He pressed his lips to hers for a kiss that didn’t last nearly long enough. “You know the trick might be that you have to say it a lot so I just get used to hearing it.”
A smiled pulled at her mouth and heart. “You think?”
“Yeah, I think.” His mouth covered hers again but then he stopped kissing her and frowned. “Oh, and that bullshit you mentioned earlier—”
“What bullshit?” She pulled back.
“About us just dating on Friday nights.”
“Yeah?” she asked.
“Well, it’s bullshit. Do you have any idea how miserable I was last night? No Taco. No you. No laughter.” He grinned. “No black and white cookie.”
She bumped him with her shoulder. “Do you think you need to hear it one more time?”
“Yeah, try it.” He grinned.
“I love you.”
He brushed a strand of her hair behind her ear. His hand lingered on her cheek. “And I love you, Sheri Thompson.”
“Again,” she said.
Books by Christie Craig
Divorced and Desperate Series
Divorced, Desperate and Delicious
Divorced, Desperate and Dating
Divorced, Desperate and Deceived
Divorced, Desperate and Dangerous
Divorced, Desperate and Dead
Divorced, Desperate and Daring
Hotter in Texas Series
Only in Texas
Blame It on Texas
Texas Hold ’Em
Tall, Hot & Texan
Gotcha!
The Cop Who Stole Christmas
Weddings Can Be Murder
Shut Up and Kiss Me
Murder, Mayhem and Mama
Love, Laughter and a Little Murder: 3 Novels by Christie Craig
(anthology containing Murder, Mayhem and Mama;
Weddings Can Be Murder; and Gotcha!)
For more information: www.Christie-Craig.com
YOUNG ADULT NOVELS BY
CHRISTIE CRAIG WRITING AS C. C. HUNTER
New York Times Bestselling Shadow Falls Series (Young Adult)
Born at Midnight
Turned at Dark (free novella)
Awake at Dawn
Taken at Dusk
Whispers at Moonrise
Saved at Sunrise (novella)
Chosen at Nightfall
Spellbinder (novella)
Shadow Falls: After Dark Series (Young Adult)
Reborn
Unbreakable (novella)
Eternal
Unspoken
For more information: www.CCHunterBooks.com
Excerpt from Divorced, Desperate and Dead
Keep reading for an excerpt
from another great book in the
Divorced and Desperate series,
Divorced, Desperate and Dead,
available now!
After a disastrous marriage and divorce, Detective Cary Stevens vowed he’d never let another woman into his heart. But when his latest investigation puts him in the way of a bullet, his bachelor days—and one-night stands—may be numbered. On the brink of death, he finds himself in Room Six, a waiting room in the hereafter where in-betweeners’ fates are truly decided. He resigns himself to dying of boredom, if nothing else, in the lineup of senior citizens with their AARP magazines, when in walks the one woman who could make him want a second chance at life . . . and love.
Chloe Sanders learns the hard way that no good deed goes unpunished when she pushes a little girl out of the way of a moving car and wakes up in some type of purgatory. Or maybe it’s heaven, because she couldn’t have asked for a hotter guy with whom to await her final judgment. The sweeping glances of his bedroom eyes and sharp-tongued flirtatiousness tell her Cary’s certainly no angel, but is he real? When she finally wakes up, Chloe’s determined to find out if he’s truly a man of magnificent flesh and blood or just a figment of her imagination. But before she can track him down, will the murderer that first put them both in Room Six come back to finish the job?
Chapter One
“Don’t move or I’ll shoot. I swear I’ll do it.”
Detective Cary Stevens had just stepped out onto his sister’s patio when the threat rang low but clear. He could hear his two older sisters, Kelly and Beth, chatting at the poolside, enjoying their Saturday afternoon, oblivious to what was going on.
He turned around and faced the owner of the small voice. She aimed the gun right at his chest. And the dang thing was loaded, he could tell from the drops of water spilling out of the tip. “You wouldn’t do that, would you?”
“I will if you don’t give me what I want. And don’t tell me you don’t have any, because you always do. So reach into your pocket and pull it out.”
He tucked two fingers into the front pocket of his jeans and brought out the wrapped piece of bubble gum that he’d put in there just for her. Then because he didn’t completely trust his niece, he snatched the water gun. “Your mom is going to make me pay for your next dentist appointment,” he said.
“That’s your problem,” his eleven-year-old niece, Bella, said and grinned.
“Peewee,” his older sister called from the lounge beside the pool.
“Yeah,” Cary answered reluctantly. But holy hell, he’d give anything if his family would stop calling him that. Supposedly, they’d named him that the day his mom brought him home from the hospital. He’d been premature, and according to them, the name fit. But now, at six feet, three inches and two hundred pounds, he should have outgrown the nickname.
And he had. No one dared to call him that, but his sisters.
“What are you doing? If you’re giving my kid gum again, I’m going to kick your butt.”
Bella laughed. “You know she won’t really do that, don’t you?”
Cary smiled at his niece and walked over to his sisters. “She held me up at gunpoint. I had to give it to her.” He set the gun down on the bottom of his sister’s lounge chair.
“Bullshit,” Kelly muttered.
“Hey, you grounded me for saying that last week,” Bella called from the other side of the pool.
Kelly frowned. “You’re early. But that’s fine. Where’s your swimsuit?”
“I didn’t bring it,” he said, knowing both his sisters were going to get mad. But they would just have to get over it. Thanks to his brother-in-law, to whom he now owed a beer, he knew what they were up to. No way in hell was he going to let them fix him up with one of their friends. No doubt the girl was beautiful, smart, and witty—all traits he liked. But he was a love-’em-and-leave-’em kind of guy, and he doubted any of their friends were love and leave kind of girls.
Thankfully, due to the call he’d gotten thirty minutes ago from a snitch who had info on the Jones case, he didn’t even have to lie. Good thing, because he sucked at lying to his sisters.
“I told you it’s a pool party,” Beth said.
“I know, but I can’t stay. I have to meet someone. I just wanted to stop by a minute and apologize for missing it.”
“No,” Kelly said. “You can’t leave. I’m grilling hamburgers. And . . . I want you to meet someone. She even went out and bought a new swimsuit.”
“Darn,” he said, only mildly regretting that he was going to miss the new swimsuit. “Sorry. But seriously, I have to be somewhere.”
“Is it a date?” Beth asked. “You going out with someone?”
“No. It’s work,” he answered honestly.
“You’ve been divorced over two years,” Kelly said, sounding more and more like their mom. “It’s time you start dating.”
“I date.”
“No.” Kelly looked to see where her daughter was. When she was sure the girl wasn’t in earshot, she said, “You have sex. That’s not dating.”
He frowned. “I thought that counted.” All of a sudden, he felt something tug at his jean leg. He looked down, expecting to see his sister’s toy poodle, Bucko, who for some ungodly reason, thought his leg was a
pissing post. But no, this thing was . . . was . . .
“What the hell is that?” he asked, as the thing stood on its back legs.
“That’s Pooch, my new foster dog,” Kelly said and studied the animal trying to climb up his leg. “Wow, he must like you.”
After his sister’s second miscarriage, she’d started fostering dogs, and she tried to push each and every one on him. She knew damn well he wasn’t going to take in a dog, but it was her way of guilting him into making a donation to the Canine Foster program. It worked each and every time, too.
“That’s a dog?” he asked. He’d figured his donations had amounted to the cost of feeding each of the dogs for six months. He was going to get off cheap this time. It couldn’t have a stomach any bigger than a tablespoon.
“Yes it’s a dog. Don’t make fun of him. He has a Napoleon complex.”
“He?” Cary asked.
“Yes.”
“Maybe his complex has to do with the pink ribbons.”
“Dogs are color blind. And he was like that when I got him. His name is Pooch,” his sister offered and studied the animal. “This is odd. He doesn’t like anybody.”
The thing kept trying to climb up his leg, so Cary reached down, and with one hand scooped it up and held it a foot from his face.
“Be careful,” Kelly said.
“Of what?” he asked. “I’ve seen mosquitoes that scared me more.” The animal had black eyes. He brought the thing closer and a pink tongue came out and lapped him on his nose.
“Oh, my God. He really does like you,” Kelly said. “You should adopt him.”
“No.” He studied the animal closer. “You sure it’s a dog?”
It growled, almost as if insulted by Cary’s comment.
“Yes. And he might be small but he has the attitude of a pit bull. He bit Bucko.”
“Bucko probably pissed on him.”
“Are you going to let him get away with this?” Beth jumped in. “Don’t you see what he’s doing? He’s using Pooch to change the subject.”
“What subject?” He pretended to be innocent and set the creature down.
Kelly groaned. “You’re right,” she said to Beth, and then glared at him. “Don’t you want someone real? Someone you can actually have a conversation with? Someone you could share more than a few bodily fluids with?”
“I have conversations,” he said, but damn it if he hadn’t thought that same thing three nights ago when Paula, the flight attendant, jumped out of bed five minutes after she’d been screaming out his name, and took off because she had a plane to catch.
“I mean more than heavy panting.”
Cary grinned, ignoring that his sisters’ comments resonated a little too much. “I kind of like heavy panting.” And he did, but . . .
The animal started yanking at his jeans again.
“You won’t even have a relationship with an animal,” Beth said. “Why are we wasting our breath?”
“Because we love him,” Kelly said, glaring up at him from her lounge chair. “Because underneath all of that playboy attitude is a decent guy who deserves to be happy—with a dog. Not all women are like Korine. You have to give love another shot.”
Cary frowned. “No, I don’t. And I’m . . . fine.” He was going to say ‘happy,’ but it wouldn’t slip off his tongue.
Then, because he refused to have this conversation with his two sisters—especially when it involved his ex-wife—he grabbed his phone and looked at the time. It was almost five. “I have to go. See ya.” He turned to leave and almost tripped over the pint-sized dog at his feet. He picked him up and passed him to Beth. “Hold this before I accidentally step on him and make it into a smear on the patio.”
“Oh, hell,” Kelly seethed and snagged her daughter’s water gun.
Cary took off, but right before he made the door, he felt the spray of water on his back. He stopped and turned. “I’ll get you for that.” The spray got him right in the face this time. As he stopped to wipe the water from his face, he saw Bucko at his feet lifting a leg.
“Damn it,” he muttered.
Five minutes later, he drove windows-down, to dry his shirt and pissed-on jeans, toward Mason Road and the abandoned warehouse. He’d met Tommy Fincher, a snitch, here before, but for some reason today, Cary got a bad feeling. He slowed down and looked left to right. If the guy wasn’t exaggerating, he had info on who’d killed Marc Jones, a sixteen-year-old kid, who, after resisting joining the local gang, had taken a bullet in the head.
Cary could still hear the kid’s mother sobbing when he’d knocked on her door with the news last week. She’d already lost Marc’s brother to a gang. And now, if she was right in her suspicions, and he thought she was, Marc had been killed because he refused to get involved. How unfair was that?
While he couldn’t do anything to help Marc, or take away his mother’s grief, he could find the idiot who’d killed him to give the family a little peace.
Cary suspected it was gang related, but couldn’t prove they had been involved—not yet. But damn if he’d stop trying.
The hair on the back of Cary’s neck prickled. He slowed his car down, debating if he should call anyone for backup, like his partner, Danny, at Glencoe Police.
It wasn’t that he didn’t trust Tommy, the snitch, but he had a big problem with a lot of the guy’s friends.
He turned down another row of warehouses and spotted a couple of teens skateboarding. They shouldn’t be here. Too many bad people hung out here. And on the way out, he’d tell them to take their boards elsewhere.
The next row, he saw Tommy’s old Honda parked at the side of building fifty-six. He stopped thinking about danger to himself and thought of Marc’s mother. The woman deserved peace of mind.
He stopped his SUV and looked around. Only when he didn’t see anyone did he get out of his car. The big metal door to the building stood ajar. He unhooked his holster, so he’d have fast access to his gun. He’d started for the door when he noticed a spray of red on the passenger side window of Tommy’s car.
“Shit,” he seethed, knowing what it was before he glanced down to the see Tommy, a fifty-year-old full-time alcoholic and part-time drug addict, slumped over the wheel of his car, part of his head missing.
Cary’s gut knotted. He drew his gun, and reached for his phone to call it in. Before he got the words out, he heard the roar of an engine. He looked up and saw the black pickup coming right at him. The vehicle had no front license plate, and the driver wore a black ski mask.
Cary dove over Tommy’s car. The pickup missed him, but the bullet didn’t.
• • •
“No.” Chloe Sanders said without looking at her friend, Sheri Thompson, who power-walked beside her. The view of the quaint storefronts of Old Town Hoke’s Bluff, Texas—one of which belonged to her—lining the streets usually made her regular Sunday morning, five-mile exercising regiment enjoyable. But not with Sheri beside her, trying to interfere in her life.
Chloe didn’t need interference. She could make a mess of her life all by herself. She’d proven that when she’d let Jerry slip an engagement ring on her finger. Oh, it hadn’t seemed like a bad idea at the time, but a year later, a week before the wedding and . . .
“Look, Dan’s good-looking and a nice guy. A cop. Detective Dan Henderson. Even his name’s hot. He might even be willing to help you out with a couple of those parking tickets.”
“No.”
“Why not?” Sheri asked. “What’s wrong with him?”
Chloe looked up at the flashing sign attached to the street corner light pole as it started counting down the seconds. Ten, nine, eight . . .
Time was ticking. She picked up the pace, swinging her elbows and feeling her blood zing.
“It’s not him, it’s me,” Chloe said, attempting to make the street before the “Do not walk” message appeared.
Sheri moved in step beside her. “You must be confused. That’s a break-up line. I’m trying to fix you u
p.”
Sometimes Chloe was certain Sheri had gone into the wrong career. The job of graphic designer/PR specialist didn’t require bullheadedness, and if her friend excelled at anything, it was being headstrong. “And I’m telling you no.”
“It’s been a year.”
Blast it! The sign flashed red a foot before she reached it. Time was ticking. A year, and sometimes it seemed like yesterday. Heck, she still had two wedding gifts to mail back—not that it was her fault. Her mother’s old neighbor and Jerry’s great aunt hadn’t answered her email request for the return addresses.
“I know exactly how long it’s been,” Chloe said, frowning at the “Do Not Walk” sign. Had Sheri, Amber, her assistant manager, and her mom held some kind of intervention and forgotten to invite her? Why was everyone suddenly worried about Chloe’s non-dating status? Trying to keep up her heart rate—though this conversation was getting it up all on its own—she commenced to walking in place.
Sheri did the same, her feet tapping against the sidewalk. “I know you’re still hurting but—”
Hurting? Chloe stopped moving and stared at her best friend, who she loved more than books—and she really loved her books—but at times the girl could drive her bat-shit crazy. “What I am is pissed. And I’m getting this close to being super pissed at everyone else who thinks I need a man in my life. I’m happy.”
“You’re not happy. I see it in your eyes. You’re twenty-eight, Chloe. You should be dating, having sex, enjoying life.”
“I’m enjoying myself just fine. I have the Sweet Tooth Bakery, my friends, my family, my cat, my writing when I get back to it, and a fine piece of machinery that gives me better orgasms than Jerry ever did.” And the reason she could name them off so quickly was because she’d had this same talk with herself just that morning.
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