Well, temporarily, anyway.
He’d likely put her in some other agent’s protective custody so that he could get on with finding his nephew and putting an end to the baby farms. He’d want to exclude her while doing that.
But that wasn’t going to happen.
“How far is this safe house?” she asked.
“Not far. But we’ll have to drive around first to make sure we aren’t being followed. And it’s not a place we want to use for long. It’s best if I make arrangements for another place outside the county.”
That would put her even farther away from the baby farm. From Janice’s killers, too. But it wasn’t a trade-off Rosalie wanted since she needed to find answers about Sadie, and sadly, those killers might have those answers. Once they were at this interim safe house, she would somehow have to convince Austin to stay in the area.
That wouldn’t be an easy task.
Austin paused when they reached the E.R. doors and looked out. There were no other vehicles near his truck, just the same ones that had been in the parking lot when they’d arrived. Still, he hurried, and the moment he had her inside, he drove away.
“You okay?” he asked.
“No.” Rosalie didn’t even try to lie, especially since she was still shaking.
He made a soft sound of agreement. “I’m sorry. I know the shooting must bring back memories of Eli.”
“Everything brings back those memories,” she mumbled.
“Yes.” And that’s all he said for several moments. “I know saying I’m sorry won’t help, but I am sorry.”
Rosalie heard the words. Every one of them. But she couldn’t respond. She’d been raised to be polite. To not do anything intentionally to hurt a person’s feelings, but there was no way she could let him off the hook.
Eli was dead.
And Austin was partly to blame.
There were probably a lot of details of the investigation she didn’t know, but Seth had given her the big picture. Austin and Eli had been undercover investigating an illegal weapons ring, and when a hired gun of the operation had tried to flee, Austin had gone after him.
And in doing so, Austin had essentially blown their covers.
As a result, Eli had been gunned down a few seconds later by a second hired thug, who then disappeared along with his partner whom Eli had been chasing. All of this had happened just weeks before Eli and she had planned to walk down the aisle. Rosalie hadn’t even had a chance to tell Eli that he was going to be a father since she’d learned the news herself only that morning.
As horrible as all those memories were, they gave her something to focus on. Something other than Janice’s murder and the danger to all those babies.
Probably because she was still shivering, Austin cranked up the heat and took the road out of town. He didn’t go far, less than a mile, before he turned around and went in the opposite direction.
“See anything?” he asked.
Rosalie was about to say no, but she caught something out of the corner of her eye. A vehicle was parked on a side road. No headlights, and it didn’t pull out and follow them. However, because of the events of the night, it put her on edge.
“Yeah, I saw it,” Austin said, following her gaze to the side mirror. “It could be a spotter, to try to figure out which direction we’re going.”
And that meant it could be someone connected to the baby farms. “Too bad we just can’t stop and question the person inside.”
“Not with you in the truck.” Austin continued to glance at the vehicle while he turned back toward town. “I’ll try another road.”
The words had hardly left his mouth when the vehicle pulled out onto the road, following them.
“Get down in the seat,” Austin warned her.
Rosalie slid down, but she stayed high enough so she could watch from the side mirror.
Austin handed her his phone. “Call Sawyer. Tell him there’s been a change of plans, that I’m taking you to the Silver Creek sheriff’s office instead so they can guard you there.”
She hated being pawned off, but her mere presence was stopping Austin from going after the person in the vehicle. Rosalie hoped once he dropped her off that Austin would go in pursuit with plenty of backup.
Before she could press Sawyer’s number, the phone rang, and she saw a familiar name on the screen.
Deputy Gage Ryland.
Mercy. She prayed something hadn’t happened to the babies. Rosalie pushed the answer button so hard that she nearly broke the phone, and she put the call on speaker.
“Are the babies okay?” she jumped to ask.
“Fine,” Deputy Ryland answered. “That’s not why I’m calling. Is Agent Duran there?”
“I’m here, but I’ve got someone tailing me. I’m heading to the sheriff’s office now.”
“Make a detour to the hospital, and I’ll have someone take care of the tail.”
Austin and she exchanged an uneasy glance. There’d been nothing urgent in the deputy’s voice when she’d met him at the hospital, but there was definitely some urgency now.
“I’m with the injured P.I. you brought in,” Gage continued, “and I think you should get back down to the hospital fast. We’ve got a big problem.”
That was definitely not what Austin wanted to hear Deputy Gage Ryland say.
We’ve got a big problem.
Austin already had enough of those. A dead woman. Two destroyed crime scenes. And a whole mess of loose ends he needed to be working on.
Including taking Rosalie to a safe house.
“What’s going on?” Austin asked Gage.
“A guy just showed up at the hospital, and he demanded to see the P.I., Sonny Buckland. I told him it’d have to wait, that he was still being stitched up, but before I could send him on his merry way, Sonny came out of the examining room. Armed. He snatched the security guard’s gun and aimed it at the guy. Sonny’s holding him at gunpoint now.”
Of all the problems that Austin had imagined, that wasn’t one of them.
Austin shook his head. “And who exactly is the visitor?”
“Trevor Yancy.”
Even in the darkness, Austin could see the surprise dart through Rosalie’s eyes.
The concern, too.
“I wouldn’t have called you,” Gage went on, “but this Yancy idiot is egging Sonny on, along with demanding to see Rosalie and you. I’d really rather resolve this without bullets.”
So would Austin, especially since the babies might still be nearby.
“I’m on the way,” Austin assured Gage, and he turned and headed in the direction of Main Street.
“I want to go with you,” Rosalie insisted. “It’ll only waste time if you drop me off at the sheriff’s office first. And besides, it sounds as if the sheriff and his deputies already have their hands full.”
Austin couldn’t dispute any of that, but there was another angle to this. “You’ve already been put in enough danger tonight.”
She