“If that was the case, I would’ve had to escort your sister out, too.”
“Please. Layne’s the original good girl. She spends all her time making sure everyone else is keeping their noses clean.”
“Including you?”
“Well, I do try… .” She skimmed her gaze over him, her meaning, and invitation, clear. “But somehow Old Man Trouble always comes along and nudges me off that straight and narrow path.” She stepped close enough for him to notice her eyes were a shade darker than Sullivan’s, her forehead wider. “You interested in walking down that road with me sometime?”
Her voice was throaty, and as smoky and sexy as classic jazz. But beyond the seductive act, he saw glimpses of humor and intelligence. She was mysterious and smart and hot enough to melt a man’s brains—and his good intentions—in her painted-on black skirt and snug, white top, the top three buttons undone. And she knew it.
She could bring a man to his knees with a single look. She also knew the score, knew exactly what men wanted from her. A few hours of dark pleasure. Nothing more.
If they’d been back in Boston, he might have been tempted enough not to care that she was a magnet for mayhem and heartbreak. He would’ve walked her to her car. Asked if she’d be interested in going to dinner. But this was Mystic Point and he had Jess to think of, had an example to set for her.
Plus, he wasn’t kidding about keeping his professional life separate from his personal one. And while asking out the sister of one of his officers didn’t necessarily step over that line, it blurred it.
He liked things—rules and his own moral code—to be crystal clear.
And when he looked at her, he saw Sullivan. Compared her blatant sexuality, her coyness with the captain’s blunt, what-you-see-is-what-you-get attitude. In that comparison, Tori came out lacking.
He deliberately stepped back. “Have a good day, ma’am.”
She didn’t seem disappointed by his lack of response toward her. Which made him wonder if she really had been interested or if it’d all been part of some show he hadn’t been invited to.
“You do the same,” she said. “And good luck solving your first big case as chief.” She picked up the set of keys from the plastic bin provided for visitors’ keys, cell phones and other devices that would set off the metal detector they needed to pass through before entering the squad room.
Her key ring was a plastic frame with a picture of a dark-haired boy in his baseball uniform, a bat over his shoulder as he smiled for the camera. A member’s benefit card for a local grocery store was hooked onto the frame along with a small, silver heart hanging from a thin chain.
A small, silver heart that looked very familiar.
Son of a bitch.
“Those are yours?” he asked abruptly. “That’s your key ring?”
“Yes and yes.” She frowned. “Why? Is there a problem?”
Though his brain screamed at him to haul her ass back inside and toss her into a holding cell until he got to the bottom of what was going on, his instincts told him otherwise. Tori may have a missing piece of the puzzle but she couldn’t answer the questions running through his head. The growing suspicions.
“No. No problem. Have a good day, ma’am.”
He went back into the squad room. Sullivan was on her phone while Meade and Campbell both worked on their computers. Ross crossed to her desk. “I need to speak to you in my office.”
She held up a finger for him to wait then spoke into the receiver. “Yes, this is Assistant Chief—”
Ross snatched the phone from her hand and handed it to Meade in one smooth motion.
She reached for the phone. “Wha—”
“My office,” Ross said, leaning down, both hands on her desk as he crowded her against her chair. “Now.”
He straightened and stepped back far enough to give her room to stand. Her expression set, her movements stilted, she rose and walked ahead of him out of the room and down the short hallway.
“Take a coffee break,” he ordered Donna as he passed her desk.
She looked from him to Layne then took her purse out of the bottom desk drawer. “Sure thing. I’ll be back in ten minutes.”
Ross followed Sullivan into his office and closed the door.
No sooner had the latch clicked shut when she whirled on him. “I’ve already apologized for my unprofessional behavior,” she said through barely moving lips. “And I don’t appreciate you treating me with such a lack of respect. Especially in front of my coworkers.”
“Is that so?” he murmured, taking her in. Her arms were straight, her hands clenched. He had to give her credit. She didn’t give anything away. She met his gaze steadily, no guilt, certainly no remorse on her face.
But she would regret lying to him.
“Yes.” She raised her chin, revealing a thin silver chain around her neck. “That’s so.”
He thought of the shorter piece of chain attaching the heart charm to her sister’s key ring. Remembered how, when he’d first shown Layne the necklace found with the remains, her hand had gone to her throat. At the time he’d thought it an innocent gesture.
Fury had him closing the distance between them in two long strides but he didn’t let it rule him. He never let his emotions rule him.
Still, his expression must not have been as calm as he’d thought because her eyes widened. But she held her ground. “What do you think—”
“You don’t appreciate being treated with a lack of respect?” he repeated. “Well, I don’t appreciate being lied to.”
He hooked his forefinger under her necklace and tugged it free of her shirt.
And discovered the same heart Tori had on her key chain.
An exact replica of the smaller hearts from the necklace they’d found with the remains.
* * *
“WHAT THE HELL is going on?” Taylor growled. He smelled of coffee and mint. Her necklace was wrapped around his finger and his knuckles brushed against her collarbone. His skin was warm. His tone cold enough to make her shiver.
To Layne’s horror, tears pricked the backs of her eyes. She found herself wanting to tell him everything. Her fears and suspicions. Not because she was afraid of him or worried about the safety of her job or her professional reputation. Although, she realized with a jolt, she should fear for both.
She wanted to share her burden with someone. Or better yet, let someone else take care of things for her.
Which was so unlike her she almost pinched herself to see if this whole crappy experience wasn’t some nightmare.
She was the strong one. The responsible one. She’d stepped up and taken care of her family when her mother bailed. Had given up her childhood to ensure Tori and their younger sister, Nora, were safe and cared for. She’d protected them. Always protected them.
But, oh, God, she wanted, badly to be the one taken care of. Just one time.
Pressing her lips together, she jerked back and for a second, she didn’t think he’d let go. But then he eased away, letting the charm fall back to bounce once against the top button of her uniform.
“Nothing’s going on.” Her tone betrayed none of her uncertainty, her guilt. “It’s a coincidence.”
At least that’s what she’d been trying to convince herself of all morning.
“You and your sister both have