onthings. She wasnât who he thought she was, and as soon as she found Abby, she was out of there. Which meant she needed to be very careful not to lead Clint on, as Gage suggested she was doing. Nothing beyond a casual friendship was going to happen with Clint, but at the same time, she needed to find out what he knew. Abbyâs life could depend on it.
Everyone was a potential suspect or witnessâeven if they didnât realize it. Any one of them could have seen or overheard something they didnât think anything of at the time but could prove vital to her investigation. She had to keep digging until she found it.
14
Gage stretched out before the fire, trying not to think about how long Darcy and Clint had been gone. There was no harm in a walk, but uneasiness filled him and no doubt would until her return.
Whitney shifted beside him. âIâm going to grab some more coffee. Would you like a refill?â
âSure, thatâd be great.â
Whitney had a great sense of humor, was intelligent and very athletic. She reminded him a great deal of Kayden.
She returned, handed Gage his cup, and was about to sit down when Ted approached. âHey, Whitney, I hear the sunset is gorgeous.â
Interesting . Gage had expected Cal or another of the other single passengers to hit on Whitney, not one of the crew.
Whitney glanced up at the darkening sky. âI think weâve already missed it.â
âEven better to see the stars from the rise. Wanna join me?â
âThanks, but Iâm good right here.â She settled back down on the log beside Gage.
âYou sure?â Ted smiled. âI promise, I donât bite.â
âIâm good. Thanks.â
Ted glanced between her and Gage and then nodded with a look of understanding. âMaybe some other time.â
Gage waited until Ted walked away before glancing at Whitney. âNot into walks or not into Ted?â He took a sip of his coffee.
She shook her head. âNot into disappearing.â
Gage spluttered on the liquid. âIâm sorry. What did you say?â
âNot into disappearing.â
âThatâs what I thought, but I donât understand. Are you suggesting Ted . . . ?â
âIâm not suggesting anything. Iâm simply being safe. Iâm a single female alone on an excursion. It would be foolish of me to leave the group with anyone, no matter how cute he may be.â
âYou make it sound like people are disappearing from cruises all the time.â
âNearly twenty last year alone.â
âFrom the Bering ?â
She shook her head. âNo, worldwide, but the Bering âs not free of its problems.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âLast August some honeymooners, Drake and Christine Bowen, disappeared while on an excursion.â
Bowen? âWasnât that the man who murdered his wife and then ran?â
âThatâs what the media claimed.â
âClaimed?â The media certainly wasnât bias-free, but it had sounded as if the husband was downright guilty.
âI had a friend on that cruiseâMelody. We used to work together at our old law firm. Anyway, Melody said she spent some time with one of the men whoâd been on that excursion, and he said the whole thing was strange.â
âStrange . . . how?â
âTheyâd made camp, and everyone had gone to bed. In the morning, Bowen gets up and canât find his wife. The team starts searching, but they canât find her anywhere.â
Gage remembered the news coverageâit not being far from their backyard. âI think at first they thought sheâd wandered off, but then someone discovered blood in the Bowensâ tent.â
âRight, but this guy told Mel that Bowen freaked and claimed it was planted there.â
âPlanted there? Oh, come on.â Gage sat his cup aside.
âThatâs what everyone
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