The Passion Of Sam Broussard. Maggie Price

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The Passion Of Sam Broussard - Maggie Price Mills & Boon Intrigue

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basement corridor in the Oklahoma City P.D.’s headquarters building. “Eight o’clock sharp.”

      The cop who’d introduced himself as Kostka slid a key into the door’s lock and swung it open, releasing a whiff of musty air into the hallway. The space beyond the door reminded Sam of a windowless black cave.

      It matched his dark mood.

      “When did Lizzie make that appointment with you?” Kostka asked while reaching in and flipping on the office’s overhead lights.

      “I called her from Shreveport two weeks ago today,” Sam answered, wondering why the hell that mattered. “She said she was flying to Vegas that afternoon to get married, and would be back at work this morning.”

      Which was the start of the first leave time Sam had taken since the tragedy that had thrown his world out of whack. Time off his lieutenant had ordered him to take.

      Kostka rubbed his double chin. “That’d explain it.”

      “Explain what?”

      “Lizzie’s experienced a few…personal complications lately.” Kostka stuck a hitchhikerlike thumb toward the office. “Why don’t you get settled while I give her a call?”

      Sam remained in the dim corridor while his narrowed gaze took in the neat-as-a-pin desk in the cubbyhole-size office, its walls lined with battered black filing cabinets. He doubted Liz Scott’s personal complications could get anywhere near to the damnable ones he’d endured. Even after two and a half years the guilt still ate at him like acid.

      The one thing—the only thing—that had eased that searing ache was the intense edginess he felt a month ago when he recovered the .45 Colt.

      The thought of the weapon that had been linked to one of Oklahoma City’s cold case homicides had Sam peering around the office’s door to see if he could spot a second desk. He didn’t.

      “Does Scott have a partner?” he asked.

      “No,” Kostka answered. “The OCPD received some sort of grant to open the cold case office a couple of months ago. Got funding for only one detective position. That’d be Lizzie’s.”

      Sam knew he could turn over the evidence envelope he had carried in from his SUV to the department’s property room, then get back on the road to the vacation he had no desire to take. But leaving the Colt wouldn’t help him figure out why the instant he’d touched it, he felt the equivalent of a rasp running right up his spine to the base of his skull.

      Each day the gun had stayed in possession of the Shreveport P.D., that feeling had intensified. Which was something Sam hadn’t shared even with his own partner, much less his Grandmother Broussard. One mention of his edgy unease, and the self-professed—and very superstitious—conjure woman who’d raised him would have mixed up one of her infamous herb bags of who-knew-what green leafy substances, with instructions for him to sleep with it under his pillow.

      Even if he didn’t give a damn about the case the Colt connected to, Sam knew all too well how defense attorneys could twist chain-of-custody issues to get evidence tossed out. Thirty years had passed since the automatic was used to murder a woman. With the case still unsolved—and a motherlode of evidence found inside the gun—he didn’t want to risk having a judge rule the Colt inadmissible just because the cop who recovered it had failed to turn it over to the current officer of record on the case.

      “I’m late! I’m sorry I’m late.”

      The harried female voice and hurried clip of footsteps on the dingy tile floor had Sam looking over his shoulder.

      Despite the dim lighting, he could tell that the tall, long-legged woman rushing his way was a knockout. Her skin seemed flawless, her face a perfect oval. Her hair was slicked back and twisted into a braid that hung over one shoulder. As she moved, one flap of her turquoise jacket fanned back to reveal the gold badge and holstered automatic clipped to the waistband of her black slacks.

      When she got close enough for him to see that her hair was flame-red, a feeling of familiarity hit him. But if they’d ever met before, he couldn’t name the place or time.

      “Welcome back, Lizzie,” Kostka said. “I was about to settle your visitor in your office and give you a call.”

      “Thanks, Kostka, I owe you.”

      “And don’t forget it.” Behind the older man’s grin, Sam saw the sharp assessment in his eyes as he gave her a quick going over. “I heard about the latest…glitch in your plans. You okay?”

      “Fine. I’m fine.”

      It took Sam by surprise to find himself fighting the impulse to reach out, trail his fingertips down the knotted cable of her hair to find out if it felt as fiery as it looked. Instead he offered his hand. “Sergeant Scott, I’m Detective Broussard, Shreveport P.D.”

      “Detective,” she said, extending her hand. “Sorry I wasn’t here when you arrived.”

      The instant her palm pressed against his, Sam felt heat zigzag between them like a bolt of lightning.

      “You’re here now,” he said, and suspected she’d felt the sensation, too. Why else would her eyes narrow, or her hand linger in his a moment longer than necessary?

      “Guess I’m done here,” Kostka said, turning toward Sam. “Pleasure to meet you, Broussard.”

      Sam returned the detective’s handshake. “Thanks for the escort.”

      “No problem,” Kostka said, then ambled down the hallway toward the elevator.

      “I planned to arrive early and have things organized for when you got here,” Liz said across her shoulder as she stepped into her office. She plopped her black leather tote bag on the desk, then turned back to face him.

      Beneath the office lights, Sam saw that her eyes were ice-green. A tingle touched the back of his neck like a cool wind. Again, he felt a sense of familiarity, as though he’d gazed into those green eyes before, but had no memory of where or when. All he knew for sure was that if his grandmother ever got wind of this, she’d get her sister and cousins together for a mass tarot card reading.

      “Then….” Liz lifted a hand, let it drop. “Time just got away from me.”

      Stayed home for a quickie with the new husband? Sam wondered. She wasn’t wearing a wedding ring, but neither had he. There were plenty of ways for do-wrongs to get revenge against a cop. No sense telegraphing that the cop had a spouse someone could go after.

      Sam settled in the sole chair at the front of the desk that Scott had waved him toward. He noted her office was ruthlessly organized. File drawers were neatly closed, papers stacked, their edges aligned.

      Some instinct told him she ran her life that same way. “So, what do I call you now?”

      Her copper-colored brows drew together. “Now?”

      “When we talked on the phone, you said you were flying to Vegas to get married. You going by your husband’s last name?”

      “Oh.” She looked away toward one of the windowless walls, but not before Sam saw the color rise in her cheeks.

      Great,

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