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Authors: Linda Lael Miller

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In other words, Melissa thought,
Get the hell out of my office.
She was inclined to agree.

Steven smiled, nodded politely and headed for the door.

Melissa would have waited until she was sure he was gone to duck out, but the fact was, she wasn’t any more eager to deal with Tom than with Steven at the moment.

Steven was waiting in the hall. Melissa ignored him, walking on by. He stopped her by reaching out and taking a light but firm hold on her elbow.

Her temper flared. “I can’t believe you would actually consider representing that scumbag!” she whispered, her fury at such a fever pitch that the words just formed themselves, seemingly independent of her brain, and came tumbling out of her mouth. “Pete Ferguson would step off the sidewalk and into the street before he’d
squash a bug
under his shoe, let alone manhandle anybody. And as for Carter—”

“Whoa,” Steven said. “Everybody has a right to
counsel. Or were you out sick when they covered the fundamentals the first week of law school?”

Melissa jerked her elbow free, in no mood to be reasoned with. “Yes,” she agreed tartly, “everybody
does
have the right to counsel. But before you take on any more clients, you might want to take the trouble to find out what kind of people they are!”

“It doesn’t matter what kind of people they are,” Steven replied moderately. “The law is the law.”

She took a step back. “Pete Ferguson’s father was the last sheriff,” she said. “Before that, it was his grandfather, and before
that,
his
great
-grandfather. The Fergusons are some of the finest people in this community—”

Steven leaned in, so his nose was nearly touching hers. “
Beside the point,
counselor,” he said. “If your friend, Deputy Ferguson, gave Nathan Carter a working over, I’ll nail him for it.”

For a long moment, they just glared at each other.

Then Steven turned and walked away.

Melissa didn’t move until he’d disappeared through the outside doorway. It took her that long to calm down enough to set foot inside her office.

She was immediately met with a whole new Andrea. Gone were the jeans, the hair spikes, the too-tight T-shirts, the heavy eye shadow and the white lipstick. She was wearing a nice skirt, a white blouse and modest makeup.

Melissa couldn’t help staring. “What happened to you?” she asked.

The girl straightened her spine and lifted her chin. The expression in her eyes was completely earnest, and she held Melissa’s direct gaze without looking away. “I’m turning over a new leaf, that’s all,” she replied,
with a little sniff. “Byron says it’s important to look professional.”

Melissa barely kept herself from smiling at that one. “Oh?”

Andrea nodded and then pushed back her chair and stood. “I even made coffee. It should be ready by now.”

Melissa raised both her hands, palms out. “Sit down, Andrea,” she said. “I was only teasing before. Making coffee really
isn’t
in your job description.”

“Can’t a person do something nice for somebody?” Andrea asked. Her lower lip was wobbling now, and her eyes misted over.

“Sit down,” Melissa repeated, but gently.

Andrea sagged into her chair.

“What’s this all about? This big transformation, I mean?”

“I almost ran over you yesterday morning,” Andrea burst out, and a tear slid down her cheek. “I—I guess I’m just trying to—well—
make up
for what could have happened to you, at least partly, if—if—”

Melissa felt a burning sensation behind her own eyes now. “You’ve apologized,” she reminded her assistant. “You’ve promised to be more careful in the future. You don’t need to do anything more, Andrea.”

Andrea absorbed that in silence, looking straight ahead. Her hands rested on the surface of her desk, fingers tightly interlaced.

Melissa waited a few moments, then asked, “Were there any messages?”

“Mrs. Brady called,” Andrea said, turning her head. “So did Mrs. Hillingsley. They agree on
one
thing,
anyway, that the Parade Committee meeting didn’t go very well.”

Meeting? It was a beat before Melissa recalled the great toilet-paper debate, and how she’d suggested that the committee gather right away to settle it.

“Oh,” she said.

“Half of them want to let Mrs. Hillingsley decorate the Chamber of Commerce float any way she pleases,” Andrea went on, a smile creeping over her mouth as she spoke, no longer gazing off into the beyond, “and the other half say there’ll be hell to pay if she embarrasses the whole town of Stone Creek by decking the thing with miles of toilet paper.”

Melissa muttered under her breath. If troublemakers like Nathan Carter didn’t give her a migraine, the Parade Committee would. “Did anyone else call?”

“Mr. Blake left a voice mail,” Andrea said. “It was so long that I thought it’d be better if you just listened to it yourself, instead of me trying to write it all down. You know how he rambles on.”

Oh, indeed she did.

“More space aliens landing in his cornfield and scaring his sheep?” Melissa asked.

Andrea nodded, then gave a little giggle. “Sorry,” she said, after a moment, clearly insincere.

Melissa heaved out a sigh. “Okay,” she said. “That’s everything, then?”

“That’s everything,” Andrea said.

Melissa practically dove into her office.

Concentrating on her work proved to be a challenge for the rest of the morning—she kept thinking about Steven, and the things they’d done together the night
before, juxtaposed against the cold, hard reality of their separate philosophies concerning the practice of law.

She was a prosecutor.

He was a defense attorney.

There were similarities between them, of course, but just then, the differences looked a whole lot bigger.

CHAPTER TWELVE

J
UST BEFORE NOON,
Melissa saved a computer document to the file labeled “to be reviewed” and noticed for the first time that she was hungry. That morning’s after-jog smoothie had definitely worn off.

Too bad the residual effects of Steven Creed’s
lovemaking
hadn’t—or those of the confrontation outside of Tom’s office after Nathan Carter’s release from jail. The occasional faint aftershock
still
rocked her—at once delicious and annoying.

Melissa decided to remain in the office over her lunch hour, although the day was lovely and it would have been a lot more fun to munch away on a half sandwich and a fruit cup from the little market down on the corner.

So, silently telling herself to
get over it
all the while, she had strawberry yogurt from her stash in the break-room fridge instead.

And she waited.

When she couldn’t sit still for another moment, she stood up and walked out of her private office, past Andrea and into the corridor.

Tom was sitting at his desk when she walked in, scribbling away at some form on a clipboard. Seeing her, he pushed the paperwork away and got to his feet. His desk chair creaked in the process.

She didn’t speak right away, so he spread his hands wide and said, “What?”

“Do you have any idea what kind of problems you’ve opened yourself up to?” Melissa demanded. “Maybe it was all right to throw someone into jail just to get them off the street back in the day, but it isn’t anymore!”

Tom’s eyes twinkled, though he looked weary, too. “Tell it to Pete Ferguson,” he said, slowly sinking back into his chair. “
He
made the arrest.”


You
tell him,” Melissa snapped in response. “You’re his boss.”

Tom arched an eyebrow. “Are you through?” he asked, with a grin he couldn’t quite suppress, though he did make a visible attempt.

Melissa began to pace. “Carter
could
sue the county for false arrest,” she reminded her friend. “And even if Steven Creed didn’t take the case, some ambulance chaser from Flagstaff or Phoenix would be thrilled to do it!”

Tom nodded toward the chair facing his desk. “Sit down,” he said. “You’re making me nervous.”

She plunked herself onto the seat, arms folded.

“Speaking of Creed,” Tom said, when she didn’t speak, “what’s going on between you two?”

“Who says anything is ‘going on’?” Melissa countered, perhaps too quickly.

“Oh, come on,” Tom said. “The air was
flammable
in here this morning. Good thing nobody smokes in public buildings anymore, because the whole crowd of us might have gone up in a blast if anybody had flicked a lighter or struck a match.”

Melissa folded her arms. “I’m not discussing Steven Creed with you,” she said. She wanted to discuss Steven
with
someone
—Ashley and Olivia were both likely candidates—but not Tom. Definitely not Tom, because he’d tease her to death if she admitted anything.

Tom chuckled. “All right,” he said, spreading his hands in a gesture of affable acquiescence. “But don’t think you’re fooling anybody, because you’re not.”

Melissa took a step toward him. Let her arms fall to her sides. “Speaking of not fooling anyone,” she said, “remember our bet? You were supposed to ask Tessa Quinn out for dinner or a movie—or have you forgotten?”

He reddened slightly, under the jaw.

Elvis made a rhythmic thumping sound against the floor as he scratched under his chin with one hind leg.

“You said the bet was off,” Tom told her.

“No, I didn’t,” Melissa argued. “
You
did. And that’s as good as losing, as far as I’m concerned.” She leaned in, tucked her fingers under her armpits and flapped her elbows like wings. “Cluck-cluck-cluck.”

“Look, it isn’t that easy, okay? Tessa comes from a different
world
than I do. She’s beautiful. She used to be on TV—God only knows who she’s dated in the past and—”

“Cluck,” Melissa said. “Cluck. Cluck—”

“Stop it,” Tom ordered.

“Arrest me,” Melissa challenged.

“That is tempting,” came the raspy reply. Tom hooked his thumbs under his belt. “And if you think all this jabbering is throwing me off, you’re wrong. I’m a trained investigator, remember. I know there
is
something going on between you and Steven Creed. In fact, I’d go so far as to say you weren’t even home last night.”

“What makes you say that?”

“I might have driven past your place once or twice.”

Melissa raised one eyebrow. Tilted her head to one side. “Is that right? Well, let’s assume, for one wild and crazy moment, that I
did
have something ‘going on’ with Steven. Why would that be any of your damn business?”

He smiled. “It wouldn’t,” he conceded. “But I’d be happy about it. The whole damn
county
would be happy, in fact.”

Melissa’s tone was dangerous, which was fine, since she wanted it that way. “Because—?”

“Because you don’t have a life. Ever since you and Dan broke up, you’ve been—it seems like you’re—”

“And I suppose
you
have a life?”

“I get by,” Tom hedged.

“‘Getting by’ doesn’t count. You’re still a young man, Tom. You’re nice-looking and honest and you have a steady job.
Lots
of women would be interested in you, and Tessa might just be one of them, for all you know. I can’t
believe
that as brave a man as you are, you’re afraid to risk one tiny rejection.”

Tom didn’t answer. He just stood there, looking like he was trying to think of a smart-ass comeback, but none was forthcoming.

“All right,” Melissa said, “there’s a dance at the Grange Hall Saturday night. Why don’t you ask Tessa if she’d like to go?”

He let out a breath. “Tessa’s always friendly when I stop by the café for coffee, or pick up something from the bakery side,” he confessed, “so I get to thinking she might be up for dinner and a movie, anyway, but then at other times she seems pretty distracted, like a
lot of things are worrying her. How do I know I’m not misreading the smiles and all that? After all, Tessa is nice to everybody, not just me.”

Melissa felt a rush of sisterly tenderness and touched Tom’s arm. “It’s a
dance,
Tom. Ask her. Either she’ll accept and you’ll both have a great time, or she’ll refuse, and you’ll be able to stop wondering and move on.”

He turned stubborn then. “I’ll ask Tessa if
you’ll
ask Creed,” he said.

The depth of her reaction to the suggestion startled Melissa. Suddenly, she wanted to run back to her office and hide behind her work again.

Which was completely crazy, considering the things she and Steven had done in bed together just the night before.

Weren’t parts of her still humming with sense memories?

Tom pounced on her hesitation and jumped in feet first. “
Now
who’s chicken?” he asked.

Melissa forced herself to relax. Tried for a throw-away smile. “How do I know this isn’t a trick?” she asked. “I invite Steven to the dance and then you conveniently fink out on asking Tessa. Where would that leave me?”

“Dancing with Steven Creed?” Tom teased, a grin in his eyes.

“You go first,” Melissa said. “And I have to be there when you ask her.”

Tom pretended to be horrified. “You don’t trust me?”

“Not when it comes to this,” she replied, lifting her chin. “You’ve been waffling for a year, telling me you’re going to make a move and then backing off again.”

“You expect to
be there
when I talk to Tessa?”

Melissa nodded. Glanced at her watch. “Nearly two o’clock. It would be entirely reasonable for us to go out on a coffee break right about now,” she said. “We’ll head over to the Sunflower, and when Tessa comes to the table to take our order, you just say something like, ‘There’s a dance this Saturday night and I was wondering if you’d like to go with me.’”

Tom considered long and hard. It was a measure of how much he really liked Tessa, maybe even
loved
her, that taking such a small risk scared him.

“All right,” he finally said. He whistled for Elvis, who got to his feet and crossed the office. Holding the office door open for Melissa, Tom added, “After you, counselor.”

“I’m proud of you,” Melissa said.

She ducked into her office for her purse—Andrea still wasn’t back—and ducked out again.

“There’s a catch,” Tom informed her, when they were both strapped into the squad car and Elvis had taken up his post in back, behind the folding grill.

Melissa’s stomach fluttered slightly. “What kind of catch?”

“Fair is fair,” Tom said. “If you get to hang around when I ask Tessa to go to the dance, then the reverse is true. I have to be there when you ask Creed.”

Awkward,
Melissa thought. Her most recent exchange with Steven hadn’t exactly been a friendly one. And, anyway, there was a big difference in situations here—she’d
slept
with Steven Creed. Recently. There had clearly been no such intimacy between Tom and Tessa.

Still, how could she refuse without explaining? And
she certainly wasn’t about to admit that she’d spent the night with the man, even though Tom had expressed his suspicions.

“You’re on,” she said finally. She’d think of a way out later.

Tom nodded and started up the cruiser, and they headed for the Sunflower Café and Bakery. Alice McCoy was out front on her three-wheeled cart, putting tickets on windshields, and she waved merrily to Tom, one crime fighter acknowledging another.

Tom smiled and waved back, but he looked a little pale around the jawline, and Melissa knew he was nervous.

She felt fairly sympathetic toward him, even—until they walked into the café that is. There was Steven, sitting on the same stool as the first time she’d laid eyes on him, sipping coffee and going over plans with Alex Royce, an architect from Indian Rock.

Steven turned immediately to face Melissa, and his eyes sparked when he looked at her. The corner of his mouth quirked up, too.

Tom was so pleased to see Melissa put on the spot like this that he must have forgotten his own mission, at least for a moment.

“We’re on a coffee break,” Melissa said, perhaps a touch too loudly.

Conversation ceased all over the small eatery, and everyone looked in their direction. A few people smiled to themselves before going back to their late lunches, early suppers or afternoon snacks.

Steven spoke to Alex, who nodded, and then rose from the counter stool to walk over to Melissa and Tom.

“Have you calmed down a little?” Steven asked,
unsmiling, gazing deep into Melissa’s eyes. She felt as though she were being
undressed,
and her cheeks flamed.

She flushed, too tongue-tied to speak, while Tom grinned down at her, plainly enjoying her discomfort.

Steven’s gaze held hers. “Evidently not,” he said, apparently in answer to his own question.

Melissa glared at him. How was she supposed to ask this obnoxious man out on a
date,
for heaven’s sake, and in front of half the town, too?

“I’m fine,” she managed.

“That’s good to hear,” he said.

At the same moment, Tom gave Melissa a light poke with his elbow. “Go ahead,” he said, in a stage whisper that probably carried clear past the jukebox and down the short hallway to the restrooms. “Ask him to the dance.”

Melissa tallied up her chances of getting away with murder and decided they weren’t good. Too many witnesses, for one thing.

So she had to let Tom live. For the moment.

Steven’s grin was even more crooked than before. He might have thrown her a lifeline of some sort, said
something,
but not a word came out of that highly kissable mouth. He simply stood there and waited.

Melissa cleared her throat, painfully aware that everybody in the place had an ear cocked that way. “There’s a dance at the Grange on Saturday night,” she said, because there was no way out. “And I was wondering if you’d like to go.” She paused. “With me, I mean.”

“Is it Sadie Hawkins’ Day?” some redneck joked, from one of the booths.

“Say what?” someone else called.

Steven leaned in, not touching her, though his breath made her lips tingle. “Yes,” he said. “I’ll go to the dance with you, Melissa O’Ballivan, but only if you agree to pick me up in the roadster.”

The tension subsided slightly.

“What’s going on?” a customer yelled to a friend on the other side of the café.

“Melissa asked that Creed fella to the Grange Dance!” the friend boomed.

“It’s about time she had a date,” commented someone else.

“Good,” Melissa said. Then she turned on Tom and glowered up at him. At the edge of her vision, she saw Tessa coming out of the kitchen, looking lovely in her jeans, sleeveless white top and blue cobbler’s apron smudged with flour. “Now it’s
your
turn.”

Steven, after one lingering look of sheer appreciation, excused himself quietly and went back to the counter, where Alex waited with the plans.

The clientele was still being unusually quiet.

“Have a seat,” Tessa said, her glance moving questioningly between Melissa and Tom. “Ella will be right with you.” Ella was the other waitress.

Melissa flashed Tessa a bright smile. “We were hoping you could wait on us personally,” she told her friend. “Would you mind?”

“Not at all,” Tessa replied, dusting the flour smudge off her front with a few slaps of one hand. “On my way.”

As soon as Melissa and Tom had seated themselves at a table in front of the window, Tessa was there, order pad in hand, pencil at the ready.

“Coffee for both of us, please,” Melissa said.

Tom sat directly across from her, brooding. He wouldn’t look at either Melissa or Tessa.

Melissa kicked him under the table.

Tom started, as though he’d been off in some other world and had just come in for a crash landing.

He looked up at Tessa, his hands so tightly interlocked that his knuckles showed white, and blurted out, “I guess you wouldn’t want to go out with me or anything.”

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