Stella’s gaze lingered on his face. “No time to shave?”
“Rough night.” He reached up to feel his jaw. Stubble rasped under his fingers. “I thought you liked the scruff.”
“I do.” The blush on her fair cheeks sent a warm wave of pleasure through him. Why didn’t he dream of her last night? His imagination did a fine job of conjuring the feel of her skin under his hands, the taste of her . . .”
Yeah. Those images would keep the nightmares away. He made a mental note to think of her the next time he closed his eyes. A vision of Stella, naked in his bed, flashed into his mind.
Not now.
He refocused on the conservatively dressed woman next to him, dressed being the key element. Her hair was wound into its usual tight bun, exposing the delicate line of her jaw and the column of her throat. Her cotton blouse was buttoned up far too high. What was that? A purple shadow outlined the left side of her jaw. He reached out and turned her face to catch the light. “Is that a bruise?”
She pulled her face out of his gentle grip. “It’s nothing.”
Anger surged.
“Who put it there?” Mac barely recognized his voice.
“A suspect.”
“When?”
“Last night.” Stella turned the car around and drove away from his cabin. “It’s not a big deal. Gianna called me to say she’d seen a strange man creeping around her NA meetings.”
“So you went and staked it out?” While Mac had been hanging out with the family, she’d been working the case. Alone.
“I took a uniform with me, and we caught him. Getting him into the handcuffs was a challenge.” She frowned.
“Do you think he had something to do with Dena’s disappearance?” Whoever he was, Mac wanted to smash his face.
“No. He’s a suspect in Missy Green’s murder.” She checked her phone. “I’m waiting for Gianna to return my call so I can get her to ID him.”
“Have you found anything to connect the cases?”
“No. Maybe I’m wrong and they’re not related.” She turned the rearview mirror to examine her face.
As much as Mac hated to see that mark on her face, he said, “Gives you street cred.”
She smiled, then winced as if the motion hurt. “Always good.”
“Where are we going?” He gulped coffee.
“The drug treatment center Missy used. The New Life Center for Hope.” She glanced at him. “Like I told you on the phone. You don’t have to come with me. This might not be related to Dena’s case.”
“Then again, maybe it is,” Mac said. “I read the case files. Both women are about the same age. They both have dark hair. Both the murder and the abduction were violent crimes, and they occurred within days of each other.” He paused. “Besides, I trust your instincts even if you don’t.”
Blushing, Stella settled into her seat, her fine-boned hands low on the steering wheel.
“What do you know about the center?”
“It’s run by a Dr. Randolph. He has no pending malpractice suits and no criminal record.” Stella tucked a stray hair back into her bun. “His center is supposed to be the best. People come from quite a distance to get treated there.”
“The Who’s Who of rehab?”
“Something like that.”
“Do you always wear your hair all coiled up like that?” He regretted the question as it left his lips.
“Our chief takes the dress code very seriously.” Stella sighed. “My other option is to buzz it above my ears.”
He pictured the way her hair had looked tousled and damp the night he’d crashed his Jeep. “The bun is awesome.”
“I think so, too.” Her grin eased the pressure in his chest. The more time he spent around Stella, the more interest he had in his hometown. He enjoyed the kids, too, and Hannah and Grant when they weren’t too pushy. Was it possible that the good memories would eventually outweigh the bad?
“I’m taking you with me, but you have to behave.” She shot him a bossy look, which was just plain hot. Stella could push him around anytime. Hell, she could handcuff him and—“I’d like to get on the doctor’s good side, so please don’t body slam anyone,” she said with a direct gaze that made his blood hum.
“Yes, ma’am.” Might be interesting to see those handcuffs on her wrists, too. Padded of course. Mac would never leave a mark on her perfect skin. He stared out the windshield. “I’ve been thinking about Missy’s case. Heroin as a weapon seems odd if she was tortured.”
“Why do you say that?”
“Why inflict pain on someone and then give them a painless death?”