broken did nasty things to his restraint. Micah took a deep breath and exhaled it slowly. Failed to help his temper. Not a big surprise since he figured nothing would. He went to her, and noted the whispered buzzing he stirred with a group of women to the right. Their gossip would have to be diffused later. Madison needed him more.
Micah placed his hand on Madison’s shoulder. She tensed beneath his touch, but tilted her head back. Red-rimmed blue eyes met his gaze. He resisted his instinct to tug her into his embrace and demand the cause of her anxiety. Resisted telling her he’d seek immediate justice against the one who harmed her.
Madison reacted to his touch, rubbed her palm across her pants and squeezed his hand resting on her shoulder. Her response appeased his instincts and tamed the demon within demanding swift justice.
“I shouldn’t have called you,” she said, her voice raspy from crying. “I just didn’t know who…there was no one else to—” A tiny head shake and her gaze fell away, as did her hand.
Friendless? Was that what she indicated by her broken sentences? Any fool could discern girls weren’t her friends because they envied her. Males weren’t her friends because they all wanted her. He silently promised to give her friends so loyal they’d die for her.
“I’m glad you called. Let me,” he said and gave a little pull on her backpack. She allowed him to ease it off, tugging her arms free of the straps. Micah placed it between his feet as he sat beside her on the concrete surface, leaving less than an inch between them. “You want to tell me what’s going on?”
Or point me in the instigator’s direction so I can kill them slowly?
“Not really,” she said looking everywhere but at him. The crying was over, that was a good start. Good for his temper too.
“You terrified me. I broke a handful of laws rushing to you.”
She turned her head to look at him. Her eyes remained puffy, but she’d be good as new in a few hours, all evidence of her weeping eradicated. “Sure you did.”
Easy to discern she believed that like she believed a bad pick-up line.
“I did a U-turn into oncoming traffic, went well over seventy down Jefferson Street and parked illegally.” Micah brushed his knuckles across her cheekbone and her eyelids went half-mast at the gentle touch. “Why are my actions so hard for you to believe?”
Madison shrugged, looked away quickly. Micah guessed the question hit a sore nerve.
“Your family loves you and would—”
She snorted loud enough to interrupt his sentence.
“I believe every teenager thinks their parents don’t love them or are unreasonable.”
“Not every teenager’s father blames her for gaining unwanted attention from men.”
Those words were spoken so solemnly, Micah knew not to question their validity. The floodgates on his temper burst wide open again and he struggled to keep his voice flat. “Anyone who has met you knows you’re above reproach, charmingly innocent.”
And driving me fucking crazy with her innocence.
“When men stare at me and flirt with me without any enticement from me,” she chewed on her thumb nail, “that’s damning enough in Daddy’s eyes. An innocent girl wouldn’t provoke such an action.”
What an ass her father is ! Maybe a few screws loose too for him to think such nonsense. He hadn’t met a pastor yet that wasn’t a touch crazy. Causing the father problems wouldn’t be a bit of a problem; a juicy sex scandal should do the job nicely.
“I cannot speak for the other men, Madison, but I only seek friendship from you.” A lie to damn his soul, but for a worthy individual. “Is he who upset you today?”
“Mr. Dominus—”
“Micah,” he corrected. “You called me in crisis, and gave me a mini heart attack. I believe I deserve a small boon. Call me Micah.”
A touch of a smile. “You’re dangerous…Micah.”
She made him work for each small victory, but damned if they weren’t
Kizzie Waller
Celia Kyle, Lauren Creed
Renee Field
Josi S. Kilpack
Chris Philbrook
Alex Wheatle
Kate Hardy
Suzanne Brockmann
William W. Johnstone
Sophie Wintner