“So now,” Rowdy said, still in an analytical mind-set, “you think your dad might’ve dicked with the window lock? You think he’d use the details of this current cluster-fuck to set you up...for what?”

She just didn’t know. She couldn’t imagine her father wanting her dead, but... “The window got open somehow.”

Reese began to pace. “Maybe he just wanted to scare you off.”

“Surely he never intended for an actual fire to be set,” Logan added.

Dash pushed to his feet and stood in front of her. “You’re not safe here.”

But where would she be safe? “Only an idiot would try to strike twice at the same place.”

“And we already confirmed we’re dealing with idiots.” He towered over her, so tall, so leanly muscled. “I think you should come away with me for a while.”

“What?” Discrediting such a suggestion, Margo blinked up at him. Run? Is that what he wanted her to do? Abandon her job? Adamant, she shook her head. “No.”

“Where to?” Reese asked, deliberately exacerbating Margo’s overall mood. “Your secret cabin in the woods?”

“No.” Dash held her gaze. “By now it’s not so secret anymore. I have another place in mind.”

With Oliver finally sleeping, Margo eased him aside and stood to face off with Dash. Before she got a single word out, he leaned forward and kissed her.

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In front of everyone.

Not a wimpy little kiss, either, but a kiss of bold possession and honest caring.

As he straightened again, he looked far too serious. “The threat is real, whether you want to admit it or not. And I’m willing to bet Logan and Reese will back me up on that.”

* * *

LOGAN AND REESE both raised their hands.

“Agreed.”

“Absolutely.”

Seeing them, Rowdy, too, raised his hand. “Just for a little while, Lieutenant. Until we can sort this out.”

She felt cornered, Dash knew, and he hated that. But if she was right, if her father was now trying to throw her to the wolves, then how much protection would be enough?

He rallied arguments to convince her. “Someone was in your house.”

“Believe me, I’m aware of the significance.” She started to turn away, but he brought her back around.

“The news has probably already shared the whole break-in. By the afternoon every creep out there will know right where you are.”

“It’s likely.” She put a hand to her forehead.

Dash wanted to coddle her—but he knew she neither wanted nor needed that. She needed his support.

She needed his insistence.

“I’m not talking about your walking away from the job.” He needed her to know that he understand the importance of what she did, and supported her diligence in doing it. “Just take a weekend.” With me. “Let Logan and Reese do their thing.”

“It’s my thing, too.”

It meant a lot to Dash that the others kept quiet and let him handle it. They’d back him up if he needed it, but he was hoping Margo would relent without their input. “I know that, honey, and you’re damn good at that job. No one thinks otherwise.”

“You don’t have to placate me.”

“I was shooting for honesty, actually.” He used her experience against her. “Think about it from another angle. If another cop was in your circumstances, what would you tell him?”

Grousing, she again tried to walk away.

Dash again brought her back.

“Stop that!” Vibrating with agitation, she fisted her hand against his chest. “I need to talk to Yvette. I want to ask her about those rims. I want—”

“To know she’s okay?”

In a bid to reclaim her calm, she breathed deeply. “Yes.”

He could almost read her thoughts, feel her distress. She’d just experienced a fraction of what Yvette had suffered and her sympathy for the younger woman was a live thing.

He understood that better now after learning of her history with her father. That very understandable empathy interfered with her sound judgment, and showed her selflessness.

If they had any privacy, he’d calm her the best way he knew how—by loving her, by draining her tension through sexual release. But it would be a while before they had that opportunity.

Logan cleared his throat. “That can be arranged. Today even.”

Reese spoke softly. “Maybe after your doctor’s appointment.”

They both sounded so ill at ease, it made Dash drop his head forward and laugh.

Not giving Margo a chance to get riled over his misplaced humor, he put his hand over hers and grinned at her. “It is endlessly amusing to me how such a small woman can make such big cops so perturbed.”

“Yeah, well,” Logan grumbled, “she doesn’t usually come off as ‘small.’”

True, because Margo had the spirit of an Amazon. Dash cupped her chin, marveling again that a woman so strong could be so sweet and soft. “Your house is done for, honey. It’s going to take a professional cleaner to come in here and get the floors cleaned.”

“I know.”

“Oliver needs a calm, quiet place to recover.” Dash could just imagine the looks on the faces of the other guys. Using her cat as a lure was desperate—but he’d bet on it being effective. She loved Oliver.

Sighing, Margo put her forehead against his chest. “I agree. But your address was probably never well hidden to begin with, and as you said, this secret cabin of yours isn’t secret anymore. I can’t just take Oliver to a hotel—”

“I wouldn’t ask you to.”

She leaned back to see him. “So then...where?”

Shoving his hands into his pockets and resenting that he had to share here and now, in front of others, Dash said, “I have another place.”

Logan, who had the same access to funds as Dash, thought nothing of that assertion.

Reese and Rowdy...yeah. They were more surprised.

“Another place?” Rowdy asked.

“Like...a third home?” Reese marveled.

Logan kept quiet. He understood that they could each buy multiple homes and not be strapped.

“Another lake house.”

Her jaw loosened. “You have two lake houses?”

Feeling ridiculous, as he always did over excesses, Dash rolled a shoulder. “I was going to give the first one to Logan.”

Logan perked up. “Really?”

He twisted to see him. “I know you guys have been looking. But Pepper has fond memories of my place, which is maybe why she hasn’t been able to settle on a different one, right? So I figured you should have it.”

“Right you are.” Smiling, Logan stepped forward and took his brother’s hand. “Thanks, man.”

“You earned it.” Dash would forever think of that rustic cabin as the place where Pepper sealed the deal with his brother—and in the bargain made him a very happy man. Even now, the very inventive and sexual way she’d tormented Logan made Dash want to laugh. “Anyway, the new lake house is a little more modern. Still private, though. Until I just told you guys, no one knew about it.”

Margo stared at him hard. “Just how well-to-do are you?”

Deflecting, he said, “No more so than Logan.”

Her gaze transferred to his brother.

Proving he didn’t like talking about money any more than Dash did, Logan scowled. “We inherited a small fortune.”

“Your parents are still alive!”

“Grandparents,” Dash explained. “They were loaded, and they adored us.”

Logan tried to downplay it. “It doesn’t matter. Usually.” He glanced at Dash. “But at times it comes in handy.”

Like a junkyard dog, Margo found a new bone to gnaw on. “You keep this private place so you can take women there?”

“Not exactly, no.” He hadn’t taken women to either place. For Dash, the lakefront cabin had been an escape from everything and everyone else. But he wanted to share it with Margo.

“Is it far away?”

“An hour.” He looked down at the cat. “Does Oliver travel well?”

“No, he pukes.”

Dash winced, but persevered. “So we’ll put him in a carrier and hope for the best. Don’t you think he’ll be more comfortable without having to deal with cleaning people and cops coming and going and the stench of kerosene?”

“Yes.” She glanced at the clock by the TV. “He’s usually okay by himself while I’m at work, or if I have to be away a few hours, but you’re right. Today is not a good day to leave him alone.”

“I didn’t say—”

“I think I should cancel my doctor’s appointment.”

Rowdy stepped forward. “Leave him with me.”

Margo lifted both brows, but Dash nodded agreement. “You have time for that?”

“I don’t have to be at work for a while,” Rowdy told them. “And even if I’m late, Cannon can get the place opened up.”

Still resistant, Margo asked, “Is there anything Cannon can’t do?”

“Not that I’ve seen so far.” Hands on his hips, Rowdy studied her. “But how long could the doctor’s appointment take anyway? A few hours at most, right?”

“I assume no longer than that.”

“Oliver knows me now and he doesn’t hate me. I’ll hang around, ensure no one comes in here that shouldn’t and make sure the cat gets whatever he needs.”

Margo’s attention went from Rowdy to her sleeping cat and back again. “He’s old and blind....”

“And a real trouper, I know.” Coming closer, he looked down at Margo. “I can even get hold of the cleaning people and get things set up. That way you guys can be gone for the weekend without any worries.”

Logan said, “I’ll make sure someone is here for the cleaners. No one will be in your house unattended.”

“I’ll call Mr. Sweeny right now and make sure he knows you’ll be stopping by to chat with him and his granddaughter.” Reese pulled out his cell. “Since you aren’t sure how long you’ll be, I’ll just say sometime after your doctor’s appointment. Will that work?”

Everyone watched her, and Dash could see she felt put on the spot. Usually that’d make anyone defensive.

Margo suddenly laughed. “It’s absurd. All the big strong men arranging my entire weekend for me.”

“Honey—”

“It’s okay, Dash.” The laugh faded into a fond smile that encompassed them all. “Honestly, other than expecting me to abandon my job, I appreciate the effort. I’m not used to all this...fussing.”

They all scowled over that. “Men don’t fuss,” Dash told her.




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