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His erotic dream veered off as he caught a glimpse of her just before she disappeared into the garden.

Fine, he thought. Maybe better. A sultry garden in the middle of the night. Perfumed air and passion. She wasn’t going to know what hit her.

“You know where they are.” Hawkins dragged her head back by the hair and she nearly cried out.

“If I knew where they were, I’d have them.”

“It’s a publicity stunt.” He whirled her around, laying the edge of the knife against her cheek. “I figured it out. You’ve just been playing games to get your names in the paper. I’ve put time and money into this deal, and it’s going to pay off tonight.”

She was too terrified to move. Even a tremor might have the blade slicing over her skin. She recognized rage in his eyes, just as she recognized him. This was the man Max had called Hawkins. “The map,” she began, then heard Max call her name. Before she could take a breath, the knife was at her throat again.

“Make a sound and I kill you, then him.”

He’d kill them both anyway, she thought frantically. It had been in his eyes. “The map,” she said in a whisper. “It’s a fake.” She gasped when the blade pricked her skin. “I’ll show you. I can show you where they are.”

She had to get him away, away from Max. He was calling her again, and the frustration in his voice had tears welling in her eyes.

“Down that way.” She gestured on impulse and let Hawkins drag her down the path until Max’s voice faded. At the side edge, the garden gave way to the rocks where the smell and sound of the sea grew stronger. “Over there.” She stumbled as he pulled her over the uneven ground. Beside her, the slope ran almost gently to a ridge. Below that, dizzying feet below, were the jagged teeth of rocks and the temperamental sea.

When the first flash of lightning struck, she jolted, then looked desperately over her shoulder. The wind had come up, but she hadn’t noticed. The clouds still hid the moon and smothered the light.

Was she far enough away? she wondered. Had Max given up looking for her and gone back inside? Where it was safe.

“If you’re trying to pull something on me—”

“No. They’re here.” She tripped on a jumble of rocks and went down hard. “Under here. In a box under the rocks.”

She would inch away slowly, she told herself as every instinct screamed for her to run. While he was involved, she would inch away, then spring up and race to the house. He grabbed the hem of her skirt, ripping it.

“One wrong move, and you’re dead.” She saw the gleam of his eyes as he bent close. “If I don’t find the box, you’re dead.”

Then his head went up, like a wolf scenting. Out of the dark with a vicious oath, Max leaped.

She screamed then as she saw the wicked edge of the knife glint in the flash of lightning. They hit the ground beside her, rolling over dirt and rock. She was still screaming when she jumped on Hawkins’s back to grope for his knife hand. The blade sliced into the ground an inch from Max’s face before she was bucked off.

“Damn it, run!” Max shouted at her, gripping Hawkins’s beefy wrist with both hands. Then he grunted as a fist grazed his temple.

They were rolling again, the impetus taking them down the slope and onto the ridge. She did run, but toward them, sliding along the loose dirt and sending a shower of pebbles to rain over the struggling bodies. Panting for breath, she grabbed a rock. Her next scream sliced the air as Max’s leg dangled over the edge into space.

All he could see was the contorted face above his. All he could hear was Lilah shouting his name. Then he saw stars when Hawkins rammed his head against the rock. For an instant, Max teetered on the edge, the brink between sky and sea. His hand slipped down the sweaty forearm. When the knife came down, he smelled the blood and heard Hawkins’s grunt of triumph.

There was something else in the air—something passionate and pleading—as insubstantial as the wind but as strong as bedrock. It slammed into him like a fist. The understanding went through him that he wasn’t only fighting for his life, but for Lilah’s and the life they would make together.

He wouldn’t lose it. With every ounce of strength, he smashed his fist into the face grinning over his. Blood spouted out of Hawkins’s nose, then they were grappling again with the knife wedged between them.

Lilah lifted the rock in both hands, started to bring it down when the men at her feet reversed positions. Sobbing, she scrambled back. There were shouts behind her and wild barking. She held tight to the only weapon she had and prayed that she would have the chance to use it.

Then the struggling stopped, and both men went still. With a grunt, Max pushed Hawkins aside and managed to gain his knees. His face was streaked with dirt and blood, his clothes splattered with it. Weakly he shook his head to clear it and looked up at Lilah. She stood like an avenging angel, hair flying, the rock gripped in her hands.

“He rolled on the knife,” Max said in a distant voice. “I think he’s dead.” Dazed, he stared down at his hand, at the dark smear that was the blood of the man he’d killed. Then he looked up at her again. “Are you hurt?”

“Oh, Max. Oh, God.” The rock slipped from her fingers as she tumbled to her knees beside him.

“It’s okay.” He patted her shoulder, stroked her hair. “It’s okay,” he repeated though he was deathly afraid he would faint.

The dog got there first, then the others came thundering down the slope in nightgowns or robes and hastily pulled-on jeans.

“Lilah.” Amanda was there, desperate hands running over her sister’s body in a search for wounds. “Are you all right? Are you hurt?”