Highland Shifter
Page 57

 Catherine Bybee

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Helen didn’t see the problem. Philip might be hiding something, but deep inside she didn’t think he was dangerous. “Keep your friends close and your enemies closer. I’ve never thought of my boss as my enemy. The only way to figure out what he wants is to get near him.”
“No.”
Helen’s head shot toward Simon. “Excuse me?”
“He’s dangerous.” Simon’s tone was final. Good thing they weren’t in his century or Helen might feel obligated to listen. As it was, she didn’t.
“We don’t know that.”
“He’s dangerous until we prove otherwise.”
Myra, Amber, and Cian listened while Simon attempted to put his foot down.
“I think I know the man better than you.”
Simon’s jaw twitched. “You may know him, but we know Druids. We’ve seen what those who are evil are capable of. You haven’t.”
Something inside her shivered. Years of being on her own however, kept Helen from bowing to Simon’s will. Sure, something about Philip had always bothered her. She’d chocked that up to the man’s seeming interest in her as a woman. Now she knew it was deeper than that. Still, he wasn’t dangerous. The only way she’d prove that is to get near the man and prove he wasn’t going to do a thing to her.
Helen didn’t realize how still the room had become until Lizzy stepped back in. “I left a message…ah, what’s going on?” Liz slid to a stop and eyed her son before glancing at Helen.
Seconds ticked by without a word.
“Would someone please tell me what happened?”
Myra cleared her throat. “Helen wants to confront Philip and Simon was explaining how dangerous the man can be if he is in fact a Druid.”
“I don’t want to confront him, just spy on him to find out what he’s after. I can’t do that sitting around here hiding.”
When Liz nodded, Helen thought she had the woman’s support.
“The man broke into your apartment and followed you to Europe to spy on you. He isn’t a choirboy. Doesn’t mean he slices people up, but he’s not innocent.” Lizzy stood before Helen and broke some of the tension in the room. “I have a call into Jake at the station. With any luck, we’ll hear from him soon and we can draw in more information. Laying low for a couple more days won’t hurt.”
“Unless Philip returns and finds me here. Then what?”
“Then you’re surrounded by people who can protect you,” Simon said.
All her life Helen only depended on herself. What happened when everyone in the room returned to their time? Who would be there to protect her then?
No, Helen could count only on herself. She’d learned a thing or two living on the streets. Some of the urban knowledge would come in handy now. “Fine.” Let him think he won. From the look on Simon’s face, they’d be arguing until dawn if Helen didn’t relent.
Chapter Twenty-Three
“I can’t believe I’m sitting next to you again.” Jake Nelson stared at Simon’s mother with his jaw on his chest. From what Fin had told Simon of the man, he wasn’t sure how much he could trust him. Jake might have been as close to a brother to Todd at one time, but he hadn’t made Simon’s mother and Fin’s stay in this century easy. According to Fin, Jake threatened to turn Liz and Fin into the police on several occasions, never believing their stories of time travel and magical powers.
Simon wondered what Nelson believed after he saw Fin and Liz disappear right in front of his eyes only two years ago. There was no denying his mother’s or Myra’s age. age, Myra’s, whom Jake had met.
“We didn’t think we’d need to return here either.”
Jake’s gaze swept over Myra’s frame and settled on her protruding stomach. “Isn’t it dangerous for you to…travel in your condition?”
Myra rubbed her belly. “We seem to be doing fine.”
“Where’s Todd?”
Worry filled Myra’s face. “Home. For our safety, and that of the children, we needed to travel without him.”
“Children?” Jake no sooner asked about them before several sets of footsteps ran down the hall and into the living room.
Fiona and Aislin sailed into the room at a run, Jake and Kyle fast on their heels.
“I tagged you!” Kyle hollered.
The ground under them started to shake when the girls came to a stop.
“Aislin, stop that,” Myra scolded her daughter, knowing it was her making the earth tremble beneath their feet.
Aislin slid behind her mother’s back and the room quieted. “Sorry.”
Myra reached around her daughter and pulled her close. “We have company.”
Jake and Kyle, both out of breath, stood taller and eyed Jake Nelson quietly.
“Jake,” Myra called her son to her side. When he made it to her, she lifted her hand in the older Jake’s direction. “Honey, I want you to meet the man your father and I named you after. Jake Nelson, this is our son, Jake Blakely.”
Jake Nelson’s speculative expression slid from his face like butter from hot bread. Little Jake was an exact replica of Todd and Nelson could see it. Todd’s son proudly put out his hand for the other man to shake.
“My father speaks of you all the time.”
“Does he?”
“Aye. Says you’re the brother he didn’t have.”
Nelson pulled in a quick breath and blew it out slowly. “When you see him again, tell him…tell him I feel the same.”
Jake nodded. “Yes, sir.”
Liz encouraged the children to play in another room while the adults talked.
“So, you’re Simon?” Jake said after the kids left the room.
Simon nodded.
“You realize you’re supposed to be a teenage kid, right?”
“I was at one time.”
Jake moved his gaze to Helen. “And you’re the latest ‘missing’ woman. Am I to believe that every missing person on the books is a time traveler?”
“I wouldn’t go that far,” Liz told him. “We’ve been free of visitors for over a decade. Helen stumbled upon us. We didn’t search for her.”
“Are you a Druid, too?”
Helen shrugged. “So I’m told. Hard to argue with the things I’ve seen in the last month.”
Liz spent a little time bringing Jake up to date on the reasons for their twenty first century visit. When they broached the need for Jake’s help, Simon and Helen took over the conversation.