Christmas In Snowflake Canyon. RaeAnne Thayne
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СКАЧАТЬ one of those inane, obscure details she couldn’t help spouting when she was nervous.

      He snorted. “Wow. You are quite a font of information, Genevieve. This evening is turning into all kinds of interesting.”

      She couldn’t see his features well through the snow-dimmed streetlights but she was quite certain he was laughing at her. She hated it when people laughed at her—one of the biggest reasons she hated being here in Hope’s Crossing.

      Before she could respond, the vehicle stopped and she saw the solid, somehow intimidating shape of the police station outside the ice-etched window.

      A moment later, the door on her side of the vehicle opened and Pete Redmond loomed over her. “You two having fun back here?”

      Dylan didn’t answer, making her wonder if he had been having fun.

      “What do you think?” Genevieve tried for her frostiest tone. Pete had tried to ask her out once when she was home for the summer, before her engagement to Sawyer.

      “I think you’re in a pickle, Ms. Beaumont,” he answered.

      Oh, she could think of a few stronger words than that.

      “I think we all need to suit up for the you-know-what to hit the fan after Mayor Beaumont gets that phone call,” the female police officer with the split ends and the improper lipstick shade said as she helped pull Genevieve out of the backseat and Dylan, by default, after her.

      Her stomach cramped again, just picturing her father’s stern disapproval. What if he decided her latest screw-up was too much? What if he decided not to give her the chance to sell Pearl’s house as her escape out of town?

      She might be stuck here forever, having to look for excitement at a dive like The Speckled Lizard.

      A sudden burst of wind gusted through, flailing snow at them, rattling the bare branches of a tree in front of the station. Gen shivered.

      “Let’s get you two inside,” the female officer said. “This is shaping up to be a nasty one. We’re going to be dealing with slide-offs all night.”

      Despite the nerves crawling through her, the warmth of the building seemed almost welcoming.

      She had never been inside a police station. Somehow she expected it to be...grittier. Instead, it looked just like any other boring office. Cubicles, fluorescent lighting, computer monitors. It could be a bland, dreary insurance office somewhere.

      She was aware of a small, ridiculous pang of disappointment that her walk on the wild side had led her to this. On the other hand, she was still shackled to the scruffy, sexy-smelling, damaged Dylan Caine.

      The officers led them not to some cold interrogation room with a single lightbulb and a straight-backed chair but to what looked like a standard break room, with a microwave, refrigerator, coffee maker.

      Yet another illusion shattered.

      “Have a seat,” Pete said.

      “Can you take these off now?” Dylan raised their joined arms.

      The female officer seemed to find the whole situation highly amusing, for reasons Gen didn’t quite understand.

      “I don’t know about that,” she said slowly. “We wouldn’t want the two of you starting any more fights. Maybe we should leave it on a few more minutes, until we give Chief McKnight time to assess the situation.”

      Genevieve drew in a breath. The McKnights. She couldn’t escape them anywhere in this cursed town.

      “What about our phone calls?” Dylan said. “I need to call my attorney, who also happens to be my brother Andrew. I’m sure Ms. Beaumont wants to call her father.”

      “You don’t speak for me,” she said quickly. “I don’t need to call my father.”

      “But you’re going to need an attorney.”

      She was exhausted suddenly after the ordeal of the evening and the cut on her cheek burned. Her brain felt scrambled, but she said the first thing that came to her mind. “I’ll use yours. Andrew Caine is my attorney, too.”

      Her father would find out about this, of course. She couldn’t hide it. For all she knew, somebody had already told him his only daughter had been scrapping in a bar like some kind of Roller Derby queen. But she couldn’t endure more of his disappointment tonight, the heavy, inescapable weight of her own failure.

      “Seriously?” Officer Olivarez—now, there was a mouthful—looked skeptical. “You’re sure you don’t want to call Daddy to bail you out?”

      “Positive.” She looked at the two officers and at Dylan. “I think we can all agree, the last thing any of us needs tonight is for my father to come down here. Am I right?”

      “I doubt anything you do will stop that,” Dylan drawled.

      He was right. Someone at the Lizard had probably already dropped a dime on her. Wasn’t that the appropriate lingo? William was probably already on his way over but she wasn’t going to be the one to call him.

      “Andrew Caine is my attorney. End of story,” she declared. “Now will you please take these things off?”

      After a pause, the female officer pulled out a key to the handcuffs and freed them. Instead of elation, Genevieve fought down an odd disappointment as she rubbed the achy hand that had been cuffed with her other one.

      “You can call your brother over there.” Officer Olivarez gestured with a flip of her braid to a corded phone hanging on the wall.

      Dylan headed over and picked up the phone receiver, and after an awkward moment where he tried to figure out what to do with it, he draped it over his shoulder so he could punch the numbers with his remaining hand.

      Poor guy. Even something as simple as making a phone call must be a challenge with only one hand.

      The two officers started talking about a sporting event Genevieve didn’t know or care anything about. She couldn’t hear Dylan’s conversation with his brother, but judging by the way his expression grew increasingly remote, it wasn’t pleasant. After a few minutes, he hung up.

      “Well? Is he coming to get us out?”

      “He’ll be here. He wanted to know if we had been booked yet.”

      The two officers exchanged glances. “Chief McKnight wants us to hang on until he gets here. It’s kind of a sticky situation, what with the district attorney’s office being involved.”

      “What does that mean?”

      “Once we book you, you have to go into the system,” Pete Redmond explained, not unkindly, and she was a little sorry she hadn’t agreed to go out with him all those years ago. “That means your arrest will always be on record, even if you’re not charged.”

      “The police chief is on the phone with the district attorney, trying to iron things out.”

      “How long will that take?” she asked.

      “Who СКАЧАТЬ