but I’m making it work, Vincent, for me and for Kelly.”
“Making it work. That’s not quite the same as being happy.”
“I’m happy enough. And so is your daughter. And if you have a shred of decency, you won’t do anything to spoil the image she has of her dead father.”
“It would surprise you if I had a shred of decency in me, wouldn’t it?”
“I don’t know what you have inside you. I never really knew you.”
“You’re right. You never knew me, and apparently I never knew you.”
“How did you and Tyrone find out the deaths were faked?”
“Bribes. Favors. Blackmail. The Magilinti way.”
“And if all else fails, there’s violence.”
“That, too.”
“And yet you expect me to believe you.”
“Unless you’re willing to risk Kelly’s life on the bet that she’s safer without me around. But if you do, I’ll take Kelly and run with her. I’ll keep her safe, one way or another, with you or without you.”
She shuddered, and he clenched his hands into fists, fighting a totally insane need to comfort her. Being with her was already messing up his mind and his emotions. He’d have to keep his guard up every second. He would not let her back into his heart.
The tension was as thick and as bitter as stale coffee by the time Kelly bounded back into the kitchen.
“So are we eating are what?” Kelly asked. “I’m starved.”
“Me, too,” Vincent said. “I’ll make a salad to go with the potpie.”
Janice started to say there were no ingredients for a salad, but Vincent was already at the refrigerator pulling out fresh leafy salad greens and a large ripe tomato. He’d apparently stocked their refrigerator and made himself at home.
Now he was moving about her kitchen almost as proficiently as she did, pulling out a salad bowl and a knife for slicing the tomato. And Kelly, who never helped without being asked, was setting the table for three.
Vincent Magilinti had moved back into her life as effortlessly as he had the first time. Only this time she wouldn’t thrill to his touch. She wouldn’t burn with desire from his kisses. She wouldn’t make love to him so passionately that she cried.
She wouldn’t let him destroy her life or Kelly’s. He’d done that one too many times already.
KELLY KICKED OFF her shoes and dropped to the chair in front of her computer. She was glad her father’s friend was going to hang out with them for a day or two, but thankful she didn’t have to give him her room. She could do without her bed but not her computer.
Vincent was sleeping on the daybed in the room her mother used for an office. It was between her bedroom and her mother’s. Her mother had wanted Kelly to take that room as her bedroom, but she’d talked her into this one. She liked being at the back of the house and away from her mother, who was always complaining that she played her music too loud.
She had mail, but it could wait. She hit a couple of keys and when the right screen came up, she logged into a chat room. She’d caught the tail end of a chat about a new video earlier tonight. She wanted to see if anyone knew the name of the guy in the black leather pants. He was cute.
A second later, an instant message popped up from Byron. She moved her cursor to the reply field and started typing.
We got back tonight. And we have company, a friend of my father’s. He’s pretty cool. Handsome, too, but I don’t think my mom likes him. She hardly talks to him at all.
Mothers can be weird.
Tell me about it. Is yours working tonight?
No, but she’s not home. I got some news, too.
What kind of news?
Big news. I’m getting a truck. Meet me and I’ll tell you about it.
Mom’s not going to let me out this late.
Tell her you’re going to Gayle’s like you always do.
She’ll say it’s after ten.
Then sneak out. You’ve done it before.
Yeah, but I’m always scared I’ll get caught.
I’ll be at the park in fifteen minutes. I really need to see you. C’mon, Kelly. Don’t let me down.
I’ll try.
She logged off the computer, then threw herself across the bed. She had to give this some serious thought. She liked Byron a lot, but she didn’t want to get into trouble. Not that it mattered. She wasn’t going to get to go to New Orleans even if she was an angel.
A new truck was a big deal.
And it wasn’t as if it were midnight or something. It was only ten after ten. Some of her friends got to stay out until eleven o’clock when they went to the skating rink. After all, they were starting high school this year.
Kelly waited ten minutes, then opened her bedroom window. The rest of the house was wired so that if any door opened after her mother set the alarm, a loud buzzer would go off. Kelly had found out how to disconnect the wires from her window in a chat room over the Internet.
Everything you could possibly want to know was floating around somewhere in cyberspace. All you had to do was find it. And what she couldn’t find, Byron could. He was the smartest high school boy she knew. Actually, he was the only high school boy she knew very well, but still, she knew he was smart. Might even be a genius.
Tasuta katkend on lõppenud.