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The Mermaid Murders

Page 23

by Josh Lanyon


  Kennedy turned. His eyes glittered in the glare of the high beams. “You’re not walking away from this, that’s for sure.”

  It was much later before Jason had a chance to speak to Kennedy on his own. Chief Gervase had been whisked away to Boston for surgery, and Rexford was crawling with state troopers while most of the deeply shocked and grieving members of Kingsfield PD looked on.

  “You can head back to the motel now. In fact, you should head out for L.A. tomorrow,” Kennedy told Jason. “Assuming you can get the okay from SAC Manning. I’ll finish wrapping things up here.”

  “You want me to leave?” Jason could have blushed after the startled words left his mouth. He just meant…well, actually he did kind of mean it the way it sounded.

  Is that it?

  Of course that was it. There wasn’t enough of a case left to require two special agents, especially when one of them was on loan from another and greatly understaffed unit. And as for the rest of it…

  I follow the catch-and-release rule. By exigency and by inclination.

  “You’re in a big hurry to get back to L.A. Correct?” Kennedy’s appraisal was as cool and direct as the day they’d met.

  “Right. Yes.”

  Kennedy nodded and turned away.

  “I would have fired,” Jason said to his back.

  Kennedy turned to face him, regarding Jason steadily, bleakly.

  “Thank you for what you did earlier, but it wasn’t necessary.”

  Kennedy said, “West, the only reason you’re not dead is because he didn’t want to kill you.” He sounded as tired as Gervase had at the end.

  “That’s not—” Jason stopped. “I would have fired. I was squeezing the trigger.”

  “You didn’t fire. You didn’t shoot. He let off five rounds. You didn’t return fire once.”

  “I thought I could talk him down. I was talking him down.”

  Kennedy closed his eyes as though in pain.

  “You can think what you want. I didn’t freeze. I would have fired if I hadn’t had another choice.”

  Kennedy started to answer, then stopped. He said finally, “You’re too smart not to understand the potential consequences—for everyone—of being wrong about this. That’s all I’m going to say.”

  Their gazes remained locked. Jason nodded.

  Kennedy didn’t believe him, but Jason was telling the truth. He had been about to fire. For him, the nadir had been during those minutes when he had been frozen with fear in that cellar doorway. He had hit rock bottom, but he had come back from it. In fact, there was a kind of comfort in knowing no bullet could ever hurt like the pain he had faced in that basement.

  “What about Kyser?” he asked.

  Kennedy frowned. “What about him? He’s not part of this case. If he wants to behave like a freak, that’s his business.”

  Right. It wasn’t against the law to be a very weird guy.

  “Okay. Well, I guess that’s it.”

  Kennedy nodded and once more turned his back to walk away.

  What the hell. You only lived once.

  “How often do you get to L.A.?” Jason called.

  Kennedy stopped. Turned. He looked at Jason. Impassive and cool. Shook his head. “No.”

  For the record. All purpose and all encompassing. In answer to any question you could ever ask…

  No.

  Not even a polite and face-saving sorry to say, not that often.

  Nope. Just a flat and businesslike no.

  Police line. Do not cross.

  “Right. Well, nice working with you.” It was kind of amazing Jason got the words out so calmly, given the way his throat closed like a vise on that final you.

  This time it was Jason who turned away.

  * * * * *

  By the time he made it back to the motel, Jason was angry.

  Also sick with disappointment and hurt.

  Which made no sense whatsoever.

  He had understood the terms of engagement.

  He himself was not looking for a relationship, let alone a long-distance relationship with someone as difficult and unpredictable as Sam Kennedy.

  His emotional reaction to Kennedy’s curt goodbye was…embarrassing, frankly.

  Thank God he had managed to hide it. Probably not well enough. And he could have kicked himself for that hopeful, tentative How often do you get to L.A.?

  Jason swore and threw the last of his clothes in his suitcase.

  What he was feeling was probably something akin to leaving summer camp. You bonded with people through adversity, and sometimes it was hard to say goodbye. That was all.

  And that was normal. This had been a tough case for him. He’d had to work through a few things. So it was natural to confuse his feelings about the situation with his feelings for Kennedy.

  His brief conversation with SAC Manning did not improve his mood.

  Manning was erm bitterly disappointed at the way things had worked out in Kingsfield. He could not come up with a reason for insisting Jason stay on, but it was clear it killed him to give up without a fight.

  “Agent West, do you feel that perhaps, erm, something Kennedy did during that previous investigation might have ultimately, erm, triggered—”

  “No, sir. I really don’t.”

  Jason had stuck to that line, and eventually Manning had to accept defeat.

  “Your cooperation and diligence have been, erm, duly noted, Agent West.”

  “Thank you, sir.”

  He was in bed, not sleeping, when he heard Kennedy’s footsteps on the landing. Jason glanced at the clock. Two thirty in the morning. It would be light soon. He would be leaving for the airport soon.

  Heart thumping, he listened to that firm tread approach…and then pass his door.

  No pause. No hesitation.

  He scrunched the pillow over his hot face. What had he thought? That Kennedy was going to change his mind when he remembered all those great times they’d spent together?

  Jesus. Christ. Get over it.

  He closed his eyes. A second later his eyes popped open again—like his eyelids were broken.

  He was too tired to sleep. That was the truth. He was wired. He ought to just head out now.

  Yes, actually, that was a good idea.

  Why was he wasting time lying here when he could be on his way back to Boston? That would save him from the awkward possibility of running into Kennedy in the morning.

  He sat up, snapped on the light, and then sat on the edge of his bed, wondering at the wave of depression he felt at the idea of never seeing Senior Special Agent Sam Kennedy again.

  Really, Jason? Coz you couldn’t stand the guy five days ago. And now you’re getting choked up because you’ll never again have to put up with that perfumy aftershave and his insistence on always driving everywhere?

  There came a soft knock at the door.

  His heart nearly jumped out of his chest. Jason rose, hauled on his jeans, and went to the door. He peered out the keyhole.

  Kennedy was frowning at the landing.

  Jason slid the safety chain, turned the deadbolt, opened the door.

  Kennedy transferred the frown to Jason.

  “I saw your light was on.”

  Jason frowned back. “I’ve got an early flight.”

  “Right. Look.” Kennedy drew a breath. “I’m not good at goodbyes. But I enjoyed working with you too, Agent West.”

  “Thank you.”

  “That’s all.”

  Jason nodded curtly.

  Kennedy turned away.

  Jason very, very gently closed the door. He leaned his forehead against its glossy enameled surface.

  He listened for Kennedy’s retreating footsteps.

  Nothing.

  More nothing.

  He raised his head.

  Was Kennedy still standing outside his door?

  Knock. Knock. Knock.

  Jason wrenched open the door. “Back so soon?” he asked tersely.

&nb
sp; Kennedy’s blue eyes seemed to be the only color in the night. His hair looked platinum, his face white in the thin light radiating from the overhang. “Listen,” he said. “You don’t want to be involved with me.”

  “You’re right.”

  “If you think I’m an asshole now…”

  “You don’t have to convince me.”

  “I’m too old for you, for one thing.”

  Jason folded his arms. “And getting older by the minute.”

  “I’m always on the road. Always traveling. I like it that way.”

  “Sure. Sounds ideal.”

  Kennedy drew a deep breath. “I made the decision a long time ago that this job did not allow for anything other than…this job.”

  Jason was silent. “Wow,” he said finally.

  Kennedy’s throat jumped as he swallowed. “And even if I could find the balance of work and relationship—and I don’t think that’s in me—this isn’t the kind of job you want to bring home to someone you care about. I would not want to open this door to someone I cared about. Especially not someone like you.”

  “Especially not someone like me,” Jason repeated. “I see.”

  “No, you don’t. But I do. And that’s why I think this would be a horrible idea.”

  “Kennedy, when you retire from the Bureau, you should go into sales. You’re a natural.”

  Kennedy finished quietly, “Because I care about you, Jason. More than I thought I could.”

  Jason rubbed his eyes. Pinched the bridge of his nose. He opened his eyes. “Okay. Let me get this straight. You like me too much to ever see me again. Is that pretty much it?”

  Kennedy stared at him. There was so much pain in his face. He wasn’t even trying to hide it. Features set and pale, mouth too firm, eyes dark with naked emotion. Where had all that come from? Four hours ago he had been Mr. Freeze.

  “Jesus Christ,” Jason said. “I was just asking for a fucking date. But since you’re putting it out there, I didn’t expect this either. And I can’t say it particularly fits in with my plans. I’m not whatever it is you’ve convinced yourself I am. I’m not a civilian, for one thing. I don’t care that you’re an asshole—although you are—and I don’t care how old you are, or that you travel a lot, or that the job comes first. And I don’t even want to know what the rest of it is, though obviously there’s something I should probably know about. I would like to…” He was astonished when his voice cut out.

  Kennedy stared at him, watching his struggle.

  Jason finished steadily, “I would like to try.” He amended, “I would at least like to try one date.”

  Kennedy let out a long breath, like a swimmer who just didn’t have the strength to keep fighting current. The moment seemed to float there, and then he reached out, hand locking in Jason’s hair, pulling him in for a kiss.

  Just before their lips met Kennedy said softly, “When and where?”

  Watch for the return of Jason West and Sam Kennedy in

  The Monet Murders (The Art of Murder Book II)

  Coming Winter 2017

  Author Notes

  Thank you to the following people: Keren Reed, Marilyn Blimes, Dianne Thies, Susan Sorrentino, and Janet Sidelinger. Have I told you lately that I love you?

  Those of you paying attention will remember that Sam Kennedy was a Behavioral Analysis Unit Chief in Winter Kill. He has not been demoted. The events of Winter Kill coincide with The Monet Murders, the second book in the Art of Murder series.

  About the Author

  Bestselling author of over sixty titles of classic Male/Male fiction featuring twisty mystery, kickass adventure, and unapologetic man-on-man romance, JOSH LANYON has been called “arguably the single most influential voice in m/m romance today.” Granted, that was yesterday.

  Today Josh’s work has been translated into nine languages. The FBI thriller Fair Game was the first Male/Male title to be published by Harlequin Mondadori, the largest romance publisher in Italy. The Adrien English series was awarded the All Time Favorite Couple by the Goodreads M/M Romance Group. Josh is an Eppie Award winner, a four-time Lambda Literary Award finalist for Gay Mystery, and the first ever recipient of the Goodreads All Time Favorite M/M Author award.

  Josh is married and lives in Southern California.

  Find other Josh Lanyon titles at www.joshlanyon.com

  Follow Josh on Twitter, Facebook, and Goodreads.

  If you enjoyed this story, check the following titles, also by Josh Lanyon:

  Novels

  The ADRIEN ENGLISH Mysteries

  Fatal Shadows

  A Dangerous Thing

  The Hell You Say

  Death of a Pirate King

  The Dark Tide

  Stranger Things Have Happened

  The HOLMES & MORIARITY Mysteries

  Somebody Killed His Editor

  All She Wrote

  The Boy with the Painful Tattoo

  Other novels

  The ALL’S FAIR Series

  Fair Game

  Fair Play

  This Rough Magic (A SHOT IN THE DARK Series)

  The Ghost Wore Yellow Socks

  Mexican Heat (with Laura Baumbach)

  Strange Fortune

  Come Unto These Yellow Sands

  Stranger on the Shore

  Winter Kill

  Jefferson Blythe, Esquire

  Murder in Pastel

  Novellas

  The DANGEROUS GROUND Series

  Dangerous Ground

  Old Poison

  Blood Heat

  Dead Run

  Kick Start

  The I SPY Series

  I Spy Something Bloody

  I Spy Something Wicked

  I Spy Something Christmas

  The IN A DARK WOOD Series

  In a Dark Wood

  The Parting Glass

  The DARK HORSE Series

  The Dark Horse

  The White Knight

  Snowball in Hell (DOYLE & SPAIN Series)

  Haunted Heart: Winter (HAUNTED HEART Series)

  Mummy Dearest (XOXO FILES Series)

  Other novellas

  Cards on the Table

  The Dark Farewell

  The Darkling Thrush

  The Dickens with Love

  Don’t Look Back

  A Ghost of a Chance

  Lovers and Other Strangers

  Out of the Blue

  A Vintage Affair

  Lone Star (in Men Under the Mistletoe)

  Green Glass Beads (in Irregulars)

  Blood Red Butterfly

  Everything I Know

  Baby, It’s Cold (in Comfort and Joy)

  A Case of Christmas

  Short stories

  A Limited Engagement

  The French Have a Word for It

  In Sunshine or In Shadow

  Until We Meet Once More

  Icecapade (in His for the Holidays)

  Perfect Day

  Heart Trouble

  In Plain Sight

  Wedding Favors

  Wizard’s Moon

  PETIT MORTS (SWEET SPOT Collection)

  Other People’s Weddings

  Slings and Arrows

  Sort of Stranger Than Fiction

  Critic’s Choice

  Just Desserts

  Merry Christmas, Darling (Holiday Codas)

 

 

 


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