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Here With Me (Adair Family 1)

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With that, she spun, kicking up gravel with the speed of her movement.

Before Lachlan knew it, she was in her vehicle and driving away.

Leaving him stunned and disoriented by her confession and the sincerity he’d heard in it.

11

Robyn

Seven days had passed since Mac was attacked, and they were finally discharging him from the hospital in the morning. Staring at the cork pin board I’d ordered online, my eyes darted around the evidence I’d collated, trying to make sense of it. The problem was, there were several people in Ardnoch with motive.

At the sound of a car pulling up next to the trailer, I reached over and turned the board around to hide it from plain sight. A Range Rover drew up outside, and I knew it must be Lucy.

Gordon was a friend of Mac’s, and he offered me his rental trailer in what the Scots called a caravan (not a trailer) park by the beach. He rented it to me for peanuts, which eased my financial concerns. It was a little cramped and gloomy on cloudy days, but I’d take it. At least it was one thing I didn’t have to worry about on top of the stress over Mac, the stalker, and my mom calling nonstop. I’d brushed off her calls with emails, but I knew I’d have to pick up the phone soon. I hated lying to her and knew I’d have to for Mac’s and Adair’s sakes.

“Hey,” I greeted Lucy as I stepped out of the trailer. Like me, she wore yoga pants and a T-shirt. When I told her I’d started running the beach in the morning, she jumped on the chance to join me. I wasn’t sure why she wanted to spend time with me, but I enjoyed her company so why question it?

She threw me her glamorous smile as she rounded the SUV, and I marveled at her ability to look constantly flawless. “Hey, yourself.”

We fell into companionable silence, walking down the grassy edge of the dunes and onto the beach. The sand was soft and golden, resistant to our footfalls until we neared the shore where it was compacted by the water’s continual caress.

Lucy stopped and took in a deep breath as she looked out across the sea. “There’s nothing like it here. The fresh sea air. The sound of perfect silence.” She eyed me with a soft smile. “I always thought perfect silence was nothing. But it’s not. It’s the world devoid of human noise. It’s waves lapping at the shore, gulls crying in the sky, the breeze whistling over clifftops and soaring down valleys.”

I smiled at her as I started warm-up exercises. Lucy followed suit, and I observed, “I think there’s a writer in you, Lucy Wainwright.”

“Do you? Because I’m writing a script.”

“About what?”

“It’s a character story. Rags to riches. No clichés. Kinda … autobiographical. Though that’s just between me and you. I would never sell it as that. My business is my business.”

Hearing the hard edge in her tone, I nodded in agreement. “I thought you were taking time off?”

“Oh, I am. And I’ve been offered amazing material, too, but you have to listen to your body, you know.”

I definitely understood.

Falling into silence, we jogged. It wasn’t surprising that Lucy kept up with me. I knew from our relaxed mixed martial arts lessons that she worked with the personal trainer at the estate every day. Being in shape was a prerequisite for the action roles she enjoyed between her more character-driven work.

After five miles, we turned and made our way back.

We were still about a mile from the caravan park when it started raining, and my muscles burned with the strain of running on sand. I slowed, breathing hard, hands on knees as sweat trickled down my spine.

“That was … that was great.” Lucy puffed out. “Why … why haven’t I—I been doing that … the whole time?”

“Beach running?”

“Yeah.”

“Good, right? Tougher on the muscles. And invigorating.”

“It is.” Lucy straightened to join me in cool-down exercises. “Though I’d prefer later in the morning. I need my beauty sleep.”

I shrugged unapologetically. “I’m an early bird.”

“Then I guess I’m up early for the foreseeable future. It’ll do me good.”

“If this is how you look early in the morning, I don’t think you have to worry about it affecting your beauty,” I assured her.

“You’re sweet.” Lucy beamed. “When you say stuff like that, I know you actually mean it. There’s no insincerity or jealousy behind it. It’s refreshing.”

We were silent as we finished our cool-down and then moved again. The drizzle felt great against my hot skin as we ambled down the beach. “Is that what it’s like? Envy and fakeness all the time? Hollywood, I mean?”

“Not everyone. Obviously. Lachlan isn’t like that. There’re lots of actors not like that, although there are lots of actors who are … it’s more about LA. Everyone is constantly in competition. For everything. It’s exhausting. Sometimes you don’t know who your real friends are, and when they say you look beautiful, there’s this look in their eyes like they wish you’d fall off a cliff and die.”



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