by phone. And although she missed them, sheâd been too busy to feel homesick. It wasnât that she didnât like Portland. On the contrary, she loved being able to call the city her hometown. But she had things to do, places to go, people to see. She had a career to build. And returning here had been a giant step backward in that regard.
â Special Agent Logan,â Bridget corrected his identification of her. She needed to make that clear to him, too. âSo just what am I doing home, anyway?â
âYouâre needed for a job,â he told her.
âThat much I gathered,â she replied, biting back the duh with which sheâd almost punctuated the statement. Exhaustion, she told herself. She always got cranky when she didnât get enough sleep. âWhat I want to know is why me?â she elaborated patiently.
Instead of answering her, Sam Jonesâor, rather, Special Agent Samuel Jonesâbent to pick up the larger of her two bags, leaving the small one for Bridget. Anequal opportunist, she thought. She liked that in a man. Not that she liked this man, mind you, she hastily backpedaled. But he clearly wasnât a coddler, and she respected that. She wasnât a coddler, either.
He tipped his head toward the exit doors. âCarâs just outside. Youâll be briefed on the assignment when we get to the field office. Youâre expected ASAP. Iâm expected to be the one to get you there.â
He was obviously no-nonsense, too, something else Bridget admired. Still, a little information up front would have been nice.
Without awaiting a response from her, Samuel Jones began to make his way to the exit, so she hastily retrieved her other suitcase and followed. Involuntarily, her gaze fell to the elegant expanse of his broad shoulders as he cut a swath easily through the crowd, and she noticed how much taller he was than everyone else. He turned his head once, to glance at something that must have caught his eye, and even his profile made her want to sigh wistfully. And seeing as how Bridget Logan didnât have a wistful bone in her body, that wasnât exactly a reaction she welcomed.
Fatigue, she told herself again. She was only acting like a boy-crazy preteen because she was tired and crabby and hungry. She hadnât been boy-crazy even when she was a preteen. Sheâd been way too focused on school, and way more interested in changing the world than in thumbtacking pictures of River Phoenix and Leonardo DiCaprio to her bedroom wall. Once Agent Jones dropped her at headquarters and took off againâand once she got some decent sleep and a decent mealâshe wouldnât give him a second thought.
They walked in silence until Jones halted behind ablack, commonplace, four-door sedanâgovernment issue, natchâand thumbed the key bob to open the trunk. He hefted her suitcase inside, reached for the one she held out to him and repeated the action, then thumbed the key bob again to unlock the car doors. He didnât stride to the passenger side to open the door for Bridget. And again, she grudgingly saluted him for it. He was obviously the kind of man who assumed a woman in her job could take care of herself. And she could.
So it made absolutely no sense that Bridget should feel slighted by his gesture. Or lack thereof. For some strange reason, though, she did. Boy, she really did need to catch up on her sleep.
After folding herself into the passenger seat and strapping on her seat belt, she turned to face Agent Jones again. âSo how much do you know about this case Iâm being assigned to?â she asked.
He looked over at her, his stony facade cracking just enough that she could see he thought she was nuts for asking such a question. âI know everything about it,â he told her in a tone of voice that likewise suggested he thought she was nuts.
Or maybe he thought she was stupid. It certainly wouldnât have been the