Bones Don't Lie (Morgan Dane #3)(81)
“Kill the headlights before you make the turn,” Lance said.
Exterior lights blazed in the new development, eliminating the need for headlights.
Two blocks away, she slid the Jeep to the curb, choosing the darkest place between street lamps. They watched Stan park in his driveway. Lights shone in the front windows of the big house. Stan got out of his car. Closing the door, he stopped and scanned the street. Did he feel them watching him?
Stan went into the house. The first-floor windows went dark a minute later.
“Maybe he’s going straight to bed,” Morgan said. That’s what she would do.
“It’s late,” Lance agreed.
“Do we continue to watch him? If he was going anywhere else, he wouldn’t have driven straight home.”
“Unless he saw us.”
“If he saw us, we might as well leave. He won’t lead us anywhere if he knows we’re watching.”
Lance shifted in his seat. “Drive around the next block.”
Morgan cruised past Stan’s house and turned left three times.
“Pull over here,” Lance said. “Under that tree.”
Morgan parked at the curb around the corner from Stan’s house. “It’s so bright here. I feel exposed.”
Not only were the lots covered in landscaping lights, but the houses were close together. There were no dark places to hide.
“It’s the best we can do in this neighborhood,” Lance said. “From a home security perspective, I applaud the lack of dark shadows for burglars to lurk. But for our purposes tonight, it’s damned inconvenient.”
They climbed out of the Jeep. They locked the vehicle’s doors manually and closed their doors as softly as possible.
“Hold my hand.” Lance reached toward her.
She slid her hand into his.
Lance tugged her onto the sidewalk. “We’re just a nice couple taking a stroll.”
For a minute, that’s exactly what she wished they were. The crisp night air chilled her face, but her coat blocked the worst of the cold, and the heat of his body penetrated her thin leather glove. A snow flurry drifted down, slow as a feather, and landed on her arm.
If they weren’t on a stakeout, their walk would be romantic.
Tires crunched on asphalt.
“Look casual.” Lance pulled Morgan closer, wrapping his arm around her shoulders.
Morgan glanced over her shoulder. “Uh-oh.”
A black-and-white sheriff’s vehicle pulled up to the curb a few feet ahead of them. Sheriff King climbed out of his car, crossed the strip of grass next to the curb, and stepped onto the sidewalk, blocking their way. “What are you doing here?”
“Taking a walk,” Lance said.
“Don’t smart-ass me.” The glare of the streetlamp overhead cast the sheriff’s face in harsh, angry shadows.
Waves of animosity—and testosterone—shimmered between the two men.
“Stan Adams called me to say you have been harassing and stalking him,” the sheriff said.
Morgan squeezed Lance’s hand. “Don’t say anything.”
The sheriff propped his hands on his hips. “Didn’t I tell you both to stay away from this case?”
Lance said, “My mother is lying in a hospital bed—”
“Stop. Talking,” Morgan said in a louder voice.
The sheriff pointed at Lance. “You should listen to the lawyer.”
But Lance’s temper had obviously kicked his sense out of the way. “I have every right to protect my family.”
“You don’t have squat.” The sheriff paused after each word for effect.
Morgan nudged an elbow in between the men and tried to defuse the situation. “We just found out that Stan Adams called Jenny Kruger yesterday, but you knew that, right? You have access to her phone records.”
The sheriff’s lips mashed flat. She couldn’t tell if he knew or not.
Lance leaned forward, as if he was going to speak. Morgan tugged him back.
“Jenny was poisoned with opioids,” she said. “Tonight at the hospital, someone tried to do it again.”
“Do you have proof of that?” Sheriff King asked.
“It just happened,” Morgan said. “Her saline solution was spiked. The Scarlet Falls PD has just begun their investigation.”
“So you just thought you’d take matters into your own hands?” King asked.
Lance shook his head. “And this is why we didn’t want to call you.”
“I’ve had it with you.” The sheriff’s finger stabbed in the air toward Lance. “The only way I’m going to keep you both out of my way is to put you in a cell. You’re both under arrest.”
“You can’t be serious.” Lance took a step forward.
So did the sheriff. “I don’t make jokes.”
It was true. The sheriff had no sense of humor.
“Just do what he says.” Morgan gripped Lance’s bicep. The muscles were hard and tense under her fingers.
“Both of you, hand over your weapons.” King held out an empty hand.
They slid their guns from their holsters and offered them butts first.
The sheriff took both. “Put your hands on top of your heads. Lace your fingers.”
Melinda Leigh's Books
- What I've Done (Morgan Dane #4)
- What I've Done (Morgan Dane #4)
- What I've Done (Morgan Dane #4)
- Bones Don't Lie (Morgan Dane #3)
- Her Last Goodbye (Morgan Dane #2)
- Seconds to Live (Scarlet Falls #3)
- Bones Don't Lie (Morgan Dane #3)
- Melinda Leigh
- Midnight Betrayal (Midnight #3)
- Midnight Exposure (Midnight #1)