Temple wasn’t surprised. Molina had never let up in her vendetta against Max. They’d even duked it out mano-a-mana (if there was such a thing) in a Strip club parking lot. Molina had finally caught Max and he needed to get away fast because he knew Temple was in danger of becoming the next Stripper Killer victim.
Su’s piquant face had a sly, triumphant look.
Payback time for Temple, a rank amateur, copping a prime undercover assignment she had wanted. It didn’t matter that it had frosted Molina’s tortillas to ask such a favor of an antagonist. Temple had gotten the job, not Su, who was as capable of looking sixteen as Temple was, if that was an advantage when one was almost thirty-one and aching to be taken seriously in life and love.
Su leaned close to whisper, at just the right level of Temple’s left ear.
“The rumor is that the lady lieutenant flipped and eloped with that hunky magician you used to call yours.
Temple fought to look unruffled.
It made a kind of crazy sense.
Temple’s pulse was pounding in her . . . temples. She moved away from Su, who slunk into the waning crowd like a snake relieved of its poison. Temple was aghast. Disbelieving. Stunned. Betrayed. Jealous.
She looked for Matt, for a glimpse that would restore stability, remind her how much she loved and desired him.
He wasn’t there. Nobody still lingered at the head table. Everybody had drifted away without her noticing.
It wasn’t just Max anymore. It was everybody.
She gazed around.
The entire room was empty.
She was alone at the banquet table with its abandoned dessert plates and crumpled peach linen napkins.
This was a nightmare!
She needed somebody to tell her so, and nobody was there for her.
Not even the malicious Su anymore.
Max and Molina. Max and Carmen.
Temple swallowed. She wanted to shout the word, but she couldn’t.
She couldn’t move. Couldn’t speak, shout.
No.
This
Her nightmare.
She blinked her eyes open in the dark.
A warm hand was on her arm.
“Are you all right?” Matt’s voice came from the dark. “You were making almost strangling noises. Temple?”
Was she all right?
Obviously not, if she was still dreaming about Max.
Maybe this dream was the real good-bye. Her unconscious had paired Max with her worst enemy, the woman of her nightmares, and bid him adieu. Said good riddance to them both.
That was it. The dream was a sign any feelings for him were over. All gone. Gone with the Molina.
So revolting!
She shuddered.
“You’re cold,” Matt said, tightening his grasp. “Let me warm you up.”
Shallow Wound,
Deep End
Morning, after another long, fitful night.
Carmen Molina could hear her daughter and Morrie Alch talking in the other room, through a fog, darkly.
Mariah’s light, girlish voice made a pleasant counterpoint to Morrie’s low, street-cop growl. Carmen smiled. Making detective had never softened that rumble-busting vocal grumble. Then she took her own inventory.
She wasn’t used to being helpless. Ever. Yet she’d lain here for three days on antibiotics and Vicodin, like some zonked-out druggie. Matt Devine hadn’t swooned into bed like a Southern belle when
But his had only been a short superficial slice. Hers was superficial too, but long. Sitting up, even breathing and talking and eating, were darn unpleasant.
A homicide lieutenant ought to be up for a stronger adjective than “darn,” but she habitually watched her language around Mariah. Besides, it unnerved the unit that she’d always been so eternally in control. A lot of females in male-dominated jobs tried to relax their male subordinates by matching them curse for curse, shout for shout. A couple of football coaches, notably Super Bowl winner, Tony Dungy, went the opposite route. That’s why they called her the Iron Maiden. Quiet but unflappable, invincible. Silent as cold steel.
Not very iron lately.
The voices were coming closer. Mariah bearing her morning slop: canned soup! But Morrie had done it: whipped her hormonal, edgy, unreliable teen daughter into a meek little nurse.
Molina pushed herself up against the piled bed pillows, trying not to grimace as the eighty-six stitches in her stomach and side screamed bloody murder at the motion.
A deep wound knocks you out. A shallow one tortures you to death.
Morrie turned on her bedside table light, leaving the shutters closed. He didn’t want Mariah seeing or guessing any more than she should.
“Something new from your friendly neighborhood grocery shelf,” he said. “Mac and cheese.”
“Great.” She meant it. The thin soups were getting old. “Thanks, honey, but you better get to school.”