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  Honey set the two grocery sacks on the floor and watched as Rachel carefully locked the front door again. “What’s going on?” she demanded, planting her strong, freckled fists on her hips. “Why am I disguising my bag as quilting squares?”

  “In here,” Rachel said, leading the way to her bedroom. He still wasn’t moving, except for the regular motion of his chest as he breathed. “He’s been shot,” she said, going down on her knees beside him.

  The healthy color washed out of Honey’s face, leaving her freckles as bright spots on her nose and cheekbones. “My God, what’s going on here? Who is he? Have you called the sheriff? Who shot him?”

  “I don’t know, to answer three of those questions,” Rachel said tensely, not looking at Honey. She kept her eyes trained on the man’s face, willing him to open his eyes, wishing he could give her the answers to the questions Honey had asked. “And I’m not going to call the sheriff.”

  “What do you mean, you’re not going to call?” Honey fairly shouted, shaken out of her usual calm capability by the sight of a naked man on Rachel’s bedroom floor. “Did you shoot him?”

  “Of course not! He washed up on the beach!”

  “All the more reason to call the sheriff!”

  “I can’t!” Rachel lifted her head, her eyes fierce and strangely calm. “I can’t risk his life that way.”

  “Have you lost your sense of reason? He needs a doctor, and the sheriff needs to investigate why he was shot! He could be an escaped felon, or a drug runner. Anything!”

  “I know that.” Rachel drew a deep breath. “But the shape he’s in, I don’t think I’m taking that much of a risk. He’s helpless. And if things aren’t that…cut and dried…he wouldn’t stand a chance in a hospital where someone could get to him.”

  Honey put her hand to her head. “I don’t understand what you’re talking about,” she said wearily. “What do you mean, ‘cut and dried’? And why do you think someone would try to get to him? To finish the job they started?”

  “Yes.”

  “Then it’s a job for the sheriff!”

  “Listen,” Rachel said insistently. “When I was a reporter, I saw some things that were…strange. I was on the scene one night when a body was found. The man had been shot in the back of the head. The sheriff of that county did his report, the body was taken in for identification, but when the one-paragraph report appeared in the newspaper two days later it said that he had died of natural causes! In a way, I suppose it is natural to die of a bullet in the brain, but it made me curious, and I poked around a little, looking for the file. The file had disappeared. The coroner’s office had no record of a man who had been shot in the head. Finally the word filtered down to me to stop snooping, that certain people in government had taken care of the matter and wanted it dropped.”

  “This doesn’t make any sense,” Honey muttered.

  “The man was an agent!”

  “What sort of agent? DEA? FBI? What?”

  “You’re on the right track, but go deeper.”

  “A spy? You’re saying he was a spy?”

  “He was an agent. I don’t know for which side, but the entire thing was hushed up and doctored out of existence. After that I started noticing other things that weren’t quite what they seemed. I’ve seen too much to simply assume that this man will be safe if I turn him over to the authorities!”

  “You think he’s an agent?” Honey stared down at him, her brown eyes wide.

  Rachel willed herself to answer calmly. “I think there’s a chance of it, and I think we’d be risking his life to turn him over to the sheriff. It would be a matter of public record then, and anyone hunting for him would be able to find him.”

  “He could still be a drug runner. You could be risking your life by protecting him.”

  “That’s a possibility,” Rachel admitted. “But he’s wounded, and I’m not. He doesn’t have any chance at all, except what I can give him. If the DEA has busted up a drug ring there’ll be something about it on the scanner, or in the newspaper. If he’s an escaped felon it’ll be on the news. He’s not in any condition to hurt anyone, so I’m safe.”

  “And if a drug deal has gone sour, and some other unsavory characters are after him? You wouldn’t be safe then, from either him or the others.”

  “That’s a chance I’ll have to take,” Rachel said quietly, her gray eyes level as she met Honey’s worried gaze. “I know all the possibilities, and I know the risks. I may be seeing shadows where there aren’t any, but think how terrible it would be for him if I’m right.”

  Honey drew a deep breath and tried again. “It just isn’t likely that a wounded spy would wash up on your beach. Things like that don’t happen to normal people, and you’re still within the bounds of normalcy, even if you are a little eccentric.”

  Rachel couldn’t believe what she was hearing, from Honey of all people, who was usually the most logical person in the state. The night’s events were rattling everyone. “It isn’t likely that a wounded man would wash up on my beach period, regardless of his occupation! But he did! He’s here, and he needs help. I’ve done what I can, but he needs medical attention. He still has a bullet in his shoulder. Honey, please!”

  If possible, Honey went even whiter. “You want me to take care of him? He needs a doctor! I’m a veterinarian!”

  “I can’t call a doctor! Doctors are required to report all gunshot wounds to the police. You can do it. No vital organs are involved. It’s his shoulder and his leg, and I think he has a concussion. Please.”

  Honey glanced down at the naked man and bit her lip. “How did you get him up here?”

  “Joe and I pulled him, on this quilt.”

  “If he has a severe concussion he may need surgery.”

  “I know. I’ll handle that if it’s necessary. I’ll think of something.”

  They were both silent for a few minutes, looking down at the man who lay so still and helpless at their feet. “All right,” Honey finally said, her voice soft. “I’ll do what I can. Let’s get him up on the bed.”

  That was as difficult as getting him up from the beach had been. Because Honey was larger and stronger, she got him under the shoulders, while Rachel slid one arm under his hips and the other under his thighs. As Rachel had noted before, he was a big man, and roped with muscles, which meant that he weighed more for his size than a less muscular man would have. He was also deadweight, and they had to be careful of his injuries. “Good God,” Honey panted. “How did you manage to get him up that slope and into the house, even with Joe’s help?”

  “I had to do it,” Rachel said, because that was the only explanation she had.

  Finally they got him on the bed, and Rachel slumped to the floor, totally exhausted by the night’s efforts. Honey bent over the man, her freckled face intent as she examined him.

  CHAPTER THREE

  IT WAS THREE o’clock in the morning. Honey had left half an hour before, and Rachel had held her weariness at bay long enough to take another much needed shower and wash the salt out of her hair. The heat of the day had finally abated enough that the air was comfortable, but soon it would be sunrise, and the heat would begin to build once more. She needed to sleep now, while she could, but her hair was wet. Sighing, she propped herself against the vanity and turned on the blow-dryer.

  The man was still asleep, or unconscious. He was definitely concussed, but Honey hadn’t thought it was severe, or that he was in a coma; rather, she’d decided that his continued unconsciousness was due to a combination of fatigue, loss of blood, shock and the blow to his head. She had taken the bullet out of his shoulder, stitched and bandaged his wounds and given him a tetanus injection and an antibiotic; then she and Rachel had cleaned him up, changed the bedding and made him as comfortable as they could. Once she had decided to help, Honey had become her usual capable, unflustered self, for which Rachel wo