One Stormy Night. Marilyn Pappano
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He figured Taylor’s interests lay more in line with revenge. People didn’t go without his say-so. If an officer decided to leave the department, Taylor fired him before he got the chance. Back in college, when word had gotten out that he was going to be cut from the football team, he’d quit first. He wouldn’t have liked that Jennifer had left him. He’d want to win her back, if for no other reason than so he could turn around and leave her.
Hey, no one had ever accused Taylor of maturity.
“You should have gone back to California with your sister,” Mitch said flatly.
She glanced at the check, then left a generous tip on the table before meeting his gaze again, hers straight, blue, steady. “Is that a threat, Officer Lassiter?”
He kept his gaze just as straight and steady. “Why, ma’am, I’m an officer of the law. I don’t make threats.”
Her snort showed just what she thought of that. His brief experience with the Belmar Police Department—two months and counting—supported her opinion.
There had to be some advantage to a job that paid what this one did, Billy Starrett often repeated.
He followed her to the counter, where she paid her ticket, then out the door. Her car was parked down the street; his was around the corner. She walked a few feet away, then turned back. “Remember—bank, post office, grocery store.” Then, with a smirk, she walked off.
Damn Taylor for giving him this order. Mitch had better things to do, things that actually fell under his job description. Using department assets to find out what the chief’s wife was up to wasn’t exactly appropriate. But, when compared to all the other inappropriate things going on within the department, this one didn’t begin to matter.
He climbed into his unit, switched the AC to high, then fastened his seat belt. He’d spent more years in a patrol car than he wanted to count at the moment. With a shotgun secured to the dash, a heavy-duty flashlight in the passenger seat, the radio, the computer and the extra handcuffs tossed onto the console, he felt comfortable here, more than anywhere else in Belmar.
There were three banks in town, but he didn’t have to guess which one Jennifer was going to. She tapped the horn as she drove past, just to make sure he didn’t miss her. She was entirely too accommodating about being watched to be up to anything. It promised to be a long, boring morning.
She went inside the bank and spent eleven minutes and got in and out of the post office, with a handful of mail, in six. Her next stop was the grocery store nearest the apartments. He parked behind her car and across the aisle and watched as she went in.
Ten minutes passed. Fifteen. The engine was running and so was the AC, but the temperature inside the car was steadily rising. Southern Mississippi was always hot and humid in September but seemed even more so that morning. Maybe it was Hurricane Leo, idling out in the gulf, deciding which way to blow. Maybe it was this assignment, being used as a babysitter—spy—on city time, that was making him hot. Or, hell, maybe it was the whole damn job.
Restless and needing to do something that felt productive, he called in the tag on her car to the dispatcher, Megan, who ran it and notified him, predictably, that it came back to a rental company. He asked her to call the company and find out who had rented it. She said something to someone there in the office before replying affirmatively, and he recognized her voice from last night’s call to Taylor.
So Megan was sleeping with the chief. Great for job security…until she did something to tick him off or he found someone he wanted more. Like his wife?
It took a few minutes for Megan to call back with the info, and she did so on his cell phone. “The car was rented by Jessica Randall, who lives in Los Angeles. You think she’s related to Taylor’s wife?”
You think?
“I know she’s back. What do you think she wants? Where has she been? What has she been doing?” Dispatcher and department gossip—Megan’s unofficial title.
“You’ll have to ask Taylor. Thanks for the info.” Mitch hung up as a vision of blond hair, golden skin and frilly clothing came out of the grocery store, only one small bag in hand, and started his way. He rolled down the window as she neared. “Why is your car rented in your sister’s name? Why didn’t you do it?”
Dark glasses covered her eyes, hiding their expression. He wore dark shades, too, but she wouldn’t be able to read any more if she were looking straight into his eyes.
“What do you need to rent a car, Officer?”
“Driver’s license and credit card.”
“And what did you find inside my washed-away car besides two suitcases, some jewelry, cosmetics and a few mementos?”
Her purse, with her driver’s license and credit cards.
“Jess rented it for me before she left. She knows I’m good for it. And speaking of good…” She held up the shopping bag a moment before depositing it in his lap. “I realized this is going to take me a while, so I thought you might need to cool off.”
One part of his anatomy was quickly turning ice-cold until he lifted the bag and looked inside. It held a bottle of chilled water and an ice cream sandwich.
For the first time in a long time, he was taken by surprise. Under the circumstances, she was the last person he would have expected a thoughtful gesture from. “I—thank you.”
She flashed a smile. “I’ll be out soon as I can.” She strolled back into the store, long legs taking long steps, hips swaying. When had he ever seen Jennifer Burton stroll? When had he ever watched her do anything?
God, he needed a break. A date. A woman.
Any woman who could make him forget all about his boss’s wife.
Jessica loaded more groceries and cleaning supplies than she could possibly use into the trunk of the rental, climbed behind the wheel and glanced at Mitch before backing out. He’d finally shut off the engine and rolled down the windows and he looked hot. Sweat dotted his forehead and likely dampened his shirt as well as his hair. Damp was a good look on him. Wet would probably make her steam.
The cell phone beeped and she punched the speaker button. “It’s about time you called.”
“How’s it going?” Jen asked, her voice ethereal and disembodied through the small speaker.
“I met Taylor this morning and he’s a jerk. What a loser.”
“Oh, I thought he was amazing when we met. He was so handsome and charming and adorable.” She sighed. “Of course, I didn’t know then what I know now.”
“I also met your next-door neighbor.”
“Mrs. Foster? She’s kind of a pain—oh, you mean Mitch Lassiter.”
Who was also kind of a pain, Jessica thought with another glance in the rearview mirror.
“You know you can’t trust him.”