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it into a definitely.

      “You could come early and go to church with us.”

      Now she wanted church too. Years since he’d done that. Which was a shame. He used to enjoy church, but now it gave him too much time to reflect on things he shouldn’t reflect on. “Don’t push it. Saturday for dinner. I’ll be here. I’ll see what Camille is doing. Don’t worry. I’ll channel the guilt from you.”

      She waved her hands. “Oh, with the sass.”

      He kissed her again. “I love you. Good night.”

      “I love you, too. Drive carefully. No speeding.”

      “Yes, ma’am.”

      He turned to Jenna. “All set?”

      Please let her be all set.

      She nodded. “You bet.”

      He shook hands with the sheriff. “Thank you. I’ll call you with any updates.”

      “I’d appreciate that.”

      On the way to his SUV, he grabbed the file box off the back of the sheriff’s cruiser, the weight of it, as always, easy to handle. Most of what was in that file he’d probably seen already. Except for the photos. Being a marshal, he’d learned to take emotion out of a case. Even when it came to his mother. He could read the forensics reports, investigator notes and the autopsy report. All of it, he could handle. Even some of the crime scene photos showing the exterior of the house or certain pieces of evidence were tolerable. But not the ones of his mom’s body. Those were a different damned beast, and he couldn’t find a compartment big enough to control the massive anger those pictures would unleash.

      Balancing the box against the SUV, he opened the back door, shoved the box on the seat and walked around to get Jenna’s door. By the time he’d gotten there, she already had her hand on the handle.

      “I’ve got it,” he said.

      “Again with this?”

      When he’d picked her up at her apartment, she’d teased him about the gesture. What she didn’t know was his aunt would skin him if he abandoned his manners. Plus, he liked doing it. “Yeah. Again with this. Get used to it and don’t argue.”

      He held open the door and waved her into the car. To that, she tilted her chin up and saluted. “Yes, sir.”

      And the look on her face, so serious with her cheeks sucked in and her gaze straight ahead, made him laugh. Really laugh.

      In front of his mother’s house no less. Helluva thing.

      She slid into the car and the interior light illuminated her face and the grin that—wait for it—would cause the punch to his chest. Jenna Hayward was beautiful, but she wasn’t one of those everyday beautiful women you could find anywhere you looked. On sight, she took a man’s legs out from under him. Bam!

      He leaned in to get a whiff of her perfume, something floral but light. Not allergy inducing. Thank you. Once again, his eyes went to that extra undone button on her blouse and the lush skin under it. He caught a glimpse of lace and swore under his breath. “Okay, Miss Illinois, cut the wisecracks.”

      She straightened up. “Miss Illinois?”

      “You think I’m going to let you anywhere near my mother’s case without checking you out?”

      * * *

      HE KNEW. Not that it was some big secret, but she didn’t necessarily flaunt her beauty queen background. In her line of work, it didn’t gain her anything. All she knew was that at the age of twenty-one, after years of working the pageant circuit, years of hearing her mother coo over how beautiful her daughter was, and the resulting pressure of it all, she’d had enough. Enough of the dieting, enough of having to look a certain way at all times, enough of the show. She simply wanted to be Jenna. A pretty girl who liked to eat cake and pester her detective father with questions about cases.

      Playing along, she scissored Brent’s silky tie between two fingers. Nice tie. Nice man. Nice everything. And she so adored the way he interacted with his family. Teasing, but firm and loving when they tried to give him any nonsense.

      “My pageant days aren’t classified information. All you have to do is check Google. And, by the way, you failed. I didn’t win. I was the runner-up.”

      His lips lifted slightly as he watched her play with his tie. “I didn’t fail. I knew that, but decided it wasn’t worth mentioning. Those judges were either blind or stupid. I’m guessing beauty contest judges need eyesight, so that leaves stupid.”

      Did that just send a hot flash raging? This was their problem. That connection, that heat she couldn’t ignore. “Marshal Thompson, are you flirting with me?”

      “Nope. Calling it like I see it.”

      She flicked away the tie. “I was fifteen pounds lighter then.”

      Where did that come from? Sure, her brothers liked to taunt her about packing on a few pounds, but her pageant weight was impossible to maintain. And Jenna had a thing for food. In that she liked it.

      “Yet another tragedy,” Brent said.

      “What?”

      “That you were fifteen pounds lighter.”

      In the lit interior of the car, she studied his face. Looking for the tell that he was charming her into possibly removing her clothes. Which, if he kept talking like that, just might happen. Without a doubt, every one of her brain cells must have evaporated. Only explanation for this attack of flightiness.

      “You don’t like skinny women?”

      “Brent?” his aunt called from the front of the house. “Everything okay?”

      He backed away and straightened. “We’re good! Seat belt jammed.”

      He shut the door, came around the driver’s side, hopped in and fired the engine. “If we stay here, she’ll be all over us.”

      Jenna waited. Would he answer her about the skinny women thing? Part of her wanted to know. The other part wanted to run. Although the extra fifteen pounds had only brought her to a size eight, it still bothered her. Made her wonder what men saw when they looked at the ex-beauty queen whose body had gone fluffy.

      At the road, Brent hit the gas and the car tore through the blackness of the country road, the only sound being the radio on low volume. Tim McGraw maybe, but Jenna couldn’t tell. She was more of a pop music girl.

      “No,” Brent said.

      “No what?”

      “I don’t like skinny women. And it’s a damned shame you think you looked better fifteen pounds lighter because, honey, you’re wrong.”

      Oh, she might like where this conversation was heading. “I don’t think I looked better.”

      “Liar.”

      “Hey!”

      “Just admit it and be done with it. I saw your picture—nice gown by the way—and I can promise you, from a completely male perspective, you looked like a bean pole back then. A guy my size would break that girl in half.”

      “Did you somehow get drunk when you were outside with your family?”

      He smiled at that and she liked the sight of it.

      “Calling it like I see it,” he said again.

      “Well, thank you, I suppose. For the compliment.”

      “You’re welcome.”

      “It never hurts to hear someone appreciates your looks.”

      For a quick second, he turned and the dashboard glow lit his face as he helped himself to a look at her body. “I definitely appreciate your looks. I’d imagine most men do. I think you know that.”

      The

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