by Tee O'Fallon
“Cassie?” Rose grinned at her.
“Yeah?” She cleared her throat and felt heat rise to her face at the realization she’d been caught staring at Mike. Again. To get away from Rose’s deep, throaty laugh, she quickly sought out the peaceful solitude of the kitchen.
“You know,” Sue said as she stacked plates onto a shelf, “Mike could have any woman he sets his sights on, but if you don’t give him something to work with, he’ll find someone else.”
Cassie grabbed the last two order slips clipped to the wheel and began to fill them.
“I couldn’t care less if he finds someone else. And I couldn’t care less if the chief of police is a real ladies’ man, either.” It would figure if he was. All women—except her—loved a man in uniform, especially one with muscles bulging all over the place.
“He is,” Sue continued as she cleared dirty plates from the counter. “But not in the way you think. Women throw themselves at his feet all the time, but he’s never brought one date to the Nest. Says he doesn’t have time to date.”
“Maybe not, but he certainly has a lot of spare time during the day to stop in for lunch.” Cassie ladled some of the remaining white bean and bacon soup into a plastic container and set it in the commercial refrigerator.
“Now he does, but it wasn’t always like that.” Sue grabbed a stack of napkins. “Before Mike got here, there was a lot of dope-dealing riff-raff in town. Mike, Jimmy, and the other cops got into a lot of scrapes back then, always having to get stitched up at the hospital.”
Cassie paused in the middle of ladling a second container of soup. “Is that how he got that scar on his forehead?”
“No, that one he had when he got here, and he refuses to talk about it. Must have gotten it when he worked for the NYPD.”
Cassie nearly dropped the soup container onto the floor. “Mike was a cop in the city?”
“Sure was. Rumor has it there’s a box chock full of commendations and medals from his old job stored in the basement of the police station. Anyway, all I’m saying is that Mike’s a catch, and if you don’t go fishing, someone else will reel that man in before you get your hook in the water.” Sue took the soup from Cassie’s hand, winking as she headed for the refrigerator. Ignoring Sue’s suggestive hint, Cassie pondered whether Gray or Dom would know Mike. Then again, the NYPD had nearly forty thousand officers.
The sudden urge to blow off a little steam had her glancing out the door at the billowing summer clouds.
Cassie retrieved her keys from her locker and pointed the key fob out the kitchen’s rear door in the direction of her Trail Blazer. She’d left the air conditioning setting cranked high, so when she hit the remote start it would pre-cool the SUV before she got into it. If she hurried, she and Raven might have enough time to get in a run on one of those trails she’d glimpsed just outside of town.
The perfect remedy for getting a girl’s troubles off her mind. Like a seriously hot guy.
And a hired killer.
“Hey, Cass. How’s Mayberry?”
“Very funny, bro.”
Cassie held her cell phone to her ear as she maneuvered the Trail Blazer from the deserted parking lot back onto the road. She and Raven had run a breezy four miles along a dirt path in the woods outside of town. Behind her on the rear seat, Raven panted loudly but happily.
“Any news on who planted the bugs?” She swiped at a bead of sweat trickling down her temple.
“Negative.” The sound of a police radio chirping in the background told Cassie that Gray was in his Crown Vic. “But I won’t stop looking until I find out who it was. IA’s working on it, and I’m running a few checks of my own. You can bet whoever did this received substantial payment for their services, and money like that is too big to hide.”
Cassie didn’t doubt for a second Gray would get his man, her big brother always did. He was tenacious to a fault. “Anything useful from Manici?” she asked hopefully.
“Nothing good. The little prick’s still denying everything, no shock there. We started going through his secret stash of videotapes, but that’s gonna take a while. Aside from the original tip about the hit and its connection to the bust at La Femme, we’ve got nothing.”
“So what’s next?” Cassie braked as deer darted across the road in front of the Trail Blazer. “I can’t hide forever.”
“We’ll figure it out,” Gray replied. “We’re putting enough informant money on the street to buy a small country. Something should turn up. I also went to your house to check on things. The place looks fine. All I did was turn off a light upstairs and—”
A light?
“Gray,” she interrupted, gripping the phone tighter. “I didn’t leave any lights on.”
There was a moment of silence. “Are you sure?”
“Positive.” Her fingers tightened around the steering wheel.
“Shit.” She heard a stream of more curses before Gray added more calmly, “I’ll get a team over there to dust for prints, but there was no sign of forced entry. If someone broke in, they knew what they were doing and probably didn’t leave any. I’ll check for security cameras on your street.”
“There aren’t any,” Cassie said, frowning. “The neighborhood’s residents voted against installing them. They thought it was too Big Brother is watching you.”
“Damn,” Gray said. “A camera might have picked this guy up.”
As she sped along the deserted road, deadly reality punched her in the gut.
Someone is really trying to find me. To kill me!
“We haven’t turned over copies of the recordings you made at La Femme yet,” Gray said, “but there aren’t that many female detectives working out of this precinct, so I’m sure it wasn’t hard to figure out your real name and, with a little digging, where you live.”
“I know.” Cassie clenched her jaw. The idea of someone breaking into her home, riffling through her things, filled her with so much anger she wanted to hit something. “I still can’t figure out why someone would come after me when the recordings would still be admissible whether I’m alive or dead.”
“I don’t get it, either.” Gray sounded as frustrated as she felt. “Dom and I agree, Manici would be stupid to try this when he’s about to be indicted. Makes him look guiltier and doesn’t really accomplish a thing for him. Unless there’s something you’re not telling us, none of this makes sense.”
“There’s nothing I haven’t told you, I swear it.”
The police radio chirped again, and she heard Gray respond into the microphone. “Gotta go, but, Cass?” There was no mistaking the worry in his voice. “This could take a while. Be careful and stay lost. And above all else, don’t tell anyone who you are, including the locals. Some cops can’t keep their mouths shut and wouldn’t know a real crime if it hit ’em in the ass. Promise me, Cass.”
“Okay, I promise.” But she could already envision how angry Chief Michael Flannery would be if he only knew. The man didn’t strike her as someone who would take well to being deceived, even by another cop and even under these circumstances.
Cassie ended her call. Two seconds later, an explosion blasted the Trail Blazer.
Chapter Five
The kid was bad news. Timothy Harding’s driver’s license said he was from Albany. When Mike asked what he was doing this far north tooling around Hopewell Springs, Harding said he was sightseeing.
Bullshit.
As Mike wrote up a speeding ticket, he maintained a wary eye on the neon blue Honda and its driver. The kid was about eighteen and skinny as a rail. Restless, but no track marks up his arms. If he’d been smoking dope, Mike would have smelled it and seen it in the kid’s eyes. No slurred speech, either, and he’d responded to questions with lucid answers. No wants or warrants for Harding, but Mike’s gut told him something was off.
Prescription drug abuse was a growing problem among teenagers. Just yesterday, the town’s drug store had reported a teenager loitering out front for hours. Problem was the des
cription of the kid fit half the boys in town.
With no reason to detain Harding, Mike scribbled his badge number and last name at the bottom of the summons and tore it off the ticket pad. He approached the car and handed the ticket through the open window.
“Thanks for nothing,” Harding said with a sarcastic edge as he pulled slowly away from the curb.
Ignoring the bad attitude, Mike watched the car until it disappeared on the main road headed out of town. He had a feeling he hadn’t seen the last of Tim Harding, or Tim’s neon blue Honda. He’d have to keep an eye out for the kid. The last thing he wanted was to get caught with his guard down.
As Mike wiped the sweat from his brow, his fingertips grazed the long, raised ridge of the scar on his forehead. It had been more than six years, but his head still ached occasionally from the injury that had laid him up in a hospital, comatose for nearly a month.
Never again.
This town depended on him to keep its citizens safe. He’d failed once before, in a different city and another lifetime. He vowed not to repeat history.
Back in the comfort of the air-conditioned Explorer, he turned off the red and blue strobe lights and cruised toward the outskirts of town. He waved as he passed a couple of kids walking a yapping beagle. Speaking of dogs, he’d heard that Cassie had some kind of black watchdog. Even without the dog, her tough-as-nails attitude would be enough to repel any man with half a brain. Any sane man, particularly one like him who knew better, would be wise to stay far away from that little witch and her bubbling cauldron. So why couldn’t he stop thinking about her?
Because she intrigued the hell out of him.
Behind her beautiful face lay intelligence and a razor-sharp wit that contrasted with an inner softness she tried to hide. And the way she filled out a pair of jeans wasn’t bad, either.
Just your libido talking.
That, and he hadn’t had sex in ages. Not good sex, anyway. Elaine Bitters had destroyed something inside him, the part of a man that allowed him to get close to a woman. The very thing that made the difference between sex and making love. Yeah, cynical cop that he was, even he knew the difference.
Sometimes he still couldn’t believe Elaine had been undercover with Internal Affairs. IA sent her to investigate him on a bogus tip he was on the take, and she’d taken her job seriously. She’d broken every rule in the book and slept with him. She was the perfect girlfriend, and he should have seen her for exactly what she was—a conniving, driven woman who didn’t give a crap about him. Her only love was for the department and grabbing that next promotion.
Mike gripped the steering wheel so tightly his knuckles cracked. He hadn’t seen it coming. He’d been blinded, thrilled to have a woman in his life who loved the same things he did: sports, fishing, watching NASCAR races on TV. Making love until they were both crazy. The perfect wife. That’s why he’d decided to ask her to marry him.
The same day he planned to propose, the precinct commander informed him he’d been under investigation by IA, but after a six-month review was cleared of all charges. Turned out another shift supervisor wanted the lieutenant’s position Mike was about to get and fed IA a long line of shit that Mike was dirty. Three hours after learning the woman he thought he’d been in love with was only using his ass, he responded to a domestic and got clocked in the head. Two other people died because he’d been so damned distracted he couldn’t think straight. He still blamed himself and always would.
Finding out his colleague had tried to sabotage his career was bad enough, but it didn’t compare to the shock of finding out about Elaine. It would have been quite a coup for a policewoman to nail a decorated officer. But Jesus, she’d crossed a major line where their relationship was concerned.
Hell, what relationship?
The whole thing had been built on one goddamn lie after another. Remembering what happened six years ago had him gritting his teeth so hard they hurt. Christ, he should have taken himself off the roster for the rest of the day when he’d learned about Elaine, but he couldn’t. As a supervisor, it had been his responsibility to cover a call if necessary, and the shift had been severely undermanned that day.
When he’d finally checked out of NYU Medical Center, he couldn’t deal with what had happened and locked his emotions up tighter than Fort Knox. When the chief’s position in Hopewell Springs opened up, he jumped at it. The more distance from Elaine and the city the better. Since then, he didn’t get involved and he never looked back.
Another vehicle coming down the road in the opposite direction caught Mike’s attention. It was a Trail Blazer, blue, like the one he’d seen Cassie driving. If he wasn’t mistaken, it was Cassie’s Trail Blazer. The SUV shimmied just before darting across the lane directly into Mike’s path.
“What the hell?” He jerked the wheel hard left, his front bumper coming a hair’s breadth from smashing into the Trail Blazer as it fishtailed across the road at a crazy angle.
And headed straight for a tree.
…
Cassie turned to verify Raven was unharmed. “Holy crap that was close.” Not only had she barely braked in time before embedding the hood of the Trail Blazer into a mammoth-sized maple tree, but she’d come perilously close to smashing into another SUV. If it weren’t for the other driver’s quick reflexes, she probably would have.
Her hands shook as she shut off the engine. Cassie got out of the Trail Blazer to check on the other driver but froze at the sight of the police Explorer.
And the chief of police charging at her.
“Are you all right?” Mike gripped her upper arms, pinning her with a penetrating, concerned blue stare.
“Fine,” was all she could manage. Even after the shock of a near miss, she felt every one of his strong fingers on her skin.
“Blowout?” He looked over her head at the Trail Blazer.
Cassie eyed the flattened left rear tire and wrinkled her nose at the pungent odor of burned rubber and hot, sticky asphalt. Damn thing was shredded beyond repair. What had sounded like an explosion was merely a violent blowout. “Thank God,” she murmured.
“Thank God you had a blowout?” Mike raised his brows. “Lady, you’re damn lucky you didn’t plow right into me or go face-first into that tree.”
“You don’t need to tell me that.” She pulled from his grasp, irritated at his anger. Seemed like their little truce was history.
Without thinking, she opened the rear door of the SUV to unload the spare tire and jack, forgetting about Raven who shot out in full-force attack mode, barreling straight for Mike. “No, get back!” she shouted, petrified Raven would clamp her jaws around Mike’s leg and he’d shoot her beloved dog.
But not only was Raven not attacking, she was actually wagging her tail. Mike stretched out his arm for Raven to sniff. To Cassie’s immense shock, Raven began to lick his hand, then let out little whimpering noises and lifted her paw to him. Cassie scratched her head.
Am I in another dimension?
Mike crouched to take Raven’s paw in his large hand. As he did, his navy-blue uniform slacks tightened over his legs, outlining every sculpted muscle of his thighs and butt. Talk about a great ass!
Another whine from Raven, more licks, this time to Mike’s face. “Traitor,” Cassie couldn’t help whispering.
“What?” Mike grinned as Raven drowned him in slobber. The grin turned into a slow, dangerous smile. The kind that turned women’s brains to mashed potatoes.
“Nothing.” Her gaze was irresistibly drawn to Mike’s rippling forearms and the way his uniform hugged his broad back over the Kevlar vest. And, oh Christ, the man had the most beautiful smile. All those white teeth…and those firm, sensuous lips. Cassie decided then and there that Mike wore a five-o’clock shadow better than any man she’d ever met.
“Belgian sheepdog?” He dodged another swipe of Raven’s tongue.
“Uh-huh.” She could only nod, still stupefied at Raven’s reaction to Mike. If she didn’t know better, she’d say
her dog was in love.
“Great breed.” Mike stood and wiped his face with his forearm. “When I was a kid I had a German shepherd. Still miss that dog.” He gave Raven another scratch behind the ears, and Raven leaned her head against his leg.
“Yeah, some breed.” Cassie narrowed her eyes. Furry little Benedict Arnold. When they got home, a serious talk was in order.
Mike stroked Raven’s head with his long fingers. “Some police departments have Belgians on their K-9 squads.”
“Really?” Cassie bit back a knowing laugh, pretending to be ignorant of the breed’s security-oriented talents.
Mike nodded. “Yours is well-behaved. They can be a handful if they don’t have a job to do every day, but you’ve obviously trained her well.”
“Uh, thanks.” She hadn’t lifted a finger to train Raven. The dog had come to her that way, straight from the K-9 squad.
“What’s her name?” Mike wiped his face again where Raven had licked him.
“Raven.” With a shake of her head, Cassie resumed the process of changing out the flat.
“Need some help?”
“No thanks.” For some reason, she found his offer patronizing.
“Oookay.” He sent her a dubious look.
Cassie fit the lug wrench onto one of the nuts and pulled. Unsuccessfully. She tried the other nuts until every muscle in her hands, arms, shoulders, and back screamed in agony. Not one of the damned nuts budged.
Meanwhile, the late afternoon sun blazed overhead like a blowtorch, quickly covering her face in sweat and making her hot pink shorts and skimpy white tank top stick to her body like glue.
Cassie felt Mike’s intense blue eyes taking a walk all over her body. “Checking out my ass again, Chief?”
A slow, annoying smirk crept to his mouth, and for a split second Cassie was tempted to smack it off his gorgeous face. “If you don’t want folks checking out your ass, I suggest you not wear hot pink. Tends to attract attention.”