The Girl in the Mist (Misted Pines #1) Read Online Kristen Ashley

Categories Genre: Romance, Suspense Tags Authors: Series: Misted Pines Series by Kristen Ashley
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Total pages in book: 127
Estimated words: 129001 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 645(@200wpm)___ 516(@250wpm)___ 430(@300wpm)
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She glanced toward the counter, saw Celeste still was waiting for her drink, and out of earshot, which was a little too late, but thankfully Celeste wasn’t close, then she came back to me.

“Come on by to the shop. I don’t give discounts to rich people, but I’ll give you an early look at the Thanksgiving stuff.”

She slapped my knee so hard, it didn’t hurt badly, but it hurt.

She then got up and walked away.

Twenty-Six

Just Starting Out

I finally got my return text.

At 11:47 at night.

It read, You up?

Yes, I replied.

On my way over.

You will note that wasn’t a question of whether I wanted company at nearly ten to midnight.

I wasn’t in a good mood, and not because it took so long for Bohannan to reply to my text.

It was because I felt obliged to pull the curtain on my wall of windows, which normally gave an incredible view of a tranquil, mist-shrouded, moonlight-gilded lake, which was one of the reasons why I bought this place.

It also meant that I didn’t see Bohannan coming up.

But I heard his knock.

I headed to the security panel and disarmed it before I went to the door, pulled back the curtains and let him in.

He gazed approvingly at the curtains.

I shut the door.

“Beer or an Aromacobana brownie?” I offered.

“Just ate,” he replied.

“At nearly midnight?” Those three words were filled with wifely disapproval that wasn’t mine to have because he was a grown man, he could eat when he wanted, but also, I wasn’t his wife.

He made no reply, but he was watching me closely.

In other words, this time with his quiet, he read my mood and was proceeding with caution.

I moved to the couch. “Do you want to sit?”

I felt him behind me.

I also was in a titch less of a bad mood when I sat down, turning his way and lifting my bent leg to the seat, and he sat close, so his thigh was against my shin, and then he one-upped that by curling his long fingers around the back of my knee.

“What’s up?” I asked.

“Why you up?” he asked.

“Because I consumed a massive latte at around three o’clock, and I really can’t have caffeine after, maybe, ten, or it keeps me up late at night.”

“Right,” he muttered.

“I answered yours…” I prompted.

He didn’t cushion it.

“Hawk is sending a guy. His name is Billy. He’s gonna be living at the rental property up your lane. Hawk will also be monitoring the feeds from your cameras again, twenty-four, seven.”

Now it was me with no reply.

“Jess and Jace, they caught a trail. They followed it,” he said.

“Okay,” I whispered.

“We got sensors, even a few cameras. They send alerts to our phones, me and the boys. We have a lot of them. We move them around from time to time. But it isn’t like every inch of the woods is lousy with them.”

“Okay,” I repeated.

“Though, it’s just the woods we keep track of. I own the land. No one owns the lake.”

“Right.”

“Trail they tracked says whoever it was, they knew to avoid the wood. They came lakeside. On foot. Practically in the water. But not in the water, like they wanted the trail found. And not through the woods.”

Suddenly, I felt very cold.

“Beyond your boathouse, maybe six, ten feet, that trail disappears. Just stops.”

I started trembling.

Because I’d heard that before.

When they followed the trail of who took Alice.

It led into the woods.

And then it just stopped.

Bohannan pulled my knee fully up on his thigh, which scooted me across the seat closer to him.

“Hawk checked that footage again and again. But did you see the guy walk back the way he came?”

I shook my head.

“He did not retrace his steps?”

I kept shaking my head.

“You see a boat at all?”

Again, I shook my head.

“Did you keep watching?”

I nodded, but said, “It wasn’t like I watched for hours. I texted you and talked to you and then started checking windows. But except for the texting, and until after we spoke, I didn’t take my eyes from the windows.”

Bohannan nodded.

Once.

“There are blind spots to Hawk’s coverage, but on one feed or another, he’d see that guy. He didn’t see the guy. Even if he came around the front of your house. And when I say retrace his steps, what I mean is, to make no trail, he’d have to be walking backwards, placing his feet exactly where his feet were on the way in and retracing his steps. And I figure anyone would notice that.”

“So, um…what does that mean?”

“It means I know we’re just starting out…”

Oh boy.

“But I want you to move in with me.”

Well.

Damn.

Twenty-Seven

They Got More Signatures

The next afternoon, I was standing outside Aromacobana, studying the mural, impressed by the tie-dye effects in the peace signs, and the choice to make the bear and hunter look like a real bear and hunter, not cartoons, when I felt someone come up to my side.


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