Out of Eden. Beth Ciotta

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nodded, then shifted. “Chief Curtis liked Maxwell House Dark Roast. Day in, day out. Don’t seem right, drinking his brew without him. Thought I’d try something different.”

      “It’s good.”

      “Dorothy won’t like it.”

      Jack’s gaze flicked to the assistant’s vacant desk. “Speaking of Ms. Vine…”

      “This ain’t typical,” Ziffel said in her defense. “Dorothy’s one of the most punctual people I know.”

      “Should I be worried?”

      “She’s seeing to Chief Curtis’s…worldly possessions. He was a widower,” Ziffel explained. “No children.”

      “I get it, Deputy.” No wife. No kids. No one to see to his affairs after he’d keeled over unexpectedly from a heart attack. Jack was in a similar position. No wife. No kids. Just a sister who resented him and a niece who didn’t know him. “Ms. Vine gets here when she gets here.”

      “Right-o, Chief Reynolds.”

      “Jack’ll do.

      Ziffel smiled and Jack got the feeling he’d just risen a notch in the man’s eyes. “Know what you need with that coffee, Jack? Kerri’s apple strudel. I bought a half dozen. Help yourself.”

      According to Ziffel, Kerri’s Confections was famous countywide. The proprietor, Kerri Waldo, a fairly recent addition to Eden, had a gift for creating heavenly desserts. Her recipes were spiked with secret ingredients and the daily special was usually a one-time affair. The freshly baked scents wafting from the box on Ziffel’s desk promised a decadent delight.

      Jack wasn’t hungry, but this was a chance to bond with his new right-hand man. If it meant sampling strudel, so be it. He moved to Ziffel’s desk and dipped into the box. Two seconds later, nirvana. “Wow.”

      “I’ve asked her to marry me three times,” said Ziffel.

      “Aren’t you already married?”

      “In this case my wife would consider bigamy a blessing. She’s addicted to Kerri’s sweets.”

      Jack cracked a smile, sampled more strudel. Shy licked his fingers. He couldn’t blame the dog. Hard to resist heaven.

      “Just so you know,” Ziffel said, narrowing his eyes on Shy. “Dorothy is a neat freak.”

      “Really.” Jack’s gaze flicked to his office.

      “Chief Curtis’s office was off limits. Said he had his own system. Knew where everything was. If Dorothy shifted so much as a pencil, he had a conniption fit.”

      “Yeah, well, I don’t know Curtis’s system. Ms. Vine can shift all the pencils she wants, and while she’s at it, I could use help organizing files.”

      “That she’ll like. That,” he said, pointing to Shy, “she won’t.”

      Jack had only met Dorothy Vine briefly, but long enough to know she’d view Shy as a hairy, four-legged disruption. He looked down and met the mutt’s baleful brown eyes. Could she be any more needy? “Ms. Vine will have to deal. Shy’s destructive when I leave her home alone.” He refreshed his coffee and moved into the disaster zone.

      Ziffel followed. “Separation anxiety. Saw a special about it on Animal Planet. Stems from fear of abandonment. Especially prevalent in rescued strays.”

      Jack sat at his desk and opened that day’s edition of the Eden Tribune—the rural voice of Miami County. Although the paper included state news, it typically focused on feel-good articles, local sports and community events. Far and away from the bleak and stark reports of the New York Times, Daily News and the New York Post. There was something to be said for Americana newspapers, especially by someone suffering big-city burnout. This week the paper brimmed with stories and advertisements for Eden’s upcoming Apple Festival.

      Jack skimmed the classifieds while Ziffel spouted the advantages of hiring a dog trainer. “I don’t need a trainer. I’m not keeping her.” No mention of a missing dog in the lost-and-found section. “Figured I’d walk her around town. See if anyone recognizes her.”

      “Without a collar and leash?”

      Jack glanced up. “We have a leash law I don’t know about?”

      Ziffel sniffed. “No law. But what if she attacks someone?”

      “Shy’s afraid of her own shadow.”

      “Doesn’t mean she won’t attack if provoked. Just because she’s meek… Where is she, anyway?” Ziffel turned, stiffened.

      Jack saw what he saw—Shy with her nose in the red-and-white signature box marked Kerri’s Confections. Shit. “Don’t—”

      “Hey, you thieving mutt!”

      “—yell.” Jack was on his deputy’s heels. The sight of Shy crouched and trembling with apple goo and flaky crumbs on her snout made him smile.

      Ziffel was not amused. “You…scrounge. You…menace!”

      He gripped the man’s bony shoulder. “You can’t blame the dog for wanting to sample something that smells so good.”

      “She not only ate all the strudel,” he complained, “she peed on the floor.”

      “That’s because you yelled. Relax. I’ll clean it up.” Jack patted Shy’s bowed head, then swiped several tissues from Dorothy’s desk.

      “The strudel—”

      “I’ll buy more.”

      “Probably sold out already.” He swiped up the damaged box. “Dang nabbit!”

      Dang nabbit? What the hell? Cops cursed. Most of them crudely and often. At least in Jack’s experience. Then again, this was Eden—paradise in the heartland. An old-fashioned town with old-fashioned values.

      While Ziffel cleaned up the pastry disaster, Jack made a mental note to clean up his language—when in Rome—although he refused to substitute dang for damn or fudge for fuck. Although, damn, fuck should probably go. This should be interesting. Amused, he flushed the soiled tissue, then washed his hands.

      The roar of an engine drew them both to the station’s front window.

      Jack noted the rider with a raised brow. Was that…Holy shit. It was. On the heels of surprise came a jolt of lust. Typically he wasn’t attracted to biker chicks, but this one was sexy as hell in her short skirt, denim jacket and…Christ…were those combat boots?

      “Spenser would have a fit if he saw Kylie on that motorcycle,” Ziffel said.

      Jack wrestled with his own misgivings. “Because it’s not a Harley? Or because it’s dangerous?”

      “Both.”

      He was right. Spenser wouldn’t approve. Mostly because of the safety issue. Motorcyclists were twenty times as likely to die

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