Our First Christmas
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Synopsis
It’s that time of year when the world falls in love . . .” Join four of your favorite authors for tales of Christmas romance to remember forever. “Under the Mistletoe,” Lisa Jackson Megan Johnson’s marriage is over—or so she thinks. When her husband Chris lands in the hospital, she remembers the unexpected joy of their first Christmas together . . . “A Ranger for Christmas,” Mary Burton The holidays bring painful memories for history professor Marisa Thompson. But agreeing to help Texas Ranger Lucas Cooper solve a case presents her with more than a distraction . . . “A Southern Christmas,” Mary Carter Reporter Danielle Bright is heading home to write about Christmas down south—and possibly win back her ex. But Sawyer, the sexy photographer, is determined to jingle her bells . . . “Christmas in Montana,” Cathy Lamb Family is where you go after quitting your job, but Laurel Kelly isn’t prepared for the changes at home in Montana—or the fact that her high school boyfriend now owns the family land . . .
Release date: September 27, 2016
Publisher: Zebra Books
Print pages: 449
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Our First Christmas
Lisa Jackson
Friday, December 19, 7 P.M.
You’re a hard woman to find. Professor Marisa Thompson stared at the text. You’re a hard woman to find. Was this a joke? No one was looking for her. She’d barely been back in Austin forty-eight hours. But as she reasoned this was a mistake, silent warnings whispered.
As she considered responding to the number with the Texas area code, a knock at her office door had her sliding her phone back into her back pocket.
“Professor Thompson, bet you don’t know what the other professors are calling you?”
Marisa raised her gaze to the junior professor’s smiling face. Kyle Stone wore a Santa hat cocked sideways over shoulder-length sandy blond hair and his nose glowed red, a sign he’d had too much tequila punch at the history department’s holiday party. She tugged off her glasses and tossed them on a pile of manuscripts she’d marked up in red ink. She reached for a cold cup of coffee, stood, and moved to a small microwave in the corner of her office. Christmas music drifted through the hallways of Garrison Hall. “I don’t bet. But it’s Scrooge, no doubt.”
Laughter rumbled in his chest and he strolled into her office. “How’d you know?”
“I have a reputation.”
“Their teasing is good-natured.”
“No, it isn’t.”
He pouted, clearly making fun of her sour mood. “Why didn’t you make an appearance at the party?”
“Just didn’t.” She put the mug in the microwave and punched in one minute. Behind the lectern or cutting through the jungles to a Mayan ruin, Professor Marisa Thompson was at home. Ancient languages buried by time, neglect, or malice were easier to grasp than a holiday packaged in disappointment and wrapped in bows of false promises. The Christmas season was a time to be endured, not celebrated.
“More sour than usual.”
“I miss the jungle.”
You are a hard woman to find. The text tugged at her concentration before she brushed it away.
She’d returned two days ago from a six-month sabbatical spent in the jungle west of the Yucatan in Mexico, hunting for evidence of the Mayans who’d lived in the region one thousand years before the Spanish had arrived. Two weeks before she was to leave, she stumbled upon a hole in a large limestone mound. The hole had been carved out centuries ago by grave robbers and offered a glimpse into a tomb. She’d been able to squirm inside the hole and with a light had found a cavern covered with ancient writings. It had been the single most important find of Mayan language in decades. She’d wanted to keep digging and work until the entire site had been mapped and catalogued. But her time and money had run out thirteen days later and she’d been forced to leave her ruins behind, until she could find sponsors to pay for her return.
“Everyone was asking about you. This is your first Christmas back in Austin in several years.”
The seasonal travel had been deliberate. Life was easier when she vanished during the holidays. However, this year a lack of funding and the university’s schedule dictated a return to campus to teach graduate classes in the spring semester. And so here she now sat in her small office, trying to immerse herself in her ancient languages and hide from the holidays and festive coworkers. Of course, she could go home to her Hyde Park home in central Austin, but that would mean facing too many unpacked boxes delivered this morning from the storage company. The boxes had valued papers and books and memories—items that belonged to her mother, items she’d not been able to look at in the seven years since her mother’s death.
“Bradley and Jennifer were there. He’s been talking nonstop about your trip to Mexico and your find.”
She allowed a twinge of disappointment with the mention of the ex-boyfriend. “That so?”
Kyle lowered his voice a notch, speaking in a conspirator’s whisper. “He’s itching to work with you on your find.”
Six months ago Bradley had dubbed her adventure a fool’s errand. “He wasn’t the one sifting through rubble and rock in one hundred degree heat.”
“He’s never loved field work.” Kyle picked up a limestone rock from Marisa’s bookshelf. “Hard to chase the financing when you’re in the boonies.”
Marisa studied the rock in Kyle’s hand. Found at her latest dig, it reminded her that she belonged in the jungle, not here. “I suppose.” The microwave dinged; she removed her coffee and sipped. The coffee tasted bitter.
“Aren’t you supposed to pick up toys for your brothers?”
She glanced at the clock on her desk. “Damn.”
Thanks to her trips to Mexico, she had avoided family gatherings, but this year had no credible excuse exonerating her from her father and stepmother’s big holiday party. She wasn’t close to her dad and his second wife, but they had two sons, Travis and Tyler, seven-year-old twins. As much as she dreaded the holidays, she had a begrudging affection for her half brothers, whom she’d not seen in over six months.
Kyle glanced at his black explorer’s watch. “If you hurry you can make it.”
The shopkeeper had called and warned her that today would be the last day he’d be open before Christmas. He was closing early this year to go on a holiday vacation. If she didn’t pick up the toys today, she’d not get them until after New Year’s.
Marisa grabbed her leather jacket and slid it over a black T-shirt embellished with a glyph symbolizing life. Pulling her long dark hair out from under her jacket, she reached for her satchel purse. Silver and beaded bracelets rattled on her wrists as she shut off her desk lamp. “I can’t believe I forgot. I swore to myself I’d not mess this up.” She might not love the holidays now, but when she’d been seven, the holiday spirit had zapped through her body like electricity, just as it did her brothers now.
“Why didn’t you order online like a normal person?”
“Because my stepmother said the boys wanted these specialty trucks from this particular store. She had the shopkeeper set them aside for me.” She shrugged. “It would be nice if I bought a nice gift for the boys. I haven’t shared Christmas with them in years.”
“I didn’t think you were motivated by guilt.”
If she hadn’t liked her brothers, she wouldn’t have taken the bait. “Easier to get the trucks, put in an appearance at their Christmas party, and be done with it all.” She scooped up her papers, dropped them in the bottom desk drawer, and digging her keys from her purse, fastened the lock. “I’ll see you after the holidays.”
“Tell me you aren’t doubling back here to the office and working on Christmas Day.”
“Okay, I won’t tell you.”
“Give yourself a break.”
“I love my work.” And it’s all I really have.
“You are hopeless.” He kissed her on the cheek. “Merry Christmas.”
“Back at you.”
Christmas music chased after her as she hurried along the hallway and out the front door. Cold winds had her drawing in a breath as she tugged up her collar and ducked her head. With her mind squarely on reaching the toy store in time, she didn’t see the large man until he was feet from her.
“Dr. Thompson, you are a hard woman to find.”
The familiar deep baritone voice echoing the text message had her turning to face a man with broad shoulders. He wore a Stetson, white shirt, red tie, a heavy dark jacket, and silver-tipped boots that peeked out from crisp khakis. The Pecos star, clipped to his belt buckle, confirmed he belonged to an elite group of lawmen, the Texas Rangers. Only one hundred and forty-four men and women wore the Rangers’ star.
For a moment, she struggled to reconcile the man before her to memories she’d done her best to forget.
They had met six weeks ago on the Day of the Dead celebration that had beat with a fever pitch in Merida, Mexico, the centuries-old city that was the heart of the Yucatan. Music reverberated around the small university café built in the European style of the Conquistadors and coated with the white limestone of the Mayans. She’d been savoring a spicy hot chocolate and watching parading revelers, dressed in brightly colored Indian garb and carrying large gold crucifixes in honor of their Catholic faith.
The Day of the Dead festival was a remembrance of dead ancestors, and when she was in Mexico she always made a point to attend. A toast to her late mother had been on her lips when he’d crossed her path.
He’d worn a simple white shirt, jeans, and that Stetson. If not for the hat, certainly his commanding attitude gave him away as American. He sat at a table beside hers and ordered a beer in fluent Spanish spiced with a subtle Texas drawl.
Texans might squabble and carry on while inside their borders, but once they stepped over the state line, they shared a kinship. She’d been feeling festive that day, perhaps lonely, and so she’d done what she’d rarely done. She’d struck up a conversation with the man, Lucas, which had led to drinks, dinner, and later his room.
The next morning she’d awoken, satiated and chagrined over their encounter. Sleeping with strangers had never been her style, and she’d felt awkward. While he’d slept, she’d slipped away and returned to her jungle, certain the past would stay dead and buried.
Now as Marisa watched Lucas walk up the stairs with slow, purposeful steps, her heart dropped into her belly. What were the chances of them ever seeing each other again?
“Lucas Cooper.”
The sound of his name sharpened gray eyes. “Good memory.”
“Some say too good.” She glanced at her watch. Forty minutes until the store closed. Grateful for the excuse, she said a little too quickly and candidly, “I’m sorry to run off, but I have to pick up a gift for my brothers or I’ll be blackballed from my family. Have a good evening.”
As she descended the steps, he followed. “I came to see you.”
She fished her keys from her purse, energy flooding her veins. “Why?”
“Not for the reasons you might think.” He kept pace with her easily.
Heat now burning her cheeks, Marisa let the comment drift past, hoping it would carry away the night they’d shared. She tipped her head forward, letting the curtain of black hair obscure his vision of her face.
“I hear your thing is ancient languages.” His tone remained steady, though she sensed a vague insult simmering below the surface.
Her thing? She’d dedicated the last decade of study to the subject. Like her mother before her, she’d established herself in international circles as the premier linguist in the Mayan language, whose origins could be traced back over two thousand years. “Yeah, you could say that.”
“I hear you’re mighty good.” His face softened, but avoided a smile.
“So I’ve been told.” She burrowed chilled fingers into the pockets of her jacket.
“I’d like to run an idea by you.”
“What? Why?”
“I’m on a case.” Ah, so Merida hadn’t mattered much after all.
Pride piqued, her voice was more clipped. “Maybe you could call my assistant, Kyle, and make an appointment. Like I said, I must get these presents picked up. I’ll have plenty of time after the holidays.” Truth was, she had plenty of time, but his blatant dismissal of that night had her digging in mental heels. Stubbornness, she’d been told, was her greatest asset and her worst fault.
“Now would be better than later.” Steel coated the words barely softened by a slight smile.
She glanced up, conscious of the difference between her diminutive height and his six-foot-five frame. To appear a bit more intimidating, she tilted her chin and raised a brow as if staring at a tardy student. “I don’t imagine you as a student of ancient languages.”
Amusement danced in his gray eyes at her attempt to claim command of a situation he’d owned before he’d uttered the first word. “You’d be surprised what interests me, ma’am.”
“Are you trying to be clever?”
“Wouldn’t know how to be clever if I tried.”
False modesty didn’t ring true. “What do you want?”
“Got a research question for you.”
“Regarding?” He wasn’t the relaxed man with the easy smile she’d met in Mexico. This man was harder, tougher, the kind of man who didn’t seek out anyone without an express purpose.
He glanced from side to side and dropped his voice a notch so that only she could hear. “I’m not here to interfere in your personal life. I’m working on a drug case. It’s the same case that took me to Merida. A drug dealer has developed a code that’s been used to communicate information about an upcoming shipment, and no one can break it.”
She drew cool air deep into her lungs. “And you want me to break the code?”
“I’d have asked you in Mexico if you’d let me get to know you better. I figured we’d talk more at breakfast.”
Color warmed her cheeks. “Breakfast.”
“You vanished into the jungle until a few days ago. I never forgot you, and it’s taken me this long to track you. Like I said, you are a hard woman to find.”
Friday, December 19, 7:40 P.M.
Lucas had hunted down Marisa. He’d tracked her to Mexico and now here. She wasn’t sure if she was upset or pleased. “I see.”
“No one has figured the code out so far. It’s made up of dots and dashes and pictures. We think perhaps Mayan or Aztec, but no one can read it.”
“There are glyphs?”
“Say again?”
She unzipped the folds of her jacket to show him her T-shirt. “Like this?”
His gaze dropped, lingered. “I suppose so.”
She zipped up her jacket. “Why didn’t you talk to the folks here at the university? I’m not the only one who could have figured this out.”
His gaze met hers. “We had Rangers interview the professors here. None could help us out.”
Despite the situation’s awkwardness and the ticking toy clock, her interest flickered. “Do you have it with you?”
“I have all the pieces and parts back at Ranger headquarters.”
“Is this time sensitive? Can I look at it tomorrow?”
“We don’t have much time, now. Days maybe. Now would be best.”
The front door to the building opened, and a woman’s laugh drew their attention to a couple—her ex-boyfriend and his new girlfriend, a tall blonde dressed in a silk dress and fur jacket. Awesome. Marisa had Ranger-from-the-Past and Bradley and Jennifer to contend with at once. Awesome. And thirty-eight minutes until the toy store closed.
“Marisa,” Bradley called from the top of the stairs.
She watched as Bradley’s girlfriend whispered in his ear, and he nodded. Her frown suggested she clearly did not want to meet Marisa any more than Marisa wanted to meet her. The power duo descended the stairs, both all smiles.
When they approached, Marisa straightened her spine just a fraction and tried not to focus on her lack of makeup or her faded jeans. How many times had her dad told her to lose the homeless look and dress like a professional? “Bradley.”
“We missed you at the party. Mrs. Lorraine was looking for you. She had lots of ideas for the spring semester programs.”
Mrs. Lorraine was a sixth-generation Texan and a large donor. The last time she and Marisa had talked, she’d wanted Marisa to include more Texas history in her curriculum. When Marisa tried to explain she taught Mayan history, Mrs. Lorraine had said she didn’t really care about any history other than Texas history. “Right.”
Bradley’s mouth twitched. “There’s a lot of buzz about your work. Had some alumni at the party who wanted to meet you. Your kind of find could mean lots of donations.”
“I don’t have concrete information yet.” Aware of Ranger Cooper’s gray gaze assessing every move, she itched to be gone.
“Who’s your friend?” Bradley asked.
Marisa swallowed. “Bradley and . . . Jennifer, I’d like you to meet Texas Ranger Lucas Cooper.”
Lucas took Bradley’s hand in his, and she savored a moment’s satisfaction when Lucas squeezed the professor’s hand a bit too hard. “Didn’t catch the last name.”
“Rogers.” Bradley pulled back his hand. He had enough pride at least not to grimace or shake the cramp from his hand. “Marisa, Jennifer and I were hoping you could join us for drinks. She was just telling me how fascinated she is with your work on ancient languages.”
Jennifer smiled and nodded. “We’d love to have you.”
As obtuse as Marisa could be about reading body language, she realized Jennifer’s flat smile and distracted gaze telegraphed total disinterest. “I can’t.”
“Give me one reason why you won’t join us, Marisa.” Irritation had crept into Bradley’s voice. So far her work had kept her job safe in the department, but she didn’t have tenure yet and he’d been hinting about budget cuts. She might be sitting on the breakthrough of the century or nothing. “You can’t hide from Christmas for the rest of your life.”
“Not the rest of my life,” she said. “Just six more days.”
“She was like that when we dated,” Bradley said to Lucas. “Hated the holidays. Always a sore point with us.”
Embarrassment mingled with anger. She was not going to have a blow-by-blow of her failed relationship in front of a man she’d slept with and abandoned. “No one’s interested in our history. Now, if you all will excuse me.”
Bradley’s smile vanished, and he looked as if to block her path. Lucas shifted his stance just a little closer to Marisa as if making a claim. “She’s got a real tight schedule. Just time for me this evening.”
Bradley didn’t hide his shock. “You have a date?”
Marisa enjoyed his shock too much to correct him. “We do.”
When they’d dated, she’d never said no when he’d asked for her help, whether it was interpreting some of his work or covering his classes. However, her patience had been stripped away. “Girls have fun once in a while.”
Bradley frowned. “You owe the department an appearance with the alumni party. I’m tired of covering for you.”
“Then don’t.”
Bradley’s BlackBerry buzzed, distracting him from his comeback.
Lucas took the opening and moved a fraction closer to Marisa. “We really have to get going. Have a nice evening.”
“You aren’t coming?”
“No,” Marisa said, grateful Lucas had the sense not to answer for her.
Bradley glanced at Lucas, who stood tall, an immoveable wall of muscle and determination. Frowning, Bradley cut his losses, took Jennifer by the elbow, and said his good-byes.
As the duo left, gratitude jostled Marisa past embarrassment. “Thank you.”
Lucas’s gaze lingered on Bradley, much like a wolf stalked prey. “You aren’t comfortable around the guy.”
“It’s not that. I just don’t have the reserves to deal with him tonight.” She glanced at her watch. Twenty-nine minutes. She’d never make it to the store in time. “And like I said, toys for my brothers. The shopkeeper is closing up tonight and won’t reopen until after the holidays.”
“What’s the address?”
“It’s on North Highway. I’m not going to make it.”
“I know the place. I can get you there.”
“You?”
“Yeah, but you are going to owe me. Toys first. Code second.” Not a question. A done deal.
“Sure, why not.” The puzzle was a reason to avoid her empty home and the boxes crammed with memories. “But this is just about the code.”
A staggering power radiated behind those gray eyes. “Sure.”
Stubbornness had her wrestling for the control that remained out of reach. “As soon as I get those toy trucks.”
“Best if I drive. And I’m parked right out front. We’ll get there faster. Wait right here.”
“Sure.” The chill cut through her jacket as she moved toward the SUV. Lucas opened her door, and she slid inside. As he crossed in front of the truck, he pulled his phone from his jacket and spoke quickly before ending the call. He tossed his hat in the backseat and slid behind the wheel. He smelled of fresh air and the faintest hint of soap, scents that had clung to her skin as she’d driven back to the jungle alone.
He put the car in gear and flipped on the lights. “Hold on.” When he gunned the engine, she grabbed hold of the door. He wove in and out of the streets as if he’d lived in the area all his life. Soon they were headed north.
On any given day she loved the silence, but now it weighed heavy and awkward.
Lucas broke it with, “How did your dig go in Mexico?”
“You’ve been asking around about me?”
“For months. No one in Mexico could quite figure out where you were in the jungle.”
“That’s the idea. Keep the dig location a secret.” She folded her arms. “You never mentioned you were looking for me in Merida.”
“I was looking for Dr. M. E. Thompson. Not a woman wearing a white dress in a café.”
Her cheeks warmed. “Did you know who I was in the café?”
“No. Like I said, you didn’t look like a professor of ancient languages. And you never mentioned your work at dinner.”
“Too many people think the Mayan ruins are stocked with gold. I didn’t need any unnecessary trouble.” She glared at him.
“You thought I was trouble?”
No. Not then. “You never know who’s listening.” She tilted her chin up. “And what does a professor of ancient languages look like?”
He tossed her a look. “That was a compliment.”
She’d heard enough about the stereotypes to know what he must have imagined when he’d gone looking for her. “When did you put the pieces together?”
“After you left.”
“Not much of a detective.”
He tightened his grip on the wheel. “I found you, didn’t I?”
She dropped her head back against the seat. Could this Christmas season get any worse?
She didn’t know what to say, so she kept silent. Lights from cars and buildings whisked past.
“Word is, you have a major find on your hands,” he said.
No one wanted the blow-by-blow of her findings. Too many times, she witnessed eyes glazing over after she launched into a detailed description. “Bits and pieces. I’m hoping to string it into something worthwhile.”
Ahead, she spotted the lights of the toy store sign, and soon he’d parked in front. Inside, she saw the clerk waiting, two bags on the counter.
“I’ll be right back,” she said.
“I’ll be waiting.”
Disregarding the meaning humming under his words, she dashed into the store. Bells jingled over her head as she hurried through the door. She glanced at the clock, fishing her wallet out of her purse. One minute past closing time. “You waited for me.”
The older man, eyes heavy with fatigue, shook his head. “Ranger said to wait.”
“A Ranger called you?” She pulled out her credit card and handed it to him.
He swiped it. “Said not to close and to wait.” He looked past her to the dark SUV. “He sounded insistent, so I figured it was best to wait.”
She pocketed her card and the receipt. Normally, she’d have argued. Taking any kind of favor led to dependency and that led to heartache. But tonight she was too grateful to complain. “Thanks.”
“Merry Christmas.”
“Same to you.”
She wrestled the heavy bags from the counter and moved to the front door. Lucas got out of the SUV and opened the door for her. Without asking, he took the bags from her and placed them in the backseat.
“Thanks.”
“Glad to help.”
She slid back into her seat, and he settled behind the wheel and drove. “So tell me about this code.”
“Not much I can tell you. Experts can’t crack it. They thought if they could create a key, they could translate the symbols. But no one can figure out the key.”
Silver bracelets jangled on her wrist as she ran her fingers through her hair. “Well, ancient languages are what I do best.”
“Exactly what I’ve heard.”
“Show me what you have and I’ll take my best shot.”
“Great.”
They arrived at Ranger headquarters minutes later and Marisa followed Lucas past security. He led her to his locked office, flipped on the lights, and moved to a small conference table where a stack of papers rested. “These are the coded messages we have. Feel free to have a look. If you don’t mind, I’m going to order pizza. Haven’t eaten much today.”
Her stomach grumbled. “I’ll go halves with you on the pizza. I’m starving.”
His powerful gaze reflected a mixture of humor and deadly intent. “You crack that code, and I will buy you all the pizza you can eat.”
“Deal.”
Her mind shifting from him to the papers, she quickly found herself pulled into the documents and the swirl of symbols. To the untrained eye it was chaos. To her, it was heaven.
Lucas met the pizza delivery guy at the front desk, and when he returned to his office he found Marisa exactly where he’d left her, frowning over the ciphers, oblivious to him and the world around her.
A fellow Ranger, Brody Winchester, had a smart wife, Dr. Jo Granger, who’d put Lucas on to Dr. M. E. Thompson a couple of months ago when the first coded messages had appeared. Lucas considered Jo one hell of a smart woman, and when she’d commented that Dr. Thompson was another level of smart, he’d known she was in the big leagues.
After learning Dr. Thompson was in Mexico on a dig, he’d gone to Merida, Mexico, to ask around the university. He had learned she was a bookish, odd woman who lived for her dead languages. A dull sort, one professor had said, but the best in her field. She was expected in town to replenish supplies, but no one knew exactly when she’d appear.
When he’d arrived at that sidewalk café, he’d been looking for good grub, a cold beer, and a chance to recharge after forty-seven hours of nonstop work while he waited for Dr. M. E. Thompson.
When he’d spotted the woman in the white dress, rational thought vanished, and when she’d smiled at him and teased him about the Texas seeping through his Spanish, he’d been lost. The ensuing conversation, dinner, drinks, and sex had momentarily banished thoughts of work. That night had been all about the woman in the white dress. And then she’d vanished.
He’d asked around and discovered the woman in the white dress was Dr. Thompson. He’d called himself every form of dumbass before deciding that finding her would be easy. However, he’d not counted on the jungle or that it would swallow her trail so completely.
Hours ago, when he’d received word she’d returned to Austin from her jungle dig, he’d dropped what he was doing and come straight to the university. There was a code still to be cracked and if he were honest, one night with Marisa had not been quite enough.
How many times since had he dreamed about her in that white dress? Hell, even now he thought her glasses accentuated rather than hid bright green expressive eyes and a high slash of cheekbones. And the frown grooved in her forehead added to her allure.
“Pizza,” he said.
She glanced up from the pages, her eyes a bit vacant and lost. He could almost hear the gears in her brain shifting and grinding as she refocused on the world outside her scroll. “Great. I’m starving.”
As she cleared away her papers and stacked them neatly, he set the pizza box on the table along with a bag stuffed with napkins and drinks. “I wasn’t sure if you liked soda. There’s water in the cooler if that’s what you prefer.”
“Soda’s great.” She rolled up her sleeves and placed napkins in front of him and herself. He flipped open the box and the scents of pepperoni, mushroom, and onion drifted around them. She took a piece of pizza and laid it on her napkin. “I haven’t had pizza in ages.”
He sat and rolled up his sleeves, exposing forearms dusted with dark hair. “It’s a mainstay for me.”
She took a bite and glanced toward the papers to her right. “It’s an ancient language. I’m fairly sure it’s Mayan. It might take me a couple of days, but I can figure it out.”
“A couple of days?” No hiding his surprise.
“Shouldn’t be that hard.”
He laughed. “Don’t tell the forensics team.”
“They shouldn’t feel bad. Unless you study this all the time, you wouldn’t have a clue.”
“I’ll be sure to pass it on.” Already, he pictured the team’s frustration when he told them Marisa had dubbed the task easy. They’d endured many sleepless nights trying to figure out what the dealers were communicating to each other.
“So what exactly am I looking for?”
“There is word of a major shipment arriving from Mexico into the area. It’s a new supplier trying to make a name for himself, and we want to stop him before he gets established.”
“When’s it expected?”
“We’ve heard around Christmas Day but don’t know exactly where or when.”
“Time is running out.” She plucked the cheese off the pizza and ate it. “I’ll work fast.”
“Thanks.” He sipped his soda, unable to rein in his curiosity.
“So you dated that Bradley?” She looked up at him as he paused, pizza inches from his mouth.
She picked a piece of pepperoni off her pizza and then set it aside. “Ours was a fairly classic tale. We dated. We broke up.”
“Been reading body language for a long time, ma’am. More to that story than meets the eye.”
“You read body language?”
“As well, if not better, than you read those dead languages.”
She shrugged. “People are a mystery to me. Must be why I like my dead languages. They may take years to figure out, but there’s always a pattern, clues to lead you to the message. That’s not so true when it comes to people.”
“Me
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