Things began to click into place. No doubt those kinds of tattoos cost a lot more than the one picked from a book. People who paid that kind of cash for a one of a kind wouldn’t be too pleased to see it on some frat boy who got tatted up after a kegger.
“But these custom designs are showing up all over Miami,” he said.
Penny nodded. “Pretty much. I’ve spotted five myself and that’s not including your friend at the pool.”
“Where do you keep the drawings of your designs after you’re done?” Whoever the thief was had to have access to it or be glued to Penny’s side at the studio.
“Sometimes I frame them along with a photo of the client and hang it in the studio.”
There went that theory. Anyone who walked into Daring Ink was on the suspect list. Sawyer rubbed the back of his head like he could force another angle through his thick skull.
“However,” she continued, “most of the time they go into my portfolio.”
Now that narrowed the field.
“Where do you keep it?” he asked.
She took a sip of her beer and then set it down on a coaster on the coffee table before snagging another coaster from the stack and putting it under his beer. “I used to keep it at the studio but now it comes home with me every night since the thefts started.”
Every crime needed three things: means, opportunity and motive. The means and opportunity to do it made sense, but the motive totally eluded him. “Why would someone steal the designs, what’s in it for them?”
The vein in her temple went from double time to triple time. “It’s a way for an apprentice to make a name for themselves before they’re really ready.”
“Have you talked about it to anyone at your studio?”
“No.” She fiddled with the hem of her shirt. “At first I wasn’t sure and then I didn’t want to tip my hand. With something like this, I need to catch whoever it is with my portfolio in their hand.”
“Why wouldn’t they just take a photo and show the customer the artwork on their phone?”
“When it comes to a customized tattoo, the client wants to see it up close and personal,” she said. “They want to see the kind of detail that just doesn’t come through on the phone. That’s what helped me realize I wasn’t just losing my mind when I started to see people with my work inked on them. I used to leave my portfolio in the office overnight and I’d come in and find it put away somewhere I wouldn’t put it. I put two and two together and came up with a thief.”
“It’s a shitty thing for someone to do, but you’ve already gotten paid for the people who commissioned the tattoos, why not just let it go?”
Face blazing red, she bolted out of her seat, her hands curled into tight fists. “Because that is my art out there, the same as if it was a painting that sold for millions in one of the Wynwood Art District art galleries. Plus, if one of my clients ever spotted their custom tattoo on someone else, my reputation as a tattoo artist running a reputable studio would be trashed. This is who I am. The thief has to be stopped.”
Sawyer considered the case as she paced back and forth in front of the coffee table with its stack of black and red stone coasters. He could understand being pissed off that someone had ripped her off, but judging by the tight jerking motion of her normally smooth walk and how her jaw was clenched tight enough to break a tooth, he could tell this was more—it was personal for her in a way that went beyond business or financial considerations.
He may have signed on for this as a way to win a bet, but seeing her like this ate away at his stomach lining. It just wasn’t right. Become a cop may not have been his A plan, but once he’d made the commitment he was all in. Most days that meant running down drug dealers and tracking human traffickers, but today it meant finding a shithead who thought he could steal from Penny with impunity.
Now all he needed was a cover to get him in the tattoo studio long enough that he could take a good look at everyone without raising suspicion that Penny was onto the thief. Going in as a new hire wasn’t going to work. He could barely draw stick people. He watched her pace the length of the coffee table as he rolled the problem around in his head, but it was difficult because seeing her hips sway was getting his other head interested.
That was it. The idea was so stupid it was brilliant. “I go in posing as your new boyfriend, scope the joint out, have a couple of chats, narrow down the suspects and we’ll go from there.”
She laughed—laughed—and collapsed next to him on the couch, wiping amusement from her eyes. “That’s not going to work.”
“Why? You already have a boyfriend?” He disliked that idea more than he had a reason to.
“No.” She shook her head, the last bit of sun coming in through the windows turning her hair fiery. “I don’t ever have boyfriends—not anymore.”
Now that was enough to pique his interest and make him scoot closer on the couch. “Not at all?”
“Nope.” She crossed her arms and lifted a brow in one of the best non-verbal fuck yous he’d gotten in a long while.
Penny was a riddle. She was a badass tattoo artist who insisted on using coasters. She had a condo-wide commitment to red, black and white with everything in its place—except for her bedroom. She had a bod built for long, sweaty nights but didn’t have boyfriends. Finding the tattoo thief might be the objective, but unraveling the mystery that was the woman sitting next to him was far more interesting. He couldn’t help but pull at the loose strings to see what he’d find.
“What does the whole no boyfriend thing mean for your sex life?” he asked.
She rolled her eyes so hard he was surprised they didn’t fall out of her head. “You’re the perfect example of how you don’t have to date to have sex or are you one of those people who thinks only guys go that route?”
He draped his arm over the back of the couch, letting his fingers brush the soft cotton of her T-shirt. It was the barest of touches, more of a graze than a caress, and still electricity sparked in the air between them. “And you don’t think your employees will think I could change your mind?”
There was no doubt in her gaze. Just a challenge and the skinniest sliver of lust. “Not a chance in hell.”
“Really?” He dipped his head lower, pausing just as his lips were a millimeter from hers. “Why don’t you test me out?”
Pulse pounding in his ears as it raced from his brain to all points south, he waited for a second, gambling that he wasn’t imagining the attraction between them. She didn’t move forward to complete the kiss, but she didn’t back away either. He could wait—sit back and let things get awkward fast—but neither of them were getting away that easy. Penny wasn’t a woman to be pushed, but he’d bet she could be persuaded.
He closed the distance between them, tasting her soft, full lips and the lingering flavor of the honey wheat beer she’d been drinking. Teasing and tempting, he trailed his tongue across the seam of her mouth, urging her to open up for him. With a soft sigh, she did.
*****
There was no way in hell kissing Sawyer was a good idea but Penny couldn’t stop herself. Being around him turned her world into a rainforest where peeling off her clothes and running around naked all the time seemed perfectly normal. His lips were firm against hers and his tongue teasing, the combination was lethal. She slid her tongue against his, taking the kiss deeper, as she scooted closer. His hand dropped to her waist and he tugged the hem of her shirt higher.
The cool blast of air against her stomach brought her back from the brink. She flattened her palms against his chest and nudged him back.
“That isn’t going to happen.” She sounded as winded as if she’d just run the Miami marathon in six-inch heels and a g-string bikini. “Look, thanks for the offer, but I think I’ll handle this on my own.”
Getting up from the couch and away from his testosterone Bermuda triangle should have been her next move, but she wasn’t sure her jelly knees would hold her up. So instead she sat as straight as she could and clasped her hands in her lap.
Sawyer wiped the pad of his thumb across the corner of his mouth as he gave her a considering look. It was’t predatory in a creepy-stalker way, but that didn’t make her feel any less like she wasn’t being pursued—and turned on, God help her.
“I’m hooked on this mystery,” he said. “You can’t kick me off the case now.”
She could and she would. She had to. Being around him was as bad of an idea as someone getting a lover’s name tattooed on their forehead.
“Thanks for trying to help, but it’s not—”
“So if a pretend boyfriend is out,” he interrupted, “then you can give me a tattoo.”
Penny blinked as she tried to process his declaration. No one got a permanent tattoo on a whim to help someone who was practically a stranger. That plan made the fake boyfriend scheme look reasonable.
“Think about it,” he continued, his blue eyes gleaming with excitement. “That would give me a believable excuse to be at your studio and get a feel for the who and the what. It would need to be a big one, a custom design. We could work up something and see if the thief takes the bait.”