Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Suspense,
Fiction - General,
Romance,
Historical,
Contemporary,
Adult,
Love Stories,
Romantic Suspense Fiction,
Romance - Contemporary,
Romance - General,
Romance: Modern,
Chicago (Ill.),
Private investigators - Illinois - Chicago
Now, put me down.”
He set her down, then reached into his pocket. Sunni thought he meant to show her his ID, but when he produced her .22, she nearly fainted. “Oh, God!”
“Take it easy. Silk pockets are lousy for hiding heavy hardware. Noticed it the minute you bolted through the door.” He grinned, then studied the .22 in his hand. “Do you know how to shoot this?”
“Yes.”
“Can you hit what you’re aiming at?”
“Why not hand it over and I’ll show you?”
His grin spread, then he sobered and walked over to the island counter and laid down the gun—but not before checking to see that the safety was on. After that, his gaze traveled from Sunni’s face to the swell of her breasts. “Just so I have the facts, how long have you been sleeping with Joe?”
His question turned Sunni’s cheeks hot. Only, she knew what had prompted the question. Last night he had witnessed her and Joey Masado kissing. And it hadn’t been just a friendly kiss. Joey had told her to kiss him like a woman in love.
“Come on, Sis. I know Joe was here last night, and we both know how I know that.” Her continued silence had him rubbing his whiskered jaw as he continued to take her apart with his eyes. “I didn’t hear you. Are you or are you not doing the horizontal hustle with him?”
Sunni drew her robe together to lessen the amount of cleavage on display. She wasn’t sure if it helped, but she’d be damned if she’d check. “That question wasn’t part of our deal,” she finally said. “I won’t discuss my personal life with a stranger. At least not until you can prove to me you are who you say.”
He parted his jacket and settled his long-fingered hands on his hips. “I’ve seen a lot of you lately, Sis. I don’t consider us strangers.”
Sunni knew what he was getting at. She clamped her mouth shut, then winced when renewed pain shot into her bruised lower lip.
“If I’m going to keep you alive, I need to know everything about you. That includes whose bed you frequent and who you’ve passed your apartment key around to. There was a murder five days ago, and you’re the PD’s number-one suspect. You forgotten that?”
“No. But I didn’t kill Milo Tandi.”
“You have no motive as far as I can tell. But those scarves manacled around the DB’s wrists are damn incriminating, Sis. And this time the CSU didn’t screw up the evidence when they collected it. Your prints are crystal.”
Another warning bell set off inside Sunni’s head. She’d lived with a cop for more than twenty years—her father used cop slang constantly. DB meant dead body. CSU was the crime scene unit. Only a cop would use that kind of slang. Only a cop would—
“Are you Joey’s window dressing, Sis, or the beautiful woman caught in the middle of an old feud? If you’re the woman in the middle, I’ll warn you it isn’t a healthy place to be sitting right now. Powerful men in powerful places think human life can be bought and sold as easily as real estate. The Masado boys and the Tandis are powerful players in an old organization. You could be taking a swim in concrete if you’ve been bed hopping.”
More words and phrases convinced Sunni that—
The phone rang.
Sunni jumped, then stared at the phone on the island counter just a foot away from where her bodyguard stood. On the second ring she started forward.
“Let the machine take it.”
She ignored his rusty-nail voice as well as his intimidating stance. As she reached for the phone his hand covered hers and remained there like an iron paperweight.
“I want to hear who it is.”
Five rings later the answering machine clicked on. “Sunni, it’s Joey. Detective Williams paid me a visit early this morning. He claims he called your father four days ago after being assigned to Tandi’s murder investigation. You can imagine my surprise when he told me Clide Blais was your father. Especially since my records say your father and mother are dead and buried