Hot For You

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by Cheyenne McCray




  Riding Tall

  Hot For You

  Cheyenne McCray

  ***

  Copyright © 2013

  Hot for You by Cheyenne McCray

  All rights reserved. No part of this e-Book may be reproduced in whole or in part, scanned, photocopied, recorded, distributed in any printed or electronic form, or reproduced in any manner whatsoever, or by any information storage and retrieval system now known or hereafter invented, without express written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.

  E-book conversion by Bella Media Management.

  Published by Pink Zebra Publishing at Smashwords.

  13-Digit ISBN: 978-1-939778-91-8

  First Edition e-Book

  ***

  Chapter 1

  Leigh’s phone must be off. Carilyn pressed her own iPhone’s disconnect button and tucked it back into her purse. Leigh had said she’d be home all day but Carilyn’s calls kept going straight to voicemail. But then again, Carilyn was two hours early.

  She steered her car down a busy street and glanced at a place named the Hummingbird Café, which was next door to a bar called Nectars. Her stomach growled, making her decision for her. While she waited for Leigh to call her back, she had to get something to put in her belly. The café looked like a great place to get lunch.

  She drove around until she found a place to park, behind the building. It must be a great place if she had to park around the back. After she killed the engine, she grabbed her purse and climbed out. She tugged down her thigh-length jean skirt, shut the door, and locked her car.

  It had been a long drive from Kansas City to Prescott, even with the stops she’d made and the overnight stay at a hotel in Albuquerque. She pushed fiery red curls that had escaped from her ponytail away from her face and headed around the building toward the front entrance. It was a beautiful Arizona spring day and she smiled to herself. Back home in Kansas it was still chilly but here the weather was gorgeous. Arizona was so different than the Midwest.

  Through the plate glass window, she saw that the café was busy and she hoped there was an available table. It was a quaint-looking place with a blue and white striped awning, flower boxes filled with geraniums on the windowsills, and a large hummingbird and flowers painted on the front window. Ironwork tables with matching chairs were arranged on the patio in front of the restaurant. Each table was occupied and the sound of conversation filled the air.

  Bells jangled on the door as she pushed it open and immediately warm delicious smells met her nose. Her stomach growled again.

  A woman with short blonde hair stood at the hostess stand and smiled at Carilyn. “Welcome to the Hummingbird. Will anyone be joining you?”

  Carilyn shook her head. “Just me.”

  The hostess showed Carilyn to a table near the window. She sat in the chair and glanced out the window at the busy street before taking a look at the menu.

  After a pretty waitress had taken Carilyn’s order for a club sandwich with home fries, Carilyn drew her phone out of her purse and pulled up a map for directions to Leigh’s house. Her friend didn’t live too far away, but Carilyn never dropped in on anyone unless she knew they were home and they were expecting her. Leigh wasn’t expecting Carilyn for quite a while yet.

  Her gaze drifted away from the map and back to the window. Her eyes rested on the backside of a man standing in front of the café, who was holding a phone to his ear. He had a powerful build and his navy blue T-shirt stretched across his broad shoulders. He wore pants that hugged his nice ass and his athletic thighs. The shirt had Prescott Fire Department across the back. She wondered if he looked as yummy from the front as he did from the back and she hoped he would turn around.

  Still on his phone, he faced the restaurant, granting her wish. She sighed as her gaze traveled over his muscular chest and up to his handsome face and his chestnut brown hair. If all firefighters looked as good as he did, she might have to set fire to the kitchen while she was here.

  She cocked her head as she remembered that Leigh was dating a fireman. Was this the guy? If he was, Leigh was one lucky woman.

  The firefighter shoved his phone into a holster on his belt and walked to the café’s entrance. The bells jangled as he entered and he greeted the hostess with a grin that made Carilyn sigh again. She wouldn’t mind having that sexy grin directed her way, up close and personal.

  Mentally, she shook her head. She was only going to be in Prescott for a month, so no sense in drooling over hot firefighters here. Not to mention she’d promised herself she wasn’t going to rush into another relationship after Sam went into the Peace Corps six months ago. He’d broken her heart but she still cared for him and hoped he was doing well.

  She didn’t even know why she was thinking about relationships when she was eleven hundred miles away from home.

  Rather than looking away from the man, she continued to watch him—it was as if her gaze was glued to him. After the hostess led him to a table not too far from Carilyn, the hostess left him with one menu. Apparently he was eating alone, too.

  The man raised his head. Eyes the color of polished oak met hers and the corner of his mouth turned up as he smiled. Her face warmed and she was afraid she was turning red—a curse of being so fair-skinned. She looked away from him and back to her phone. Of course the screen had gone dark so she quickly pressed a button to bring the map back up. The screen blurred as she felt the heat of his gaze on her.

  Thankfully, the waitress arrived with Carilyn’s club sandwich. She would just focus on her lunch and not look at the firefighter again. Yet, she couldn’t help herself and snuck one more look at him from beneath her lashes. That was one damn fine man.

  The sandwich was great as were the home fries, satisfying her hunger. Doing her best not to look at the man again, she paid her bill and left the restaurant. She didn’t know if she’d imagined it, but she felt warmth on her skin, like he was watching her leave.

  A breath of relief rushed out of her once she made it outside. Now she could stop drooling over hot firefighters and get back to real life.

  Leigh still hadn’t returned Carilyn’s call, so she tried her friend again as she walked down the sidewalk. The day was sunny and warm and a few people walked along the street in unhurried strides. Everyone looked so casual and relaxed.

  She listened to the phone ring. Once more the call went directly to voicemail. She’d left a couple of messages earlier, so she pressed the off button, breaking the connection.

  An acrid odor came from ahead and she frowned. It smelled like something was burning.

  When she rounded the building she froze. Smoke billowed from a car—

  Her car.

  Panicked, she raised her phone to dial 9-1-1, but her fingers were trembling and it slipped out of her hand. Just as she stooped to pick it up, someone rushed past her.

  She heard the squawk of a radio and saw that the firefighter from the café was running toward a truck, radio held up to his mouth with one hand, keys gripped in his opposite fist. He shoved the radio into a holster and jerked opened the truck door. He grabbed something red and she saw that it was a fire extinguisher.

  “Get back.” He shouted over his shoulder and she almost tripped over her own feet as she hurried to back up.

  Fire crackled and hissed and her heart pounded. Even from where she stood, she felt the heat of the flames now coming from the car’s interior.

  The firefighter had already started using the extinguisher, but
the flames were growing too rapidly. Sirens filled the air and a part of her realized the fire department must have been close because in the next moment a fire truck pulled up behind the café. Immediately the fireman from the café tossed aside the spent extinguisher, hurried to the truck, and started working with his fellow firefighters.

  Everything was a blur to Carilyn as the men hooked up a hose to a nearby fire hydrant and in the next moment the firefighters aimed a powerful burst of water on the car.

  Then it hit her hard and she gripped her hands into fists. Her laptop was on the floorboard of the backseat of her car. It was more important than everything in the car combined and it was most definitely history. All she could do was watch as her car burned along with her livelihood.

  Helplessly, she stared at the scene, her heart already having sunk to her toes. The fire was out within minutes, but her car was toast, along with everything in it.

  Two police cruisers arrived and officers blocked off the area, keeping the growing crowd back, away from the scene.

  The firefighter from the café turned and looked at her. He was the only one not wearing protective fire fighting gear and smoke streaked his face and bare arms. He started walking toward her.

  “Your car?” he asked when he reached her.

  Unable to speak, she nodded.

  He dragged his hand down his face. “Are you all right, Miss—?”

  “Thompson.” She swallowed as she found her voice. “I’m Carilyn Thompson.”

  “I’m Cody McBride.” He gave her a critical look. “Are you all right?”

  “I’m okay.” She looked at her car and her breath came out in a rush. “My car sure isn’t.”

  “You’ve been in the restaurant for a while.” He nodded to the car’s remains. “Any idea on how the fire started?”

  She shook her head. “None.” She turned her gaze on her car. “My luggage is in the trunk. Do you think it’s all burned up?”

  He nodded. “Not a chance.”

  She bit the inside of her lip, having a hard time believing she’d probably lost everything that had come with her. Worst of all was the fact she’d lost her laptop.

  “I take it you’re from out of town?” he said.

  “Yes.” She cleared her throat. “I’m from Kansas. I came here to housesit for my friend, Leigh.”

  “Leigh Monroe?” he asked.

  She looked at him with surprise. “Yes.”

  “I like Leigh,” he said. “One of the guys dates her.”

  “That’s right.” She should have thought about that. She’d been too stunned over her car being on fire to remember that this firefighter, Cody McBride, might know Leigh.

  She started shivering and rubbed her arms before dropping her iPhone again. He picked it up for her, but instead of handing it back to her he put his arm around her shoulders. “You’re probably feeling a little shock.”

  “But nothing happened to me,” she said as he guided her toward the back of the fire truck.

  “Your car burned up right in front of you along with everything you had inside.” He grabbed a blanket from out of the back and put it around her shoulders. “It’s normal to have a reaction like this.”

  She sat on the curb and he crouched beside her and gave her the cell phone he’d picked up.

  “I need to call Leigh.” Carilyn’s hands were shaking as she tried to go into her list of recently dialed numbers to redial Leigh’s. “I haven’t been able to get hold of her so she doesn’t know I’m in town yet.”

  “Let me help.” He steadied the phone for her and Carilyn pressed the number for Leigh.

  Carilyn brought the phone up to her ear and heard the call go straight to voicemail. She sighed and disconnected the call. “Leigh must be having problems with her phone or forgot to turn it on.”

  “After you give your statement to the police and I finish up here, I’ll give you a ride to her place and we can see if she’s home,” he said. “It’s not far.”

  “Thank you.” She gave him a little smile. “If it isn’t too much trouble.”

  He got up from his crouched position and held out his hand. “Not at all.”

  She took his hand. It felt warm and dry and tingles raced through her. She hurried to release his hand when she was standing.

  He checked the trunk and sure enough, her suitcases were in ruins, too. A sick feeling made her gut feel like it was churning.

  She answered a few more questions about the fire and was unable to give the firefighters or police any idea of how the fire started. Her stomach sickened as she looked once again at the charred carcass that had once been her vehicle.

  “Will you be okay here?” he asked. “I’ll finish up and then we can head over to Leigh’s.”

  She nodded. “I’m fine.”

  Cody felt a stirring in his gut as he looked at the beautiful Carilyn Thompson. Something about her had him wanting to comfort her and learn everything he could about her.

  He shook the thoughts away and was just about to walk away from Carilyn when a voice came from behind him, calling his name. “McBride.”

  Cody turned and looked at Bill Johnson. “What’s up?” he asked his friend and fellow firefighter.

  “You need to check this out.” Johnson waved Cody toward the car.

  Cody gave a nod to Carilyn then left her sitting on the curb. He went to the car, and looked in the open door. He knelt, studying something on the floorboard. Damn. He hadn’t expected this.

  Cody frowned as he straightened and faced Johnson. “Has anyone touched it?”

  Johnson shook his head. “Exactly as we found it, on the floorboard.”

  Due to the head fire investigator’s accident at one of the arsonist’s fires, Cody had taken over as the lead. He had a degree in fire, arson, and explosion investigation, which was now being put to good use.

  Cody’s features darkened as he looked at the car. They’d already secured the scene and set up a command post so he wasn’t concerned about the evidence being disturbed. The firefighters were all professionals and took care not to disrupt the scene more than they’d had to while putting the fire out.

  This was most likely another case of arson as it appeared that what Johnson had found was in fact a Barbie doll. It sure as hell looked like it could be. The arsonist had struck three times prior to this, but this was the first car he’d targeted. Every fire had been started differently, from causing an electrical fire in a dress shop, to tampering with natural gas in a home’s kitchen, to pouring gasoline around a dance studio and starting it with a match.

  Dolls were the only things that connected the crimes. One had been left at each scene at the point of origin, in a small fireproof glass wool tube, so that they were not burned beyond recognition.

  This however, was the first time they’d found what appeared to be a doll with no tube protecting it. If it was a doll, they were fortunate it hadn’t been burnt completely. The police hadn’t released the information about the arsonist’s signature to the public so it couldn’t be a copycat.

  Maybe they’d get lucky and would find someone who had witnessed an individual leaving the scene.

  Some time later, after observing and collecting evidence, Cody stood apart from the car and entered his notes on his iPad. He moved his gaze from the tablet to the car, to study what was left of the vehicle. He pictured the crime in his mind. Someone had broken the passenger side window, which hadn’t been visible from where Carilyn had been standing when she watched her car burn.

  A homemade incendiary device had been dropped through the broken window, landing on the passenger seat. A Barbie doll had been thrown onto the driver’s side floorboard. The doll should have completely melted, but the fire hadn’t come close to it. The heat had been enough to make it almost unrecognizable, though. Almost. Part of the doll’s hair had survived and was clearly a vivid red despite the smoke and heat damage.

  When he finished, he turned to see Carilyn sitting on the curb again. Earlier he’d not
iced her talking with a police officer. Cody would have to ask her a few questions, too.

  He walked to where she sat and looked down at her. “No luck, I take it, in getting hold of Leigh.”

  She shook her head. “Still no answer.”

  “I’ll get you to her house.” He held out his hand and she took it. As he helped her to her feet he met her gaze. Damn, but she had the most beautiful green eyes he’d ever seen. He’d always had a thing for redheads and her hair was a pretty shade of red-gold.

  Carilyn pulled her hand away from his and he reluctantly let it go. He’d liked the feel of her hand in his.

  She looked up at him. “You don’t need to take me to Leigh’s. I know you’re busy.”

  “It will only take a few minutes.” He offered her a smile. “I want to make sure she’s there.”

  “Okay.” Carilyn nodded and then walked to his truck with him.

  ***

  Chapter 2

  Still too stunned to think clearly, Carilyn climbed into Cody’s truck as he held the door open for her. She was careful not to let her skirt slide up. She buckled her seatbelt then clutched her purse to her belly. It was the only thing that hadn’t burned up in the fire because she’d taken it with her into the café.

  Cody jogged around the truck and climbed in on the driver’s side. He jammed the key in the ignition and glanced at Carilyn. “Are you sure you’re all right?”

  She managed a little smile. “Considering my car is fried, my laptop and belongings are history, and I am now minus transportation, I’m okay.”

  He started the truck. “The fact that you weren’t in the car at the time is a damned good thing.”

  She let her breath out. “Yes, there’s that.”

  He maneuvered the truck through the crowd of emergency vehicles. “This may seem like an odd question, but would you have had a doll of any kind in your vehicle?”

  Carilyn frowned. “No. Why?”

  Cody’s brow furrowed. “The object that Johnson showed me may be a burnt Barbie doll.”

  “I don’t have Barbie dolls.” A queer feeling stirred in her belly. “They found one in my car?”

 

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