Sleight of Hand

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by CJ Lyons




  SLEIGHT OF HAND

  CJ Lyons

  PRAISE FOR CJ LYONS:

  "Everything a great thriller should be—action packed, authentic, and intense." ~#1 New York Times bestselling author Lee Child

  "A perfect blend of romance and suspense. My kind of read." ~#1 New York Times Bestselling author Sandra Brown

  "Pulse-pounding suspense and hair-raising chills...a story of danger and intrigue that defies any reader to put it down." ~New York Times Bestselling author, Susan Wiggs

  "A high stakes adventure with dire consequences." ~New York Times bestselling author Steve Berry

  "A compelling new voice in thriller writing…I love how the characters come alive on every page." ~New York Times bestselling author Jeffery Deaver

  "A powerful taut thriller" ~Mystery Gazette

  "Top Pick! A fascinating and intense thriller." ~ 4 1/2 stars, RT Book Reviews

  "An intense, emotional thriller…(that) climbs to the edge of intensity." ~National Examiner

  "Highly engaging characters, heart-stopping scenes…one great rollercoaster ride that will not be stopping anytime soon." ~Bookreporter.com

  "Adrenalin pumping." ~The Mystery Gazette

  "Riveting." ~Publishers Weekly Beyond Her Book

  Lyons "is a master within the genre." ~Pittsburgh Magazine

  "This fast-paced, suspense-filled story will leave you breathless and begging for more." ~Romance Novel TV

  "I did not want to put it down….An incredible way to spend a few hours!" ~5 Cups, Coffee Time Romance

  "A great fast-paced read….Not to be missed." ~4 ½ Stars, Book Addict

  "Breathtakingly fast-paced." ~Publishers Weekly

  "A winner!" ~Romantic Times, Top Pick

  "Simply superb…riveting drama…a perfect ten." ~Romance Reviews Today

  "Characters with beating hearts and three dimensions." ~Newsday

  "A pulse-pounding adrenalin rush!" ~Lisa Gardner

  "Simply exceptional. The action never lets up…keeps you on the edge of your seat." ~Roundtable Reviews

  "Explodes on the page…I absolutely could not put it down." ~Romance Readers' Connection

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  SLEIGHT OF HAND

  Copyright 2011, CJ Lyons

  Legacy Books

  Cover art: Pat Ryan

  All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, Legacy Books. The scanning, uploading and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law.

  Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author's rights is appreciated.

  Library of Congress Case # 1-273031561

  SLEIGHT OF HAND

  CJ Lyons

  CHAPTER 1

  The last time Dr. Cassandra Hart entered Pittsburgh's Three Rivers Medical Center she was covered in the blood of the man she had killed.

  Not to mention bits and pieces of his brain and skull.

  Now, forty-one days later, Cassie halted beneath the large marble angel that stood near the doors of the ER. Her palm grew clammy as it gripped her cane, her fingers digging into the rubber handle. Once upon a time, Three Rivers Medical Center was a second home to her, one of the few places where she felt comfortable, safe even. Today she looked at the door and fear churned through her gut, a counterpoint to the throbbing in her ankle.

  The last time she crossed this threshold, she'd come not a physician, but as a patient. A victim.

  She swallowed hard, forcing down bile as she remembered the expressions of her colleagues that night. First came surprise, then pity, and finally–when they learned what Cassie had been forced to do, trapped in a cellar with a killer–fear.

  Her eyes squeezed shut at the memory. What if she couldn't handle it? What if she'd lost her edge? People's lives were at stake. What if she made a mistake, hurt someone? Once begun, the treadmill of anxiety revved into overdrive. She could take more time. Her boss and doctors had wanted her to, said she was coming back too soon.

  Cassie opened her eyes and realized she was hunched over, leaning on the cane. Her gaze fixed on the concrete walk splattered with mud from April showers. Both hands now pressed on the cane as if the thin cylinder of metal was the only thing keeping her on her feet.

  She hated the damned cane.

  Lashav. She borrowed one of her Gram Rosa's favorite gypsy curses. Shameful. She could damn well stand on her own two feet.

  Forcing herself upright, she faced the doors emblazoned: Emergency Department in blood-red letters. She took a deep breath, balanced without the cane. Turning her gaze to the marble angel, she sent a quick prayer for hope, strength, for whatever it would take to get her through this day.

  Cassie walked the remaining ten feet to the entrance. She threw the cane into the garbage can. The sliding glass doors swished open, and she crossed over.

  <><><>

  "This doctor, Cassandra Hart, she almost got you killed, didn't she, Detective Drake?"

  "Yes. No!" Mickey Drake pulled his gaze away from the view of Pittsburgh's PNC baseball stadium and turned to face the departmental psychiatrist.

  Noah White was his name, although the man had one of the darkest ebony complexions Drake had ever seen. White's accent was a soft, southern syrup. Better to sooth the jagged nerves of men who carried guns and knew how to use them.

  "No, you don't understand. She saved my life."

  "But you wouldn't have been there, would not have gotten shot if not for her, correct?"

  Why did shrinks have to twist everything? Bad as lawyers that way. Drake spun away, clamping his jaws shut before he said something stupid. He needed White's recommendation to the OIS team to allow him to return to duty. The Officer Involved Shooting team was already breathing down his neck because he'd canceled this psych eval twice already. Three strikes and he was out.

  Drake's hands clenched into fists as he paced the room. Damn, his leg ached. The surgeons said the wound was healed, but there was still a knot where the bullet had torn through his thigh muscle.

  "Detective?" White's voice brought Drake back to the subject at hand.

  "No, I wouldn't have been there if it weren't for her," Drake admitted, running a hand through his hair, tugging on dark strands past due for a trim. He found himself back at the window, avoiding the shrink's hyper-vigilant gaze.

  The Northside office building had a great view down into PNC Park. The grass in the baseball stadium shone with a rich viridian hue. April, home games, bright sunshine. Damn, he missed Three Rivers Stadium where his dad used to take him as a kid. Drake remembered clutching his glove, anxious for any chance to catch a fly ball as he and his dad hung out over the railing beyond third base.

  Drake shook his head, turning his back on the springtime antics of Pittsburgh Pirates' baseball. He faced White once more.

  "We also wouldn't have found the killer without her," he reminded the shrink, trying to steer him away from the subject of his relationship with Hart. A relationship that both confused and frightened Drake. No way in hell was he gonna let any head-shrinker start dissecting those feelings.

  "Stress debriefing" the Pittsburgh Police Bureau called it. Bullshit was more like it. What good would come of sitting around talking about t
hings in the past? What he needed was to get back to work.

  "You sound like you feel angry. Is that because Hart was a civilian doing your job for you?" White's voice was bland as he probed, searching for the weak spots in Drake's psyche.

  Drake was silent. He imagined he could hear the crack of the batter connecting with a pitch far below. It wasn't so different from the sound a tire iron made when it cracked a human skull.

  "Or because you almost died because of her?" White continued.

  The roar of the crowd was a distant rumble as runners rounded bases. To Drake it sounded like the thunder of gunfire in close proximity. Sweat gathered at the back of his neck, slipping under his shirt collar as he tried to block out the memory of the bullet tearing through his chest, collapsing his lung, the certain knowledge that each breath would be his last.

  "I'm not angry with Hart," he told his reflection in the window.

  "No? Then tell me what you feel."

  Fed up to here with shrink talk, Drake whirled on White, ignoring the twinge in his still-healing thigh. "You're the one with all the answers. You tell me. What should I feel?"

  White curled a corner of his mouth into a disappointed frown. It was an expression Drake was well acquainted with. His dad had often used that same look, that "I expected better of you" look. Drake never had the right answers for him either.

  He sighed and sank into the overstuffed chair farthest from White. The only way he was going to get back on the streets was to play by White's rules.

  "I'm angry with myself," he said, the words almost catching in his gritted teeth. Damn, he hated talking about this shit. "I'm a cop. I should have protected her, should have been the one..."

  His voice trailed off, a haze of blood floating over his vision despite the sunlight streaming into the office. He blinked and it was gone, leaving only White, his face neutral, waiting for Drake.

  "You know she killed a man that night?" Drake continued. "Caved his head in with a tire iron."

  Another cheer raising from the crowd at the ball game made for a bizarre punctuation to his words.

  The shrink nodded, folding his hands over his ample belly. With his bald head, rimless glasses and full beard, he resembled a dark-skinned Santa Claus. Drake could only hope that White had an early Christmas present for him–a chit back to the streets.

  "And you blame yourself that she was forced to such extremes?"

  Drake nodded, his gaze never leaving the Karastan rug beneath his feet. "She's an ER doc. There's a Latin term, an oath doctors take–"

  "Primum non noncere," the shrink supplied. "First, do no harm."

  "Yeah, whatever. Anyway, things haven't been the same between us since then." Drake closed his eyes. He would never have been here if this wasn't the only way to get back on the job. But this wasn't helping, he felt worse now than he had before.

  "After all that happened, you're still interested in pursuing a relationship with her?" White sounded surprised.

  Drake's eyes snapped open. "Of course I am."

  "But she's reluctant?"

  "She's been hurt before. Her ex-husband was abusive. But she got out. In fact," he smiled at the memory, "one time he came after her, and she gave him a black eye."

  The shrink was silent. Drake wished he'd never said anything about Hart's ex, Richard King. Even though the man was now confined to a wheelchair, he and his lawyer brother were still around to cause trouble. They blamed Hart for the accident that ended King's career as a surgeon.

  "It was in self defense," he added lamely. White remained silent. The only sound in the room was the infuriatingly slow ticking of the clock. "It's not like she's a violent person. She's passionate, that's all."

  "Passionate about her ex-husband?" the doctor asked in a bland voice.

  "No. That's over." Drake returned to his feet, prowling the room once more. Judas H, how the hell had they gotten onto this subject? "She's passionate about everything. This whole thing started because she wanted to help a patient. She latches onto something or someone and suddenly she feels responsible for everything that happens. And she won't let go, won't stop until everything's right."

  "Dedicated," White suggested.

  "Driven's more like it. Reckless, relentless. And stubborn as hell. Christ doc, you don't know stubborn until you've met Cassandra Hart." Saying Hart's name aloud wrenched something deep in Drake's gut. He sucked his breath in, turning away from the shrink to hide it. Hart's face filled his mind, her porcelain skin with exotic high cheekbones, dark hair, eyes a man could drown in. He took a deep breath and steadied himself, turning back to face the doctor.

  "Speaking about Dr. Hart seems to disturb your equilibrium."

  Understatement. "Guess she kind of threw me off balance."

  "Why do you speak of being with her in the past tense?"

  "It's not Hart that's in the past." Drake fumbled to explain. "It's just that overwhelming passion–you know what I mean. That feeling like you're falling, drowning in a whirlpool that sucks you under, but you're too far gone to even care. That's what is past."

  White cocked his head. "But isn't that what most people find exciting about being in love? Doesn't that passion drive the relationship forward?"

  "Maybe. But that passion made me drop my guard, that feeling almost got Hart killed."

  "And what about your Dr. Hart? Does she agree with this new philosophy of yours?"

  "Guess that's enough for today," Drake said in a casual tone as if they'd been talking about the Pirates' opener.

  He and Hart hadn't exactly talked about things since he got back from his mother's last week. At least not important things. Like the way his heart about jumped out of his chest every time she got too close. Or the way his throat closed tight and he broke out in a cold sweat when he watched her move, her natural grace impeded by her healing Achilles' tendon, reminding him of what he'd almost lost. "Time's up, right?"

  The shrink didn't even glance at his watch. "No," he said. "We've a few more minutes. Sit."

  Drake took his seat once more, perched on the edge, hands hanging between his knees.

  "How would you categorize your relationship with Dr. Hart?" White persisted in his torture.

  Drake swallowed his groan and hung his head. There were no words for the way he felt about Hart. Why waste time trying to find any? Besides, they were supposed to be talking about the shooting, about getting Drake back on the streets where he belonged.

  The silence lengthened, but the shrink did nothing to alleviate Drake's discomfort. Finally, the clock chimed the hour, and Drake popped from the chair like a schoolboy released for the summer.

  "I can get back to work now, right?" he asked, hands clenched at his sides as he waited for White's reply.

  "Desk duty." Came the grudging answer. "I want to see you tomorrow morning, Detective. We still have a lot of ground to cover."

  Drake said nothing, only nodded his head. He had to restrain himself from slamming the door behind him as he left the office. He moved down the corridor, his gait unbalanced. Not from the leg injury, but from the weight missing on his hip. Amazing that thirty-four ounces, the weight of a fully loaded forty caliber Glock-27, could make such a difference.

  It made all the difference in the world. A cop without a gun, chained to a desk, what good was he to anyone?

  CHAPTER 2

  Cassie made her way to the ER's locker room, changed out of her jeans and into scrubs. She was glad there was no one there to watch her sit on the bench to maneuver her legs into her pants. This shift was going to be long enough, no sense allowing stubborn pride force her to put more stress on her ankle.

  Her hands moved in a familiar routine, clipping her name badge to the top pocket, checking the trauma radio and fastening it to her waistband alongside a pair of hemostats that held a roll of tape. The short-sleeved scrub top revealed the jagged scar that ran down her left forearm, and she debated on a lab coat to cover it.

  Let ‘em stare, she decided. They'd have t
o get used to it sooner or later.

  The first person she encountered at the nurses' station was Rachel Lloyd, the day shift charge nurse. Rachel stood several inches taller than Cassie's five-four and looked down on her with dark brown eyes set in even darker skin. Her hair was arranged in an intricate coiffure of braids perched high on her head, not a strand daring to leave its designated position. A definite contrast to Cassie's own frizzled curls, which resembled a wet mop struck by lightning.

  "Good to have you back, Dr. Hart," Rachel said in her clipped Caribbean accent. Her tone was neutral as if she didn't care whether Cassie succeeded or failed. Either way, Rachel would be there to witness and document it for the record.

  Nice to know some things didn't change. She and Rachel shared a mutual respect for each other's skills combined with a mutual disapproval of the other woman's methods. This morning Rachel's look held the same frosty regard as it did six weeks ago. Without a trace of pity, which Cassie was grateful for.

  Because she refused to be a victim–ever again.

  "Ready for your first patient, Dr. Hart?" Rachel asked, holding a clipboard out to her.

  Cassie tried to act nonchalant, ignoring the sudden clenching of her stomach as she took the chart and headed into exam room five. Waiting for her there was a young black woman cradling a toddler on her lap. They both looked up when Cassie entered, the woman's expression tired and anxious. The toddler's face was tear stained. He took one look at Cassie and threw his arms around his mother's neck, hiding his face.

  "Is this Antwan?" Cassie asked, reading the name on the chart. Antwan Washington, age three, chief complaint ear pain. No fever, vitals normal, no complicating past medical history according to the nursing notes. Looked like Rachel had picked out an easy one for Cassie's first patient back.

 

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