Название: For the Baby's Sake
Автор: Beverly Long
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Зарубежные детективы
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He met her eyes over the shoulder of her date. Her full lips parted ever so slightly, and her face lost its color. He shrugged in return and tapped the man between them on the shoulder.
The guy, early forties and balding, turned his head slightly, frowned at Sawyer and kept dancing.
Sawyer tapped again. “I need a few minutes with Ms. Mayfield.”
They stopped. When the guy made no move to let go of her, Sawyer held out his hand. She stared at it for several seconds then stepped away from her date. Suddenly she was in his arms, and they were dancing.
He wanted to say something. But his stupid mind wouldn’t work. He couldn’t think, couldn’t talk, couldn’t reason.
She smelled good—like the jasmine flowers that had grown outside his mother’s kitchen window.
He wanted to pull her close and taste her. The realization hit him hard, as if someone had punched him. He wanted his tongue in her mouth, her breasts in his hands and her thighs wrapped around him. He wanted her naked under him.
Sawyer jerked back, stumbling a bit. He dropped his hands to his sides. The two of them stood still in the middle of the dance floor like two statues.
Why didn’t she say something? Hell, why didn’t she blink? She just kept her pretty green eyes focused on his face. Sawyer kept his breaths shallow, unwilling to let any more temptation into his lungs. “Any more letters?” he asked. He kept his voice low, not wanting others to hear.
She shook her head. “Our mail doesn’t usually arrive until after lunch. I left before it got there.”
“So, no news is good news?”
“For tonight.”
He understood avoidance. At one point in his life, he’d perfected it. He felt silly standing in the middle of the floor. He stepped closer to Liz Mayfield, and she slipped back into his arms as if it was the most natural thing in the world.
Which didn’t make sense at all because it had to have been ten years since he’d danced with a woman. It felt good. She felt good.
He really needed to remember that he wasn’t here to dance. “What did your little friend have to say?” he asked.
Her body jerked, and he realized he’d been more stern than necessary. “I’m sorry,” he said.
“That’s fine,” she said. “It’s just that I…I didn’t see Mary today.”
“She didn’t show, did she?”
Liz shook her head and jumped in with both feet. “I had to cancel most of my appointments. I didn’t feel well.” That much at least was true. She’d been sick after hearing Mary’s voice mail. I’m not coming today. I’ll see you tomorrow at the regular time.
Liz had tried to call her a dozen times before giving up. Dreading that Detective Montgomery would find her before she had the chance to locate Mary, she’d left the office. She’d worried that a frustrated Detective Montgomery might take matters in his own hands and track Mary down.
Liz had never expected he’d show up at the fund-raiser. But she should have known better. Detective Montgomery didn’t seem like the kind of guy who gave up easily. In fact, he seemed downright tenacious. Like a dog after a bone.
She tried to hold that against him. But couldn’t. While it made for an uncomfortable evening, she couldn’t help appreciating the fact that he’d held her to her twenty-four hours. He took his work seriously. She could relate to that.
“Are you okay now?” he asked, sounding concerned.
She nodded, not willing to verbalize any more half-truths. From across the room, she caught Carmen’s eye. She was standing behind the punch table, pouring cups for thirsty dancers. Liz could read the concern on her pretty face. She’d had that same look since Liz had told her about the letter.
Liz shook her head slightly, reassuring her. Carmen was little, but she could be a spitfire. If she thought Liz needed help, she’d come running.
“Who’s that?” Detective Montgomery asked.
“Carmen Jimenez. She’s a counselor, too. I think I mentioned her yesterday.”
“I remember. Did you tell her about your letter?”
“Yes.”
“She hasn’t gotten anything similar?”
Liz shook her head.
“I’ve got some bad news,” Detective Montgomery said. “We found another dead body this morning. Right outside of this very hotel. He’d been shot. Up until a few weeks ago, he’d been a cook for Mirandez.”
“Mirandez has a cook?”
He leaned his mouth closer to her ear, and she felt the shiver run down the length of her spine. “Not like Oprah has a cook. A cook is the guy who boils down the cocaine into crack.”
“Oh. My.”
“People keep dying,” he said. “It’s my job to make it stop. If Mary knows something, it’s her job to help me.”
She’d been wrong. He wasn’t like a dog after a bone. He wanted fresh meat. She pulled away from him, forcing the dancing to stop. She couldn’t think when he had his arms around her, let alone when his mouth was that close. “If you had enough to arrest her,” she protested, “you’d have done it yesterday. You don’t have anything but a wild guess.”
He had more than that. The tip had come from one of their own. It had taken Fluentes two years to work his way inside. Sawyer didn’t intend to sacrifice him now.
Push the counselor. He could hear Lieutenant Fischer’s words almost as clearly as if the man stood behind him. “She was there. And you need to convince her to tell us what she saw. She needs to tell us everything. Then we’ll protect her.”
“You’ll protect her?”
“Yeah.” For some reason Liz’s disbelieving tone set Sawyer’s teeth on edge. “That’s what we do. We’re cops.”
“She’s eight months pregnant.”
“I’m aware of that. We would arrange for both her and her baby to have the medical care that they need.”
“And then what?” she asked, her tone demanding.
Sawyer threw up his hands. “I don’t know. I guess the baby grows up, and in twenty years, Mary’s a grandmother.” Sawyer rubbed the bridge of his nose. His head pounded, and the damn drums weren’t helping. “Look, СКАЧАТЬ