Hot Contact. Susan Crosby. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Susan Crosby
Издательство: HarperCollins
Серия: Behind Closed Doors
Жанр произведения: Контркультура
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781408943045
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shook her head. “I wanted to talk to you. Away from your office.”

      “What made you think I wouldn’t have talked to you? Met with you, away from the office? Did you figure you had to play the sex card to get my attention? I assure you, I’m not that base.”

      “The attraction was real and unplanned,” she admitted. “Unfortunately.”

      “Unfortunately?”

      “It complicated everything.”

      “You seemed to deal with that complication just fine. Nice dance, Arianna. Great kiss. I bought it.”

      His anger was justified, but it still stung. “I didn’t know it was you by the waterfall. I had no idea.” She couldn’t tell if he believed her. His expression didn’t change. “As for the kiss, I was as swept away as you were. The last thing I needed was—was…” She spread her hands wide, not able to come up with the right word.

      “Chemistry?”

      “Yes. I don’t know if you’ve heard but I haven’t exactly endeared myself to the LAPD through the years.” Which was putting it mildly, she thought.

      “I heard rumors,” he said, then shrugged. “I asked around a little after we met.”

      “I have a lot of resentment.”

      “I gather that. At least now I know why.”

      She’d wondered. She’d thought maybe that was why he hadn’t tried to contact her after they met last year. But that was before she knew he’d been engaged. “I figured you might have. But there’s no denying we made some kind of connection when we met. I also figured if you got to know and like me, you would be more willing to do me a favor.”

      He shoved his hands in his back pockets. “What kind of favor?”

      “I want to see my father’s file. I had hoped you’d find a way to get it to me.”

      “All you have to do is request it.”

      “No. It’s unsolved. I’ve been denied access.”

      “That makes no sense. If the case is twenty-five years old, what would it matter? Certainly you’re entitled under the Freedom of Information Act.”

      “My relationship with the LAPD is bad enough already. Pushing legalities would only hurt me in the future when I need information for a case. All I want is to see the file. And find the killer,” she added, the most important issue.

      “Why do you think you could?”

      “It’s a hunch. I’m a good investigator, and I’m not bound by a cop’s rules.”

      She could see him thinking it through.

      “Was your father involved in a crime?” he asked.

      “My father was a thirteen-year veteran of the Los Angeles Police Department. He died in the line of duty.” A situation that still made her both angry and proud. He’d been her knight in shining armor—but he’d been taken from her.

      Joe hardly missed a beat. He rested his palms on the counter and leaned toward her, his gaze locked with hers. “Then you know that my father and everyone else at the department did everything they could to find the killer and bring him to justice. Everything.”

      She didn’t break eye contact. “And yet they didn’t solve it. Tell me, Joe. If it was your father who had been murdered and justice hadn’t been served, wouldn’t you be doing everything in your power to find the killer?”

      He was quiet long enough that she began to hope.

      “I can’t help you,” he said at last, pushing away from the counter.

      Hope died. “Why not?”

      “A hot file like that—a cop whose line-of-duty death was never solved? That would require approval from some brass before I could pull it from Records. Plus, it would look like I was working, which I can’t be, because I’m on vacation.”

      “When you get back from vacation, then.”

      “I’m off for four weeks starting today. If you can wait that long I’ll give it a try.”

      She decided to press. “Would you let me talk to your father?”

      “That’s not possible.” He picked up two of the food containers and carried them to the kitchen table.

      “Why not?”

      “I’ve given you my answer, Arianna. If things were different I would try to help you.”

      Her throat burned. He was her only chance of getting a look at the file, short of hiring a lawyer and making an issue out of it, which would totally destroy whatever small amount of credibility she had with the department. Not to mention that she needed the nightmares to end.

      She looked blankly at all the food she’d brought. She couldn’t stay there any longer.

      Arianna extended her hand. “I’m sorry I bothered you.”

      He took her hand then didn’t let go until she met his gaze. Sympathy brought out specks of gold in his green eyes, but he didn’t try to stop her. She was grateful for that.

      She kept her emotions in check as she pulled away from the curb. Now what? Where could she go? Not back to her mother’s house. Not to her own apartment, either. Too quiet. To the office, then, where she spent most of her life, anyway.

      She had to come up with plan B.

      An hour later Joe tossed his inventory log onto the dining room table and headed to the backyard, in need of fresh air. He stalked the grounds, hunting for nonexistent weeds, then sat next to an orange tree and rested his back against the trunk. He plucked a blade of grass, then another. One more.

      He didn’t know why he’d expected anything different. Of course Arianna wasn’t interested. He was a cop, LAPD at that—just like her father, a man who had died in the line of duty. And his own father hadn’t found the killer.

      That was just the beginning. Her income was probably three times his—or more. She had fit in at Scott’s party, as sophisticated as the rest of his guests. Joe hadn’t, which is why he’d discovered the waterfall in the first place. He had decided he’d made a mistake by going to the party and so had looked for a place to hang out until he could politely leave.

      Then Arianna had appeared in the misty, mysterious place like a wish fulfilled, her spicy perfume alerting him to her presence, her sexy body jolting him back to life after a long sleep, her dark eyes entreating him to trust and hope. Was it all a game? She said it wasn’t, that the attraction was real and unplanned and complicated. He would’ve believed her, believed she was honest, if she hadn’t misled him last night. What was the truth?

      He’d been lied to before, most recently by his own fiancée. He hadn’t learned to play those games and didn’t know how to spot the players.

      Arianna hadn’t shown herself to be any different. She’d walked out as soon as she learned he couldn’t be of any use to her.

      So much for trying to get back his life. And a date. It was too bad his interest had been piqued to the degree it had.

      “Joe?”

      He swung around. Arianna stepped through the side gate and into the yard.

      “I didn’t mean to just barge in, but I rang the bell several times. Your car was still out front, so I took a chance you were out here.”

      Damn, she was one sexy woman. Curvy, fluid, graceful and…competent.

      “No problem,” he said, standing to greet her. Stay this time….

      “I apologize for walking out on you,” she said.

      He liked her directness and that she looked him in the eye. He even liked that she didn’t offer an