go.â
âWhyâd you turn down Detective Ramirez?â he asked.
I wasnât sure it was any of his business, but I answered. âI was dating someone back home. I didnât think it was fair to any of us to complicate things.â
âSomeone said you were all over him at the last crime scene.â
I knew what he was referring to. âWe hugged each other, Agent Fox, because after seeing what was in that house I think we both needed to touch somethingwarm and alive. I let one man hold my hand and all the other men think Iâm fucking him. God, there are times when I really hate being the only woman around this kind of shit.â
I was out of the car. Micah was getting our bags from the back.
âNow thatâs not fair, Marshal. If Iâd hugged Ramirez or let him hold my hand, thereâd be rumors, too.â
It stopped me for a second, and then I laughed. âWell, damn, I guess youâre right.â
Micah had traded the key for a little ticket stub. He popped the handles on the carry-on bags so theyâd roll. I took one of them but let him take my briefcase, since I was still on the phone. The little bus was waiting for us and a few more passengers.
âI look forward to meeting you, Marshal Blake. Time I stopped listening to secondhand stories.â
âThanks, I guess.â
âSee you on the ground.â And he was gone.
I folded the phone shut and was already going up the bus steps before the attendant tried to take mybag. It was the skirt outfit and the heels. I always had more offers to help with luggage when I was dressed like a girl.
Micah came up behind me, mostly ignored, though he was dressed up, too. Weâd chosen his most conservative suit, but thereâs only so much you can do with a black Italian-cut designer suit. It looked like what it was: expensive.
No one would mistake him for a Fed of any kind. Weâd pulled his thick, curly hair back in a tight French braid, which almost gave the illusion of short hair. Heâd put on a white shirt with the suit and a conservative tie.
We settled into the back row of seats. Heâd kept his sunglasses on even in the darkened parking garage, because behind those dark glasses was a pair of leopard eyes. A very bad man had forced him into animal form long enough, and often enough, that he couldnât return completely to human form. His eyes were yellow-green, chartreuse, and not human. They were beautiful in the tan of his skin, but they tended to freak people out, hence the glasses.
I wondered how the FBI would take the eyes. Did I care? No. Things had worked out with Special Agent Fox, or seemed to be working out. But someone who had been in New Mexico was trashing me. Who? Why? Did I care? Yeah, actually, I did.
CHAPTER
3
I hate to fly. Iâm phobic of it, and weâll leave it at that. I didnât bleed Micah, but I left little half-moon nail impressions in his hand, though I didnât realize it until after weâd landed and were getting our bags from overhead. Then I asked him, âWhy didnât you tell me I was hurting you?â
âI didnât mind.â
I frowned at him, wishing I could see his eyes, though truthfully they probably wouldnât have told me anything.
Micah had never been a cop, but he had been at the mercy of a crazy person for a few years. Heâd learned to keep his thoughts off his face, so that his old leader didnât beat those thoughts off for him. It meant that he had one of the most peaceful, empty faces Iâd ever met. A patient, waiting sort of face like saints and angels should have but never seem to.
Micah didnât like pain, not the way Nathaniel did. So he should have said something about the nails digging into his skin. It bugged me that he hadnât.
We got trapped in the aisle of the plane, because everyone else had stood up and grabbed their bags, too. We had time for me to lean in against his back