âSorry,â he said. âI canât seem to help looking at you. I find youâ¦interesting.â
She looked wary, but her lips twitched. âInteresting, huh? Thatâs one of those sneaky, double-edged words. Interesting how? Interesting like flesh-eating bacteria? Interesting like something out of The X-Files ?â
âLet me pick another word,â he said smoothly. âFascinating.â
She snorted. âOh, get out of town. Fascinating, my butt.â
âThat, too,â he said, before he could stop himself.
She muffled a crack of laughter behind her hands. âLook whoâs trying to be cute. Hang on to your day job, McCloud. You werenât cut out to be a comedian.â
He was pleased to have made her laugh, even if it took making an ass of himself. âPlease call me Davy.â
âDavy.â She said the word slowly, like she was tasting it.
He reached across the table and took her cool, slender hand in his. âYou want to talk, Margot? I know how to keep my mouth shut.â
She hesitated, mouth trembling, and slowly pulled her hand away. âNo. Not now. Itâs a long story, and Iâm late for work.â Her voice turned brisk. âI dragged you out of bed at an ungodly hourââ
âI get up early anyhow,â he assured her.
âI really appreciate the moral support, but if youâve got things to do, you donât have to hang around here. Iâm past the worst of it. Now I just have to get on with my day somehow.â
He couldâve howled with frustration. Sheâd been so close to talking. âWe could go someplace and get some breakfast,â he said.
She flinched at the mention of food. âGod, no. Iâve got to clean that blood up somehow, and get Mikey to the kennel, and see if I can get to work in time to salvage my job, so maybe you should justââ
âI know a good cleaning service that can take care of your porch,â he offered. âAnd Iâve got a friend at an independent crime lab. Iâll take a sample of that blood to be analyzed. You donât know who or what itâs from. Donât handle it yourself. Let professionals deal with it.â
She looked doubtful. âI donât think I should have to handle it either, but I canât afford the luxury ofââ
âTheyâre my friends,â he insisted. âTheyâll cut me a deal.â
Her eyes were full of wary confusion. âDonât, Davy,â she said softly. âItâs sweet of you, butâ¦just let it be. Iâll take care of it when I get back.â She stopped whatever else she was going to say, shook her head and scurried into her bedroom.
He headed out to the porch and stared at the dark, glistening pool. He wasnât great with blood. He could handle it if forced to, but it made him queasy and depressed, stirring memories he really didnât want to unearth. He forced himself to concentrate as he scraped a sticky flake of the blood into a plastic bag with the point of his knife.
When he came back into the kitchen, she was dressed in a dowdy blue waitressing uniform, somehow managing to look sharp and sexy in it. Her hair was twisted up into a spiky fountain of dull brown wisps.
She pulled a set of purple spandex workout gear off the drying rack in the kitchen, shoved them into her gym bag and pulled open the door. She jerked her chin for him to precede her out.
âWill you have dinner with me tonight?â he asked, as she followed him out. âWe can do Thai, or sushi. Youâll be hungry by then for sure.â
A reluctant smile curved her soft mouth. âYouâre slick, McCloud.â
âCall meââ
âYeah, OK. Davy. But tonightâs not good. Iâve got a lot to deal with. As you well know.â She locked the door and marched down the steps, head high, back straight. Her moment of weakness was definitively over.
He tried
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