Run Wild

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Authors: Lorie O'Clare

BOOK: Run Wild
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Contents

 

Title Page

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

Teaser

Also by Lorie O’Clare

Praise for Lorie O’Clare’s previous novels

About the Author

Copyright

 

 

Chapter One

 

“Natasha?” Greg King glanced up from the file in his hand. “Natasha, the phone?”

“Got it.” Natasha grabbed the phone from her desk, ignoring Uncle Greg’s disapproving frown.

Patricia Barton, Patty, hurried into the office. “Here’s the file you were looking for,” she announced, handing the file to Greg before giving Natasha a winning smile.

KFA, King Fugitive Apprehension, had recently hired on two new bounty hunters. Two weeks ago Uncle Greg also had hired a new office assistant. Natasha appreciated the help in the office, but Patty was intent on showing Natasha up, making their daily jobs more of a competition than a team effort. It sucked. Natasha was competitive, and if the prissy little girl wanted to be shown who was the better woman, Natasha would take her down. She had created this job Patty was determined to show her, and everyone else, she could do better.

There was no way Natasha would give Patty the satisfaction of knowing how much she affected her. She returned an indifferent nod and looked away, staring outside through the large windows as she answered the phone.

“KFA,” she said quietly, calmly. “How may I help you?”

“I need to speak with Natasha King,” a deep, male voice demanded.

Natasha blinked. She’d been answering KFA’s phones for seven years, since her uncle opened up shop, and couldn’t remember when anyone last called this number for her. She had her own cell, and if anyone wanted to reach her, they called her number, not KFA’s. Yet this was the second time today someone had called and asked to speak to her. The first call had distracted her. Now her nerves were on edge.

“This is Natasha.” She turned her back on Uncle Greg and Patty and walked around her desk. “May I help you?”

“This is Natasha Nadine King?”

Natasha’s heart stopped and she froze. Then her teeth clamped shut when she plopped into her office chair behind her desk, which faced the rest of the office. Natasha didn’t use her middle name. Sure, it was on her birth certificate, but Nadine was her mother’s name, the woman who’d left Natasha and her father when she’d been four years old. “Nadine” wasn’t even on her driver’s license. Not even the middle initial.

“Who wants to know?” she demanded, keeping her voice low as she shot a furtive glance toward her uncle. For once she was glad Patty was kissing up to him. It was keeping him busy. Otherwise he’d be towering over Natasha wanting to know who was harassing her.

“This is a personal matter between Natasha King and her family.”

Her family? Her family, for the most part, was standing five feet from her. There were her two cousins, Marc and Jake, but both of them had moved out and weren’t working for KFA anymore. And Aunt Haley, of course, who didn’t like Patty any more than Natasha did, was probably either in the kitchen or somewhere else in the King house, which was attached to the KFA office. The office had once been a screened-in front porch, but Uncle Greg had converted it over shortly after he’d opened his doors for business.

“This is Natasha,” she said hurriedly. “What can I do for you?”

“Natasha.” There was no emotion in the man’s tone. “Where’s your father?”

“My—” Natasha bit off the word “father.” Who the hell would be asking her about her father? Obviously no one who knew her. She was the last person to ask if anyone wanted to find George King.

“Yes, your father, Natasha,” the man said crisply. “Tell me where he is.” He was rather demanding.

“I have no idea,” she drawled, her heart beating once again as she leaned back in her chair and examined her fingernails. It was the second time today. The first caller had been more polite, more conversational, but the question had been the same. Why did they want to know where her father was? What had he done?

She waited out the silence, curiosity besting her. At the same time she straightened her hand and stared at her short nails and the recent manicure she’d given herself. After her last breakup and Bill Sanders’ informing her he couldn’t be in a relationship when he wasn’t sure who wore the pants between them, Natasha had decided to confiscate some of Aunt Haley’s nail polish and paint her nails and her toes. They even matched. There was a first.

“Miss King.”

Natasha wasn’t in the mood to offer the caller a more informal title.

“I need you to come to Weaverville.”

“Weaverville?”

“Yes, Weaverville, California.”

She ran her fingers through her long black hair, immediately tangling them when she neared the ends, then yanked her hand free and stared at the tousled ends with casual indifference. Somewhere in her desk drawer was a hair stick she could wrap her hair around and pin to the back of her head.

Natasha opened the drawer and spotted it immediately. At the same time she glanced up, which was a mistake. Uncle Greg was watching her, raising an eyebrow. He was listening. Patty had returned to her smaller desk along the adjacent wall and was tapping away at her keyboard, probably blogging. The stupid twit seemed to forget anyone could read it. Natasha would check Patty’s blog later and read all the hateful things she wrote about her.

“Where is Weaverville, California?”

“We’re in the Trinity Alps.”

“I’m in L.A. That’s eight or nine hours from here.”

This time her caller waited out the silence.

“You can come here, fax, or mail any information.” Natasha wasn’t in the mood for nutcases. What was her father up to now?

“Your father is in serious trouble. You’re needed in Weaverville if you have any intention of helping him.”

She blew out a breath. Answering the phone for KFA all these years didn’t make dealing with people like this any easier. Everyone thought their world was coming to an end and KFA needed to drop everything and run to their assistance immediately. All she could do was slow the caller down and gather information. “Sir, I’m sorry. I didn’t get your name.”

“Trent, Trent Oakley. Does Monday work for you, around two
P.M.
?”

“Why are you asking where my father is and demanding to see me?” she asked. “I’ve already told you I don’t know where he is and no, Monday at two
P.M.
doesn’t work for me at all.”

She pictured Trent Oakley to be some bulging-gut mountain man, wearing a cowboy hat and plaid shirt and spitting chew after every other sentence. If he called her “little woman” she would hang up on him.

“This needs to be discussed in person.” Trent allowed another pause.

Maybe he didn’t realize what Natasha did for a living. He’d have to do a hell of a lot more than that to persuade her into doing what he wanted.

“Natasha,” Trent said, lowering his voice. Apparently, he felt they’d spoken long enough to address her by her first name. “I’m extending you a courtesy. I’m giving you the opportunity to meet with me before any charges are officially made.”

Natasha sighed. “Give me your number and I’ll call you back,” she said, resigned. “We’re a busy office. Don’t count on me being there.”

He merely grunted, gave her his number, and hung up without saying good-bye. She pulled her phone away from her ear slowly, trying to digest everything he’d just said or, better yet, what he hadn’t said.

This was two calls now. The first caller hadn’t identified himself but had simply asked if she were related to George King. They’d asked where he was. She’d said she didn’t know and they’d hung up. Now this caller, this Trent Oakley, had taken the conversation a bit further. It was all too bizarre. It had been years since she’d last seen her father.

Even if she did take off from work, which wasn’t an option, drive clear up to Northern California, which she couldn’t do, it made absolutely no sense at all why anyone would want to talk to her before pressing charges against her father. She had no say in her father’s life and never had.

“What was that all about?”

Natasha jumped and stared at her uncle, who loomed over her desk, watching her carefully. “Is something wrong with George?”

Patty hopped around her desk and sidled in next to Greg, her bright brown eyes wide with curiosity. “Is there something I can help with?” Which was her way of snooping into a conversation.

“No,” Natasha and Greg said at the same time.

“Oh.” Others might be offended by the snub, but Patty rocked up on her heels, spinning around with the files she held in her hands, and disappeared from Natasha’s line of vision. Uncle Greg was a large man and initially Patty’s not cowering around him had impressed Natasha.

Most people took one look at her uncle, who was six feet, four inches tall and built like one of those professional wrestlers on the WWE shows, and forgot what they were going to say. He could be intimidating as hell, and he did have a temper. But he was also the man who practically raised her and was more of a father than her real father had ever been.

Natasha saw the concern in his eyes, and although she hated talking about either of her parents with anyone, she and her uncle were also talking about his brother. She’d overheard more than once what her uncle thought of Natasha’s father, not only for willingly dropping Natasha off at Uncle Greg and Aunt Haley’s house several times a week throughout her childhood, but for eventually leaving her with them permanently. They didn’t care for George’s self-focused lifestyle and indifference for anyone but himself.

Her father was a gambler, a con artist, and a lady’s man. Natasha had overheard him telling Uncle Greg that his world was no place for an adorable little girl. At the time, Natasha had hung on to the words “adorable little girl.” She’d adored her dad, and truth be told, she didn’t hate him now. George King wasn’t a bad man, just a bad father, which made the conversation she’d just had with Trent Oakley even more mysterious, if not just plain weird.

“I don’t know if he’s in trouble, or not,” she said, and gathered her hair behind her head, twisted it into a knot, then slid her hair stick through it to hold.

“What was that phone call about?”

Uncle Greg had been a cop for twenty years before becoming a bounty hunter and had taught Natasha to focus on details and on how to read people. The look on his face suggested he believed his brother had done something wrong. Greg’s large stature suddenly appeared harder than stone and he crossed his thick arms against his chest as he stared down at her. He’d already drawn his conclusions and wasn’t happy.

Natasha felt a wave of defensiveness as she looked up at him.

“I need a drink.” Natasha pushed her way out from behind her desk. “Patty, can you handle the phones for a few minutes?”

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