sheâd promised her father she wouldnât be late.
If she intended to keep that promise, sheâd better get a move on. She mounted the steps to her tree houseâan eleven-hundred-square-foot architectural wonder of reclaimed wood and leaded glassâand leaped lightly over her cat, Pita (short for pain in the ass), who liked to lie on the next-to-last step, solely in order to better trip someone, Jess believed. Shorty had promised to come out and feed her while she was gone.
Thirty minutes later, she secured the house and lugged her bag to the car. Because she imagined the security agent was going to be either short on conversation or too long-winded to endure, sheâd included her iPod and an eReader. For whatever reason, when she tried to picture the man, her warped imagination kept conjuring images of Kevin James from Paul Blart: Mall Cop . Why? Who knew, but it made her snicker every time all the same.
With a shake of her head and another glance at the clockâdamn!âshe slipped the key in the ignition and slung gravel as she peeled out of the driveway. From her house to the shop was ordinarily a fifteen-minute drive.
Sheâd need to do it in ten.
It was obscene how much that pleased her.
* * *
âW HAT THE HELL ,â Griff muttered, his gaze trained on the rearview mirror. Heâd first noted the red Camaroâthe retro-kind Chevy had debuted a few years agoâmore than half a mile back when it had first appeared in the distance.
It was damn hard to miss.
Candy-apple red, white racing stripes from hood to trunk, and the way it had moved seamlessly in and out of traffic, smoothly passing everything that interrupted its path had certainly drawn his attention. A little admiration, even.
Now, as the car drew nearer to his bumperâso close that he could read the tag on the front, which appropriately read Fasterâirritation was quickly dimming the original sentiment. He was moving five miles past the speed limit on a two-lane highway with a double yellow line. The driver couldnât pass without breaking the law, and he refused to go any faster.
Though he couldnât make out much beyond a lot of dark curly hair and sunglasses, he knew it was a woman behind the wheel and heâd admit, she seemed more than capable of handling the powerful, if impractical, car she drove. But if she didnât get off his damn bumper, they were going to have a serious problem.
He slowed a little, just to infuriate her. âIâm in front of you, lady. Get over it,â he muttered.
She dropped back as they mounted a small hill, and Griff had just congratulated himself for making her retreat, when the yellow lines changed in her favor and she roared past him. He barely caught a glimpse of her pleased smile, but it was enough to make him want to hit the accelerator a little harder and take off after her.
Which was irrational, of course, so he put the thought firmly out of his mind. He was a grown man on his way to an important job, his first as a civilian. Playing cat and mouse with a girlâone who had a much faster car, no lessâwas a distraction he couldnât afford, and it rather startled him that heâd been inclined to do it in the first place. Chasing after her would have been pointless and, as a rule, he didnât pursue things he knew would be a waste of his time.
Feeling strangely unsettled, Griff watched the red car disappear over the next hill and released a pent-up breath. He drummed his thumbs against the steering wheel, suddenly restless, and shifted in his seat. Heâd been on the road for almost eight hours already and knew that at least another four would be in his future today, if he planned to stick to his schedule. Which he did, of course, otherwise what was the point in having one?
Heâd allotted eight minutes to pick up the bra and his Rossi escort, another seven for a bathroom break, and planned to arrive in Hagerstown no later