Distraught
over the loss of her cellphone, (the case held sentimental value)
Moira Crane goes to the police station to report the theft. Detective
Rhys Fletcher ushers her into his office and it becomes more of a
flirtatious conversation than a police interview.
"Sorry
for the mess. They're repairing my usual office. Had a waterpipe
burst. So I'm stuck in the file room. They're in the process of
converting to paperless." He held up a file, pulling a silly,
sad-clown face.
Moira
smiled. "I thought maybe you were just incredibly busy and
awfully disorganized."
"Me?"
Fletcher tossed his hat on a rack near the desk. "Neat as a pin.
Ask Sue." He nodded to the woman outside.
"Don't
listen to him, he's a slob. They're all slobs," the older woman
laughed.
"Thanks.
Make me look bad in front of the lady." He invited Moira to take
the only chair in the office. He perched on the edge of his desk, one
well sculpted thigh slung over the corner.
In
the small, windowless room, Moira could smell his cologne. It was
dusky, spicy and tingled her nostrils. An uncomfortable warmth filled
her. She shifted in the chair.
"I
know it's a little cozy in here. I'm sorry." He shifted too.
Moira
got the strong impression she had the same effect on him that he had
on her.
"So,
tell me what's wrong, Miss Crane."
Moira
told him about what had happened in class and her actions afterward.
Fletcher nodded, pressing his lips together.
"So,
you don't think any of your students could have done this?"
"Maybe,
as a joke. None would do it seriously—at least I hope not."
"Could
it have been taken by mistake?"
Moira
shook her head. "I doubt it. My phone case is very distinctive
and childish. My ex-boyfriend's daughter gave it to me for my
birthday. She's five."
Moira
gulped, her eyes watering again. She pulled out a crumpled tissue
from the stack Sue had given her, smiling when Fletcher's
handkerchief appeared in front of her. Laughing, she took the
handkerchief.
"I'm
sorry, I got mascara on it." She handed it back to him.
Fletcher
tossed it aside. "That's what I pay the maid for." He
smiled down at her. "I can't guarantee we'll get the phone back.
If it was stolen, it's probably been sold off by now. But you did the
right thing by contacting the phone company."
"It's
the pictures," she wailed. "I don't have copies of them. I
know I should have saved them—"
"But
you don't think about that," he said quietly. "Not with
something as precious and spontaneous."
He
sounded so subdued, Moira stared at him. She never tried to read
people she'd just met. Sometimes, their emotions were so obvious, she
couldn't help it. The pain radiating off him was intense. He'd lost
someone he loved dearly—and the pain was recent. Moira's fingers
brushed his hand before she could stop it. She got a flash of a
grave—no, two. One adult sized and one very small one.
"I'm
so sorry," she whispered. "It must be quite awful to lose
your family."
Rhys
Fletcher recoiled from her touch, jumping off the edge of the desk.
He knocked his lamp to the floor in his attempt to get away. The bulb
shattered on the tile floor.
"Who
are you? Did he send you?"
"What
are you doing in there, Rhys Fletcher?" Sue called from her
desk. "If you break another lamp. . . ."
"Sorry.
My fault," Moira called.
Moira
stooped to pick up the lamp. Her long, sable hair cascaded over her
shoulder. Their eyes met when she stood up. Fletcher's were dark,
penetrating, glaring at her.
"I'm
sorry," she whispered. "I didn't mean to pry. It's just—I
sense things. I know it sounds all freakish, but when I touched you,
I saw graves. Your wife and child?"
"Who
are you, Miss Crane?"
"I'm
an English teacher at the high school."
Fletcher
signed, running his hands over his close cropped hair. "I'm
sorry, Miss Crane." He adjusted his shirt sleeves, tugging at
the cuffs. "It wasn't my wife and child. It was my sister and
her daughter." He set the lamp well out of his way and sat on
the desk once more. "I apologize. I'm naturally
suspicious."
"You
asked if he sent me. No one sent me, Detective Fletcher. I'm
here about my phone."
"Of
course. If I haven't completely blown any chance in hell I had of
getting to know you better, would you like to go to dinner?"
Moira's
eyes widened. "What?"
"Dinner."
He eyed her calmly, smiling.
"Like
a date?"
"Yes."
He folded his hands in his lap, waiting.
Moira
crossed her legs, twitching hair behind her ear. She couldn't read
any deception in his face. He really wanted to ask her out. If the
feelings she got from him early on were any indication, he was
genuinely interested in her. In fact, she suspected this conversation
was brought on less by him being a police officer and more about
being a man.
"Are
you married?" Her eyes narrowed.
"Sue,
am I married?"
The
older woman didn't even look up from what she was typing. "Nope,
more's the pity."
"Am
I dating anyone?" He winked at Moira, knowing that would be her
next question.
"There's
not a woman alive who would put up with you long enough." She
smiled up at him. "Is that young whelp asking you out?" she
directed at Moira.
"Yes,
ma'am."
"Well,
he's not completely untrainable, but you'll have your hands full.
He's better than most and not as bad as some others. Go for it."
She waved at them. "With my blessing. Now, leave me be. I have
work."
"You
have the Sue Seal of Approval," Fletcher said. "What more
can you ask for?"
Moira
laughed. "I guess I can't ask for anything more. Okay, I'd love
to have dinner. I need to go home and fix my face."
"I'll
pick you up at seven."
"Don't
you need my address for that?"
He
picked up her paperwork, grinning as he waved it at her. "I've
got it right here. All your most intimate details."
"If
you weren't a cop, that would be a really pervy thing to admit,"
Moira said, her lips twitching as she tried to hide a smile.
"Moi?"
He pointed to himself with both index fingers. "Not a perverted
bone in my body," he said as he walked her out.
"You're
a man, aren't you?" Sue said, without looking up. "You're
all perverts."
"Well.
Put that way. . . . At seven?"
"Yes.
And thank you, Detective Fletcher."
He
kissed her hand. "Rhys, please. I promise that dinner isn't part
of our usual customer service."
Giggling,
Moira walked out to her car. Fletcher accompanied her,closing her
door when she was settled. She turned the key and opened the window.
"I'll
run over your foot if you keep standing there."
Taking
a couple steps back, he put his hands in his pockets, squinting
against the sunshine. "See you at seven, Moira."
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