By the time they reached the station with the adjacent jail, Maggie had stopped to take a few breaths. Though it was routine for her, he glanced around. The way his luck ran, one day she’d shriek so long and loud that she’d bust a vessel in her brain and die right there, in a place as familiar to most people as their homes, handcuffed in the backseat of a police car.
He couldn’t help thinking, albeit guiltily, that her daughters would be better for it.
The rest of the suspects taken into custody at Maggie’s house—her boyfriend of the month, his cousin and three buddies—had already been escorted inside and were going through the booking process. Ty freed Maggie’s left wrist, waited until she sat on a bench and then hooked the dangling cuff to the metal loop welded there.
“Isn’t this a fun way to spend a Saturday?”
He didn’t have to look to know it was Detective Katherine Isaacs standing behind him. She’d been teamed with their boss, Tommy Maricci, this morning, and they’d been the first to return to the station with their prisoners. As he’d been the first black hire, the first black detective, Kiki had been the first female.
“Yeah,” he said before he turned. “Hell of a morning.”
She wore her brown hair pulled back tightly, braided to control its natural frizz. Like everyone else, she was dressed in jeans and a polo shirt, though she definitely looked better in them. With pale skin, a few freckles and blue eyes, she was smart and aggressive, the first requirements for a woman in a male-dominated field. The only problem was she was so used to going balls-to-the-wall for what she wanted that she had trouble accepting that she sometimes couldn’t have it.
And what she’d wanted, for the past few years, had been him.
“You got plans for tonight?” she asked as they both turned toward the hall that led to their office. Her head topped his shoulder; she wasn’t more than a few inches shorter than him and probably didn’t have much more body fat than him.
He missed the days when he’d dated shorter, softer, rounder women.
“Uh, yeah. I’m going over to my grandfather’s house. Fix him some dinner, watch a movie. He’s partial to John Wayne.”
Her eyes narrowed. “Really. Saturday night, and you’re hanging out with Grandpa? Come on, Gadney. Doesn’t Pops go to bed with the sun?”
“Actually, he stays up later than me most nights. Says he doesn’t have enough time left to waste it sleeping.” Ty repeated Granddad’s words with a smile that was more grimace. Everyone had a time to die, and Granddad’s couldn’t be too far away. He’d already lived eighty full years, forty of them mourning his wife, twenty-five of them raising various grandkids and great-nephews. It had been a good life, and he was ready to meet his Maker.
Ty would never be ready for life without Granddad in it.
He opened the door at the end of the hallway that led into the police department proper, and Kiki brushed against him as she went through. “Can’t you visit Pops tomorrow? It’s Saturday night, Ty, and I want to party.”
“You’ve got other friends to party with. Granddad’s expecting me.” He said it in as friendly a voice as he could muster, but it didn’t win him any points with her.
Her lower lip sliding into a pout, she muttered something that he was pretty sure was obscene before turning into the women’s locker room. Lieutenant Maricci, coming out of the men’s locker room, gave a rueful shake of his head.
“I warned you, Gadney. Never date within the department.” Maricci held up one finger and then stuck up another. “Never date a woman who can take you in a fair fight.” Another finger. “Never date a woman who’s a better shot than you.” One more finger. “And never date a woman who’s just freaking nuts. It gets ugly when it goes bad. And it always goes bad.”
“Yeah, Lieutenant, I know.” He’d known it wasn’t a good idea the first time a bunch of them had gone to a party at Kiki’s place and he hadn’t been smart enough to not be the last one to leave. A good time, a few beers and...
He hadn’t gotten home until the late the next morning.
That had been two years ago, and they’d been together off and on since. Sometimes she said she loved him, and sometimes she said she hated him. He felt bad about it, but he didn’t love her. He didn’t even much like her when he was with her.
More important, he didn’t like himself when he was with her. Too many arguments, too much pressure, too much everything except satisfaction.
“What about Maggie’s kids?” he asked before Maricci could walk away.
“Social workers are on their way to pick them up from the neighbors and will take them to an emergency shelter.”
“They bite, you know? And they’re really good at hiding. And running away.”
Maricci grinned. “Yeah, first time I removed them from the home, my shins were bruised for a week. It took two of us to put them in the car because by the time I got one buckled in, the other was unbuckled and out the door. They’re showing the finest rebellious spirit of their uncles.”
They both got somber. It was one thing for the grown Holigans to raise hell, but it sure made it hard to find placement for the five- and six-year-old girls when it was like herding cats one-handed. “I don’t suppose a respectable, law-abiding relative has turned up since the last time Maggie was in jail.”
“Law-abiding, definitely not. But maybe one of the guys has conned some innocent into marrying him or has found God in prison and wants to do the right thing.”
They both snorted. Not likely.
“They’ll stay with one of the emergency families this weekend, and then Jill will get something more permanent figured out Monday.” Maricci punched his shoulder. “You better get out of here before Isaacs comes out and decides to take another run at you.”
Ty considered it for about sixty seconds. He didn’t need to go into the office because he and Pete had an agreement: whoever dealt with Maggie, the other would do the paperwork. Didn’t need to stop by the pop machine, either. He could buy that on the way home. And there were times when retreat really was the best option.
Maricci went one way, and Ty went the other, heading out the main door and to his truck at the far end of the lot. He tossed his vest into the passenger seat and then slid behind the wheel and pulled out of the parking lot.
As he sat waiting at a stoplight, from the corner of his eye he saw a group of officers come out of the station. Kiki was with them, one arm around the newest officer, a twenty-four-year-old kid named Benton. Every time he’d broken up with her, she’d immediately gone out with other guys, making sure he knew, and he’d always been just a little jealous. Yeah, they’d been broken up, but it would just be a matter of time before they got back together. Today...
He didn’t feel a thing besides relief, along with a little sympathy for Benton. He hoped the kid knew what he was getting into.
Instead of pop, he opted for coffee and found a parking space a half block from the square. A Cuppa Joe stood on the corner where it’d been long before Joe Saldana came to town and bought it. He’d taken the shop green, widened the selection of gourmet coffees and served pastries and cookies baked by his former deputy U.S. marshal wife, Liz.
The air was thick and damp, and he smelled more than a little ripe from the hours spent at Maggie’s place with the heavy bulletproof vest on. Definitely reason to get his order to go. He went inside, cold air rushing over him, a sensation as common in summer as the kudzu trying to conquer the South. He ordered a frozen coffee and two of Liz’s special oatmeal raisin cookies, picked them up and then stepped back outside on the sidewalk and almost plowed over the woman standing there.
“Sorry,” he murmured, but she didn’t seem to notice him. She stared down the street toward River Road as if she were in a trance, so intense that he turned to look behind him to see if anything was out of place. There wasn’t. About the usual
number of shoppers, the usual old men sitting on the benches in the park, the usual cars parked diagonally along the street.
He looked back at the woman. She was a good six or eight inches shorter than him, wearing a sleeveless red dress that hugged her curves and a pair of open-toed heels that showed off her deep red nails. Sunglasses hid her eyes, but it was a good bet they were brown, fitting with the creamy milk-and-cocoa hue of her skin. Her lips were deep red, too, and her shoulder-length brown hair was smooth. Probably the result of an hour’s worth of wrestling with a flatiron.
She was... Not beautiful. Not pretty.
Lovely. She was absolutely lovely.
And Tyler Gadney was a sucker for a lovely woman.
* * *
Of course you’ve seen it before. You’ve taken the virtual tour on the website a dozen times in the past week. You’ve looked at the pictures enough to blur the line between reality and dream, right?
Right? Because that was certainly what Nev had tried to do.
Still, standing here on the sidewalk, the square on her left, the coffee shop on her right, staring ahead at the river, was raising goose bumps all up and down her arms.
“—help you? Are you okay?”
The words came from right in front of her and shook her into consciousness. A man stood before her, the kind of man who made her blink twice and back up a step. A dangerous man.
Then her rational self took over. Dangerous only if she was ever foolish enough to get involved with such a man, and she wasn’t. She’d never even had a chance, because men like him took one look at her sister and forgot she existed.
He’d asked her something and, judging by his raised brows, was waiting for an answer. Something about help? “Um, no, I’m fine,” she said, her voice hoarse. She cleared her throat and forced a slight smile. “Really. I am.”
“You sure? You look a little shaken.”
His frown and concerned tone seemed vaguely familiar but couldn’t possibly be. If she’d ever met him before, she wouldn’t have forgotten him. Heavens, she didn’t even go places where guys like him went. Sporting events, trendy clubs, modeling shoots, hangouts for the beautiful and adventurous. She went to church and shopping and the occasional movie.
“You want to sit down? Maybe have some coffee?”
She saw the coffee in his hands, quickly losing its frozen texture, and the cookies in a thin paper sleeve, and her stomach rumbled. She’d bet Marieka’s stomach never growled in front of hot men like this.
“Have a seat.” He set down his cup and cookies on the wrought iron table beside them and then pulled out a chair. “I’ll get you...coffee? Something cold? Cookies?”
Her gaze drifted past him to the square, and a shiver deep inside worked its way out. “Yeah, okay,” she said numbly.
She was here, in the place of her dreams. It had taken a full day for YaYa to convince her to come and then the rest of the week to arrange to be away and take care of last-minute details that couldn’t be handled by computer while she was gone.
Lima hadn’t been happy with Nev’s plans, but then, Lima was never thrilled with anything her older daughter did. Marieka had laughed at her for wasting vacation time in a little old Georgia town. She was going to New York on her next vacation to do some quality partying with her best girlies. She wouldn’t be caught dead in a dirty old town like Copper Lake.
But YaYa had encouraged Nev, and the dreams hadn’t gone away, and now here she was. The place of her dreams. Sounded like a good thing. Nightmares was more like it. Hauntings.
She tried to relax on the iron chair, wiggling like an uneasy cat. She’d been in town less than fifteen minutes, and she already wanted to leave. What could she possibly learn here? She didn’t know a soul to ask questions of and didn’t know what questions to ask.
And she certainly wasn’t walking down that asphalt path in the riverside park. Not alone.
A rush of cold air blew over her as the man came out with an identical cup of frozen coffee and a couple of cookies. He set them down and then pulled a linen napkin from his hip pocket and laid them down, too. “I’m Ty Gadney,” he said as he slid into the chair across from her.
Heat flushed her cheeks. First, he’d witnessed her standing on the sidewalk like a zombie; now he’d bought her food and felt obligated to sit with her and make sure she didn’t do something stupid like stumble in front of a car or collapse to the ground.
Nothing like looking her best when she met a gorgeous man.
“Nev Wilson,” she mumbled, paying extra attention to the napkin she spread across her lap.
“Short for Nevaeh?” He laughed. “I’ve got a cousin named that. She goes by Vaeh.”
Though she couldn’t quite meet his eyes, she smiled, too. “My younger sister got the perfectly normal name of Marie—to which she added an extra syllable in fifth grade because it was too normal—while I got heaven spelled backward. I guess my mother thought of me as a gift from heaven.” Or the backward spelling meant she wasn’t quite the gift Lima had expected.
“Vaeh has sisters named Cherina, Shiraz, Kaiea and Chablis. Makes for interesting yelling at family reunions when the rest of us have names like Tom, Janet, Linda and Bill.”
He took a bite of his cookie, and a look of pure pleasure crossed his face. Nev pinched off a piece from her own. In one bite, she tasted oatmeal, walnuts, chocolate, butter and sugar. Man, she needed this recipe.
“Are you visiting someone here?”
The obvious question—he was from here, she wasn’t—startled her, and the chill deep inside gave a faint shiver to remind her it hadn’t gone away. “I, uh, no. I’d seen the, uh, website and had some time off so...”
“If you have time while you’re here, stop inside the coffee shop in the evening. Raven works then. She did the website, pictures and everything. She’d love to hear that it caught your attention enough to make you come.”
An image of every barista she’d ever bought coffee from popped into Nev’s mind, teenagers and college students, with an occasional adult thrown in. Not exactly tourism/website developers. “She did an excellent job on the site.”
“She’s better with a camera than anyone I know.” He shifted positions, his shirt rippling over taut muscles. For the first time, she noticed the embroidery on the left chest: Detective Division, Copper Lake Police Department. Suddenly she realized why his wrinkled brow and concerned tone had been familiar: he shared more than that with her favorite television federal agent. Shaved head, muscular body, quick grin, aura of danger, devastatingly handsome.
Sighhh. Not for her, but still sighhh...
“Would you like a tour of downtown Copper Lake? Depending on whom I channel, it could take as little as ten seconds.”
She reached for her iced coffee and miscalculated, almost knocking the cup over. Catching it quickly, she looked up, meeting his gaze. “Channeling?”
Cocoa brown eyes, grin, shrug that reminded her of a big lazy cat. “Channeling, copying. Like my boss. ‘Coffee shop, church, old house. Square, memorials, old buildings. Ellie’s Deli, more old buildings. More that way, that way, that way.’” He gestured north, east and south.
The vague uneasiness stirred by his mention of channeling faded. “I take it your boss is a man of few words.”
“He was. Now that he’s got kids, he’s expanding his vocabulary. Now, I could also do Miss Lydia’s version of a tour. Her family’s been here for centuries—they built the mansion over there—and she knows the history of every building and pretty much every family in Copper Lake. She can remember seeing presidents in the town square when she was a little girl.”
“History is good,” Nev agreed. Her family had history, too, but they weren’t big on remembering it. Lima said it was people a person should value, not places, circumstances or events. Nev couldn’t figure out how
to separate them. Didn’t growing up black in the South, with a grandmother who’d been a slave, do a lot to shape YaYa into the woman she was today? Hadn’t Pawpaw’s experiences in helping to break down race barriers in the army in World War II—harassment, prejudice, hatred and fear—affected who Daddy had become?
Hadn’t growing up with a father who adored her, a sister who was perfect and a mother who preferred that sister played some role in who Nev was?
“How long will you be here?”
“I don’t know. I’m pretty flexible.” As soon as his grin started, her face heated and she restated, “My schedule is flexible. So...” She took a long suck of coffee, savoring it. “Does it offend you if people call you police officer instead of detective?”
He stretched out his long legs, bumping hers, murmuring an apology. “Some of the people I work with take offense, yeah. It takes commitment to become a detective, and some people want the respect of the title. But me, nah. It took commitment to become a cop, too. Either title deserves respect in my opinion.” He took a long drink of his own. “In a lot of people’s opinion, neither does.”
“Is it what you always wanted to do?”
“Always. Are you doing what you always wanted to do?”
Once again she shifted on the metal chair. Doing what she always wanted? Not by any stretch of imagination. She was old-fashioned, Marieka said scornfully, because she’d always wanted to get married, have a bunch of kids and be happy. That was it.
Jobs didn’t matter; she’d held a variety of them and hadn’t hated any of them except waiting tables. Money didn’t matter. As long as they could pay their bills, that was enough. A husband she loved who loved her back, kids who grew up safe and hopeful and loved—that was her dream.
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