Heaven and Hell (Heaven and Hell, #1)

Hap took us slightly out of the town and turned onto a narrow road that managed somehow to be attractive while at the same time not inviting strangers. This was because of the big sign that said, “Private Road. Private Beach. Homeowners Only.”


Although it was a private road that led to houses on a private beach, the homes were surprisingly mostly older and small-ish, not the grand manses I would have suspected a rich, famous hot guy to live in. They were also built relatively close together. Every once in awhile you could see someone bought a couple of lots, scraped the old houses and put up modern, starkly designed (but cool) beach houses. But mostly the houses seemed vintage and established.

As we closed on the dead end, Hap lifted a hand and nabbed a remote from his sun visor. He hit the button then tossed it to Sam who caught it. Then he slowed and turned.

It was then I realized that regardless of my mood, I was excited to see where Sam lived. He called it his house. He talked about his deck. But he had not described it. I knew he had a place in Indy when he was playing for the Colts but sold it when he quit. I knew he had a place in LA while he was playing for the Colts where he lived outside football season and he sold that too. Ditto with his place by the base. This was now his only property.

And I suspected it would be everything, as the tall, black, attractive but not entirely imposing gate swung open and Hap drove through, I saw that it was not.

It was not a huge, modern, starkly designed (but cool) beach house on a triple lot.

It was a small, established, charming beach house on a single lot with a similarly small, established beach house close to it on one side, nothing but sand dunes and grass on the other.

There was a short, curving, black asphalt drive that grew wide and led to a two car garage. The drive also swung along and up the side of the house. I could see the dune that the house was built into jutting out from the house on either side. And all the green space around the drive was set with cool, tall, what I would guess were native grasses in bunches. The house was wide, squat and had two stories. And there was a white-painted, narrow walkway that wrapped around the house.

Hap drove up the side of the drive and we unloaded. As the men got the bags, I stood carrying Memphis’s crate with a Memphis I’d reloaded in it. Then Sam led us toward the front of the house facing the ocean.

I followed, Hap followed me. We trundled up a white-painted plank ramp and there it was.

The beach.

The ocean.

Beautiful.

Sam didn’t slow to drink in the view and around he went to a long deck that had two tall flagpoles at each end. One flew an American flag and under it was a black flag and on that there was what looked like a yellow diamond from which two wings jutted out the sides. On the other pole was a black flag with a gray skull wearing a forest green beret with an insignia on it, neon green fire shooting out the sides and crossed rifles at the skull’s jaw.

I stopped and stared at it as Sam went on and Hap came up behind me.

“Rangers,” Hap said and my eyes moved from the flag to him.

“Sorry?”

He extended his head to the flag. “Rangers. Army Rangers,” he stated then his head jerked to the other flagpole. “Airborne.” Then he grinned. “Figure you know the one with the stars and stripes.”

I stared at him a second then I looked at the flags.

Rangers?

I could not say I was hip on all the elite training a man in the Army could do.

What I could say was that I knew what a Ranger was. Everyone did.

They were the baddest of the badasses in the world.

And I’d read the book about Sam and it said not one thing about Rangers.

I looked back at Hap, my brows knit. “Was Sam a Ranger?”

His face changed. The grin stayed in place and he was wearing sunglasses so I couldn’t see if it still lit his eyes but I could tell he was no longer committed to it.

“Maybe I should let Sam tell you about that,” he muttered over the waves crashing against the sand.

Right. Like that would happen.

Woodenly, I turned toward the house, taking it in. It was shingle-sided, the shingles painted gray with gray-ish brown shingles on the roof. The woodwork was white. The deck had a plethora of white Adirondack chairs with curved footstools that, pushed together, made the chairs more like lounges. There were also a couple squat round tables. It led to a deck-long screened porch that, when I walked through, I saw had a rough wood picnic table with two benches on one side of the porch and wide wraparound bench on the other side covered in dark gray cushions strewn with huge, fluffy light gray and bright yellow pillows.

Through the double front doors I was in the house.

I wanted to take it in but I also needed to let Memphis free so I got out of Hap’s way, shoved my sunglasses back on my head, set down her crate, crouched by it and turned her loose. She burst out, emitted a couple of yaps then put her nose to the floor and commenced her voyage of discovery.

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