ONE
THE SNARLING, POSSIBLY rabid, five hundred pound grizzly bear lurking in the trees was the final straw.
Hailey Genest stopped in her tracks, staring at the area of the forest where she’d heard the rustling. Okay, so maybe it wasn’t a grizzly bear. She didn’t think Maine had grizzlies, even deep in the woods. It was probably only a black bear, but it was a really big one.
“I think it was a chipmunk,” her buddy system partner said.
Hailey turned her stare on Tori Burns, who’d talked her into this stupid wilderness adventure. “I hate you so much right now.”
Tori grinned. “Your mascara’s smudging.”
“Why are we friends again?”
“Because you came into the diner during my shift and whined about being the last single woman on the entire planet because all of your friends have found their soul mates. When I pointed out I’m single, you decided we should be friends.”
She hadn’t been whining. She’d just had a rough day and hadn’t felt like she could call her friends to vent because they were all probably greeting their menfolk at the door. And, yes, she had imagined them in aprons and pearls just because she could.
“First Paige married Mitch, then Lauren ran off to Massachusetts and married Ryan, and Katie’s living with Josh.” Hailey snorted and crossed her arms. “Those damn Kowalski men stole all my women.”
Tori sighed. “And now I’m friends with a woman who wears makeup and new hiking boots on a wilderness adventure.”
“The better I look, the better I feel and I thought I’d need the boost.” She looked down at her feet, trying not to wince. “Pretty sure my blisters are reaching horror movie proportions, though.”
“I told you it would be better to wear sneakers than brand-new hiking boots.”
“I wanted to be fashionable.”
“Yes, because limping is totally the new black.”
Hailey took a few steps, trying to ignore how much her feet, calves and every other part of her body hurt, but then she stopped. “Listen.”
After several seconds, Tori frowned. “I can’t hear the others anymore.”
“Not even the woman who sounds like she has a built-in megaphone and sucked helium for breakfast. They left us behind.” Even as she said the words, which should have been cause for concern, Hailey felt a pang of relief.
If the group had left them behind, there was no pressure to keep up, which was something she’d been failing at miserably for at least a mile. She considered herself to be in good shape, but hiking for miles over uneven ground in the woods was kicking her butt. And they still had paddling canoes to look forward to, just to make sure her arms and back ached as much as her legs tomorrow.
Since her usual daily workout was pushing a cart of books from the night drop box back into the library, she could only wonder what she’d been thinking. Or drinking.
“If we hurry, we can catch them.” Tori cast a doubtful glance at Hailey’s feet. “If it helps, we get to sit in the canoes.”
The thought of being off her feet did help a little, so Hailey did her best to keep up with her new friend. Tori wasn’t very tall, but she walked with a long, confident stride that was hard to match. Trying to ignore how her impending blisters and the muscles in the backs of her calves were having a contest to see which could burn the worst, Hailey put one foot in front of the other and tried not to stumble over roots.
After what felt like miles, Tori stopped in a clearing and shook her head. There were several paths in front of them and they all looked the same degree of disturbed. No matter how hard she looked, Hailey couldn’t tell which one their group had taken.
“Aren’t they supposed to break off tree branches or something to point the way?” she asked.
“We weren’t kidnapped by Magua. We just didn’t keep up. I think if the tour guides noticed they’d lost us, they would have waited rather than leave signs for us to interpret.”
Hailey slapped herself in the face, then grimaced. “I’m going to need a blood transfusion before we get out of these woods.”
“I have some Deep Woods Off in my pack. You want it?”
“No. I already have bug repellent on.” She waved at a particularly persistent blackfly. “It’s all natural and it nourishes my skin. It smells good, too.”
“Too bad it doesn’t keep the bugs away.”
“The comments on Pinterest said it wasn’t quite as effective as the chemical versions, but did I mention it’s nourishing?”
Tori snorted. “And now you’re nourishing the blackflies.”
“I suck at being outside.”
“You are surprisingly bad at it for somebody born and raised in rural Maine.”
“Whitford’s rural, but it’s not this rural.” Hailey wanted to point out her parents had chosen Whitford, not her, but a bug almost flew into her mouth, so she closed it.
“Well.” Tori put her hands on her hips. “We’re lost.”
MATT BARNETT LEANED against a tree trunk and imagined himself at a crossroads. To the left was the low road. He could continue his walk in peace, making his way back to camp. Crack a beer with his old man. Drop a line in the river.
To the right was the high road, which meant approaching the two women whose voices carried through the trees like sirens. The fire truck kind, not the beautiful women luring sailors onto the rocks. They were lost, and rescuing damsels in distress wasn’t on his vacation agenda.
Then again, vacations weren’t supposed to have agendas. And as much as he wanted to kick back in his favorite fishing chair with a beer, it wasn’t in his nature to leave two women alone in the woods. Unless, of course, they’d done it on purpose and it didn’t sound like that was the case here.
With a weary sigh, he pushed off the tree and made his way to the women. He stepped out onto the path in front of them and had to give them credit for not screaming. They both yelped a little and the brunette dug her fingernails into the blonde’s arm, but no full-blown hysterics.
He couldn’t really blame them for being startled. Being on the downside of a two week vacation, Matt was looking more than a little rough. The jeans and flannel shirt were common enough, but his lucky fishing hat was nothing short of disgusting after years of wear. His hair had been overdue for a cut before the vacation even started, and he hadn’t shaved since the last day he worked. If he’d been holding an axe, the women probably would have fainted.
“You ladies lost?”
“Nope.” It was the brunette who spoke. She looked him straight in the eye while she lied. “We’re all set, but thanks.”
“Where you heading?”
This time it was the blonde who spoke, and she pointed at a spot over his shoulder. “Since we’re facing that way, probably that way. Now if you’ll excuse us, we—”
“Sound carries in the woods, so I know you’re lost.” He had a cabin and a dwindling vacation to get back to. “I’m Matt Barnett. I have a cabin a couple miles from here. I’ve been coming here my whole life and I haven’t buried a single body in the woods yet.”
“We totally believe you,” the brunette said. “Because serial killers always start the conversation with how many bodies they’ve disposed of.”
Even though there was a touch of humor in her voice, he noticed neither of them relaxed, which was good. Women shouldn’t trust strange men who popped out of the tree line. But he also wanted to get this show on the road. If he had to tell them he was a game warden, he would, but he’d try to avoid it if he could. That, more often than not, led to questions and complaints and friends of friends who’d been cited and could he just look into that? He didn’t want to go there, if possible.
“Let’s go with the theory I’m not a serial killer for a few minutes,” he said. “I’m not leaving you stranded in the woods, so the way I see it you ladies have two options. You can let me lead, which means I’ll be in front of you and you can keep an eye on me, or I can shadow you, which means you won’t be able to see me, but I’ll be able to see you. That would be creepy.”
“Or we could run,” the blonde said.
He’d always been partial to brunettes in the past, and this one should have caught his eye. She was cute and had the potential to be a real firecracker, but for some reason it was the blonde who kept snagging his attention. Nothing about her—from the makeup she’d put on her face for a trek through the woods to the brand-new boots on her feet—was his type.
And she was looking at him like he’d just crawled out from behind a Dumpster. He’d seen that look before and he tended to not like women who aimed it his way.
She could probably run. The jeans and the form-fitting fleece zip-up she was wearing accented the fact she was in nice shape. But those boots had to be hurting her and the way her makeup was smearing around her pretty brown eyes told him she’d been sweating. If walking through the woods was an effort for her, running would be a joke.
“Pretty sure I could catch you.”
The brunette snickered. “Of course you’d catch her. I’m faster than her, plus everybody knows the blondes always die first.”