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About That Kiss:A Heartbreaker Bay Novel(24)



Besides, he was busy cleaning up the streets of asshats and hopefully  also cleaning up his karma while he was at it. He didn't have time for  this.

He finally fell asleep just before dawn and then overslept. He hit the  office at a run to find Molly in the staff room, making coffee. She  handed him a mug along with a sympathetic look. "You're late. Again."

"I know," he said, willing the caffeine to kick in fast and give him grown-up manners.

"You must like having your ass chewed out."

"Yeah, I live for it," he said dryly and then turned and found Archer  standing there, arms crossed, expression dialed to pissed off.

"Should I be rethinking you as my number two guy?" he asked. "Because if  you can't program a fucking alarm, then we have problems."

Joe resisted rolling his eyes. "Sorry. Bad night."

Archer dropped his arms and his bad ‘tude. "Your dad?"

"No."

Archer looked at Molly, who went palms up. "Not me," she said. "I'm  good." She paused and then got a worried expression. "Is it Kylie?" she  asked Joe. "Did she get another pic from that asswipe?"

"What asswipe?" Archer wanted to know. "And why don't I know about said asswipe?"

"She wanted it kept quiet," Molly said. "She had a family heirloom  stolen. And now the guy who stole it is toying with her, sending her  pictures of the thing in peril. Joe's on the case for her."

Shit. Joe sent his sister a thanks a lot glare because Archer hated it when his guys took side jobs without informing him.

"You need help?" Archer asked him.

Joe looked at him in surprise.

"It's Kylie," Archer said simply.

All of them cared deeply for Kylie. Well, maybe some of them more than others, Joe thought.

"She need anything from us?" Archer asked.

"I have some research to do, was going to do that after work here."

"Do it now." Archer turned to Molly. "Mark him as busy this morning and not to be interrupted."

Joe nodded at him. "Thanks."

"Help our girl. You know where to find me if you need anything."

Which was how Joe found himself glued to the computer in his office for  the next few hours. He had a lead on their next apprentice, who'd moved  to Santa Cruz. Sixty-year-old Raymond Martinez had changed his name to  Rafael Montega, maybe to attempt a mile of the bad debts left in his  wake, including a bankruptcy disaster. Rafael wasn't woodworking  anymore. He'd recently begun managing a little art gallery.         

     



 

Joe sent Kylie a text that he was driving up there after work. "And  five, four, three, two . . ." he murmured, smiling grimly when his phone  buzzed a return text.

I'm coming with.



Of course she was. He texted that he'd pick her up after six o'clock.

But then he and the guys got held up on a job. One of their clients'  cases had gotten moved up on the board as needing immediate attention.  The client's very successful company had grossed close to fifty-five  million dollars in the past year and was in the process of trying to  sell itself to another entity.

Unfortunately their client discovered by accident that he was being  embezzled. He'd been having lunch with a banker friend, who'd thanked  him for opening a new business account at his bank and making such a  large initial deposit.

The client freaked because he hadn't opened any such account. He'd  immediately reported the embezzlement to the police, who'd been slow to  mobilize. That's where Hunt Investigations had stepped in.

Yesterday, Archer had sent Joe and Lucas in to snoop around. They'd  discovered the client's receptionist was opening the mail and passing  client checks to her partner-in-crime. This partner then filed a  fictitious business statement, which enabled him to open a bank account  in the client's name and deposit the monies into his own account.

Joe had notified the bank and told them to let Hunt Investigations know  when there was activity on the account. Almost immediately after, the  suspect called the bank to ask why they'd not cleared a $55,000 check.  Joe told the bank to tell the guy to come in and sign the check to get  the funds. Joe and Lucas were parked outside the bank when the partner  parked right next to them.

Unfortunately, somehow he smelled a rat, jumped back in his car, and  took off, with Joe and Lucas in hot pursuit. Joe was driving and Lucas  was on the phone with both law enforcement and Archer when the suspect  started shooting at them.

Needless to say, the shooting ramped up police interest in a big way.  They'd eventually caught up with the gun-toting rat and arrested him,  but the incident had involved a lot of extra hours of reporting.

Joe hated reports.

In the good news department, the embezzler had been caught and Joe and  Lucas had secured a very nice bonus for Hunt Investigations from the  pleased and relieved client.

But it was nine o'clock that night before Joe got to Kylie's place. He  stood on the porch and once again remembered the other night, how he'd  felt watching Gib come out of her apartment obviously in possession of a  key, and his own over-the-top reaction.

Because he'd wanted it to be him.

Just as he lifted his hand to knock-since he didn't have a damn key-he heard Kylie cry out from inside.

In five seconds he'd broken in and had his gun out. Sweeping his gaze  across the room, he found Kylie on asleep on the couch, clearly in the  throes of a bad dream. He quickly cleared the room and the rest of the  apartment before coming back into the living room to crouch at her side.  "Kylie," he said softly.

"Don't leave me," she whispered, voice thick with tears, and for a  minute Joe's heart stopped because . . . she wanted him to stay?

He dropped to his knees and took one of her flailing hands in his. She  squeezed it tight and pressed it to her heart. "Grandpa, please don't  die."

Well, hell. All those of years living with his dad and then his own  experiences in the military had taught Joe the dangers of waking someone  up without warning. But this was Kylie and she'd been reduced to  heart-wrenching whimpers, so he scooped her up into his arms and sat on  the couch with her in his lap. "I've got you, Kylie." He brushed a kiss  to her damp brow. "You're safe. Wake up now."

At the sound of his voice she instantly came awake. He could tell by the  sudden stillness of her entire body and how she stopped breathing.  Pulling her in closer, he kept his mouth at her temple. "You okay?"

She let out a shuddery sigh and relaxed into him, pressing her face into  the crook of his neck as she nodded. He didn't believe it for a second,  but sometimes one had to fake it to make it, so he let her have that  one. "Bad dream?"         

     



 

Face still buried against him, she nodded again. She had one arm around his neck, the other clutching something.

A photo.

Shit. He pried it from her fingers. It was the penguin, perched on the  edge of a bonfire this time, tipped as if it was about to fall in. He  started to get up, but she tightened her grip and he relaxed back into  the couch, willing to give her whatever time she needed to compose  herself. He held her close with one hand, using the other to pull out  his phone to access the app that would bring up the feed of the security  camera he'd installed outside her door the last time she'd gotten a  delivery.

The camera recorded only when there was motion, so he could zip straight  to any action, as he'd been doing two times a day since he installed  the camera. He ran quickly through, pausing at the first action  sequence-a cat chasing a bird.

And then a shadow arriving on the porch, time-stamped to several hours before.

Male.

Bulky.

He wore a hoodie sweatshirt and kept his face averted as he shoved the  manila envelope into Kylie's mail slot before vanishing into the night.

"I got a new pic," she murmured, face still planted against him.

"I see that," Joe said calmly, but he wasn't actually calm at all. He was furious-for her.

"It upset me," she said.

"Of course it did."

"No," she said, and then paused. "I mean it upset me because it showed the penguin near a fire."

And he got that too. "Because of the warehouse fire."

"Yes. It's the setup. It's a play on how he died."

"But he didn't die in the fire," Joe said. "He died two days later when he succumbed to his injuries in the hospital."

She blinked in surprise. "How do you know that?"

"Because I researched it."

"Wait." She stared at him. "You researched him? Did you research me too?"

"I research every job I take. It's why I'm so good at what I do."

"Right." She nodded, scooting back away from him, making herself  comfortable in a small ball on the far end of her couch. "I'm a job.  Somehow I keep forgetting that."

"Okay, not what I meant."

"You researched me," she whispered to herself.

"Yes." Joe drew a deep breath and held eye contact as he gave her the  rest. "And there's something else. I put a security camera outside your  front door. Motion sensor detection."