The Next Right Thing (Harlequin Superromance)
Page 1
The next right thing is the only choice
Cammie Copello gets results—even if it means stretching the rules. That’s what makes her a great private investigator. It’s also what caused the little breach between her and attorney Marc Hamilton. It’s too bad, because they made a great team. And, honestly, her career hasn’t been the same since.
So imagine her surprise when Marc shows up begging for her help with a personal case. When he turns on the charm…well, she can’t refuse. But she can keep her attraction to Marc a secret—regardless of how tempting he is. Her intentions are put to the test, however, when he proves that the attraction is not one-sided!
“I want you to be my investigator again.”
Cammie couldn’t quite believe her ears. Really? Marc was asking her to work for him again? After everything he’d said?
“Why do you need me? There are plenty of good P.I.s in Denver. Figured you’d have used some of them this past year.” She worked hard to keep her tone light, to not let some of the anger seep in.
“Oh, I have,” he said quickly, “but the person I need to find is in this area.”
Wasn’t this the boss who’d once said she was the best investigator he’d ever worked with? That he was so offhanded about using other P.I.s since she’d left felt, oh, bad. And that he was only here, talking to her, because he didn’t know any other P.I.s in this area felt, oh, worse. She straightened her shoulders in a show of bravado.
And to her surprise his gaze followed the motion.
Was the sun playing tricks on her, or was that a flush coloring his cheekbones as he checked her out?
“A good P.I. can conduct research from anywhere,” she said matter-of-factly, ignoring the thrill his gaze had caused.
“I know that, but…you’re the best.”
Dear Reader,
The Next Right Thing marks my return to Harlequin and to my writing full-time again, both of them welcome events in my life! Where have I been? Working as a private investigator. Yes, really.
I had started a private investigations agency in 2003 with my then-boyfriend. My idea was for him to be a private investigator because he had trained dozens over his eighteen years as a former trial attorney. At the time I figured I’d manage the office and handle the bookkeeping. But before I knew it, I was sitting on surveillance in the wee hours of the morning, on the lookout for signs of a woman on the run with a baby. Almost sounds like a Harlequin story, doesn’t it? Especially the part where, later, I eloped with my P.I.-partner boyfriend.
Over the years I’d occasionally touch base with Wanda Ottewell, my Harlequin editor. Last year, during one of our catch-up chats, I mentioned that I was cutting back on conducting investigations, and how much I’d love to write for Harlequin again. She said, “Why don’t you send a story proposal?”
I did. It became this book, a story about a heroine private investigator, Cammie Copello, and a hero lawyer, Marc Hamilton. Although I don’t have a penchant for bending the law as Cammie does, I’ve conducted cases similar to hers in The Next Right Thing. Like Cammie, I’ve also relied on tools, such as my smartphone, to solve whodunits.
Happy reading!
Colleen Collins
P.S. I love to hear from readers! Please contact me through my website, www.colleencollins.net.
The Next Right Thing
Colleen Collins
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Colleen Collins is an award-winning author who’s written twenty-two novels and two nonfiction books. She’s also written articles for regional and national writing organizations, as well as for publications such as USA TODAY, PI Magazine, Pursuit Magazine, PINow.com and other periodicals. Like the P.I. heroine in The Next Right Thing, Colleen has also seen the underside of a pickup while placing a GPS and has stared down more than a few coldhearted felons.
Books by Colleen Collins
HARLEQUIN BLAZE
290—A SCENT OF SEDUCTION
333—WATCHING IT GO UP
354—SHOCK WAVES
Other titles by this author available in ebook format.
Don’t miss any of our special offers. Write to us at the following address for information on our newest releases.
Harlequin Reader Service
U.S.: 3010 Walden Ave., P.O. Box 1325, Buffalo, NY 14269
Canadian: P.O. Box 609, Fort Erie, Ont. L2A 5X3
To my sister, Barbara Graham.
Contents
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Excerpt
PROLOGUE
CAMMIE EASED HER 2006 silver Monte Carlo—named Phil after the fictional private eye Philip Marlowe—next to the dirt-crusted red pickup she’d been following for the past hour. The subject—Ray “Rebel” Nathan—had strolled his six-two, cowboy-booted self into the burger dive a few minutes ago. If he was picking up to-go food, he’d be out in ten minutes, maybe less.
Cammie had to move fast.
Earlier, she’d slipped the GPS device and its battery pack inside the pocket of her jean jacket. She double-checked the bulky parts with a quick feel, then slipped out the driver’s side. Standing between Phil and the pickup, she blinked against the surging winds while quickly scanning the area. Across the parking lot, several teenagers squealed and laughed while chasing a plastic bag the wind had wrested from their hold. A late-model Dodge Charger droned by. Its driver, an older dude with a skinny gray ponytail, puffed on a cigar. Trails of blue smoke and the ʼ70s Bee Gees hit “More than a Woman” wafted through the half-open driver’s window.
More than a woman. Being female in the private eye business often felt like that, plus some. A woman had to be more resilient, sharper and often tougher to last in this male-dominated profession.
Dude turned right onto Boulder Highway, the Bee Gees’ trilling vibratos merging with the drone of noon-day traffic.
Cammie quickly moved to the front of the pickup and plunked her butt down on the asphalt.
The device clattered out of her jacket pocket.
Cursing under her breath, she snatched the metal GPS unit and its egg-shaped antennae. After quickly verifying the connecting wire was intact, she shoved them into her jacket. Leaning back, she grabbed the grill with both hands and pulled herself underneath the pickup. Her legs stuck outside the front of the vehicle, but they were only visible from the Boulder Highway, a mash of speeding cars, honking horns and exhaust. It would take someone with a sharp eye to see her limbs—and if they did, who’s to say those legs didn’t belong to the owner of this truck?
Carefully, she inched the device from her pocket.
She’d always figured for most people life was a rush of events an
d faces, racing by like the Boulder Highway traffic outside. But whenever she was battling high emotions, time had a nasty habit of snagging her, pinning her like a fly. Caught, she would grow aware of every movement, sound, subtlety.
Like right now. Battling her anxiousness, time had slowed to a crawl. The stench of twenty different fluids from the engine stifled her breath. The heat from the asphalt seeped up like steam through her clothes. And that relentless Las Vegas wind swirled around her like a ghost, its chilly breath caressing and prodding her with things she didn’t want to think about.... It’d happened so long ago, it no longer mattered.... Go away, go away....
A blustery gust of wind rattled past, chasing away the ghost. Particles of dirt spit at her face, stung her hands.
Time sped up, snapped to the present.
She pressed the GPS unit against the bumper, reassured by the clank of magnet against steel. Gotta love these older trucks and their metal parts. She lightly tugged the electrical wire connecting the unit and antennae until the wire was taut—didn’t want it to drag, catch on anything in the road while the truck was moving. She positioned the antennae to the back of the grill, moving it back and forth until she hit a sweet spot where it would easily pick up satellite signals.
Done!
Her body tingled with that familiar rush of relief and satisfaction after successfully fastening one of these babies. Maybe her uncle thought she should have stayed in law school, but he didn’t get that she dug the thrill of investigations. What lawyer got to crawl under cars, track missing people, find someone’s long-lost sibling or high school sweetheart? A P.I.’s work was the most exciting game in town. Better than any eight-to-five.
After scooching from underneath the truck and carefully rising to her feet, she nonchalantly looked around as though absolutely nothing unusual had happened. She eyed a few parked cars, a woman in a blue jogging suit scurrying into a store, her cell phone glued to her ear. A burst of the teenagers’ shrieks and laughter momentarily crested the wind, although they were no longer in sight.
No Rebel, either. Still inside buying his greasy burger.
Oh, so casually brushing dirt off her jeans, Cammie got back into Phil and drove off.
* * *
ACROSS THE BOULDER HIGHWAY from the burger dive, she parked in the lot in front of the Firelight Lounge at Sam’s Town. From here, she had an unencumbered view of Rebel’s pickup. Time to relax, check the GPS tracking software on her smartphone, double-check everything was hooked up correctly and getting signals.
She knew Rebel Boy would likely next be heading down the highway to his paramour’s apartment, and Cammie was in a primo spot to slide into traffic and follow. Her client, Rebel’s wife, didn’t know the girl’s name, or her address, but had plenty of reason for suspicion. Lipstick on his tighty whities was the clincher. Then a friend who worked at Sam’s Town had reported to the wife that Rebel’s truck had been seen tooling east past here almost every day around lunchtime.
Cammie plucked the elastic rubber band that confined her curls in a thick knot. Ruffling her hair loose, she checked the time on her smartphone—12:20. Must be eating his lunch before his noontime tryst. Too cheap to buy the girlfriend a burger, too?
Distant sirens wailed. As their screams pulsed louder, she surveyed the highway for their approach. Two fire engines, horns blaring, careened down the highway. Cars pulled over to let pass.
More sirens joined the ruckus.
A police unit, lights sparkling, charged into the burger lot across the street. Another bolted into the Firelight Lounge lot, bouncing over a speed bump. Several white Crown Victorias—unmarked vehicles—trailed the police unit into the lot, all them bouncing over the same bump.
The first unit screeched to a halt.
Right. Behind. Her.
She froze, stared in her rearview mirror at the police vehicle with its blue, white and yellow lights swirling.
“This is a felony stop,” a male voice barked over a loud speaker. “Keep your hands on the dashboard, continue facing forward, do not move. I repeat, do not move.”
Her body chilled to a temperature reserved for body trays in morgues. She didn’t need to be told twice to not move—she wouldn’t so much as twitch, shift, even flinch. A felony stop was serious business. One wrong move could mean getting shot.
“Raise your hands,” bellowed the invisible voice.
She slowly raised them, one still clutching the smartphone, hoping the cop knew it was just a phone, trying not to think of that guy in Denver who got shot when the officer thought the soda can in his hand was a gun.
“Place your hands, palms down, on the dashboard.”
She did as told. In the rearview mirror, an officer eased out of the driver’s side, gun pointed right at Cammie. He approached and she remembered the three Cs of felony stops: calm, comply and communicate. As he walked closer, he scanned the interior of her car. “Take your left hand,” he called out, “and open the driver’s door, slowly.”
Bursts of wind didn’t make it easy, but with some effort she pushed it open.
“Turn toward me and exit the vehicle.”
She followed orders, ended up staring into the officer’s face. Below thick eyebrows in need of some serious manscaping were eyes so black they could pass for bullet holes.
Fighting a shudder, she croaked, “It’s a smartphone in my hand, officer.”
“Drop it.”
She watched it clatter to the ground, wishing she’d purchased a heartier case.
“Turn and face the rear passenger door. Place your hands on top of the vehicle.”
The heated metal stung her palms.
As he frisked her, she asked in a forced-light voice, “I don’t often ask men who have their hands on my thighs this, but is there a problem?”
Her answer came from the wild-eyed woman in a saggy blue jogging outfit who materialized in the background. Her curly hair writhed like snakes in the wind, giving her a Medusa-in-polyester look.
“That’s her!” the woman screeched, pointing a shaking finger at Cammie. “That’s the lady I saw planting a bomb under that truck! Same dirty jacket, oh, yeah, it’s her all right!”
Planting a bomb? Oh, man, this was getting fugly, fast. Cammie glanced across the highway. Firefighters and dogs surrounded Rebel’s pickup. Someone dressed in a space-age outfit—bomb squad, no doubt—was crawling underneath the truck.
Eyebrow Cop cuffed her hands behind her back, informing her of her Miranda rights before gruffly leading her to his vehicle.
Two more backup units arrived—five had now convened in the Firelight Lounge lot. People flooded out of the casino, many with drinks in their hands, to watch the real live cop show. Casino security guards were trying vainly to hustle them indoors.
“Watch your head.” The cop cradled Cammie’s skull like a basketball before nudging her into the backseat.
As he drove off, she looked through the rear window at Rebel’s truck. Mr. Bomb Squad was holding up the GPS that had cost her five hundred dollars and seventy-five cents.
This monumentally effed-up excursion was going to cost her a lot more than that. A felony charge or three, a stint in jail, lawyer’s fees.
This day was turning out to be more than even a woman who was more than a woman was ready to handle.
CHAPTER ONE
GREEN-AND-WHITE SPOTLIGHTS swirled. Trumpets blared.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” boomed a male voice over the speakers, “our superstar show is beginning on the Shamrock a-Go-Go Stage! On this lovely April twentieth in glittering, glamorous Las Vegas—” the announcer’s voice dropped to a tone reserved for funerals “—we’re bringing back a star who is gone to the world, but here at the Shamrock Palace, he lives forever.” The recording of trumpets replayed. “With no further ado,” he said, all peppy
again, “the one and only King of Pop, Michael Jackson!”
Cammie looked up at as Jeffrey, one of her fellow dealers, stepped onto the Shamrock a-Go-Go Stage, a platform not much larger than her uncle Frankie’s dining room table, and four or so feet higher than the circle of green-felt-covered gambling tables. Jeffrey hailed from a town in Oklahoma—“So small, you’d miss it if you sneezed.” After landing in Vegas two years ago with stardust in his eyes, and several failed stints as a backup singer, he’d eventually found employment as a dealer-performer at the Shamrock Palace.
A grind joint at the end of the strip, the casino advertised such luxuries as green beer, daily penny-slot tournaments and celebrity-impersonator shows every hour, on the hour. Jeffrey might have a Southern twang, stand six-four in his socks and be about as African-American as Blake Shelton...but he could do a mean moonwalk and never flubbed a lip sync. Slather on lots of makeup, a curly black wig, tight pants and voilà! A taller version of the King of Pop lived again.
While Jeffrey mimed and strutted his way through the song “Billie Jean,” Cammie sipped her diet cola. Val, the Christina Aguilera celebrity-performer-dealer and Cammie’s best pal at the job, sidled up to her. “Where y’at?”
Which Val had once explained was like saying “How you doin’?” in her hometown of N’awlins.
“Slow day at the Cave.” Cammie nodded at her empty gambling table.
None of them ever called this part of the casino the Palace. Mostly because it was buried far back in the shadowy pits of the casino. To reach it, customers had to pass through several hundred slot machines, a belt of fast-food businesses employees called “Grease Gulch,” and a Tiki Bar with a thatched roof and piped-in monkey sounds.
“Slow day, f’true,” said Val. “I’ve made a whoppin’ five bucks today in dealer tips.”
Cammie glanced at Val’s skimpy sailor outfit and sailor hat. “New song?”
“Lippin’ ‘Candyman’ in an hour. Aguilera kicked some serious A in that video. I’m hoping to do the same, get some of these tightwads to open up their hearts ʼn wallets and give me some tip love. Like Mama over there.” Val gestured toward a fiftysomething woman in a low-cut leopard-print top stuffing bills into a silver bucket next to the stage. Jeffrey, as Michael, blew her a kiss with his white-gloved hand.