rooster?â
Jake shrugged. âSheâs dumb enough to do anything. Iâm open to ideas.â
âGood. Hereâs my idea. How about we forget this whole thing and go for a nice, relaxing five-mile run.â
Jake choked on his coffee. â No! I mean, thatâd be great, but what about justice? Your honor is at stake. And besides, I have an obligation here. I lost the bird, so I should find the bird. After all, I have a reputation to uphold.â Not to mention excruciating cramps in my legs. âAnd I donât have any shorts with me,â he added lamely.
Amy worried her lower lip. She really wasnât the dashing, daring detective type. She was early-to-bed, early-to-rise, dependable Amy who liked children and small dogs. She had no aspirations to be Wonder Woman, and she didnât think her honor was in imminent danger, but she did care about Jakeâs reputation as a veterinarian. Darn that chicken. He was nothing but trouble.
With a resigned sigh, Amy presented Jake with the phone book. âI suppose youâre determined to do this.â
Jake sent her a sheepish smile and thumbed through the alphabet. âTurner, Brian. Heâs on Ridge Road. Bet he lives in a condo with a Jacuzzi. Bet we find feathers on his driveway.â
His eyes traveled the length of Amy. âI think it would be best if you changed your clothes. Wear something dark. Jeans and sneakers, in case we have to run.â
Amy grimaced. This was going to be a disaster. They were going to get caught and arrested and sent to prison. What would she tell her mother? Who would feed her cat?
Ten minutes later they were seated in Jakeâs car. The engine churned, the car backfired twice. Amy suggested, for the sake of a fast and silent getaway, that they use her car.
Jake looked over at the sleek, low-slung red sports car and smiled wide. âCan I drive?â
Amy hesitated. There was something in his voice, in his eyes, in the way he leanedforward when he looked at her car. It was the way she looked at cheesecake.
âYouâll be careful, wonât you? It isnât paid for.â
He ran his hand over the front fender. âBet this baby can really move.â
âI donât know, actually. I donât drive very fast. I bought it because it was pretty.â
âOh man! Teakwood steering wheel!â
Amy held the keys tight in her fist. âExcept for the steering wheel, the whole carâs fiberglass. They tell me itâll tear easily. Just crumple at the smallest bump.â
Jake slid behind the wheel and worked the gearshift. âVroom, vroom, vroom,â he said.
Amy rolled her eyes and dropped the keys in his lap. She marched around to the passenger side and strapped herself in.
Jake was her employer, her friend, her partner in crime. He was something else. Boyfriend? No, boyfriend implied dating. Lover? Not yet. She didnât know what to call it, but they were definitely in deep like. There was some sort of special relationshipgrowing between them. Relationships required trust, right?
Jake put the car in gear and slowly backed out of the driveway. Okay, nothing to worry about. She trusted him. He put his foot to the accelerator, the result snapping her head back, pressing her into the back of her seat.
âWhat pickup,â Jake shouted, rocketing down Wheatstone Drive.
Amy clutched the dashboard. âWhat are you doing? This isnât a racecourse. This is a family neighborhood. There are dogs and cats and kids scurrying across this road.â
A hint of scarlet spotted his cheekbones. âSorry, I got carried away.â
âMen.â
Jake looked at her sideways. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
âMen are always getting carried away. It must be in their DNA. Too much adrenaline. Not enough vitamin B. Too much testosterone.â
âAh hah! Now weâre getting somewhere. I assume youâre speaking from personal