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Irresistible Force (A K-9 Rescue Novel)(4)

By:D. D. Ayres


Shay glanced at the shiny badge and then up into his face. If she'd been  asked before this moment what her attacker looked like, all she could  have described was a very angry male in camouflage clothing with a  rifle.

Now she needed a whole new vocabulary.

He was young, maybe not even thirty, and tall. And he was gorgeous. He  had that old-fashioned handsomeness with a broad brow and strong jaw,  baby blues, spiky short dark hair, and the kind of mouth that made bad  boys so irresistible. Not that it made any difference. So what if his  muscular shoulders and tapered hips gave him the look of an Abercrombie  & Fitch model? He had attacked her. In her home.

Shay tore her gaze away. Stop staring. Where was her sanity?

She drew herself up and found a safe place halfway between his chin and  his belt buckle to stare at. "Why the hell would you break in here like  that?"

"You're in possession of a canine belonging to Charlotte-Mecklenburg law enforcement."

Shay's gaze jerked up to his face. Even his scowl was, well, damn sexy,  now that she didn't feel her life was in danger. Then understanding  dawned.

She moved quickly over to stand by her pet. "I don't know what you're talking about. This is my dog, Prince."

"The hell he is! That's my dog, Bogart."

Both turned to gaze at the dog who had been silently watching them. The  K-9 barked twice, thumping his tale in good spirits, but didn't move an  inch.

They seemed to be at an impasse.

Which was just as well, because the siren wail of a law enforcement vehicle closing in fast was filling the morning with sound.

A minute later a sheriff's vehicle rolled to a stop in her yard.





CHAPTER THREE

"Hello, Shay." Chief Deputy Sheriff Elijah Ward stood wide-legged on the  porch of Shay's home, surveying her through the mirrored lenses of his  shades. "You make a 911 call?"

"Yes!" The deputy was one of the local enforcement officers she'd known  since she was a teen. He was a big man, twenty years her senior, with a  polished-pecan complexion sprinkled with chocolate freckles across his  broad nose and cheeks. "I'm glad you got here so fast."

"I was just round the bend in the lake, checking on Malcolm's house. Everything okay?"                       
       
           



       

"No." Shay pushed her door wide and pointed inside to the man standing  in shadow several feet behind her. "This man just forced his way into my  house. I want you to arrest him."

The deputy whipped off his shades with a crooked finger as he entered  the room. The stranger in question stood at ease but slowly lifted both  hands as the lawman approached. "Ms. Appleton says you forced your way  in here against her will." He squinted at the man dressed as a hunter.  "What do you have to say about that?"

"It's a misunderstanding, Deputy." James turned his right hand palm out  so that his badge was in view. "I'm on a case. My name's James Cannon,  Charlotte-Mecklenburg police."

"You got a driver's license, son?"

James duly produced it.

The deputy examined the badge and license closely then nodded in seeming  satisfaction. "What brings a Charlotte officer over to this part of the  state?"

"The theft of a K-9." James lowered his hands as relief flooded through  him. The deputy could have made things hard for him if he had wanted to.  "This young woman is in possession of a canine in service with my  police department. I came to arrest her for dog-napping."

Shay took a step toward James. "You lying son of a-"

The deputy cut her off with a raised hand. "Dog-napping." He continued to stare at James. "Is that a real crime?"

"Yes, sir." James reined in his annoyance. There were still people even  in law enforcement who saw K-9s as little more than tools instead of  valued partners. "My canine partner was kidnapped from a vehicle in  Charlotte a month ago. I doubt you got a bulletin about it all the way  up here. But I've been following leads for weeks. It led me here. I  should probably have come to the sheriff's office first, but when I saw  Bogart in this yard last night-" He noted Shay's jerk of surprise at his  mention of the night before, and filed that reaction away for later.  "You could say I lost perspective."

"Over your pet." The deputy's tone was still skeptical.

"Bogart's a highly trained and crucial member of the K-9 service."

The deputy turned his gaze on the big-eared dog who sat happily panting  away at Shay's side. "What have you got to say about this, Ms.  Appleton?"

"This is my dog. I adopted him from animal control last month."

"The hell you did."

Shay took an instinctive step back at James's hard tone. His expression  was neutral but the tension in his body could not be interpreted as  anything other than coiled strength under stress.

Deputy Wood moved his considerable bulk between James and Shay. "Easy, Officer. Go on, Shay. Tell the man your story."

Shay shot James a rude look. "I volunteer at one of the animal shelters  in Raleigh. I was at the desk when a woman came in with Prince." She  reached out to rest her hand territorially on her dog's head.

Her accuser shifted his weight, as if uncomfortable. "What name did she give?"

"She didn't."

"Keep talking."

Shay sucked in a breath of annoyance. She'd never done well with  authority. His every word sounded like an interrogation. It was  reminiscent of Eric in a bad mood. It worked her temper. "The woman said  her dog had mauled a child's pet. That's why she had a muzzle on him.  She said he was vicious and uncontrollable, and needed to be put down  before he could hurt someone else."

James swiped a hand over his mouth to block the vulgarity he couldn't  quite squelch as he gazed down at Bogart. The eager interest in his  partner's black eyes and happy thump of his tail highlighted the  absurdity of the accusation. Bogart was too well trained to attack  without cause. Yet his partner was capable of becoming a very dangerous  adversary if commanded to be so. Had Bogart gotten frightened and  attacked a child's pet? He doubted that. Yet his heart tripled its beat.  Everything he learned from now on could be crucial to protecting his  partner's future.

When James's gaze rose to meet Shay's again, it was the opaque, official  stare of a lawman on duty. "She told you specifically to put him down?"

She nodded.

"Shit!"

Shay decided she couldn't have worded her own response to the idea any better.

"Continue."

"I told her our shelter doesn't destroy an animal unless it's so sick or  injured that a vet recommends it. Or we have a formal complaint and  court order. That's when she got all huffy and said she didn't have time  for all that. If we wouldn't destroy him, then she'd find a place that  would."                       
       
           



       

"Why didn't you ask for verification of her accusation?"

Shay folded her arms protectively across her chest. "We aren't the  animal police. When a person walks in the door with a pet, shelters  don't ask them to prove ownership. We allow a person to surrender their  pet without question. It's better than trying to catch animals after  they've been abandoned."

"Go on."

Shay glanced away, flushing with annoyance. Definitely, this guy was a cop.

"She was leaving when I decided something wasn't right. Prince wasn't  showing any signs of aggression or anxiety. He even ignored a kitten  that got loose from its owner and wandered over to brush up against him  before being retrieved. So I stopped her and said that I'd fudge a few  things, and personally take care of her dog."

"You let her think you'd destroy him?"

Shay smirked at her interrogator. "I let her think what she wanted to  think so she'd leave him with me. She actually gave me a ten-dollar  tip."

"That was fast thinking, Shay." The deputy looked at James for confirmation.

James nodded. "No argument with you there."

Shay let the deputy's praise wash over her as she knelt down and hugged Prince's neck.

The action exposed a collar James had not seen before. It was royal blue  with rhinestones and silver studs. He winced at seeing his partner  decorated like some kind of show dog. Yet he couldn't fault the  instincts of the woman before him for recognizing what a great dog  Bogart was.

As for Bogart's would-be executioner, an ugly suspicion had begun to  creep into his mind. "Describe the woman who brought him in."

Shay was really beginning to hate the way this man talked in commands.  "Tall. Lots of blond hair and makeup. With big boobs. Your type, right?"

Shay was surprised to see her interrogator blush. Then she realized it  wasn't embarrassment but the seething complexion of a man about to blow  his top.