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the damned police. Call them now,” she ordered, her voice vibrating with fury. “They’ll figure out what happened. They’ll find Rodriguez.”

      “You’re sure?”

      She slapped her cell phone against his chest.

      Ignoring it, he gave her one last, long look, then stepped over to grab the receiver of an ancient rotary dial phone and made the call.

      He spoke Spanish in the local dialect, his words flowing too fast for her to make out more than every third. Her eyes widened when she realized he was actually talking to the chief of police.

      “. Rodriguez,” he confirmed. “Casa de Rico.”

      Lila held her breath, waiting for the rest of the conversation, but the only thing she heard from then on was grunts on her pseudo rescuer’s part until he said goodbye.

      “They’ll meet us there.”

      “Someone else probably called it in by now,” she mused, her fingers clenching and unclenching as she thought it through. “There’s no way nobody noticed the chef on duty missing and didn’t go looking for him.”

      “No calls from that location or in the vicinity.”

      “How do you know?”

      “I asked.”

      Oh.

      “Let’s go then,” she said, heading for the door. “We want to be there when they get there.”

      “Give me a minute.”

      A part of her wanted to unleash that fury again, to yell and demand and see him respond. But he was already doing what she wanted, she realized. So letting loose her anger wouldn’t be a show of power. It’d just be showing her bitch face.

      So Lila stayed silent while he stepped out of the room.

      She glanced out the window, noting that the baby must have fallen asleep because the swaying woman was indoors now. The forest was a tangle of shadows in the dark, but she could still make out the path to the beach. She squinted, wondering if she could see the ocean from here. Maybe in the daytime.

      But she could see well enough that she’d notice anyone coming their way. Cops. Killers. She stared until her eyes watered, but nothing moved.

      She was so focused on watching out the window that she almost screamed at the sound behind her.

      It was the beach bum, still shirtless but wearing jeans and heavy black boots instead of cutoffs and bare feet. He strode over to a drawer and pulled out a gun. A black, lethal looking weapon that had her breath knotted in her throat so tight she could barely breathe. He pulled out the magazine, checked it, then shoved it back in place before tucking the weapon into the back waistband of his jeans. He snagged a T-shirt off a pile on the chair. Pulling it over his head, he strode to the door and threw it open.

      Without a word about the gun.

      Why that should make her nervous after everything else that’d happened, she couldn’t say.

      “I’ll walk you back to your hotel.”

      “I’m going to the restaurant,” she snapped. “You remember, the scene of the crime.”

      “Of course you are.” He gestured toward the open door. “After you.”

      “Do you have to be such a jerk?” she asked as they headed through the tree-covered path.

      “Do you have to be such a drama queen?”

      “When I see a man murdered right in front of me, yes. I think I’m entitled to wear the drama crown.”

      His lips twitched.

      “Yeah, I suppose you are. If you did.”

      It took her a couple of seconds to puzzle that out.

      “You honestly don’t believe me? Why would I lie? What purpose is there in making something like that up?”

      It wasn’t until he’d joined her on the path, his steps just a little hesitant, his gait just a little off, that Lila realized she’d thrown herself into his arms, gone with him into a strange place, leaned on him for emotional support and was dragging him back to a murder scene.

      And she didn’t even know his name.

      * * *

      “Who are you?”

      What difference did it make? When Travis shot the blonde a questioning look, she amended, “I mean, what’s your name?”

      “Hawkins.”

      “That’s it? Just Hawkins?”

      He didn’t figure they were going to be exchanging mail. Or, despite the appeal of her pretty little body and sea witch eyes, good-mornings over sex-tangled sheets. So, yeah, he shrugged. That was it.

      “I’m Lila.”

      “Okay.”

      She stared. Blinked. And stared again.

      “Seriously?” she muttered under her breath. “Just, okay? Could you be any ruder?”

      “I’m sure I can if I put a little effort into it.”

      He didn’t know if that puff of sound she made was a laugh, but it made him grin.

      “Just walk me back to the restaurant and help interpret with the police,” she told him. “Then I promise, I’ll leave you alone with your beer and your beach.”

      “Anything you say. Lila.” He put a little extra agreeableness into his tone. The kind he used with irritating officers who were superior in rank only.

      “Just for that, I want an apology before you drop your butt back in that hammock.”

      Travis shot her an impressed glance. The woman must be better versed in Smart-Ass than the last admiral he’d answered to.

      “Or?”

      She stopped on the path that led from the beach to the restaurant and gave him a long study. Then her smile flashed, sassy and challenging.

      “Or I’ll keep bugging you until you do.”

      Damned effective threat, he silently acknowledged as she continued with surer steps toward the boardwalk, then up toward the side door of the bar.

      Smarter than the front entrance, he supposed. The fewer people who saw her, the less flak she’d get later. He knew enough about the local policía to know they weren’t going to be too thrilled at being hauled out of their comfy chairs on a bogus call.

      “Get your apology ready,” she said, giving him a snotty look over her shoulder as she grabbed the doorknob. Travis didn’t bother to tell her to forget about it. The doors around here automatically locked on both sides.

      She gave it a twist and tugged it open just an inch.

      “Quiet,” she whispered. “They might still be in there.”

      Huh. Travis frowned at the door, then touched the Glock nestled at the small of his back. He silently followed her inside, first looking toward the door to the kitchen, then toward the office.

      “The door wasn’t closed before. And the body? It was lying there in the doorway. Where is it?” she asked, her words so quiet they barely floated on the air. Her gaze slid to his just long enough for him to see the sick dance of nerves in her eyes, then with a sharp breath, she started for the office.

      He liked the way she didn’t back down, despite her fear. But Travis still laid his hand on her arm, halting her steps. He drew in a long breath through his nose, noting the faint scent of solvent.

      “Wait.”

      She stopped and bit her lip, looking at the door, then back at him, then at the door again.

      Nobody

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