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One Stormy Night
“Isn’t that a night on the town?” Mitch asked drily.
Rick snorted. “A night’s not even enough to get started. Mom said to tell you she misses your ugly mug and she wants to know when you’re coming to visit.”
“I’ll call her when I get a chance.”
“Yeah, just be careful what you say.”
Mitch rolled his eyes. What was it with people stating the obvious to him? Did he look that dumb? “Jeez, thanks for the advice. I probably would have blurted out everything, going all the way back to that pretty blonde who lived across the street from you guys and taught me everything a fifteen-year-old boy could bear to know when I spent the summer there.”
Rick gave a low whistle. “Kayla Conrad. Son, she taught all of us all we could bear to know. Man, I haven’t thought of her in years. Tell you what—you stay there in Mississippi and I’ll go home for a visit. I’ll give Mom—and Kayla—your best.”
“You do that.” Though if anyone could take his mind off the crappy state of his life at the moment, it might be Kayla.
Jennifer could make him forget. For a while. Then they would put their clothes back on and come back to their senses, and life would be even crappier because he would have broken one of the few rules he lived by. Taylor would find out and Mitch would suffer the consequences—and with people like Jimmy Ray on Taylor’s payroll, suffer was definitely the right word.
Scowling, he said goodbye to his brother, then returned to the car and switched on the radar unit. He was frustrated and annoyed, a prime combination for writing traffic tickets.
Taylor might be paying him illegally from the city’s coffers. But at least Mitch would know he’d done his best to increase those coffers first.
Chapter 3
A minute shy of six o’clock, Jessica ran out of steam.
She’d taken every CD and DVD out of its case, checking for original labels, and flipped through the pages of every book. She’d looked behind every picture and painting and underneath every shelf and drawer. She’d unzipped the sofa and chair cushions and tipped the furniture upside down, searched for loose tiles in the kitchen and bathroom and crawled the perimeter of the apartment checking for places where the carpet might have been pulled up. She’d heaved the mattress and the springs off the bed, dragged the frame from the wall so she could see behind it and taken every single item from every drawer, cabinet and the closet.
In the process, she’d discovered that Jen had been an amazing housekeeper, gotten hot and dirty and found nothing. Now, after a shower, she was calling it quits for the evening and heading out to dinner. Snacks could only take a woman so far.
“Going somewhere?”
She started as she locked the door but thought she did a decent job of hiding it. Letting her key ring dangle from one finger, she turned to find Mitch kicked back in a folding lounge chair underneath the scrawny oak. He wore denim shorts, faded and soft, and a Belmar High School basketball jersey that looked about twenty years out of date.
He looked incredibly hot—and she didn’t mean his temperature.
“To dinner.” She moved to the edge of the grass, wishing she were barefoot like him and could curl her toes into the cool green growth. There she could see a beer can on the ground next to the chair and a book open in his lap. She recognized it as the one she’d read on her last flight from Hong Kong—a thriller about a vulnerable woman taking on police corruption.
She chose to ignore the book. “Drinking on duty. Why am I not surprised?”
“Not much surprises you, does it?”
She shrugged.
He picked up the can, drained the beer, then crumpled the aluminum. “I’m not on duty.”
“Uh-huh. After following me around town this morning, you just happen to be sitting outside my door now by coincidence?”
“No coincidence. I sit out here most nights. I’ve been doing it since I moved in here—which, by the way, was before you moved in. Look.” He rolled to his feet with more grace than any man should show and lifted the chair easily in one hand. “There are places worn in the grass from the legs.”
The three faint lines showing where the chair had spent many hours were impossible to deny. So was the foolish feeling that curled through her. You could have told me that, Jen.
Of course, there was no response from her sister.
“I’m going to that little barbecue place out on the east side of town,” she said. “In case you lose sight of my car on the way.”
Tilting his head, he studied her a moment before saying, “I told you, I’m not working. But if you want my company for dinner, all you have to do is say so.”
She blinked at the remark, thoroughly unexpected. She wanted his company like she wanted a hole in her head. He was Taylor’s buddy. The enemy. Not to be trusted.
But someone was going to be watching her. Better him than the creepy kid who’d hung around part of the morning and all afternoon. Even with the drapes drawn, she’d known the kid was there, had felt his presence.
“I assume this restaurant requires shoes and a real shirt.”
“This is a real shirt,” he protested.
She looked at the jersey. Truthfully, it was perfectly adequate, particularly in a beach town. But it showed a lot of smooth brown skin and muscle and sinew and all that other sexy physical stuff. She would be lucky to taste her dinner, and the same could probably be said for any other female diners in the restaurant. Since she was a firm believer that barbecue, especially Southern barbecue, required all of a diner’s attention, she repeated, “Shoes and a real shirt.”
Scowling, he carried the chair, book and can into his apartment, then returned two minutes later wearing a pair of disreputable running shoes without socks and a black T-shirt with the same denim shorts.
He still looked hot.
“We’ll take my car,” he announced.
Jennifer was used to Taylor making unilateral decisions. Jessica was used to making decisions for herself. “What if I want to drive?”
He looked from the Mustang to the rental and his lip curled in a sneer. “Yeah, right.”
He was right. The temperature had dropped by fifteen degrees, but it was still a warm evening, with a nice breeze blowing in off the gulf. Who in their right mind would choose the standard rental-car sedan over a vintage Mustang convertible?
He headed toward the Mustang. It took her a moment to get her feet moving. Somewhere deep inside her brain she was sure both her sister and her conscience were telling her what a bad idea this was, but some other part of her she didn’t even want to put a name to—the risk taker? the woman? the fool?—was sticking her fingers in her metaphorical ears and babbling to block them out. It was just a short ride to the restaurant. Dinner. A short ride back. They would actually be alone ten, fifteen minutes tops. No big deal.
The Mustang’s leather seats were midnight-blue to match the exterior and still held the sun’s heat. She settled into the passenger seat, squirming a little, and fastened the seat belt. As Mitch started the engine, she dug a pair of sunglasses from her purse, put them on, then glanced at him. “Is it supposed to vibrate like that or is something wrong?”
He gave her a look she’d seen before—the condescending car guy pitying the uninformed noncar guy. “Nothing’s wrong.”
She wasn’t about to admit it, but she kind of liked the quiet rumble that all but growled “power.” She wondered how fast the car would go, how a hundred and twenty miles an hour would feel through her hair, whether he ever kicked it up and let it out. She liked the sun on her face, as well, and the feeling of openness and freedom. Maybe she would buy a convertible when she returned to Los Angeles…and choke on all that L.A. smog.
She was enjoying the ride enough that it took her a few moments to realize that they weren’t headed east. She looked around, not recognizing the road he’d turned on, then jerked her gaze to him. “This isn’t the way to the barbecue place.”
“This is the way to my favorite barbecue place. It’s better.”
“But—” She swallowed hard, the skin on her neck prickling. The street they were on was apparently part of Belmar’s poorer side of town. While the downtown area held a certain old-fashioned charm and the highways leading into town were the stereotypical gas station/motel/ fast-food strips, these blocks were just shabby. The businesses were run-down, built of cinder blocks or occupying converted old houses. The houses themselves were dilapidated, as well, and interspersed with the businesses, as if the concept of residential versus commercial hadn’t made it to this neighborhood.
“Relax,” Mitch said, then suddenly grinned wolfishly. “Trust me.”
Yeah, right.
As buildings of any sort came farther and fewer between and her heart rate started edging into double time, he slowed and turned into a gravel-and-shell parking lot. Down Home Q had once been someone’s home, with a steeply pitched tin roof and a wraparound porch. The roof was streaked red with rust, the siding aged to silver. If paint had ever coated the boards, there wasn’t so much as a flake remaining. Dark screens covered the open windows, and music and voices drifted out, along with tantalizing aromas.
Mitch parked at the end of a ragged row of cars, and they climbed the steps to the porch, where a screen door opened into the foyer, now a waiting area. The floors were wide planks of wood, the finish worn over the years, and faded cabbage-rose paper covered the walls. A wide doorway to the left opened into one dining room, a similar door on the right led to another and a hallway straight ahead went into the kitchen.
For a moment Jessica again debated the wisdom of coming here with him. Hadn’t she been stared at enough for one day? Then she took another look around. Down Home Q wasn’t Taylor’s sort of restaurant. Jen had given her pretty much the minutiae of his likes and dislikes, and this place hadn’t been mentioned at all. So far, none of the diners, plentiful in both rooms, had given them more than a disinterested glance.
A young girl came from the kitchen, her broad grin doubly bright against her ebony skin. She was about twelve, tall and gangly, waiting to grow into both her body and her beauty. “Hey, you. Daddy’s been wonderin’ where you are. Pick a table, and I’ll see if I can find someone willin’ to wait on you.”
“Aw, Shandra, you know your older sisters all fight to wait on me,” Mitch said with a wink.
She pretended to be unimpressed, but the corner of her mouth was twitching with a smile. “Yeah, you bein’ such a good tipper and all.”
“We’ll be outside.”
Mitch Lassiter, Taylor’s thug, teasing with a twelve-year-old girl. Not much surprises you, he’d told Jessica earlier, but that did.
She followed him back out the door and around the corner. There were two tables on the porch there, each with four chairs, and a box fan was braced on the railing and turned to low.
“To discourage the bugs,” he said as he sat down.
She sat opposite him, out of reach of the sun’s setting rays. The chairs were metal, mismatched and painted different shades. The table was metal, too, sporting layer upon layer of paint. The most recent was lavender; chipped places showed flamingo-pink underneath. In the center were salt and pepper shakers, a bottle of pepper sauce, ketchup, a roll of paper towels and packets of moist towelettes.
She folded her hands on the tabletop, moved them to her lap, then rested her arms on the chair arms. “The food smells good.”
“It’s the best you’ll find in town.”
She thought of the familiarity with which the girl had greeted him and the mention of her father. “You’re a regular?”
“I’m here two or three times a week. Willis’s barbecue is the best part of coming back to Belmar.”
“I hope that says more about my cooking than it does the town.” A tall, round man, presumably Willis, set two glasses and a pitcher of iced tea in front of them, then offered a menu to Jessica. “I’m Willis Pickering.”
“Jennifer Burton.”
His gaze cut to Mitch only for an instant, then he shook the hand she offered. “I know what Mitch wants—once he finds something he likes, he doesn’t change—but I’ll give you a minute to look over the menu.”
“That’s all right.” She set the menu aside. “I’ll have what he’s having.”
“Two megaplatters coming up.”
After he left, Mitch remarked, “Maybe you should have looked at the menu.”
“I’m sure I’ll like whatever I get. I’m easy to please.”
He practically choked on his tea at that, tightening the muscles in her jaw. Jen had always been as easygoing as they came. She’d never asked for much out of life—a job she liked, good friends and family, someone to love. That big house, the new BMW, the expensive gems and fussy clothes—those hadn’t been her choices. She would have been happy living in a trailer park wearing hand-me-downs as long as she loved her husband and he loved her back.
“Have you known Willis long?”
“Since middle school. We played football together.”
“So he knows Taylor.”
“Everyone in the county knows Taylor.”
“And he doesn’t like him.”
Mitch shrugged.
“Most people in the county don’t like Taylor,” she said, mimicking his tone and his shrug.
That had been Jen’s first clue that something wasn’t quite right. From the beginning it had been clear that a lot of the people Taylor was sworn to serve and protect didn’t think too highly of him—or of her for marrying him. There had been subtle digs, discomfort, sometimes outright hostility. It had bewildered her—she’d always gotten along well with everyone—but she’d written it off as an occupational hazard. Police chiefs made enemies.
Especially, she’d learned nearly three years later, corrupt ones.
Jessica pushed that subject to the back of her mind. “So Willis is about your age and he has multiple teenage daughters. Did he get an early start or are you the late bloomer here?”
Mitch shifted to prop his feet on the chair between them. “His wife had their first girl about three weeks after graduation and had another every year after until Shandra was born. She’s number four.”
“And you haven’t even got number one yet.” Not that he struck her as a particularly paternal man. She would have to see past his sexy-as-sin exterior to put him in the role of doting father—and she was having trouble with that. Enough trouble to be a concern…later.
“Nope, no kids. I did have one marriage, though. It started out great but ended when we realized we had nothing in common anymore.”
“How long did that take?”
“Four years to find out. Another to do anything about it.” His brow furrowed as he frowned at her. “You’re pretty good at getting me to volunteer information I don’t normally share.”
She coaxed a faint smile and shrugged again. “I used to teach third grade. My students always found me easy to talk to.”
“You’re comparing me to a third-grader?”
His mildly insulted tone strengthened her smile. “I think most men have quite a lot in common with third-graders. And second-graders. And kindergartners.”
“So why aren’t you teaching here?”
Jen had wanted to teach. She’d wanted to do anything besides sit home alone all day or socialize with Starla Starrett and the few others on Taylor’s approved-friends list. But Taylor had refused. How would it look if his wife was working instead of home where she belonged?
Because she didn’t like the answer to the question, Jessica ignored it, returning instead to a comment Mitch had made earlier. “So you played football. And basketball. Were you any good?”
“Good enough to get a football scholarship to Ole Miss. I played two years, had surgery on my knee, decided I didn’t want to spend the rest of my life limping around and quit.”
“I don’t like football. Or basketball. Or baseball, golf, fishing, tennis, track…”
“Don’t be shy,” he said drily. “For years I lived football and basketball. I’m a die-hard Braves fan. And the first thing my brothers and I do when I go for a visit is head out on the river to fish a few hours.”
“Your half brothers.”
Mitch took another drink of tea, brewed strong and sweet enough to put a diabetic in a coma, and wondered why she stressed the “half” part. Did she have half or step-siblings that she didn’t like to give the same acknowledgment as her real sister?
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