Dark Blue (South Island PD Book 1) (29 page)

“No.”

She stood and pressed her soft, silky lips against his jaw. Despite all odds, her breath smelled sweet when it hit his cheek.

Something inside his chest tightened as he breathed in her breath and the fading scent of her shampoo. Things had been going so damn perfectly before this. Why did shit have to hit the fan now, of all times?

His regret was almost as overwhelming as his desire for her.

Twenty-four hours ago, he’d been contemplating how soon she might be ready to hear that he loved her. Now he was being forced to worry about whether he’d be able to keep down his lunch and how soon he’d be able to walk again.

It was bitterly sobering, and when she walked out, he felt as if something precious had been ripped right out of his hands.

* * * * *

 

Something broke inside Belle during the drive from the hospital to her apartment. Emotional walls came crumbling down, exposing raw nerves. In the privacy of her car, she cried.

The tears that rolled down her cheeks were tears adrenaline had kept at bay the night before. They’d built up, compounding interest throughout the rough night and morning.

At least she’d managed to hold it together in front of Jackson. The last thing he needed was hysterics on top of everything else. She needed to get it all out of her system now, before she returned to the hospital.

Her eyes were still wet by the time she reached her apartment complex’s parking lot, but no one was out to see and there were only a few vehicles in the lot. Most of her neighbors were at work, just as she would’ve been if she hadn’t called in that morning.

She didn’t bother to wipe her eyes dry before exiting her car and digging her keys out of her purse. Consequently, her vision was blurry, and when she first stepped inside, she didn’t notice anything strange.

That changed after she went to the kitchen sink for a glass of water. She’d just pressed the glass to her lips when an unfamiliar object in the center of the table caught her eye.

CHAPTER 29

 

 

Belle liked to keep her table uncluttered. Normally, it bore nothing but a few blue and yellow woven placemats and a couple of pelican-shaped salt and pepper shakers she’d bought on a whim. But there was a bouquet in the center of the table, beside the shakers. Wrapped in cellophane and green tissue paper, it was a small riot of black-eyed-susans and little white wild flowers she couldn’t identify.

It looked hand-picked.

She tensed, gripping her water glass tightly enough that her fingers ached. What the hell?

There was no way they were from Jackson – they hadn’t been there when she’d left for the hospital the night before. The only person who had a key to her apartment, besides herself and her landlord, was Mariah.

If Mariah had brought the flowers by, why had she left them lying on the table instead of putting them in a vase with water?

The petals were starting to droop.

She grabbed her purse, dug out her phone and texted Mariah.

Did you stop by my place?

It took a few moments to get a reply – Mariah had probably been asleep – and each passing second wound her nerves a little tighter, putting her on edge.

No. I went straight home and to bed this morning. Why?

There are flowers in my kitchen. No idea where they came from.

Mariah’s next reply was much faster.
Get out and call 911.

Before Belle could reply, another text came on the heels of the last.
Now!

She wanted to think that Mariah was being melodramatic, but her heart was beating so hard she could feel her pulse in her fingertips. Putting down her glass, she grabbed her purse and stepped out onto the stoop, pulling the front door shut.

How had anyone gotten into her house? She’d locked the door – she remembered unlocking both the knob and the deadbolt just minutes ago.

Instead of dialing 911, she brought up Elijah’s number in her call log.

“Is everything all right?” He answered after the first ring.

“Jackson’s okay.” The shock of discovering that someone had been in her home had dried her tears. “I’m calling about something else – I need your advice. I came home to take a shower, and I think someone’s been in my apartment.”

“Are you inside?”

“No, I’m in the parking lot.”

“Wait in your car. I’ll be there in fifteen minutes.”

He didn’t ask how she knew. She thought he’d ended the call, but then his voice rang in her ear again. “What’s your address?”

She told him, and as soon as she hung up, her phone went off.

It was a text from Mariah.

Are you okay? Are you out of the apartment? Did you call the police?

Yes, yes and yes.

Technically, she
had
called the police. The fact that it was just one off duty officer wasn’t something Mariah needed to know at the moment.

If Mariah didn’t think Belle was being cautious enough, she’d probably dial 911 herself and have dispatch send an officer her way.

Good. Keep me updated, and feel free to come here if you need to.

She thanked Mariah, her clammy fingertips leaving smudges on her phone screen. Then she climbed into her car, turned the key in the ignition and let the AC run on full blast.

Elijah got there in less than fifteen minutes. By then, she was sweating despite the climate control.

Maybe it was because of her overactive heart. It hadn’t slowed since Elijah had called the night before to tell her Jackson had been shot. She’d already been torn over leaving him alone while she grabbed a shower, and now this.

It was all too much at once – and too strange.

Finding the flowers reminded her of finding the sex toy in the office at work, although this was a much less lewd surprise. The green dildo had been left in the center of a table too… Maybe it was related to this, somehow.

She really fucking hoped not, though. Because if the same person had been in the office and her home, she was dealing with some kind of perv who apparently didn’t worry about locks like a regular human being.

It was possible that someone had broken in through a window – she hadn’t checked her bedroom. That was the first thing she told Elijah when she climbed out of her car to greet him.

He stood on the asphalt in jeans and a t-shirt, his light brown skin glowing in the sun and his eyes dark with what she assumed was concern.

Whether it had anything to do with her situation or was solely for Jackson, she had no idea.

“So you’re absolutely sure you locked up before you left last night?” he asked after she explained how she’d come home and found the flowers.

She nodded.

“What about your windows?”

“I never open them during summer, since I always have the AC running. I’m ninety-nine percent sure they were locked.”

“Okay. I’m going to go inside and check it out. I want you to wait out here, just in case someone is still in there.”

“Thank you. I’m sorry about calling you out here like this. I know you’re not on duty, but I didn’t want to call 911.”

“It’s not a problem – I’m happy to help out. And Jackson would kick my ass if I didn’t.” He flashed her a wry smile. “You might as well get back in your car and turn on the AC.”

She heeded his suggestion – it was hot enough that she could see heat rising off the asphalt in waves.

She really did feel bad for interrupting his day off, but her relief overrode her guilt. She’d make it up to him some other time, though she wasn’t sure how. She’d worry about that later.

He was only inside her apartment for a few minutes. When he returned to the parking lot, she shut her car off and climbed back out.

“There’s no one inside,” he said, “and nothing looked off to me, although you’re the only one who can say whether anything’s been messed with or stolen. I saw the flowers on the table, like you said. Wanna come in and see if everything looks okay?”

“Yes.”

The skin on the back of her neck prickled as she reentered her apartment, paying special attention to details. In the kitchen, the only sign that anyone had been there was the bouquet. She even looked inside the fridge and cupboards – nothing was amiss.

“Jackson told me that someone got into your office at work last month and left a surprise there for you to find.”

“Not my office specifically – the main area. But yeah, I thought of that too after I found the flowers. Do you think it could be connected?”

“Don’t know. The possibility is worth keeping in mind, though.”

He shadowed her as she moved into the living room, then the bathroom and finally her bedroom.

She was relieved to find that everything looked normal. There was no cryptic message on the walls, no surprise in her bed – or whatever she would’ve found if she’d been the victim in one of those gruesome crime documentaries Mariah loved.

After a split second, her relief began to turn to embarrassment. Maybe she should’ve called the department’s non-emergency number and had them send out an officer who was actually on the clock.

“I guess the flowers are it,” she said. “Everything looks fine to me.”

She gave her closet another once-over, running her fingers through sleeves, skirts and pant legs. It was all exactly as she’d left it the night before.

“Good,” Elijah said.

“Sorry I made you come out here. I should’ve just called the department. I was creeped out when I realized someone had been in here.”

“You should be. No more apologizing – someone’s been in here, and that’s a real concern. You need to get in touch with your landlord and have your locks changed. Until then, you shouldn’t be alone here.”

“I was planning on going back to the hospital anyway – I only came here to shower.”

“I can hang out in your living room while you do that, if you want.”

“That’s really kind, but you don’t have to do that. I can go to a friend’s house.”

He shrugged. “It’s up to you, but it wouldn’t take long and I’m already here. I know you’re tired.”

He was right. Sometime during the past half hour, her exhaustion had truly settled into her bones. She didn’t feel like driving to Mariah’s.

“Thanks so much. I’ll only be ten minutes.” She called her landlord and left a message before stepping into the shower.

She made good on her promise not to take long. After pulling on fresh jeans and a tank top, she ran a comb through her hair, added a little anti-humidity product and left it down to dry naturally.

When she stepped out into the main part of the house, the air was filled with the scent of brewing coffee and she had a voicemail from her landlord.

“Hope you don’t mind,” Elijah said, “but I figured you could use some coffee. I know I could.”

“Mind? Are you crazy? It’s like you’re telepathic.”

He shrugged. “Without coffee, the police department would fall apart within a week. It’d be pure anarchy on the island.”

“Funny – sometimes it feels the same way at the college, and we don’t even have to work nightshifts. I don’t know how you guys pull it off.”

She brought up her voicemail inbox and listened to her landlord’s message.

“Apparently my landlord is on the way over here already.”

“That’s cool. I’ll hang around until then.”

She pulled two mugs out of a cupboard. “Thanks again.”

“No big deal. You’re important to Jackson, so you’re important to me. Least I can do is make sure you’re safe while he’s in the hospital.”

“You two must be good friends.”

He nodded. “We live together and we work together – if you can stand the sight of someone after several years of that, you’ve got a friend for life.”

She took a first sip of her coffee. It was practically scalding, but it was good.

It occurred to her, then, how well Elijah and Jackson must know each other.

“What do you think Jackson will do if he can’t go back to work as a police officer?” she asked.

“You worried about that?”

“Yeah.” She gripped her cup, and it all but burnt her hands. “I know the job means a lot to him, and I can’t see him handling that well. But you know him better than I do.”

He met her gaze. “You know him better than you think. I don’t think it’d go over well, either. But I don’t think that’s going to happen.”

“No?”

He shook his head. “He’s resilient. He got hurt, but people have recovered from worse. It might take him a while, but if anyone has the will it takes to make it through recovery and rehabilitation, it’s him.”

Relief crept into Belle’s veins, a sweet anesthetic. Elijah knew Jackson better than anybody, and he was a police officer too. His opinion went a long way.

“I hope you’re right.”

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