FOR THE BABY'S SAKE (4 page)

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Authors: BEVERLY LONG

Tags: #ROMANCE - - SUSPENSE

BOOK: FOR THE BABY'S SAKE
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The two men had stayed connected over the years, and when
Jamison had been hired as the executive director of OCM, he’d hired Howard’s
firm to handle the adoptions.

“Want a warm-up?” Jamison asked, nodding at Liz’s empty
cup.

“Sure.”

They walked upstairs to the kitchen. Liz had poured her cup and
handed the glass pot to Jamison when his cell phone rang. Liz started to walk
away, stopping suddenly when she heard the glass pot hit the tile floor.

She whirled around. Jamison stood still, his phone in one hand
and his other empty. Shards of glass and spilled coffee surrounded him.

“Jamison?” She started back toward her boss.

“There’s a bomb in my office.” He spoke without emotion. “It’s
set to go off in fifteen minutes.”

Chapter Three

Detective Sawyer Montgomery arrived just minutes after the bomb squad had disarmed, dismantled and disconnected—she wasn’t sure of the technical term—the bomb that had been left in the middle of Jamison’s desk. It had taken them eleven minutes to arrive. The longest eleven minutes of Liz’s life.

Beat cops had been on the scene within minutes of the 911 call that Liz had made from Jamison’s phone after she’d pulled him, his phone and herself from the building. They’d blocked off streets and rousted people from their apartments. OCM’s neighbors, many still in their pajamas, had poured from the nearby buildings. Mothers with small children in their arms, old people barely able to maneuver the steps, all were hustled behind a hastily tacked-up stretch of yellow police tape.

Liz had wondered if Detective Montgomery would come. She hated to admit it, but she’d considered calling him. In those first frantic moments before help had arrived, she’d desperately hoped for someone capable. And Detective Montgomery absolutely screamed capable. She doubted the man ever encountered anything he couldn’t handle.

But now that he’d arrived, Liz wanted to run. She couldn’t decide if she wanted to run to him to seek shelter in his embrace or run far from him to protect herself from his intensity, his questions, his knowing looks.

Liz watched him get out of the car and scan the crowd. He said something to the man who rode with him. Liz knew the exact moment he spotted her. It didn’t matter that three hundred yards separated them. Liz felt the shiver run up her arm just as if he’d touched her.

“What the hell happened?” he asked when he reached her.

Liz swallowed, trying very hard not to cry. How ridiculous would that be? No one had been hurt. No one injured. And she hadn’t even thought about crying until Detective Montgomery had approached.

“Bomb threat,” she said. “Actually, more than a threat, I guess. The bomb squad removed it just a few minutes ago.”

“Where was it?”

“In the middle of my boss’s desk. In a brown sack.” The tears that she’d dreaded sprang to her eyes.

“Hey.” Detective Montgomery reached out and touched her arm. “Are you okay?”

He sounded so concerned. That almost made the dam break. “I’m fine, really. Everyone’s just been great.”

Detective Montgomery frowned at her, but he didn’t let go. The most delicious heat spread up her arm.

“Come over here.” He guided her toward the curb.

“Okay.” Whatever he wanted. As long as she didn’t have to think. Because then she’d think about it, the bomb and the look on Jamison’s face. She’d remember the pure panic she’d felt as they’d run from the building.

He pulled his hand away, and Liz felt the immediate loss of heat all the way to her stomach, which was odd since his hand had been nowhere near her stomach. He unbuttoned his suit coat, took it off and folded it. He placed it on the cement curb. “Why don’t you sit down?” he suggested, pointing at his coat.

“I can sit on cement,” she protested.

“Not and keep those...short pants clean,” he said. His face turned red. “I know there’s a word for them, but I can’t think of it right now.”

He was smokin’ hot when he was serious and damn cute when he was embarrassed. It was a heck of a combination. “They’re called capri pants.”

He smiled. “It might have come to me.”

Oh, boy. She sat down. She knew she needed to before she swooned. “I’m sure it would have, Detective Montgomery.”

“Sawyer,” Detective Montgomery said. “Just Sawyer is fine.”

Liz nodded. The man was just being polite. After all, in a span of less than forty-eight hours, their paths had crossed three times. They weren’t strangers any longer. She was sitting on his coat. “Liz is fine, too,” she mumbled.

“Liz,” he repeated.

She liked the way the
z
rolled off his tongue. She liked the way all the consonants and the vowels, too, for that matter, rolled off his tongue. It was a molten chocolate center bubbling out of a freshly baked cake. Smooth. Enticing.

Maybe he could read her the dictionary for the next week.

“I need to ask you some questions,” he said.

She wasn’t going to get a week. “Sure.” Why the heck not? Together they sat on the faded gray cement, hips close, thighs almost touching. Liz wanted to lean her head against his broad shoulder but knew that would startle the hell out of him.

She settled for closing her eyes. It seemed like a lifetime ago that she’d crawled out of bed and caught the five-o’clock bus.

“Sawyer?”

Liz opened her eyes. The man who had been with Sawyer when he’d arrived now stood in front of the two of them. He was an inch taller and probably ten pounds heavier than Sawyer. He had the bluest eyes she’d ever seen.

Was the sky raining gorgeous men?

“What did you find out?” Sawyer spoke to the man.

“Bomb, all right. Big enough that it would have done some damage. Quick to shut down. Looks like they wanted to make it easy for us.”

Sawyer didn’t say anything.

“Who are you?” Liz asked.

The man’s face lit up with a broad smile showing perfect teeth. “I’m Detective Robert Hanson. My partner has no manners. Otherwise, he’d have introduced us.”

“I’m Liz Mayfield.”

“I guessed that. It’s a pleasure to meet you. I—”

“What else?” Sawyer interrupted his partner.

Detective Hanson shrugged. “We’ll get the lab reports back this afternoon. Don’t expect much. Guys thought it looked like a professional job.”

“Professional?” Sawyer shook his head. “Half the kids in high school know how to build a bomb.”

“True.” Detective Hanson stared at Sawyer. “Did you get her statement?”

“Not yet,” Sawyer said, pulling a notebook and pen from his pocket.

Detective Hanson frowned at both of them. Then he turned toward Liz. “Who got in first this morning?”

“I did,” she said. “I got here about five-thirty.”

Sawyer looked up from his notebook. “Short night?”

Liz shrugged, not feeling the need to explain.

“Door locked when you got here, Ms. Mayfield?” Detective Hanson asked.

“Yes. After I came in, I locked it again and reset the alarm.”

“You sure?”

“I’m usually the first person in. I know the routine.”

“Did you see anything unusual once you got inside?”

“No. I went to the kitchen and started a pot of coffee.”

“Then what?”

“I heard the front door, and then I thought I heard Jamison’s door open. It appears I was right.”

“You didn’t see anybody?” Detective Hanson continued.

“No. When I left the kitchen, I looked around.”

“Then what—”

“You looked around?” Sawyer interrupted his partner.

“Yes.”

“You should have called the police.”

She frowned at him. His tone had an edge to it. “I can’t call the police every time I hear a door.”

“You got a threat mailed to your office, and then shots were fired through your window,” Sawyer said. “Maybe you should have given that some thought before you decided to investigate.”

“Maybe we should keep going.” Detective Hanson spoke to Sawyer. “You’re taking notes, right?”

Sawyer didn’t respond.

“After I
looked around—
” she emphasized the words “—I went down to my office and started working. After Jamison arrived, we came upstairs for coffee.”

“What time was that?”

“Almost eight. Jamison’s cell phone rang and then...we called 911. That’s about it.”

“It sounds like you stayed pretty calm. That takes a lot of guts.” Detective Hanson smiled at her again.

She smiled back this time. “Thank you.”

Sawyer grabbed Robert’s arm. “Come on. Let’s go. I want to talk to the boss.”

Liz stood—so quickly that her head started to spin. She picked up Sawyer’s suit coat, shook it and thrust it out to him. “Don’t forget this,” she said.

He reached for it, and their fingers brushed. The fine hairs on her arm reacted with a mind of their own. What the heck was going on? She’d never ever had this kind of physical reaction to a man. Especially not one who acted as if he might think she was an idiot.

Sawyer jerked his own arm back. “I’ll...uh...talk to you later,” he said. Great. She had him tripping over his own tongue.

Sawyer got twenty feet before Robert managed to catch him. “Hang on,” he said. “What the hell is wrong with you?”

Sawyer shook his head. “Just forget it.”

“You act like an idiot and think I’m going to forget it?”

“Maybe you’ve forgotten this. We’re here to investigate a crime. We’ve got a lot of people to talk to. I didn’t think it made sense to spend any more time with Liz.”

“Liz,”
Robert repeated.

“Yeah, Liz.” Sawyer did his best to sound nonchalant. “She told me I could call her Liz.”

“Since when do you hang all over witnesses?”

“I wasn’t hanging all over her. She seemed upset. I offered her some comfort. Perhaps you’ve heard of it. It’s called compassion.” Sawyer started to walk away.

Robert kept pace. “That wasn’t compassion I saw. That was a mating call. What’s going on here, partner?”

Sawyer didn’t know. Didn’t have a clue why he started to unravel every time he got within three feet of Liz. “Liz Mayfield is a material witness to a crime. We had questioned her. I figured we needed to move on.”

“That’s it?”

“What else could it be?”

Robert looked him in the eye and nodded. “Your timing sucks. I could have had little Lizzy’s phone number in another two minutes.”

“Lizzy,” Sawyer repeated.

“She’s my type.”

Sawyer clamped down on the impulse to punch his partner, his best friend for the past two years. “She is
nothing
like your type.”

Robert cocked his head. “Really?”

“Yeah. Really.”

“I’ll be damned.” Robert laughed, his face transformed by his smile. “You like her.”

“You don’t know what you’re talking about.” Sawyer walked away from his partner.

Robert ran to catch up with him. “You’re interested in a witness. Mr. Professional, Mr. I-always-use-my-Southern-manners. This has got to be killing you.”

“Liz Mayfield is going to help me get Mirandez. That’s my only interest,” Sawyer said.

Robert slapped him on the back. “You just keep telling yourself that, Sawyer. Let’s go talk to the boss.”

When Sawyer and Robert reached Liz’s boss, the man held up a finger, motioning them to wait while he finished his telephone call. From the one side of the conversation that Sawyer could hear, it sounded as if the guy was making arrangements to refer his clients on to other sources. After several minutes, the man ended the call and put his smartphone in his pocket.

“Detective Montgomery.” The man greeted Sawyer, giving him a lopsided smile. “I have to admit I was hoping there wouldn’t be any reason for us to talk again.”

Sawyer felt sorry for him. He looked as if he’d just lost his best friend. “This is my partner, Detective Robert Hanson.”

“Nice to meet you, Detective Hanson. I’m Jamison Curtiss, the executive director of OCM.”

Sawyer watched Robert shake the man’s hand, knowing Robert was rapidly cataloging almost everything there was to know about Jamison.

“I understand you got the call this morning, warning you of the bomb,” Sawyer said.

“Yes. I’d just gotten to work. It was probably about ten minutes before eight.”

“What happened then?”

“Liz and I left the building.”

“Then what?” Sawyer prompted the man, reaching into his pocket for his notebook.

“Then I got a second call.”

“What?” Sawyer stopped taking notes.

“The second call came in just after they’d found the bomb. Same guy who called the first time. Congratulated me on following directions. Then he told me that unless I closed the doors of OCM, there would be another bomb. I wouldn’t know when or where, but there would be one.”

“Liz Mayfield didn’t say anything about a second call.” Sawyer couldn’t believe that she’d withheld information like that.

“She doesn’t know. I’m not looking forward to telling her.”

“Anybody else hear this call?” Not that Sawyer didn’t believe the guy. The man looked shaken.

“No. It lasted about ten seconds. Then the guy hung up.”

“What are you going to do?” Sawyer asked, keeping one eye on Jamison and casting a quick glance back at Liz. His heart skipped a beat when he didn’t see her right away. Then he spied her. She had her back toward him. It took him all of three seconds to realize he was staring at her butt and another five to tear his glance away.

Robert laughed at him. He was quiet about it—just loud enough to make sure Sawyer heard him. Jamison Curtiss looked confused. Sawyer nodded at the man to continue.

“In the past forty-eight hours,” Jamison said, “one of my employees received an anonymous threat. On top of that, my business has been shot at and almost blown up. Whoever is trying to get my attention has it. Unless you can tell me that you know who’s responsible, I don’t think I have a lot of options.”

“We don’t know—” Robert spoke up “—but we will. Who has a key to OCM?”

“All the counselors. And our receptionist. Everyone has a slightly different schedule.”

“And everybody knows the code to turn off the alarm?” Robert asked.

“Of course.”

“Keys to the office doors all the same?”

“Yes.”

“Same as to the front door?”

“Yes.”

Sawyer and Robert exchanged a look. One key and a code. Child’s play for somebody like Mirandez.

“You already gave us a list of employees with their home addresses. I’d like their personnel files, too,” Robert said.

Jamison wrinkled his nose. “Is that really necessary?” he asked.

“Yes.” Sawyer answered in a manner that made sure Jamison knew it wasn’t an option.

“Fine. I’ll have them to you by this afternoon.”

“Anybody else have a key? A cleaning service, perhaps?”

“We all know how to run a vacuum. We can’t afford to pay someone to clean.”

“Anybody really new on your staff?”

“No, we’ve all been working together for years. Liz and Carmen came at about the same time.”

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