The Baby's Bodyguard

The Baby's Bodyguard Read Online Free PDF

Book: The Baby's Bodyguard Read Online Free PDF
Author: Stephanie Newton
considered her options.
    Stay and hide. Pray the baby doesn’t cry.
    Make a run for it out the patio door.
    The safety of the baby was her first priority. And if she stayed in the house with an intruder, the baby would be at risk. But what if someone had waited outside?
    She breathed a prayer, one she’d said since childhood.
Please God, go before us and behind us. Guard us and protect us.
    Kelsey heard a door open down the hall. There really was someone in her house. Nausea burned in her stomach. She had to make a decision.
    Coming closer.
Oh, dear God, help.
    Janie’s new medicine was in the diaper bag. She grabbed it off the floor and threw it over her shoulder. She had to leave now, if she was going to. Making the decision, she put the bat down and lifted Janie from the crib.
Don’t wake up, don’t wake up.
    She crept to the glass doors, her legs weak, thebaby’s weight heavy in her shaking arms. Her breath was coming in quick gasps. She had to calm down and think.
    From the vantage point in here, the patio looked clear. If she went straight out the back without being seen, she could cut through the neighbor’s yard and be at Ethan’s boat in less than five minutes. She had to get out without being noticed. The night was dark, no moon to speak of. If she didn’t make noise, if the baby was quiet. If the intruders were busy in the house.
    So many ifs. She had to take the chance, though. Janie’s safety, her safety, depended on it.
    Now or never. Her heart pounding loud enough to wake the baby on its own, she flipped the lock, slid the glass doors open and stepped out, silent in her bare feet.
    Don’t wake up, don’t wake up.
    She ran.
    The slate pavers on her patio cut into her feet, but she didn’t slow down or cry out. She had to get through the trees to the street behind her house. Holding Janie close to her chest, she thumbed the two on her phone, where she’d programmed Ethan’s number. As it rang, she heard a shout from behind her. From her house. “Oh, no. No, no, no. Do not follow me.”
    Janie lifted her head. “It’s okay, sweetie, go back to sleep.”
    “Ethan Clark.”
    Relief flooded her at the sound of his voice, but he was still so far away. “Ethan, someone—in my—house. I ran. I’m not sure—I think—they followed.”
    “What? Where are you?”
    She had to stop for a second. She had to breathe. Flattening herself against the fence in the neighbor’s yard, she glanced back at her house. A light flashed in the window. A flashlight?
    The door slammed open and she heard more shouting.
    She whispered urgently into the phone.
“They’re coming!”
She ran. The marina was about four blocks from here, but she was on the street now. She could run faster. She hitched the baby up in her arms. Janie whimpered but didn’t cry.
    Her pursuers crashed through the bushes in her neighbor’s yard half a block away.
    She tried to glance back to see where they were, stumbled and nearly went to her knees. Her cell phone skidded to the curb. She left it.
    One wish. One prayer.
Safety.
    Something whizzed past her ear and she heard a metallic thud in the mailbox closest to her. Was that … oh, no, it
was.
They were
shooting
at her.
    Help.
    It was as close to a prayer as she could get, especially when she had a few choice words she’d like to say to the people shooting at a
baby.
    A shout came from in front of her. “Kelsey, run for the boat!”
    She didn’t hesitate. Here was help.
    Ethan didn’t hear a gunshot, but he saw the muzzle flash and heard the metallic thud as the round hit amailbox feet from where Kelsey ran with the baby. Silenced weapon, which meant professional.
    That Kelsey had been able to escape at all was pure miracle.
    From somewhere he pulled calm, clear thinking. He put a bullet in the ground near where he’d seen muzzle flash. Another into the bushes. He heard a muffled cry.
    All he needed was to keep the gunmen busy long enough to give Kelsey time to get safely on the
Read Online Free Pdf

Similar Books

Not Quite a Mermaid

Linda Chapman

Darkness Before Dawn

Sharon M. Draper

Saturn Run

John Sandford, Ctein

Taliesin Ascendant (The Children and the Blood)

Skye Malone, Megan Joel Peterson

Hostage Nation

Victoria Bruce

Shadow Pavilion

Liz Williams

Sprout Mask Replica

Robert Rankin

Watch Them Die

Kevin O'Brien