there.â
âHey,â Davis said, tucking the cigarette behind his ear. He slipped the camera strap around his neck. Reaching inside his jacket, he withdrew a notepad with a pen clipped to it. He began taking notes, his pen scratching across the pad.
LaRousseâs gaze slid the length of Heatherâs body, his lids shuttering several times. âCollins never mentioned that you were a looker.â He winked. âGuess he was keeping that info to himself.â Smiling, he shook his head, brown hair falling over his eyes in an aw-shucks kind of way.
âMust be the professional in him,â Heather said, voice level. âCould be heâs a little more interested in collaring bad guys than hooking up.â
LaRousseâs smile vanished. He jerked a thumb in Danteâs direction. âIs the rock god over there good for it?â
Heather glanced at Dante. He stood in the doorway, jacket hanging from one hand, his shaded gaze on her and LaRousse. Could he have killed the girl before De Noir had brought him home in the van? Could that be the reason De Noir had lied about his presence in the club?
Sheâs still warm.
Blood dripping onto carpet.
The stunned look on his pale, pale face.
Too much time had passed between Danteâs arrival at the plantation house and their return to the club. The windows had been left open. Cold air wouldâve chilled the body; the blood wouldâve congealed in the hours between. No, Ginaâd been killed as Heather drove Dante into New Orleans.
Heatherâs gaze shifted to LaRousse and his wintry eyes. All his down-home friendliness had frozen over, his gaze pale-blue ice. âNo,â she said. âBut I do want a statement from him.â
Digging out a microrecorder from her purse, Heather clipped it to the collar of her trench. âDante, why donât you wait downstairs? I wantââ
âLetâs go one better,â LaRousse interrupted, jabbing a finger at Dante. âManning, run Prejean to headquarters. I think we can dig up a couple of old warrants.â
âWhat the hell are you doing?â Heather stared at LaRousse in disbelief.
âCriminal mischief. Vandalism,â LaRousse said, gaze fixed on Dante. A hard smile twisted his lips. âSpray paints that damned anarchy symbol everywhere.â
Dante dropped his jacket. It hit the carpet with a muffled jingle. âNothing like having your priorities straight,â he said. His gloved hands curled into fists.
âHold on a minuteââ Heather began, but LaRousse nodded at Manning. The uniformed cop unhooked the cuffs from his belt and reached for Dante.
Dante moved .
At least, Heather had a glimpse of movement; then Manning flew across the room and slammed into the wall. His head cracked against the plaster, denting it. The handcuffs tumbled from his grasp. Expression pained, dazed, Manning pawed at his holstered pistol.
Dante stood in the doorway, one hand still lifted, body tensed.
âFreeze, motherfucker!â Jefferson screamed, swinging his pistol up.
Danteâs shaded gaze locked on Jefferson. He lowered his hand, then knotted both into fists. His head ducked down just slightly. Heatherâd seen enough street fights to know he was going to rush the rookie.
Stretching out a hand, Heather cried, âNo! Wait!â Not sure if she spoke to Jefferson, Dante, or both.
She hurtled forward, but everything slowed down. Her vision narrowed into a long, dark tunnel ending in Jeffersonâs gun. His finger spasmed against the trigger. Pulled it back. Catching peripheral movementâDavis and LaRousse helping? hindering?âHeather lunged for the gun.
She knew the moment she did that sheâd never make it.
Jefferson fired.
E TOOK ANOTHER SIP of whiskey, then set the chilled glass down on the nightstand beside the half-empty bottle of Canadian Hunter. Ice clinked. He stretched out on the bed, worrying his head and