Vigilante Mine (11 page)

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Authors: Cera Daniels

Tags: #Paranormal Romance

BOOK: Vigilante Mine
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A laugh tap-danced its way up her throat and into the enclosed space of his car. Why did her tension seem easier to bear around him? "Ryan, I meant what I said. It's not your fault. Dale made it pretty clear he's been looking for an opportunity to push me out since the night I took that bullet." She shrugged. "So if I get to blame anyone for costing me my badge, it'll be the slick bastard who benched me in the first place."

His lips parted. For a fleeting moment, Amanda read shock in the slack line of his jaw. It vanished when his hand jerked off her leg and his eyebrows furrowed. The car took the next corner sharper than prudent, drawing her eyes back to the road.

"Did something run in front of us?" She checked her mirror, but unless he'd been concerned by a paper bag blowing across the road, she didn't see cause for alarm. Not the kind of alarm that warranted a white-knuckled grip on the gear shift. "Ryan?"

"Is this guy behind bars?"

Amanda raised her gaze from his hand to his face, but he hid his thoughts well. "No. They never caught him. The man's a shadow."

He pulled up to a stop sign and his eyes left the road, his gaze like a heated caress to her skin. "You don't seem like a woman who'd give up."

"Some of us follow rules. Internal Affairs frowns on officers becoming involved in cases where they have a personal stake." Her stomach tightened. She should have been on this case. These murders would mean the stakes were no longer personal. Masks or not, though, she couldn't say for certain this was his work and even if it was, her team would still have to find a shadow.

She shrugged. "Jackson once promised me he'd sneak me onto a ride-along with the SWAT team to track the guy when I got back to work."

"Jackson?"

"My partner." She hadn't been present when Jackson was killed, but Dale's insinuation that anyone who partnered with her now would be a wasted resource stewed in the back corners of her mind. Her voice caught. "Former partner. He was killed while I was on desk duty."

Sympathy edged into Ryan's eyes. "Were you close?"

"Once." She took several controlled breaths and studied the view from the front window before speaking again. "Jackson Price. He had twenty years of experience on me, didn't want anything to do with the sidelines. Dale wouldn't put him back out there without me, so he got the green light to try for a position in another department. He was in transition. I think in his head, he'd already left the team. Jackson wouldn't even talk to me after he passed his exam."

"Jackson Price?" He tapped his fingers on the wheel. "The lead for the Old Town investigation?"

Amanda's eyes widened. As Ryan's expression fell, she wanted to kick herself under the dashboard. "I didn't know that. I'm sorry."

"So much for answers." He shrugged, but tension radiated across the line of his jaw. "It's just as well."

They continued the drive in silence. After a few blocks, the analytical part of her brain circled back to the murder. A puzzle was a puzzle, even when the pieces didn't fit. She wiggled her toes in her boots. "Dale told me not to get involved. But we found the body and I arrested a syndicate member, so that means I am already, right?"

In truth, it was a rhetorical question, but Ryan answered anyway. "Nothing wrong with thinking." He ran a hand through his hair. "Amanda, if that kid was syndicate, he didn't kill the informant."

"I know." She shot him a measuring look. "There's nothing left in Old Town to loot. He was alone and he wasn't alert enough to have been hanging around for a swap. Standing over the vic with a weapon makes him a person of interest, but trading up a gun for a knife? Doesn't fit."

"It's not just that. Old Town is neutral territory." His eyes took on a troubled gleam. "No one wants to claim the ghosts."

She chewed on her bottom lip. Old Town had stood vacant and crime-free since the fire, like a morbid kind of hallowed ground. No body drops

until today

no deals in the crumbling back alleys, no desperate and angry shoot-outs. "I wish I'd taken time to ask why he was out there in the first place."

Ryan made a sound in the back of his throat. "You think he saw someone else, heard the shot?"

"Maybe he was a witness, maybe not." Her mood lightened as she embraced the mental workout. "He had plenty of opportunity to point the blame elsewhere. He didn't."

"Maybe he was afraid of the killer."

Amanda did most of her thinking out loud. At the precinct and at home, she'd bounced ideas off of her partner, her lieutenant, and even her mother. Who knew she'd one day do the same with Ryan McLelas, hopeless flirt of the year? There'd once been as much chance of that happening as there'd been for her to lose her badge.

Back when I wasn't a departmental liability.

If only there was a way to convince Dale to change his mind.

"Hey. You still here?" he asked in a low voice that sent a tremor of temptation up her spine.

She sucked in a deep breath. "I was thinking."

"I liked it better when you did it out loud." He pushed on the edge of his glasses and drew her gaze to a panty-melting smirk that crinkled the corner of his right eye and curved those sensual, take-no-prisoners lips.

So much for his serious, analytical side.

"The other body had a mask, too," she said, focusing on the possibility of linked murders instead of taking the bait. She would never be a one-night stand kind of girl, and he would always be a playboy with a date for dinner and plenty of numbers in his little black book.

Ryan raised an eyebrow, but didn't say anything as he turned the steering wheel to the left.

"Could it be a signature?" Could the rumor mill be right, and the masked bodies point directly to the man who'd turned her own weapon against her?

The car bucked underneath her and her eyes focused through the windshield. Ryan had driven her straight to her front door. When had she told him where she lived?

 

Ryan winced when
Amanda cut an accusing look in his direction. "You lied to me. You didn't just happen to pass by, and you weren't on your way to Old Town this morning. You found my address and came out to the North End looking for me."

Despite how relieved he was to see her spark return, he didn't want to argue. So this time, he'd tell the truth.

Ryan parked the car and turned to the

now former

detective. "I was heading to Old Town. But I wanted to pick your brain on the case."

She frowned and pointed to his ear. "You told your brother you changed your mind."

"I would have been wrong to ask, so I didn't." He ran a hand over his jaw. She hadn't overheard the rest. He could handle this. "I still wanted your company."

The "company" part of the morning had been perfect. Melancholy, bitterly cold, and drearier than an autumn rain storm, but otherwise perfect. His other goal

distracting her from the morning's tip about Klepto

had been a total failure. Thanks to the murder and another mask, her attention had come full circle.

She unbuckled her seatbelt and cracked open her door with a sigh. "I hope all your dates don't involve dead bodies."

"A date sounds good. Let's spring for a late, corpse-free lunch."

She chuckled. "You don't know when to give up, do you?"

"Not many people tell me 'no'. You make it an art." The suggestive smile crept slowly across his face, and he wasn't inclined to stop it. "I happen to enjoy art."

She rolled her eyes and scooted off the leather seat, pausing with her heels on the concrete of her driveway. "Do me a favor?"

"Anything."

"Don't lie to me again."

He swallowed hard but she slammed the car door behind her before he could spit out an "okay" to add to the tally.

When she was safely ensconced in those four walls he let out a harsh breath. Every moment with Amanda threatened his resolve. How could it not? The woman was sexy, driven, brilliant as fire. When she discovered the truth, and she would . . . "God, that woman's gonna hate me."

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER SEVEN

 

 

Ryan pressed the
button for the fourteenth floor of McLelas Financial and rolled his shoulders. Useless. Twin demons of guilt and worry had coiled tight into his muscles.

"She doesn't hear me like you do."
A confused sensation accompanied Romeo's check-in.

Who, Amanda?

"She should hear me."

I take it you don't mean barking.
Ryan raised an eyebrow at his reflection in the chrome.
Zach and Jay don't hear you like this either. You're my guide. Why would Amanda be able to hear you?

The dog retreated into stubborn silence and Ryan shook his head. What on Earth was up with him today?

The elevator doors gave way to a recreation of the Amazon. Heat cranked out at full blast and the oppressive humidity sucked at Ryan's already flagging energy. Water rippled toward the elevator, only to stop at a two-foot high plastic barricade that curved around its entrance. Similar construction surrounded outlets, vents, and the stairwell doors. Green and black granite hallway flooring outside of the barricades had been usurped by an inch-high river of soggy papers and bobbing pens.

"That's it. Enough. I'm going for a cup of tea." He eyed the button for the garage level.

Then he spotted the neon yellow "Caution: Wet Floor" sandwich board.

Floating.

The understatement made his lips twitch, and he let out a startled laugh. Yesterday, he'd survived being burned alive. Today, he'd found a dead body, gotten Amanda suspended, and now his executive suite was flooded.
Flooding
, he corrected, his eardrums picking up a pattering of light rain too close to his office.

"Who has the voodoo doll, and where are you hiding the camera?" he asked.

"Ryan? Oh, thank heavens." His personal assistant's greeting was followed by a hearty splash and a feminine roar of frustration.

"Lilah?" Alarm thumped at his ribcage. Had she fallen? Was she trapped behind a piece of furniture? He shoved a palm against the elevator door and leaned into the hallway. "Lilah, are you okay? What happened here?"

He reached for his ability, pushing aside the sound of water steadily lapping against the potted trees at the end of the hall, ready to pinpoint her location at the slightest sound. Situations like this left Ryan wondering if his spirit guide should have been a bat, like Zach's.

"Quick, call Payroll and approve my raise," she fired back.

Main conference room. Ryan stepped into the shielded zone and glanced at the water on the other side. Not too deep, but his on-site supply of clothing and footwear was running low. Off came his socks and shoes. He hooked his fingers into the horizontal lacing, then slung the Oxfords over his shoulder and stepped barefoot into the stream.

The taut cord of a phone base led the way from the reception desk through the conference room doors, where it sat on top of a file cabinet. The recessed room

perfect for presentations and tiered seating, not so much for floods

was lit from the exterior office, vid-conference screens devoid of their usual standby lights.

Lilah sat tailor fashion on top of the massive wooden table, inches above the water, phone receiver cradled in the nook of one arm and a notepad dangling from her fingers. Her pants were soaked from cuff to knee and she'd pulled a dry sweater over her red blouse, the burgundy hem underneath dripping onto the wood.

"Ping Maintenance again for me, will you?" At 5'2" in flat pumps instead of the weaponized heels other businesswomen preferred, his personal assistant was a feisty little powerhouse of let's-get-shit-done. Even while trapped on top of a table. "Should just be redial."

He obliged, depositing his shoes on the file cabinet and wisely stifling another laugh as she rapped out orders for shop-vacs.

"I don't remember ordering a pool," he said when she'd finished the call.

"Your brother is a menace." She let the receiver drop into her lap and pulled a blue fountain pen from her now-limp and disheveled updo.

"Remodeling?" Ryan didn't need to ask which brother.

Jay and Zach were forever tinkering

Zach with tiny, computerized designs, and Jay, well, anything with moving metal bits he thought he could "improve" generally got a tune-up of doom. What Ryan couldn't guess, however, was how the McLelas Financial plumbing system fit into one of his youngest brother's interests.

"He swears this isn't his fault but it's been raining since he started." Lilah held up a hand to cut herself off. With closed eyelids, she gave a small shake of her head and took in a deliberate breath. Green eyes flashed open with none of the frustration and all of the calm, no-nonsense vigor he'd hired her for. "We can't cut the water completely without sending everyone home."

He frowned. "It must not be like this all over the building. You'd have already sent them on their way."

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