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Return to Evil To The Max
PROLOGUE
The music vibrated in her chest and puckered her nipples against
the tight tank sweater she wore. She couldn't hear herself think,
didn't want to. A gaggle of girls on the hairy edge of the legal
drinking age passed in front of her. They pointed, giggled, and
whispered. Like teenyboppers.
For a moment, she envied their innocence.
When she looked again, her quarry made his move. She turned, fingering
the heart-shaped locket around her neck, and watched his approach
in the mirror behind the bar.
"Wanna dance?"
His voice thrummed through her. Deep. Heavy with sexual innuendo.
He smelled of soap, fresh laundry, and aroused male. Dark hair two
weeks past the need for a cut, a month's growth of beard covering
his chin, and eyes the color of hot fudge. Mmmm. She licked her
lips. She adored hot fudge sundaes.
Garth Brooks faded into a Ty Herndon ballad. Slow. Just what she'd
been waiting for. She slid off the stool and held her hand out to
him. Weaving through the tables with him close behind her, his touch
seared her wrist. Promising.
The floor was packed with dancers doing the Drifter. They joined
in, her back to his front, not a breath of space between their bodies.
He was already hard. She was already wet. Looking over her shoulder,
she slid her hips across his erection. His nostrils flared.
Undulating dancers brushed against her. Laughter, voices, and pounding
music insulated them in the center of the dance floor. She followed
the dance, let the rhythm of her breath match the pulse of the music.
Fast. Hot. He caressed her without touching. They dipped, surged,
and rolled with the beat. His hand wandered beneath her short black
skirt, across her thigh, then slipped along her center.
She'd left her panties at home. "Do it now," she whispered, and
placed a hand on his zipper.
"Jesus," he murmured on an exhale. "Christ. This isn't such a good
idea."
"You have to." She seduced with a flexing of her butt muscles.
His finger trailed moisture along her thigh as he withdrew. His
arm tightened beneath her breasts. "Not here."
He grabbed her hand and pulled her from the dance floor. Dragging
her down a short hallway ripe with the scent of sweat, he pushed
open a door. Men. Lots of them. Bright lights. Stained white urinals.
Shocked stares.
He pulled her into the second stall, closed the door, and backed
her up against the cool metal. So good against her hot flesh. He
sat on the toilet, shoved his hands roughly beneath her skirt, then
rubbed his thumb against her clitoris. Looking down at him, she
bit her lip.
Outside the stall, speech returned. Murmurs. A quick burst of embarrassed
laughter. She fed on every sound.
He raised her skirt and put his tongue to her. She hooked a leg
over his shoulder to give him better access, braced herself against
the locked door, then moaned out loud.
Someone cheered.
He went down on her in earnest.
She came in a blinding flash. Crying out, she shuddered against
his mouth, locking him to her with her hands in his hair.
A chant rose outside the stall, "Fuck her, fuck her, fuck her."
He stood, turned her against the door, spread her legs, and took
her from behind. She came again on the second thrust and didn't
stop until he'd unloaded deep inside her.
The riot started when she opened the stall door.
CHAPTER ONE
Max Starr stopped in front of his desk and planted her hands on
her hips. "I think I know where another dead body is."
Detective DeWitt Quentin Long laid his head on his folded arms
and cried like a baby.
The clatter of computer keys stopped abruptly. A phone no one bothered
to answer rang shrilly. Four pairs of male eyes bored into her back.
Noisy hall traffic faded out.
"If you have to do that, can we go somewhere private?" she whispered.
Max started to sweat in her black slacks and blazer. The embarrassment
almost made her forget the horror of her vision.
Not.
She'd never forget the image of the couple in that restroom stall,
the sound of men ranting outside, and then ... the woman's pain,
so thick Max could feel it tighten across her own chest and crush
the bones of her face. She took a shuddery breath.
Witt didn't look up. His broad shoulders shook.
The stuffy detective pen smelled like dirty socks, and the overhead
lighting turned Witt's blond hair a ghastly shade of yellow. Three
of the suits had risen from their chairs, moving closer to eavesdrop.
So close, she smelled their coffee breath blowing down her neck.
"Hey, this is getting ridiculous," Max hissed.
Witt was a big guy, no pushover despite the blue eyes and Dudley
Do-Right dimple in his chin. She'd expected more of him. Hell, she
could have told him she'd had another psychic vision and that her
husband's ghost had sent her running to him. She spared him, figuring
Witt was still getting over the time Cameron had given him
a little ghostly nudge.
"Hey, Long, this the pain-in-the-a ... neck you keep talking about?"
Max turned to glare at Coffee Breath. At five-foot-six and in three-inch
spiked heels, she towered over the man by at least an inch. His
glasses were smudged, his brown suit rumpled, and the sleeve of
his sport coat spotty with ... something. She'd bet her next paycheck
the eau-de-dirty-socks came from his shoes.
Witt raised his head. Finally.
The creep was laughing. So damn hard he cried. Tears streamed down
his face.
She narrowed her eyes. "I'm serious."
She hadn't known he could laugh. But then she'd only known him
a little over two weeks. Still, when a man practically saves your
life, you figure you know him. Though not in the biblical
sense.
He wiped his eyes, chuckled once more, then got himself under control.
"Scranton, you got reports to type or something?" He awarded Coffee
Breath a bored flick of his hand and pulled out the chair next to
his desk for Max.
Max continued to stand. "We have to go, Witt." She lowered her
voice. "There really is a body."
"Weren't joking the other day when you said you felt a ... dream
coming on?"
She noticed he couldn't quite call it a vision. "I was, but ...
maybe I was having a premonition."
His tears started afresh. "Certifiable," he choked out.
"Me?" she muttered, affronted.
He shook his head. "Me." Then he wiped the newest stream from his
eyes with the sleeve of his charcoal shirt. "Where?"
"Where what?"
"Where's the body?" he stage-whispered back.
Thirty minutes later, Max had gotten them halfway down the Peninsula.
It was sunny, on the cool side, and just shy of noon. The drive
was forty-five minutes from Witt's station, which was close to the
San Francisco airport, to the heart of Silicon Valley ... and the
body stuffed in a dumpster behind the Round Up.
With the top up, Witt dwarfed the little red Miata. His near buzz-cut
brushed the roof, and his knees scrunched up against the dash. Well
... she'd always said the car discouraged passengers.
"Santa Clara's way out of my jurisdiction, Max."
"But I need you, Witt."
"You do?" He turned slightly, slid his arm along the back of her
seat. She wore her dark hair short, but his sleeve brushed the ends
at her nape. Her skin prickled. The confines of her car were definitely
too small for the two of them and his ego.
"Can't tell you how glad I am to hear that, Max. Think I need you,
too," he whispered, far too close to her ear.
She felt it right down to her toes in her high-heeled shoes. "Get
outta here, Long." She jabbed him with her elbow.
He sighed, then sat back. Max could breathe again. Sort of.
"Suppose you want me to run interference for you."
"The cops'll probably arrest me if I go by myself."
"Like I almost did when you got your nose into my case."
"That was days ago." And thank God they were past that kind of
distrust.
"All right. Spit it out. Everything." Witt applied the brake on
the passenger side as she snapped into the fast lane between a Camry
and a Honda. "Maybe I shoulda driven, Max."
"Do you want to hear or do you want to pick on my driving?"
"I wanna live." He settled his big hands on his thighs. Gosh, she
was partial to big hands. "But go on. Female," he prompted. "Let's
start there. Age?"
"Mid-twenties."
"Description?"
She pursed her lips. "You're interrupting my flow here."
"Habit. Sorry. Tell it your way."
She told him everything, well, almost everything. She started with
the bar and the dance. She skipped the men's room--too much explicit
sex with Witt sitting so close--and went straight to how she knew
where the body was. "...and they tossed her in the dumpster next
to the Round Up," she finished.
Her speed dropped to sixty-five. She could feel him looking at
her before he finally spoke. "You sure that's the spot?" Was that
skepticism in his voice?
"Yeah." She knew Billy Joe's Western Round Up well. It had, until
last week, been a favorite hangout of hers. But murder had squelched
her appetite for the whole party scene.
"So, in your ... dream, you're a wino witnessing a couple of guys
wearing Frankenstein and Dracula masks dumping a body." He was quiet
a moment. "Guys that you, as the drunk, of course, can't even identify."
"I bet we'll find out he knows a lot more if the detectives can
question him. Like maybe a license plate number."
He raised one blond brow. "If he knows it, don't you as
well?"
"Ummm, no." Some things weren't always ... clear in her visions.
The little punctuating silences he took were beginning to wear
on her. She had no idea what they meant. Finally he said, "That's
why you need me. To point the cops his way."
She glanced over to see him scrub one of those big hands down his
face. "I figured they'd be more inclined to look for him if you
told them about him."
"You figured I'd keep your pretty little ass out of jail."
"That's an incredibly sexist comment." Sometimes she wasn't quite
sure how to take his backhanded compliments.
His laugh grated along her nerves. But he said nothing.
She pulled off the freeway, merged into street traffic, and headed
for the alley alongside the Round Up. "Thanks, Witt," she blurted
into the relative silence of the Miata, "for not saying I'm crazy."
"After knowing you two weeks, Max, I'm the one who's completely
lost it."
She chanced a glance at him. "So you do think I'm crazy?"
"Nope." He stared straight ahead.
"Do you think I'm lying?"
"Nope."
If her hands hadn't been on the wheel, she would have thrown them
in the air. "Then what?"
"Just wondering why there's crime scene tape around that alley
by the Round Up."
Her heart skipped a beat, and her foot slammed on the brakes.
A crowd hovered like flies twenty feet back from the mouth of the
alley. Yellow tape fluttered in the breeze. An ambulance, the word
MORGUE stenciled in red letters across its rear doors, was parked
at an angle across the access. A black-and-white sat nose-to-nose
with it. Two more were parked across the street.
Witt hunched forward in his seat, looking out the windshield. "Exactly
how many of these dreams have you had, Max?"
She rolled her lips between her teeth, then blew out a breath.
"There was Wendy Gregory," the case Witt had solved last week, "and
before that, a child murdered in Golden Gate Park."
He looked at her, something unreadable in his blue gaze. "Jesus,
you were that lady?"
She listened for the denigrating tone, couldn't find it, then resented
the way he said "lady" on principal. "I'm surprised you didn't find
that out when you were investigating me."
"Suppose I didn't dig deep enough." He yanked open the car door,
climbed out, then peered in the opening. "I'll handle this. You
stay here."
"But..."
"Stay out of it, Max."
"You need me..."
"If I ask the questions, they'll think I was a cop driving
by who's a little curious. You ask, they'll bring you in
for knowing too much about the crime, not to mention that smart-ass
mouth of yours. Cops really hate a smart mouth." His gaze flicked
to her lips. "Even if it's as kissable as yours." He looked down
the sidewalk at the bustling crime scene. "Doubt they'll be as gullible
as I was." He slammed the door.
He thought she had a kissable mouth? Wow.
* * * *
Half an hour later, Witt grabbed her arm and propelled her back
toward the Miata. "Told you to wait in the car."
She jerked out of his grasp. "I hate being left out."
He gave her a look, definitely skepticism this time. "Right. Guess
that's why you work as a temp, live in a studio apartment with a
no-name cat, and wear black all the time."
Whoa. All this from a man whose average sentence length was five
words or less, generally without pronouns. "Black happens to be
my favorite color."
"Mine, too, when you're wearing it with those heels of yours."
"And the cat's name is Buzzard. Not that it's any of your business."
She ignored his remark since it was another of his sexual
innuendoes designed to push her buttons.
"Typical."
She crossed her arms and glared. "What?"
"That you're not content to let me do what you asked me to do."
She sighed and looked over his shoulder at the crime scene. The
number of uniformed cops had doubled. A police photographer and
a tech had arrived fifteen minutes ago in a utility van. The camera
had begun to flash almost immediately, covering the dumpster from
every angle. The tech had armed herself with latex gloves, plastic
and paper bags, test tubes, scrapers, fingerprint dust, notebooks--an
endless array of paraphernalia.
And Witt had been utterly at home talking with the two detectives.
Max felt excluded, and not just from the action. She reached into
her purse for her keys, then went for overkill to hide her childish
irritation. "Oh please, Detective Long, I'm so sorry. Tell me what
you learned."
The smile was slow to grow on his face, but quite devastating when
done. "Love it when you mock me. Gets me all hot."
Her face flamed. That wasn't quite the reaction she'd expected.
Or wanted. "Be serious. What you learned was that the garbage men
found her around five a.m. That she looked like she'd been there
at least a day. No I.D."
"Just what do you need me for, Max? Can't be detecting."
Both brows went up. "Must be sex."
She kept her mouth shut. At least on that subject. "Did you tell
them about the wino?"
His mouth quirked. "Got a one track mind, Max. Too bad it's always
on murder. No, didn't mention him."
She pouted.
"Gotta pick up my car back at the station, handle a few things
in my own jurisdiction, then I'll be back to check on the
situation."
"I'll come with you."
He looked at her with a definite you-might-be-crazy-but-I-sure-as-hell-ain't
expression. "Don't think so."
She persevered. "Why not?"
"They flirt with pretty women. They talk to other
cops. Don't need any help."
"That's sexist."
"We're a sexist bunch."
Wasn't that an understatement. Max decided the better part
of valor was to give in. "Fine. But you'll remember to tell them
about the wino, right?"
He gave her that smile again. Too damn cute for words. "Buy 'em
a drink at the local cop hangout, see if any new details have surfaced,
and the rest I'll play by ear." Period. Close quote. End of subject.
He looked at the keys in her hand. "You want me to drive?"
She hugged the ring to her chest. "No one drives my car but me,
hotshot."
Witt walked around to the passenger side. Max put her hand on the
door. Her fingertips tingled. She closed her eyes and for just a
moment, something sparkled brightly against her lids.
Diamonds.
Tell him, Cameron's ghostly voice whispered in her ear.
"Witt."
He looked at her over the roof of the car.
"Her name is ... was Tiffany."
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