“Ben and Sam. Stacia and Nick. Jeffrey and Archer.” He broke off, a grin forming. “Your mom and dad. Libby’s having a hard time grasping that a daughter of hers would voluntarily walk into a police station, much less get married there, but your dad’s keeping her calm.”
She smiled, loving her parents less critically than she had in a long time. They’d been great role models for loving passionately and poor ones for keeping a commitment, but that was who they were. Natasha was okay with it now, because she’d found an incredible role model for both loving and committing in Daniel.
He reached her and slid his arms around her. When she nestled against him, she felt again that overwhelming sense of home.
He began humming and moving her ever so slightly around the dance floor. He was a beautiful dancer, but sometimes, Stacia used to tease, they weren’t dancing, just engaging in foreplay. This was one of those times. Heat curled through her as his body pressed against hers, her breasts tingling, her knees going weak. If their families weren’t downstairs, ready to come up as soon as Sam’s minister arrived, they might be doing a whole lot more in the police station than rehearsing for the wedding.
Finally he spoke again. “Your mom and Stacia want you to spend the night at the hotel with them.”
“Do they have plans to put me under guard to make sure I don’t do another runner?”
It was a credit to Daniel that his immediate response was a sweet, confident smile. “If we thought that would happen, we’d put you in a cell downstairs. Though, if you stay with me instead, we could have a tutorial on Fun with Handcuffs 101. That would accomplish the same thing.”
She rubbed provocatively against him. “That sounds tempting.”
They swayed a few more inches, then he murmured, “It’s okay if you want to stay with them.”
She considered it for a moment. Most brides she knew spent their last single night in their own place or with family. But none of them had almost died a few weeks before. “I’m not sure I’m ready to walk into the hotel again,” she finally confessed. It was a beautiful place, but the memories were too recent, the screams still echoing. It would take some time before she could climb those stairs again. Live the trauma again. Face those damn metal birds again.
“And I know I’m not ready to spend a night away from you.”
He kissed her, long and slow and lazy, and she melted into him. Some dazed part of her mind realized they’d stopped their pretense of dancing, and another wondered if they really needed a rehearsal and a dinner catered by Mrs. Little Bear, and a third part wished they could just disappear into their own little blissful world.
But a truly blissful world needed far more than two people, no matter how much in love they were. It needed family and friends, and judging from the noise, theirs were gathering at the top of the stairs, full of warmth and love and happiness for them, at least until the kiss went on longer than they wanted to wait.
The pastor cleared his throat and wryly suggested, “You might want to let her breathe now.” When Daniel finally did so, leaving Natasha light-headed in a way that had nothing to do with lack of oxygen, the man went on. “Are you ready?”
Daniel stepped back, smoothed his tie and took her hand. “For better or worse.”
Her smile was automatic. “Good or bad.”
He oh, so gently touched her face, his voice lowering to a husky rumble. “Come rain...”
Tears welled in her eyes, and pure happiness bloomed inside her. She wouldn’t do a runner. This was right. Perfect. Exactly where she belonged. Resting her head on his shoulder, she finished the line for him. “Or come shine.”
* * *
Don’t miss out on any other suspenseful stories from Marilyn Pappano:
Killer Secrets
Detective Defender
Nights with a Thief
Bayou Hero
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Undercover Passion
by Melinda Di Lorenzo
Chapter 1
Liz James flicked the cash register shut with a barely stifled sigh. She handed the customer her wrapped sculpture and a receipt, then mustered up a smile.
“Thanks so much!” she said. “I’m sure it’ll look great on your son’s fireplace mantel.”
The woman—a tourist in from Freemont—nodded her appreciation, tucked the package under her arm and exited the store. And Liz let out the sigh, glad that the clock over the door read three minutes past five. She slid out from behind the counter, quickly flicked the lock shut, then stole a quick glance outside before she began the roll-down of the shutters. Hers was the last building on the block, which meant she had a good view of the rest. They were all already closed and dark. She was, as usual, the slowest at getting things shut down. She fought yet another sigh.
She usually loved her job. She loved the art. She loved the customers. She really loved being her own boss. But today had seemed especially long. Her biggest supplier—the man who also held the lease on her art store and the apartment above where she and her daughter lived—had dropped off a dozen extra paintings first thing in the morning, and Liz had spent most of her hours trying to find a home for them. As always, the stock sent in by Jesse Garibaldi wasn’t particularly high-end. But she knew it would move quickly, anyway. The man seemed to have an endless stream of interested parties who were willing to pay top dollar for the pieces.
She’d asked once where they came from—both the paintings and the buyers—and Garibaldi had explained that an anonymous local artist did the work. The pieces were nice, but not high-end, so Liz just assumed they were a side job for someone who didn’t want his name associated with the work. They sold exclusively through Garibaldi, with 50 percent of their profits going to one of his own local charities. Liz could hardly say no to the sudden influx of new pieces and the guaranteed profit.
She took a step back and studied the most prominently displayed one. It wasn’t anything terribly exciting. Well done but not outstanding. A landscape piece. A mountain in the background, a stream in the forefront and trees dotting the horizon. Except for the water, it could easily have been the view from a dozen different spots on the outskirts of Whispering Woods. The blue trickle told Liz that it was somewhere farther up the mountain.
Though she’d never ventured up the slope herself, she knew from one of her customers—a retired engineer—that a glacier-fed lake existed on a plateau, and that the r
iver sloped down the other side. According to the engineer, the river was somehow the main source of water for all of the town. Liz couldn’t remember the details. Her eyes had glazed over and her ears had shut down when the engineer attempted to explain how it all worked. Liz could talk about art history for hours. She had museum layouts memorized. But pipes and water pressure were a whole other story. The engineer had laughed and waved his hand in front of her face to check for signs of life, then called her a hopeless artist. And Liz had agreed. Engineering wasn’t her forte or her passion. But for some reason now, staring at the painting made her wish she’d paid just a little more attention.
Whoever the painter is, he or she is a heck of a lot more adventurous than I am.
For a second, the thought gave Liz a twinge of longing. Unconsciously, she reached up her hand toward the swirl of blues and greens and grays. As soon as her fingers met the canvas, she realized what she was doing and started to jerk back. Then stopped, frowning. Even though the pad of her index finger had just barely brushed the surface, the texture struck her as odd.
With a guilty look toward the door—pushed on by a ridiculous feeling that someone might actually be peering in and watching what she did—Liz pressed her fingers to the painting again. When no one burst through the door, she pushed a little harder. It felt...off. She dropped her hand and stepped back to study the painting again, this time for non-aesthetic reasons.
It was watercolor, she was sure. But also not.
Definitely strange, she thought.
Liz had never gone to school for art—life had had other plans for her—but if things had turned out differently, it was what she would’ve studied for sure. Not the means of creating it. She didn’t consider herself to be talented in that way. But the mediums and movement, the artists and their expressions...those fascinated her. She’d read hundreds of books. Spent countless sleepless nights combing through them. So, while she might not be a formal expert, she was at the very least an extremely well-read amateur.
Frowning, she moved from the first painting to a second and gave it a quick once-over. The scenery was similar to that of the first, though more of a close-up. Like someone had zoomed in to a small section of the first to showcase the details. The mountain peak wasn’t visible, but a bird could be seen on a tree branch, and rock sharply parted the river. Likely done by the same artist. Was the paint the same? Liz felt compelled to find out.
When she reached out this time, it was with far less hesitation and only a cursory glance around. Sure enough, it had the same texture. Not quite right. Not quite smooth enough.
“So weird,” she muttered, then blew out a breath, wondering why it was stressing her out so much.
The artist probably had some kind of special mixing technique. Or added some secret ingredient to the paint to make it feel a certain way. She’d read about all kinds of unconventional things, and God knew plenty of the stuff she carried in her shop was unique. That was just art.
Which is what you love about it.
“Maybe I’ve finally cracked,” she said aloud to the empty store. “I mean, really? The paint feels funny?”
She definitely had more important things to worry about. With a headshake, she stepped away from both pieces and turned back to the cash register. Cashing it out and storing the money from the day’s sales was one of the last things on her to-do list. Then she could get back to the part of her day that she loved infinitely more than she loved her job. And that was saying something. Because she really did love running Liz’s Lovely Things.
Her eyes sought and found the one non-artsy picture she kept in her little store. It was a framed shot of her eight-year-old daughter with eyes closed, tongue out and a ladybug headband askew on her head. It was Liz’s favorite. It perfectly captured the zany essence of her kid. Teegan would be in the apartment upstairs now, bouncing on her heels as she counted down the seconds until Liz came up, too. Driving the sitter crazy, probably.
With an affectionate smile, Liz turned away from the picture to jab her finger against the computerized register to punch in the closing code. The machine came to life with a tick-tick-ding, then began to automatically reconcile the internal receipt totals. Liz snorted as the little shop filled with the noise of it.
Even though it was the same every night, she always wondered why the people who created such an efficient piece of equipment hadn’t found a way to get rid of the old-fashioned sounds. As she grabbed the broom and started her quick sweep of the hardwood floors, she considered—not for the first time—whether or not the designers had left the noisiness that way on purpose. Some kind of nostalgic throwback. Then, as if to emphasize—or maybe mock—her thoughts, the cash register let out a weird groan. A crack followed the groan, and Liz sensed imminent disaster.
“Oh, you are so not going to break down right now,” she called out from across the room.
But as she set down the broom and moved toward the register, she saw that the strange sounds weren’t coming from the register at all. The machine had finished its cycle already and sat slightly ajar, waiting for her to pull out the tray and lock the money in the safe.
Liz frowned. She stepped nearer again. Then realized her mistake. The door to the storage room—which had its own exterior entry on the other side—hung open, its lock dangling uselessly to the side. Panic hit Liz hard, and she tried to turn and run. But it was too late. A sharp point pressed to her throat, and a gravelly male voice filled her ear.
“Move more than an inch,” he said, “and I’ll put a nice little hole in your jugular.”
Liz let out the smallest, shakiest breath. “Just take whatever you want.”
“Good choice,” replied her assailant. “Where is it?”
“Right there. The register’s open. Take it all. Please.”
There was a pause. “The money? I don’t want the money.”
The statement intensified Liz’s fear. “You don’t?”
“Where’re the damn Heigles?”
“What?”
The knife pushed in a little hard. “The Heigles? Which ones are they?”
“I don’t know!” Liz gasped.
“I know he brings them to you.”
Him.
Did the knife-wielder mean Garibaldi? Did he mean those paintings? After a heartbeat of consideration, she decided she didn’t care.
“There,” she said, lifting her finger just fractionally.
The blade eased. “Where?”
“The one with the river.”
The knife dropped off completely, and Liz found herself fighting a need to sag down and close her eyes. And she knew she couldn’t. She made herself watch as the man abandoned his hold on her, and she tried to commit every detail to memory.
There was the way he shuffled a little, favoring his right foot. How that shuffle masked his height and gave the impression that he was so much shorter than he was.
There was the fact that even though his face was covered by a ski mask, she could see a mottled mark on one eyelid. Maybe a bruise, maybe a birthmark.
She saw his jeans, and how dirt permeated the denim—not just near the bottom, but all over.
But when he stepped up to the painting, those observations kind of slipped away. Because he lifted his hand and touched it, just like she’d done minutes earlier. And he seemed...satisfied.
Fear gave way for a second. Curiosity took its place. Liz genuinely wanted to know what it was that he felt. What it was that made him nod, ever so slightly.
But when he angled his gaze back in her direction, renewed fear sliced through her. And his words turned the fear into terror.
“You have a daughter,” he said.
A whimper threatened. “Please. Take the painting. Take them all. And the money.”
“Believe me. I’d like to.” An unpleasant hunger laced his tone.
“Do it
.”
“Not what I came for, unfortunately.” He stepped back again, his eyes running over Liz.
Panic hit her. “Don’t—”
He cut her off with a dark chuckle. “No. Not that, either. But consider this a warning. For you and your kid. You’re going to want to call the cops. You’re going to want to run to someone and tell them I was here. But I guarantee you that doing either will result in bad things happening to the both of you.”
He gave another head-to-toe stare, his expression so cold that Liz had no doubt he was telling the truth.
Bad things.
Just vague enough to be even more terrifying than the man’s presence.
“Do we have an understanding?” he asked.
Liz managed a nod. “Yes.”
“Good.”
He at last turned away and limped out at a jog. Liz started to draw in a semi-relieved breath, but as he disappeared through the storage door, her daughter’s laugh echoed from the same direction. Oxygen forgotten, Liz’s feet hit the floor at a dead run.
* * *
Detective Harley Maxwell paused in his chase and scanned the building in search of his target. Except for the buzz of a neon shop sign a few doors up, the air was silent.
Which actually might work in your favor.
Keeping very still, he strained to hear a sound—the crunch of gravel, the creak of a door—that would indicate the correct direction. Then it came. The light brush of feet on pavement from around the side. Harley pushed down his triumph. He’d celebrate once he had his hands on his wily escapee.
He moved to the edge of the building and pressed himself against its side with practiced stealth. He knew he wasn’t the fastest runner on his team of partners, but what he lacked in natural athleticism he made up for in cunning.
Slow and steady, he cautioned himself as he inched along. Surprise is your friend.
He reached the edge of the building then and paused again. He started to ease forward. Before he could make it even a single step, a figure came stumbling around the corner.
Killer Smile Page 24