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making a deal, and when I said he should talk to his lawyer, he said Hawkins couldn’t help him. I guessed his identity, and when I called him by name, he didn’t deny it.”

      “But he didn’t confirm it, either.”

      Her frown deepened. “No.”

      “How did you know where to find him?”

      “He gave me the address and I scribbled it down while I was on the phone with him.” She rose and moved toward the desk, her knee brushing against his thigh. Silk against denim, yet the brief contact sparked like flint on steel.

      She froze, her wary gaze locking with his for just a second. But in that brief moment of connection, he saw it in her eyes: awareness, attraction. Then she turned away, rustled through her briefcase.

      Dylan had to remind himself to breathe, to remember the purpose for his visit. He was here to do his job—it was his only hope of getting justice for Beth.

      She handed him a single page with the hotel insignia at the top. He gave it only a cursory glance.

      “That’s the address he gave me,” she told him.

      “The address the caller gave you,” he amended.

      “That’s what I said.” She picked up her glass again, her fingers trembling slightly. Was she shaken by their brief contact—or was her nervousness a result of the topic of their conversation?

      It didn’t matter—he was here to investigate Merrick, not the A.D.A. The reminder didn’t cool his hormones, but it at least focused his thoughts. “What if I told you that Roger Merrick didn’t make that phone call?”

      “But—but I spoke to him.”

      “Had you ever spoken to him before?”

      Natalie shook her head. “Why would I?”

      He ignored her question to ask another of his own. “How long did it take you to get to Merrick’s apartment after you left here?”

      “I don’t know,” she admitted. “I don’t remember.”

      “Approximately?”

      She shrugged. “Twenty minutes. Maybe half an hour.”

      He’d followed the route earlier that evening. It had taken twenty-two minutes to drive from the hotel parking lot to the front door of Merrick’s apartment building.

      “Did you leave your room as soon as you got off the phone?”

      “No.” She studied the contents of her glass rather than meeting his gaze. “I tried calling you first. And when I didn’t get an answer…”

      She hesitated, and he thought he saw a touch of color rise in her cheeks.

      “When I stopped to think about it, I wasn’t thrilled about the idea of driving across town at that time of night on my own,” she admitted. “It took me a few minutes to talk myself into it.”

      The embarrassment, the hint of vulnerability, made him want to reach out to her, to offer comfort and reassurance. But he wasn’t her friend, he was a cop—and he needed to act like a cop. “A few minutes—five? Ten?”

      “Maybe ten.”

      “Which would put you at his apartment by one o’clock?”

      “I guess so.”

      He nodded. He’d been paged about fifteen minutes later, which corroborated her version of events. Almost.

      He folded his arms over the back of the chair, his eyes locked on her. “I just don’t understand why Merrick would ask you to meet him on the other side of town if he was already here.”

      Natalie frowned. “What do you mean?”

      “We checked the hotel’s phone records,” he told her.

      “And?”

      “The call that came into this room was made from one of the courtesy phones in the lobby.”

      Chapter 4

      Natalie shook her head, refused to believe it.

      “Not only that,” Creighton continued, oblivious to the effect his words had on her. “But preliminary reports from the ME indicate that Merrick was killed sometime between 10:00 and 11:00 p.m. In any event, he was dead before you received that call.”

      “Th-that’s not possible.”

      “Science doesn’t lie,” he said.

      It took a minute for the implications of what he was saying to sink in. She drew in a deep breath, determined not to reveal the hurt. “And if science doesn’t lie, you think I am.”

      “I don’t disregard any possibility.”

      She pushed her hair away from her face and realized her hand was trembling. She curled her fingers into a fist to hide this evidence of weakness. She was not weak. She was upset and tired, and she’d been ambushed in her own hotel room. But the mental reassurance did little to calm her quivering nerves.

      If what he said was true, who had made that phone call? Why? And why did he think she was lying?

      “What possible reason could I have to lie about this?”

      He shrugged. “People lie to the police all the time.”

      “I’m not ‘people,’” she said coolly. “I’m an assistant district attorney. We’re on the same side.”

      “Are we?”

      She felt her heart sink. After his actions in her office the other day, she’d begun to think he might be an ally. Her mistake. Again. “What are you implying, Lieutenant?”

      “I’m not implying anything,” he denied. “I just want to make sure I have all the facts straight in this investigation.”

      “Then why are you badgering me instead of investigating?”

      “Because you’ve somehow ended up in the middle of this damn case.”

      “Not by choice.”

      Creighton was silent for a long moment. “Willingly or not,” he finally conceded, “you’ve been drawn into it. Why?”

      “How should I know? It’s not like I wanted to walk into that apartment and find a dead body.” She shuddered as the image of that brutalized body flashed in her mind again. Far worse than the sight was the smell that continued to haunt her—the sickly sweet scent of violent death and fresh blood.

      “Someone wanted you to,” he said. “That’s the only other reason I can think of for that phone call you received.”

      “Or maybe the ME miscalculated. Maybe it really was Roger Merrick who called, and maybe he really wanted to give me information in exchange for a deal.”

      “Merrick didn’t make that phone call.”

      Natalie stood up, crossed over to the window. It had started to rain, and the heavy drops lashed ferociously against the window, streaking down the cold glass like angry tears. A flash of lightning briefly illuminated the inky sky.

      She hated storms, always had, but she’d learned the only way to overcome her fears was to face them. She continued to stare into the darkness of the night as the low rumble of thunder sounded somewhere in the distance.

      More unnerving even than the threat of the storm were the implications of Creighton’s assertion. She didn’t want to believe him. She didn’t want to consider that anyone other than Merrick had made that phone call, because if she did, she’d have to consider why. And she didn’t like any of the possibilities.

      “I don’t even know anyone in this town,” she said softly. “Why me?”

      “That’s what I’m trying to

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