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Hot Cop Next Door: A Second Chance Romance

Page 3

by Brooke Noelle


  He shrugged. “I’m sorry. Truly, I am.”

  “It’s okay, Emma. We’ve been through this before.” I turned to face him. “Thank you, Officer Jackson.”

  “Call me Cameron,” he said. “We are neighbors after all.”

  “Thank you for coming by, Cameron.”

  He got Asher’s number for the report and left.

  “Well, I guess it’s somewhat comforting I live next door to a cop,” I said, locking the door.

  “Not that it’s going to do any good,” Emma grumbled.

  “It’s fine. I’ll get a new number on Monday. I’m beat and going to bed,” I told my houseguests.

  I went to bed a little less anxious than I had been when my phone was ringing nonstop. It was a little comforting to know there was a cop right next door. He may not have been able to do much from a legal standpoint, but at least if Asher did find me, I could run to him for help.

  Chapter Four

  Cameron

  The morning came a little too soon for my taste, but that was the way it was with kids. At least, that was what I had been told. I stumbled into the kitchen to get Lily a bowl of cereal and me some coffee. She was her usual perky self.

  “What do you want to do today?” I asked her.

  On my days off, I made sure I spent all my time with her doing fun things. It was hard being a single parent with a rotating schedule. I always felt like I was failing at the parenting thing. I worked a typical forty hours a week, but since Lily had started kindergarten, I felt like I rarely saw her.

  “I want to go to the park,” she said with perfect clarity.

  I smiled. “The park it is. We have to go to Grandma and Grandpa’s house for dinner tonight. So, we can clean up around here, head to the park, and then to dinner.”

  She sighed. “Grandma already cleaned up the house.”

  I nodded. “Yes, she did, but I have to wash some clothes.”

  She wrinkled her nose. “I don’t know how to do that.”

  “And you don’t have to learn. Not yet anyway. I’ll do it.”

  That seemed to satisfy her. I knew it wasn’t exactly fun to do housework, but I hated my mother doing it. She wasn’t my maid. I was still struggling to find the balance between work, kid, and fun. I would get it. Plenty of single parents did. I was probably a little slower than most.

  I took my coffee to the laundry room and got the first load started before heading for the shower. Lily was in the living room watching cartoons, which meant I had about half an hour before she got bored. As I stripped for the shower, I thought about my last call last night. I wasn’t sure who was who in that foursome, but I had a feeling my new neighbor had gotten a new boyfriend and now the ex was jealous. Hell, maybe she left the ex for the new guy. Someone was paying a lot of money for that house next door. None of them looked like the kind of people that had high-paying jobs. I guessed, judging by their attire, they had been out partying. I had smelled the alcohol on all of them.

  I shook my head and hoped the neighbors didn’t become a nuisance. If it looked like there was going to be a revolving door of young people shacking up and coming and going all hours of the night, I would put a stop to it.

  “Daddy, I’m ready to go!” Lily hollered at my bedroom door as I was getting dressed.

  “Okay. I’m almost ready,” I said, checking my watch. It was only ten, which meant we would have some time to kill before dinner.

  I opened the door to find her waiting for me in the hallway.

  “You took a long time.” She was pouting.

  “Sorry. My body is a lot bigger than yours. It takes me longer in the shower,” I reasoned.

  She shook her head. “Are you ready?”

  “Yes, let me throw the clothes in the dryer and we’ll go.”

  She impatiently followed me around the house while I picked up, started another load of laundry, and tidied up the kitchen. In all, it took me ten minutes, but by the way she was sighing, a person would have thought I had taken hours.

  “Let’s go,” I said, heading for the door.

  She bounced out. When I turned to check the lock on the door, I noticed my neighbors in the driveway. The girl— Savannah, if I remembered her name right—was hugging the other three, who then all climbed into a car and left. She waved as the car disappeared down the street. When she noticed me watching, she gave a small wave before heading back inside.

  Interesting. She was living there alone?

  Lily and I headed to the park before visiting a children’s museum that had recently opened. It was close to four by the time we got to my parents’ house.

  “Hi, guys!” my mother greeted as we walked inside the house.

  “Where’s Grandpa?” Lily asked.

  My mom smiled. “He’s out in the shop. You can go find him.”

  “Can I help you with anything?” I asked.

  She laughed. “No, dear. Relax. You look like you could use a nap.”

  I shrugged. “I’m fine.”

  She shook her head and gave me that familiar worried-mom look. She had been doing her best to pick up the slack since Becca had died. I had a nanny who watched Lily sometimes, like last night, but my mother insisted on watching her as often as possible.

  “How was work?” she asked.

  I followed her into the kitchen and sat on a barstool. She poured me a glass of orange juice, which I desperately needed. I was dragging ass and needed the pick-me-up.

  “Good. Easy.”

  She laughed. “That’s what I like to hear.”

  “I did get a call to my new neighbor’s house,” I told her.

  “Really? That doesn’t sound good.”

  I shrugged. “She’s young and got a little freaked out that her ex was calling her. I think it had more to do with the new boyfriend being there and that they had been drinking.”

  My mother didn’t look convinced. “I don’t know. I don’t have to tell you how dangerous those domestic violence situations can be. Be careful. I don’t want you or Lily getting caught in the crossfire of some love triangle.”

  “I don’t think it’s anything all that serious. I listened to a couple of the messages. The guy will get over it.”

  She nodded. “You keep your eyes and ears open.”

  My dad and Lily came in through the back patio. He was a retired detective who had served close to thirty years on the force. We had a decent relationship, but neither of us was the touchy-feely type.

  “Son,” he said, nodding his head.

  “Hey, Dad.”

  “Dinner will be ready in about fifteen minutes. Everyone wash up. Lily, you can help me set the table.”

  We sat down to my mother’s famous meatloaf dinner. Lily chatted about school and the new friends she’d made. I was an only child, which made Lily the only grandchild. My parents doted on her but insisted they would never spoil her. That was laughable. My little girl had them both wrapped around her finger. They knew it, and I suspected Lily did as well. So far, she had never used that to her advantage.

  “We should get going,” I said after we had helped Mom clean up the kitchen. “I need to finish the laundry and get Lily in the bath.”

  After saying our good-byes and arranging the schedule for the week, we left.

  “Let’s grab the mail,” I said to Lily.

  The day was finally catching up with her. She wasn’t quite as energetic as she had been. I hoped that meant an early bedtime with no fuss.

  The mailboxes were a few houses down from mine. With Lily’s hand grasped firmly in mine, we headed down the sidewalk. I hadn’t checked the mail in days, but it wasn’t like I was expecting a check from a long-lost relative.

  “Stay put,” I ordered Lily as I opened the box.

  “Hi,” I heard Lily say and turned to see who she was talking to.

  It was the pretty neighbor.

  “Hi,” she said, looking at Lily, then me.

  “I’m Lily. This is my dad. He’s a police officer,” she
announced.

  “Hi, Lily,” Savannah said with a smile. “How old are you?”

  Lily held up her hand. “Five.”

  Savannah smiled. “Wow, you’re a big girl. I met your dad, twice now,” she said, looking at me with a smile. “I’m Savannah. I moved into the house next to yours a couple days ago. It’s good to meet you, Lily.”

  I studied our new neighbor a little closer in the fading evening light. I had pegged her to be in her early twenties, but she had a way about her that suggested she was a little older than she looked. Her green eyes were stunning. Her light brown hair was falling around her shoulders in thick, choppy waves. She was very petite—I guessed she was maybe five two or five three. The top of her head could have fit under my chin, I mused. Her small stature made her look young and vulnerable. I had this primal instinct to protect her that went beyond my vow to protect and serve.

  She looked at me and raised an eyebrow. She had caught me staring. I didn’t care.

  “Did you forget to check your mail yesterday too?” she asked, her green eyes staring into mine.

  I nodded. “Yes.”

  I didn’t tell her I hadn’t checked it in days. Lily was still staring at the new neighbor as if she were a member of the royal family.

  “You look like you got some sun today,” Savannah said to Lily.

  Lily smiled, and I saw the moment she decided she liked the neighbor. Her dark brown eyes lit up, and she practically bloomed right before our eyes. She got her social butterfly tendencies from her mother. The hair, the eyes, and the olive skin were all her mom too.

  “We went to the park,” Lily said proudly.

  “Oh, that sounds like a lot of fun. I love your hair, Lily. So pretty!”

  Lily smiled. “Daddy says I look just like my mommy. I don’t know. I don’t remember her. She died when I was a baby. We just have pictures.”

  I felt the little gut punch I always experienced when Lily told someone her life story. It was hard to hear the words, and I hated that she had to say them at all. A little girl needed her mother.

  “Sorry,” I mumbled when Savannah looked at me.

  I saw the familiar pity in her eyes and hated it.

  “I’m sorry,” she said in a low voice.

  “We should go. We’ve got a lot to get done before school tomorrow, Lily,” I said, taking her hand in mine.

  “Bye, Lily.” Savannah waved. “Have fun at school, and learn a lot.”

  Lily shrugged. “I’ve already learned everything.”

  Savannah burst into laughter. I groaned.

  “You haven’t learned everything,” I told her. It was the same conversation we’d had numerous times over the past couple weeks. “Your teacher is going to teach you new things.”

  Lily shook her head. “Uh-uh. She says I need to be in a different classroom because I am too smart.”

  “Too smart for your own good,” I quipped.

  “I think you are a very smart girl,” Savannah said, agreeing with my daughter and making an instant friend.

  “Let’s go,” I said, tugging Lily along beside me.

  I glanced back and saw Savannah watching us leave. She and I exchanged a look. It was a look that made me feel very manly. I knew what it was. Women loved men with kids; it appealed to that basic instinct most of them had. I never talked about my daughter with any of the women I met at the bars. She was off-limits.

  It almost felt like a violation to have Savannah meet my little girl. It shouldn’t have. She was too young for me, and my next-door neighbor clearly had a lot of baggage. That was not something I wanted to get into.

  “Come on, smarty pants. It’s time to get you in the tub,” I said to Lily as we walked through the front door.

  It was times like these I felt the emptiness of the house. It was too big for me and Lily, but I didn’t want to move now that Becca had died. It was the only home Lily knew, and I didn’t want to take that away from her as well.

  Chapter Five

  Savannah

  I had to find a job today. Ideally, I wanted a job somewhere in the music industry that would allow me to put my degree to good use. One would think a bachelor’s degree in music production would get me in the door of one of the many recording studios in town. It didn’t. You had to know someone, and in this city, everyone knew someone else. I wasn’t on the inside of the music world—yet.

  My parents were willing to keep me afloat until I got the right job. I had told them I could get any job, but they had insisted I put my education to use. I had tried to explain I didn’t technically need a degree; they’d urged me to get an education anyway. I hated mooching off them, but they insisted they worked hard so they could give me a comfortable life.

  The winery they had started thirty years ago had become very successful. They were doing well for themselves and certainly had the extra money to spend. It didn’t make it any easier to take from them, though.

  I clicked on yet another interesting job that had come up on my online job search. It didn’t exactly pay well, but I had to start somewhere. I was going to have to be the coffee girl or what was also referred to as an intern. It was the only way I could get my foot in the door. I filled out the app and hit send at the same time the Skype window popped up.

  It was my parents. I smiled when I answered it and found myself staring at the dining room ceiling of my parents’ house.

  “Mom? Dad?” I asked.

  “We’re here, honey. Can you see us?”

  “No. I can see the ceiling. Move the laptop screen down a little,” I instructed.

  This was a new thing for them. I loved technology that allowed me to keep in touch. My parents were in their mid-fifties and still working on learning “the gadgets” as they referred to them.

  “There you are!” I said as my mom’s face popped up.

  “Can you see me now?”

  “Yep. What are you guys doing?”

  “We wanted to check in on you. Dad’s here too,” she said, moving the laptop to show my dad, who was grinning and waving.

  “Hi, Dad.”

  “How’s the house?” he asked.

  “It’s great. Thank you. Very big!”

  He chuckled.

  “My next-door neighbor is a cop,” I told them.

  That made them happy. “Great!”

  “I have to change my number,” I said in a serious tone.

  I hadn’t done it yesterday. Asher hadn’t called all day Sunday or yesterday. I had been hoping that meant he had gotten the picture. But then, this morning, the calls had started to come in.

  “Oh no,” my mom said. “Damn that man!”

  “It’s okay, Mom. I’ll change my number and text you with it when I get it.”

  “How’s the job search going?” my dad asked.

  I sighed. “I’ve applied for several. I’ll keep looking. I’ll start knocking on doors if I have to.”

  “You don’t have to do anything. Take your time and find the right one. There’s no rush,” my mom said.

  “I will.”

  “We’d like to come for a visit,” my dad interjected.

  “Well, I certainly have the room.” I laughed.

  “We’re hoping next week sometime. We’ll let you know for sure.”

  I nodded. “I would really like that. I miss you guys,” I said, choking back a sob.

  “We miss you too. This is for the best, Savannah. We’ll visit, and as soon as things die down, you can come home and visit.”

  I sighed. “I know.”

  “Okay. We’ll let you go. We just wanted to check in on you.”

  “Bye, guys. Thank you for checking in. I love you,” I said and waved good-bye.

  The screen went blank, and I closed the laptop.

  I filled out a few more applications before showering and leaving the house to go get my new number. I needed to pick up a few groceries as well. I wasn’t going to be doing a lot of eating out. It was weird to do it alone all the time. It wasn’t li
ke I had a job or school. I could cook at home and save some money.

  I used my GPS to find a cell phone store to get my number changed. I had to pay for parking and figured I might as well do a little exploring while I was there. It wasn’t like I had a busy schedule. I kicked around downtown, did a little window-shopping, and bought a few things for the house at a second-hand store. Then it was a quest to find a grocery store that wasn’t too far from my house.

  I needed to get familiar with my neighborhood. It would help me feel more at home and less like a visitor. I pulled into the grocery store and roamed the aisles, tossing in snacks and freezer meals. I wasn’t a cook. I should have pulled up recipes before I made my way to the grocery store. Next time, I promised myself.

  I had to use the GPS to find my way home, but I was confident I could find my way around on my next outing.

  I pulled into the driveway, looked around, and didn’t see Asher’s car. It was another one of those habits that would be hard to break. So often he would be waiting for me when I got home. At first, it was sweet and I loved that he cared so much. Then, it became a nuisance. Over the past year, it became downright scary.

  I grabbed a few bags out of the trunk of my car and made my way to the front door. I froze when I saw the dozen red roses in a glass vase sitting on the front porch. My palms grew sweaty as my heart pounded in my chest. I looked around again, waiting to see Asher pop up.

  I knew it was him. I knew it with every fiber of my being. He’d always sent me roses. Sometimes they would be on the windshield of my car or a few would be sitting outside the front door of my apartment. I stood staring at the roses, unable to take another step forward.

  He had found me.

  How?

  I carefully put the grocery bags on the porch, afraid to set them near the vile flowers. I took a deep breath and pulled the card off the flowers.

  No matter what, I’ll always love you. I’ll give you your space. I’m here when you’re ready to talk.

  He didn’t sign his name. He didn’t have to. I knew his handwriting. I knew the way he talked. I stared at the card in my shaking hands. He knew where I lived. Moving had done nothing. He could still get to me, and I had only made things worse by running away. Asher was never going to leave me alone.

 

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