Handsome Boss: Handsome Devils Book 2 Page 14
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Excerpt: Handsome Lawman
“Trent Barrett, I insist you arrest Erin Weber immediately. The woman is a thief and belongs in jail,” Delia Haverhill hollered, her arms crossed under her ample chest. “Arrest her right now.”
Trent scratched his jaw and considered the middle-aged woman in front of him. Delia wasn’t what you would call the sweetest person in Honey, Texas. Truth be told, she put the cur in curmudgeon.
But still, as chief of police of Honey, he couldn’t simply ignore Delia’s complaint. And the woman hadn’t, to his knowledge, ever had anyone arrested before. There very well could be some truth in what she was saying. A least a little.
“Why don’t you tell me what the problem is and who Erin Weber might be,” he said in a calm, soft voice, hoping Delia might follow suit and stop hollering at the top of her lungs. “Then we can figure out what’s the best course of action to take.”
Unfortunately, Delia didn’t lower her volume one bit. She leaned halfway across his desk and said, “I’ve already told you what action needs to be taken. Erin Weber needs to be arrested. Now get up from behind that desk and come with me. I’ll show you who this woman is and what she did. You won’t believe her nerve. I was nice enough to visit her store last Saturday with my grandson, and she rewards me by stealing my Pookie. And to make it worse, she’s displaying Pookie right outside her store. The woman belongs in jail, I tell you.” Trent thought he was up to date on all the street names for drugs, but he’d never heard of pookie. “What in the world is pookie?”
Delia wagged a finger at him. “Get out of your chair, and I’ll show you.”
Reluctantly, Trent stood. “I’ll be happy to get one of my officers to help you, Delia. But I have a meeting with the mayor in about an hour.”
Delia frowned. “Did I or did I not change your diapers when you were too young to know your feet from your hands?”
His secretary, Ann Seaver, had walked in midway through Delia’s comment. She raised one eyebrow and looked precariously close to giggling.
Trent shook his head and sighed. “Delia, I sure do hope you’re talking about when you used to babysit me decades ago. If you mean something else, then one of us is seriously warped.”
Delia was obviously not amused. She looked at Trent like he was something stuck on the bottom of her shoes. “Of course I’m talking about when I babysat you. And I would think that means you’ll be happy to help me now.”
She gave him a squinty-eyed look. “After all, I never let you cry yourself to sleep like some babysitters do. I rocked you to sleep and sang you pretty songs.”
Ann made a spurting sound behind the hand she had across her mouth. Trent was certain she wasn’t the only one who would be laughing today about what Delia had said. No doubt Ann would tell most of the officers, and by the end of the day, everyone would be quoting Delia Haverhill.
Dang it all.
“Come on, Delia. Show me what this pookie is.” He circled his desk and stood next to the older woman. “I think you’ve already shared enough babysitting stories for one day.”
Delia didn’t even crack a smile. She simply nodded and headed toward the door. When they drew even with Ann, his secretary was still laughing.
“What in the world are you laughing about, young lady?” Delia asked her. “Seems to me I changed more than a few of your diapers, too.”
Ann turned bright red, and Trent chuckled as he trailed after Delia. That was one major advantage of growing up in a small town. Sure, everyone knew embarrassing things about you. But hey, you knew embarrassing things about them as well.
“So, Delia, how long do you expect this to take?” he had to ask as they headed for the front door.
“It will take however long you need to read Erin Weber her Melissa rights.”
The bright sunshine hit him once they were outside, so Trent pulled his sunglasses out of his pocket and slipped them on. “Miranda.”
“What?”
“Not Melissa. Miranda.”
Delia waved one hand and started down the street. “Melissa. Miranda. What difference does it make? Just read her the rights and toss her in jail. Now come on.”
Reluctantly, Trent followed. He sure didn’t like being ordered around, but as the chief of police, he had to keep the people of Honey happy.
“Tell me, what is this pookie stuff you think some woman stole from you?” he asked once they were headed down Main Street.
“First off, it isn’t pookie stuff. His name is Pookie. Pay attention, Trent.”
He thought he had been, but reading smoke signals would be easier than understanding Delia Haverhill. “Sorry if I misunderstood.”
“Second off, it isn’t just some woman who stole my Pookie. It’s Erin Weber, the woman who opened the pet shop over on Collier Street. Naturally, I suspected her as soon as Pookie disappeared.”
By now, he and Delia had turned off Main Street and were halfway down Collier. Delia pointed to the front door of a store.
“There’s Pookie. Big as life. On display for the whole town to see. Erin certainly has some nerve.”
Trent looked where she was pointing and bit back a grin. Pookie was a plastic statue of a rabbit, the kind you might put in your garden or flowerbed. The statue was old and well-worn and couldn’t be worth more than a couple of bucks.
But Delia was cooing and fussing over the blasted thing like it was real.
“Now go on inside and arrest her,” Delia said.
Trent slipped off his sunglasses and glanced around. As he could have predicted, he and Delia were starting to draw a crowd. Honey didn’t offer a lot of diversions, so anytime anything even moderately interesting happened, everyone rushed out to see what was going on. He better head on in and talk to this Erin Weber before he found himself knee-deep in nosy citizens.
“Arrest her, arrest her, arrest her,” Delia said loudly. Then she folded her arms under her ample chest once more and took on the expression of one who believes herself incapable of error.
Damn, what a way to start the day.
With about as much enthusiasm as a ten-year-old boy stuck at a Girl Scout meeting, Trent shoved open the door of Precious Pets and walked inside.
He’d only made it a few steps when a woman yelled, “Freeze!”
Trent froze as instructed and started to go for his gun when a petite, brown-haired dynamo rushed at him from the back of the store.
“Don’t move or you’ll frighten Brutus,” the woman said. “You almost stepped on him. He’s right by your left foot.” She tipped her head, her expression more than a little accusatory. “He just escaped from the bath. Didn’t you see Brutus when you came in?”
Obviously not or he wouldn’t have almost stepped on him. Trent glanced around and didn’t immediately see anything. But after learning what a Pookie was, Trent wasn’t certain he wanted to know what a Brutus might be. Probably a big ol’ ugly snake. Or maybe a tarantula.
But curiosity got to him, so he looked down anyway, then breathed a sigh of relief.
Brutus was a little bitty fluffball.
“What kind of animal is that?” he had to ask.
The woman frowned. “A puppy, of course. What in the world did you think he was?”
Trent studied the round, white ball of fur with two black specks for eyes. “He kinda looks like a dust bunny.”
The woman moved forward and picked up the puppy off the floor. “A dust bunny. Sheesh. He’s a sweetheart, aren’t you, baby?”
Obviously knowing he was being praised, Brutus let out a series of yips and yaps. Trent would give the puppy credit—he had an impressive bark for something that looked like a ball of lint. No wonde
r the dog had a tough name like Brutus. He needed every advantage he could get.
“Is there something I can help you with?” the woman asked, still cradling the dog.
“I’m Trent Barrett, chief of police here in Honey.” He extended his hand, which the woman shook in a firm, no-nonsense handshake. Just like the pup, the woman might look small and fragile, but she was stronger than she appeared. Her grip would do a lumberjack proud.
“I’m Erin Weber. I own Precious Pets.” Brutus started squirming, so Erin put the puppy down. The furball immediately trotted over and tugged on Trent’s shoelaces.
“Hey, mutt, cut it out,” he said.
“Brutus might not be a pedigree, but he’s hardly a mutt,” Erin defended. “He’s a rescue.”
“I didn’t mean mutt in a negative way.”
“Mutt is a word that has no positive connotations,” she countered. “Even though he’s from the animal shelter, Brutus has a great deal of dignity.” Trent grinned as he watched the pup chew on the shoelaces of his best boots. “Is that a fact? He has dignity?”
Erin frowned. “Of course.”
Trent tried to wipe the grin off his face, but the dang thing refused to budge. “I’ll keep that in mind.”
There was a loud rapping on the front door, then Delia hollered, “Have you arrested her yet?”
Erin frowned. “Who’s that?”
“Delia Haverhill. Do you know her?”
“Yes. I met her last weekend. Who does she want you to arrest?”
Brutus had settled down on one of Trent’s shoes, apparently to take a nap, so Trent bent down and scooped him up. The dog panted and yipped at him and looked like he might leak from either end, so Trent handed Brutus back to Erin.
“Arrest her, Trent. Do it right now,” Delia continued hollering through the door. “How dare she take Pookie!”
Erin was staring at the door to her shop, obviously befuddled. “Um, what does she—”
Trent blew out a sigh. “I’m afraid Delia wants me to arrest you for stealing her Pookie.”
**
Erin couldn’t have heard this man correctly. There was absolutely no way she could have heard him correctly. No one had a reason to want her arrested.
Pushing away her initial panic, she politely asked, “Excuse me? Did you say you’re arresting me?”
Trent Barrett smiled, a slow, sexy, lady-killer smile. Erin absolutely refused to react to his smile. Her days of falling for handsome but unreliable men were over. So what if he was tall, with deep-black hair and the most amazing blue eyes? He wasn’t her type. Nope. Not at all.
And even if he was her type—which he wasn’t—she could hardly be attracted to a man who might arrest her.
“I said Delia wants me to arrest you, but I’m only here to ask a couple of questions,” he explained.
The woman outside the front door banged on the glass again. “I’m serious, Trent; I expect results.”
Confrontation in any form always made Erin uncomfortable—at least it used to. But since her wedding day fiasco, she’d worked hard at becoming more assertive. These days, she really tried to stand up for herself. She couldn’t imagine what she had done to Delia Haverhill that had made her so angry, but Erin wasn’t about to be intimidated either by the handsome chief of police or the irate woman outside.
“Look, Chief Barrett—”
“Trent,” he said.
Erin shook her head. “No, I’ll call you Chief Barrett, if you don’t mind.”
Once again, he flashed a flirty grin that Erin suspected usually reduced any female within a two-mile radius into a fluttery mass of jelly. Too bad for the chief that she was now flutter-proof. Okay, not one hundred percent flutter-proof but close to it.
“So, Chief Barrett, whatever Delia thinks I’ve done, I haven’t. I have never broken the law.”
“I appreciate that, Ms. Weber. Delia is upset about Pookie.”
Erin took a deep, calming breath and tried again. “You said that pookie thing before. What in the world is a pookie?”
He chuckled, the sound deep and inviting, but Erin ignored it. Well, tried to, and came pretty darn close.
“Pookie is the name of Delia’s plastic rabbit which used to reside in her garden and is now sitting in front of your store. Delia seems to think you had something to do with Pookie’s relocation.”
“That’s the silliest thing I’ve ever heard. I have no idea what you’re talking about. Let me put Brutus in his carrier, then I want to see this Pookie.”
Trent nodded. “Seems like the best approach, but I’ll warn you, Delia’s a trifle hot under the collar. I’m going to head on outside and give her a couple of pointers on police protocol.”
Erin had to ask, “Such as?”
“Mostly that she’s not allowed to scream and yell while you and I are chatting.”
“I don’t think you should call interrogating me about a plastic rabbit chatting, Chief.”
“I don’t think you should call what I’m going to be doing interrogating, Ms. Weber.”
Erin didn’t want to soften toward Trent Barrett, for a lot of reasons, but she had to admit, he hadn’t done anything too terrible. At least not so far.
“I’ll put Brutus in his carrier and be outside in a sec,” she repeated, not as nervous as she’d been before.
“I’ll go talk to Delia.”
Although Brutus didn’t appreciate being put into his dog carrier, he accepted his fate with as much good grace as a feisty puppy could manage. Then Erin smoothed her green T-shirt that read Precious Pets and her beige slacks.
She took a series of calming breaths following the techniques she’d read about to reduce tension and said the affirmations the book had advised: “You’re powerful. You’re strong. You’re filled with energy.”
Then she headed to the front door, her steps decisive, her head held high. She’d just moved to this town and opened her business. Sure, the people of Honey didn’t know her. But she wasn’t a thief, and Delia Haverhill was about to learn that fact.
Feeling ready, Erin stepped outside and noticed two things—first, that Trent must have had a really intense talking to with Delia, because the older woman had her mouth clamped shut and looked about to explode.
And second, she noticed that Pookie was one sad and sorry-looking plastic bunny rabbit.
Going on the offensive, Erin said to Delia, “I’m so sorry about what happened to you, but I didn’t take your rabbit. I have no idea how it came to be in front of my store. But I’m glad you found it and can put it back in your garden.”
Delia continued to glare. “If you didn’t put it there, who did?”
“Ah, but if I’d stolen it, why would I display it in front of my store where you’d readily see it? Wouldn’t I hide Pookie so I could keep him?”
A tiny fragment of doubt crossed the older woman’s face. Erin knew Delia was now a little less sure.
“Delia,” Trent said softly. “Remember what we talked about before you say anything.”
Delia eventually made a noise that sounded like “hmmrrphfft” but didn’t say anything else. Erin frankly couldn’t tell if that was a good hmmrrphfft or a bad hmmrrphfft, but at least Delia had stopped demanding that Erin be arrested.
Now Erin turned her attention to Trent, needing his help to solve this mystery. “Honestly, I have no idea how that statue—”
“Pookie,” Delia said. “His name is Pookie.”
Erin nodded. “Right. Pookie. Well, anyway, I have no idea how Pookie came to be in front of my store.”
“You have to know something,” Delia said. “Did you see anyone lurking around?”
“Delia,” Trent said again, raising one eyebrow and giving the woman a look that Erin could only call marginally polite. “I’m sure if Ms. Weber had seen anyone lurking, she would have called the police whether or not they’d been carrying a pookie.”
“Hmmrrphfft,” Delia said again.
“You didn’t notice Pookie outs
ide when you came to work this morning?” Trent asked.
Erin only wished she had. Although, truthfully, even if she had seen Pookie, she probably wouldn’t have called the police to report a plastic bunny. “I didn’t see it because I live in the apartment above my shop. I don’t come in through the front door. I come down the back stairs.”
While Trent wrote a few things in a small notebook, Erin looked at Delia. She felt sorry for the older woman. Delia was obviously very upset. “Delia, I want you to know I would never steal Pookie. I know what it’s like to have people take things that belong to you. I can imagine how upset you were when you discovered Pookie missing. He’s such an...er...um, attractive rabbit. He must bring you a great deal of joy.”
Delia’s expression softened, but just a minuscule amount. She still pretty much looked like she wanted Erin beheaded.
“Yes, Pookie is dear to me,” Delia said.
Erin reached out and patted the battered plastic animal. “He’s sweet. You must have missed him.”
Delia held the statue close. “He is sweet, which is why someone stole him.”
Erin deliberately ignored the baiting tone in the woman’s voice. Instead, she said, “I’m so glad you got him back. When I was in first grade, one of the boys stole my lunch box, which I loved. I was devastated. I ran home and cried and cried.”
Delia’s expression softened a little more around the edges. “What kind of lunch box was it?”
“Scooby-Doo. And I loved that lunch box. I was so proud of it. I couldn’t believe it was gone.”
Delia nodded. “Scooby-Doo is a good choice. So, did you get the lunch box back?”
“No. Although I knew who took it, no one would believe me. My parents said I’d probably lost it on the bus and wouldn’t buy me another because they felt I’d been careless. My teacher said I’d probably lost it at home somewhere and didn’t believe me when I said Billy Porter had stolen it.”
“You poor thing,” Delia said, patting her on the arm.
“The worst part was that a couple of months later, Billy started coming to school carrying the Scooby-Doo lunch box. I could even see where he’d marked out my name and written his own. I was so upset, but no one would do anything, so I had to ignore it. But it was hard to ignore since Billy liked to tease me by saying ‘Don’t you wish you had a lunch box as nice as mine?’”