Playing With Fire (Tangled in Texas, #2)(88)



“But I didn’t—”

The sheriff raised his hand to stop me from continuing. “It’s okay, we know that much already.”

Cowboy glared at him. “Stuart Nelson is lying. Anna’s car was still in her driveway when I got back from the fire call. Her vehicle wasn’t stolen.”

“He’s not saying it was stolen. More like ‘temporarily borrowed.’”

I shook my head. “None of this makes any sense. Why would the kidnapper take my car and then return it?”

“We have reason to believe the perpetrator wasn’t aware the old man was in the barn,” Sheriff Wells explained. “Nelson said your vehicle barreled out of here at a high rate of speed. He tried to follow it, but lost it a few miles down the road. Once he made it back to your home and saw your Cavalier sitting in the driveway, he drove back to the barn to find out what you’d been doing out here.”

“And that’s when he found the barn on fire?”

The sheriff nodded. “He called in the fire, then found your friend and moved him to safety. Said he hadn’t even realized there was anyone else inside until the old man told him otherwise. He ran back to the barn and saw you climbing down the ladder.”

“Well, that’s just great,” Cowboy sneered, pulling off his hat and scrubbing a hand through his hair. “So on his word alone, you let the ex-convict go.”

“Didn’t have a choice,” the sheriff said. “We had nothing to tie him to the kidnapping. The only other suspects at this time are—”

“The B-Barlow b-brothers…” I wheezed, then stopped long enough to catch my breath. “It was them? They…did this?”

“That’s what we’re trying to figure out, ma’am.”

Cowboy sighed and rubbed at the back of his neck. “Don’t worry, sweetheart. We’re going to catch whoever’s responsible for this. No one’s going to hurt you ever again.” His cell phone must’ve buzzed because he stood and pulled it from his hip and looked at it. “I have to take this,” he said, leaning down to kiss my forehead before hopping out the ambulance doors.

The paramedic glanced over at Cowboy. “We’re ready to roll. If you want, Captain, you can follow behind the ambulance. Just be sure to turn on your flashers and emergency lights.”

“Follow? Are you kidding? I’m leading this parade,” he said, giving me a wink.





Chapter Nineteen


After arriving at the understaffed emergency room, I changed into a hospital gown, had a scan of my shoulder, and was eventually admitted to a room upstairs with Cowboy at my side. The nurses monitored me for any worsening signs of respiratory distress until the doctor on duty made his rounds and wheeled in a small surgical tray.

He examined me first, paying close attention to the sounds of my respirations, before moving on to my shoulder. The doctor explained how the results from my scan had showed no permanent damage, though I’d still have to wear a sling for a short period of time to promote healing. After adding a few stitches to the gash in my arm, he pushed the tray aside and told me he was keeping me overnight for precautionary observation due to the large amount of smoke I’d inhaled.

I wasn’t the least bit surprised. Been there, done that.

When the doctor finally left the room, Cowboy kissed my cheek and rubbed his calloused thumb along my jaw as he gazed down at my bandaged wrist. “I’m sorry, Anna. I wish I’d been there to protect you. I should’ve been. This is all my fau—”

I pressed my finger to his lips to silence him. “Don’t say that. You can’t stand guard over me every minute. The Barlows would have gotten to me sooner or later.”

“It won’t happen again,” Cowboy said, deadly promise looming in his threat.

The door opened and we both looked up.

Sheriff Wells stepped into the room, followed by Mandy Barlow, who was no longer in her bunker gear. Neither of them looked happy. Not that I expected her to be after hearing her brothers were going to be arrested.

“Did you pick up Joe and Clay Barlow, yet?” Cowboy asked, apparently ignoring the shine of Mandy’s teary eyes.

“No,” the sheriff said. “That’s actually what I came to talk to you about.”

They didn’t catch them?

The sheriff hesitated. “They said they weren’t responsible for Miss Weber’s kidnapping, and I have no choice but to believe them.”

“It had to be them,” Cowboy snarled, shaking his head in disgust. “If it wasn’t Stuart Nelson, then they’d be the only ones left who had any connection to Anna and would want to do her harm. What about all the threats they sent her?”

Sheriff Wells wrinkled his brow in confusion. “Threats?”

Everyone shifted their eyes onto me and I sighed. “After I had a run-in with the Barlow boys, I started receiving hostile notes in my mailbox. I thought they were just trying to intimidate me, though.”

“I want to see those notes,” the sheriff said.

“I’ll swing by Anna’s and bring them to you in the morning,” Cowboy stated, glancing over at Mandy. “I’m sorry. I know they’re your brothers, but they need to pay for what they did to her.”

Mandy shook her head. “That’s what the sheriff is trying to tell you. It’s not possible. They couldn’t have been responsible for the kidnapping. Both of my brothers have been locked up in County Jail since last night. They started a bar brawl over at The Backwoods and were arrested. They’re still in a cell.”

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