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  Expired Hero

  LAST CHANCE COUNTY BOOK FOUR

  Lisa Phillips

  Copyright Smashwords 2020 Lisa Phillips

  All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Publisher Lisa Phillips

  Cover design Ryan Schwarz

  Edited by www.jenwieber.com

  CONTENTS

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Epilogue

  One

  There were two people in the diner with the potential to kill him. It was hard to judge skill level outside of a fight, but Stuart Leland’s instinct gave enough information to gauge a baseline threat.

  He settled onto a stool at the end of the counter. The diner wasn’t too busy, even though it was lunchtime. Payday for most people was tomorrow, so it would be packed then. And a Friday. The nine-to-five crowd would be celebrating.

  “Coffee?”

  Stuart flipped the mug over. “Decaf.”

  The bleach blonde waitress halted, turned with the carafe, and headed back to the pot. He poured himself water, and she returned with a different carafe and filled his cup nearly to the brim.

  “Thanks.” Stuart topped it up with cold water from the glass.

  Before he set the glass down, a man exited the bathroom. Stuart froze. Dark T-shirt, paint-splattered cargo pants, and work boots. The man had one smashed fingernail that had turned purple and a scar in his stubble on the left side of his cheek.

  He passed behind Stuart. Smelled like paint thinner, dirt, and coffee.

  Stuart’s hand shook. The water sloshed over his hand and spilled onto the counter. The man sat down at his booth with two associates, one of whom registered on Stuart’s threat metrics.

  The waitress tossed a rag onto the counter, one thick, dark eyebrow raised. Her blonde hair was bleached to almost white and her nametag said, “Letty.”

  “Thanks.” Stuart tried to sound polite. He didn’t smile. When he tried that, people—especially women—tended to look scared and quickly move away from him. So he’d given up attempting to make friends here in Last Chance County.

  Besides, it wasn’t like he was going to live here forever.

  When she took back the rag he’d used to clean the spilled water, Stuart said, “Hot ham and cheese, side of fries.”

  “Comin’ right up.” Letty put the order in, then sashayed down to the other side of the counter.

  There was another waitress on today, clearing plates from an empty booth in the far corner. He could see through to the kitchen. One guy, white apron. Hollis was back there, her round figure bustling back and forth quickly as though she was busy and agitated. Her stepfather owned the diner and oversaw everything. Although most folks considered it hers now, the entire operation was in his name, and she was paid barely more than minimum wage.

  The second waitress lifted a tub of dirty dishes and passed in front of the door just as it opened. She smiled widely. “Kaylee. Good to see you.”

  The woman who’d entered smiled, tentative but not nervous. “Hi, Becky.”

  “Looks like your spot’s open.”

  That was a problem, as far as Stuart was concerned. Though, he didn’t let it bother him too much as he pulled out his cell phone. Let everyone think he’d fallen into the void of social media. He hardly cared what others’ opinions were.

  Kaylee had a bigger issue. That being her tendency to eat in the same “spot” every Thursday. The way she grocery shopped on a Monday. Biked the same route to and from work. Went to the gym like it was a scheduled appointment.

  Made his life easier, but it was also dangerous.

  Stuart swiped to the app on his phone and initiated the scan for Bluetooth-enabled devices nearby. He nearly blinked at the number of phones he could access, in this room alone. People had no idea what hackers were capable of, and they had no idea the ways they left themselves vulnerable to it.

  Kaylee’s phone was on the list. He knew the serial number, so he tapped hers and ran the program.

  Clone in progress.

  Some might call it an invasion of privacy, but if she’d done what he thought she had, there was no expectation of being left alone. Not from him, or any of the police officers she worked with.

  Could be the whole thing was just to rub their noses in how good she was. Kaylee sat at the police department reception desk Monday through Friday. To keep an ear to the ground so she was the first to hear when things went down? Maybe.

  Error.

  Letty set his plate down. “Something wrong?”

  “Huh?” Stuart looked up, as though she’d surprised him. “No, nothing’s wrong. My brokerage account took a hit yesterday when the S&P dipped. Nothing to worry about.”

  Letty blinked. “Sure. Ketchup?”

  “And mayonnaise.” He tapped the screen of his phone.

  Clone in progress.

  “Oh-kay.”

  As she walked away, he spotted Kaylee, now perched at the end stool. She spoke tentatively, “Fry sauce, right?” Like she wasn’t sure if he would reciprocate an attempt at friendliness.

  Stuart kept his tone light when he said, “You know it.” But he didn’t smile due to the aforementioned response he normally got.

  Kaylee’s round cheeks flushed an endearing pink under the makeup she wore. Her figure had toned up since the spring thaw, what with all the biking she did every day to get to and from work. She had one stretchy black pants and a gray T-shirt, one of those fitness trackers on her wrist with a lavender band. Her dark hair usually had purple streaks. Today they were yellow, and he realized then that, with how often her hair changed colors, they had to be clip-ins.

  Meanwhile, he attempted to appear as understated as possible. No one needed to notice him. Stuart’s entire life had been about blending in and not ruffling feathers. No one wanted a covert operative working for them who stuck out in a crowd.

  Unless they wanted to.

  Error.

  He frowned at the screen, then tapped through to find the problem. Kaylee had secrets. Stuart needed to find out what they were and what they meant to him. He couldn’t wait, and he didn’t need technical problems.

  Kaylee returned to her book.

  Letty decided to chat up two construction workers, while she held the little dish of mayo for him in her hand.

  Hollis’s movements had become increasingly erratic. She’d gone from agitated to flustered.

  Stuart read the technical report for the error. That didn’t make sense. It meant… He glanced at Kaylee. She had no idea. What on earth was the woman into?

  Another man passed behind Stuart.

  He bit down on the inside of his lip to avoid stiffening but
, he must have let on somehow. Kaylee glanced at him again.

  Stuart ignored her. He ate half his sandwich trying to figure out why this hadn’t worked. The error only meant one thing. He’d never be able to get into her phone, or listen in on her calls, or read her messages. Stuart couldn’t clone her phone.

  Because someone else already had.

  Hollis cried out. He was off his stool before the knife she’d been holding clattered to the cutting board.

  “Hey!” Letty called out, waving his mayonnaise but making no attempt to stop him. Or come after him.

  Stuart pushed through the revolving door to the kitchen, swiped a dish towel from a rack by the door, and strode to Hollis. He took her hand and wrapped her finger while she winced. “That looks bad. What happened?”

  “It slipped because the sweet potato was wet.”

  Stuart could still see the blood, even though he’d covered the cut. He pulled out his phone and pulled up Dean’s number from his favorites.

  “Cartwright.”

  “It’s me.”

  “Me?” Dean knew exactly who it was. “It’s customary to—”

  “Hollis cut her finger. It’s deep.”

  “Diner?”

  “Kitchen.”

  “I’ll be there in two minutes.” Dean hung up.

  “He’s close.” Stuart offered Hollis a polite, lips-closed smile. “He’ll be here ASAP.”

  She pushed out a breath, face pale.

  The chef guy, with the white coat, flipped two burgers. He still hadn’t turned.

  Stuart said, “Hey!”

  Hollis started. Even Kaylee looked up from her book. Her gaze drifted between Stuart and Hollis, both of them standing close to each other. Her brows pulled together and she bit her lip, her focus returning to her book.

  Stuart sighed. What did that even mean, and why did the woman take so much of his focus? He was trying to find out what she was hiding, but it was more than that. She had his attention. Her softness. The way she smiled, gentle and tentative. As though she didn’t know how she would be received.

  “You’re squeezing my hand pretty hard.”

  Stuart jerked back to Hollis. “Sorry.”

  She grinned, glanced at Kaylee, and said, “Don’t mind me.” She pinned him with her friendly stare. “She’s a quiet woman. Sticks to what she knows, lives life quiet. You know?”

  He didn’t want to nod, but she was right. He did know.

  Hollis continued, “Surprised everyone when she gave up the job at the bank and went to the police station to be their receptionist.” She leaned closer. “I actually thought she had a thing for Conroy for a while, but…” Hollis shrugged. “Even after the PD was attacked by all those guys, she still stayed.”

  Stuart had heard about the incident—a local bad guy, dead now, had sent his men to retrieve key evidence. They’d shot up the police station and taken back the cell phone. Kaylee had been there?

  Stuart glanced at her, still reading her book.

  “It’s a shame what happened to her parents.”

  The steel glint of a blade flashed in his mind; memories. Pain. The smell of blood. He looked down and saw faint scars on the back of his hand. Stuart fought the pull of the past and motioned to the chef with his chin. “What’s up with him?”

  “Headphones.”

  “Maybe lay off the knives, yeah?”

  She sighed. “I would if my food prep kid actually showed up.” She studied him. “How good are you with knives?”

  “You think I need a job?”

  “Right now, I need all that chopped for a round of cheeseburgers.” She indicated the produce with a tip of her head.

  Stuart let her hold the towel and went to the handwashing sink. He rolled his sleeves back and cleaned up. One lettuce, four tomatoes. Onions. Stuart chopped and sliced into piles.

  When he glanced at her, finished, Hollis lifted her hands together. “Please take the job. Please.”

  “What makes you think I don’t have one?”

  “Do you?”

  Stuart pressed his lips together, conceding the point.

  “Please please please.”

  Dean strode in. “Where’s my patient?”

  The chef guy spun, spatula flinging out, allowing a couple of drops of grease to fly. One hit Stuart’s cheek, hot oil stinging his skin with a sharp burst of pain. Stuart reacted before his brain caught up with what he was doing. He swiped with one arm, cracking his forearm with the chef’s, and then kicked out at the back of the man’s knee.

  The chef hit the floor with a cry.

  Stuart froze.

  “Maybe we should—”

  Stuart shook his head, not wanting to hear her take back the offer of a job. Even a dumb one like chopping vegetables. “Forget it.”

  He strode past Dean, not looking at his friend’s face because he didn’t want to see it. He pushed out the back door and found a rear parking lot. Beyond that, trees and a hill. Stuart broke into a run.

  He ducked under a branch and raced up the hill.

  The pain from the hot oil lingered. Like every other wound. Every slice and strike. If he removed his shirt, it would be written on him. A map of his darkest moments. Unable to save himself. Unable to make the pain stop.

  Sweat beaded on his forehead. He stopped at the top of the hill and spun around to look at the town below.

  He saw Kaylee, riding her bike with her backpack on. Headed back to the police department probably. Lunch break over. Error. Who had cloned her phone? He was supposed to know by now what she was hiding. Maybe she was nothing but a victim. How did he know?

  All he had as a result of his most recent clandestine mission was a job offer.

  Which, as with everything else in his life, had likely been taken away.

  Leaving him with nothing.

  Two

  Kaylee swung her leg over her bike and set the kickstand down. On any given day, she’d rather be reading a book than nearly anything else. It wasn’t like real life was all that great, anyway. Books had always been a source of comfort and probably would be for the rest of her life.

  She could go anywhere. Be anyone but herself, walking around with the memories she kept in her head, even though she prayed every day she would forget them.

  Kaylee walked up to the front door of the huge house that was nestled in the trees. Most people probably didn’t even know it was here, but she’d done extensive research before she moved to Last Chance. Google Maps Street View had shown her everything—and that included the warehouse behind the main house.

  Kaylee had looked up the address on her work computer. The police database indicated the property was owned by Chevalier Holdings LLC, though she knew Dean Cartwright lived here, along with his brother, Ted, who was the police department’s tech expert. And also he lived in this house.

  It was better not to even think his name.

  There were reportedly also four others who bunked in the multi-room house along with them, bringing the total to seven. She’d seen the four around town, driving their big, black SUV with the tinted windows. They weren’t here much as far as she could tell, but Kaylee steered clear of them anyway.

  The way she tried to do with Stuart.

  And that was before he’d attacked the chef.

  Kaylee had called Savannah before she left the diner to tell her what went down, but Stuart had left so fast, no one knew where he’d gone. Not even Dean, and they were supposed to be friends. He’d just attacked that man and then walked away. Like it was nothing.

  That “nothing” settled in the pit of her stomach.

  She knocked on the front door, then saw the bell. She rang that as well. Ted had told her that Dean was home, so she figured he was the one who would answer the door. Stuart was who knew where. Probably running from the law by now.

  It was only after she’d seen Dean at the diner that she’d had the idea to speak with him. Kaylee had been thinking on it all afternoon. How to find out the answers to her
questions.

  Without actually explaining—to anyone—what was going on.

  There was no way she would reveal her secrets.

  The door opened. “Oh. Hey.” Dean shook his head. “What’s up, Kaylee? Is everything okay?”

  “What?” Her stomach churned. Why couldn’t more of the men who lived in this town be ugly?

  She’d been watching her friends fall for them, one by one. Mia. Savannah. Now Ellie had met Dean, and while she wasn’t exactly a friend, Kaylee liked her. Then there was Jess, who was Ellie’s sister and had a serious thing for Ted, who was Dean’s brother. It was serendipity—two brothers and two sisters who fell in love with each other.

  Like all good love stories. The kind that ended with a double wedding.

  Unfortunately for her, the men were all falling for exciting, adventurous women. Ones who were everything Kaylee was not.

  “Kaylee?” He jogged her from her thoughts.

  “Um…yes, everything’s fine. If, uh, everything’s fine here, that is. I mean, is your friend okay? Did the police find him?”

  “I can’t talk about Stuart.” He moved to shut the door.

  “I need some help!” She blurted out the words, practically shouting at him.

  She didn’t want to talk about Stuart, but he was also not the reason she was here. Kaylee didn’t need to think about him, either. Not more than she already had, because that would reach creeper territory. Stuart and whatever his deal was didn’t have anything to do with her.

  And given the way he’d erupted in the diner kitchen, that was for the best.

  “I’d invite you in, but I’m the only one here.”

  He thought she would be inappropriate, or that someone might think something inappropriate might happen?

  “That’s fine.” She grasped her backpack strap with one hand. “I just...”

  He waited.

  How was she supposed to start?

  “It’s my brother.”

  “You have a brother?”

  She nodded. “You were in the Navy, right? One of the SEALs?”

  “Yes.”

  “So you know people who do jobs like that.”

  “Like your brother?”